Robot Horses, Unicorns, Dogs — But Humanoids Population Boom is Here to Replace You
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Oh, look at this.
Is this a new sci-fi movie?
Well, yes, actually, it is a new sci-fi movie, but...
It's also supposedly a new product from Kawasaki.
A rideable horse robot.
We've got to replace everything.
Humans need to be robots, dogs need to be robots, horses need to be robots.
Who are they going to sell these products to if they replace us all?
This is Kawasaki Heavy Industries.
...has shown off a bizarre concept for a rideable four-legged robotic horse.
They call it Corleo.
And it runs on a 150cc hydrogen engine.
Does that hydrogen engine exist yet?
Hmm, I don't know.
The better question is, does the robot exist yet?
I saw this on the internet, and everybody was saying, I'll believe it when it's not CGI or AI.
You know, and it's not integrated like that.
And it turns out that with the exception of like about one second, Corleo, except for about one second, it was all CGI.
Now, a lot of people say, I don't even believe that's what it is.
And we've seen a lot of that now with AI generation.
I've seen, and there's some pretty cool looking cars, actually, talking about bringing back a classic car or something.
And they have AI do an updated design on some classic, like a Mustang.
Thunderbird or something like that.
Here's the new design.
And it's all just them doing that with AI.
And that's really what I thought this was.
And I was surprised to see that it was actually introduced by Kawasaki at a Japanese trade show.
A horse that looks like a gigantic wolf, in our opinion, could traverse uneven terrain thanks to its four independently moving limbs.
Video is almost entirely computer graphics.
And to show what something like this might be capable of.
It's got rubber feet or something to help it grab rocks so it can climb like a goat, supposedly.
Well, here's the kicker.
Kawasaki says their target date for it was 2050.
Are you kidding me?
This is...
The biggest vaporware I have ever seen in my life in terms of a tease.
They're going to tease a product that's 25 years in the future?
And then, of course, you had a lot of other people saying, okay, well, here's the features of these two things that's advertised.
Here's a horse, a real horse on the one side, and here on the other side is the Corleo.
And, you know, stuff like, oh, my horse can get fuel everywhere.
My horse misses me when I'm gone.
You know, things of that sort.
They sound like the dog stuff as well.
But we have seen a lot of rideable robots being introduced.
So far, nothing at all coming close to that.
At a Chinese expo in the last year, they had a four-legged robot that was Xiaoping Motors.
They said it was a rideable unicorn for children.
It doesn't look anything like a unicorn.
It's just a four-legged thing that a kid could sit on, and it's got a globe for a head.
I don't know how you get a unicorn out of that.
Also, a giant minivan-sized rhinoceros-like four-legged walking robot that can carry up to four passengers.
Again, I didn't say anything like a rhinoceros about it.
It was just this large body that was there for four people, and it's like the walking robots from Star Wars or something like that.
So Kawasaki also showed off a concept for a futuristic modular train passenger system.
They call it Alice.
Alice. And I guess everybody is wondering in Wonderland when any of these things are going to be real.
But robotics is moving pretty quickly.
And the humanoid robotics are moving very, very quickly.
As a matter of fact, the big thing now that all the robotics companies are pushing, and a lot of videos put out in the last couple of weeks about the fact that they are taking the humanoid robots into natural walking.
And here is a video that shows the difference between, I think this is figure if I remember correctly.
And they show their previous walking robots that walk with the knees bent, you know, and now they walk in a more natural gait.
Still looks like somebody's just had a hip operation, but that doesn't look like somebody who needs a walker to walk.
So here's the evolution from...
As you can watch this, I'll narrate it.
Right now we're looking at the back.
So here's a comparison.
This is the old way.
This is the Biden walk.
Knees are bent, very tenuous.
Now it's walking a little bit faster and almost fully straightening out the knees when it takes its steps.
It's a simulation compared to the way it walks.
And here's a bunch of them.
Isn't this great?
This is what the sidewalk's going to look like.
Because humans are going to have to be locked down.
It's going to be some pandemic or something.
Or they just don't want us out.
They'll lock us down and keep us in our apartments playing virtual reality games.
And that's what the street's going to look like.
It's going to have robots walking all up and down the streets.
Don't you just love...
That is figure.
Don't you just love their planned future?
I think it's time for us to go Amish on these people.
But there is a...
Talk about trade wars.
There is a big trade war that is happening in the robotics industry.
A global arms race for humanoid robots has officially begun, and the battle lines are being drawn right now.
On one side, Elon Musk's Tesla Optimus.
On the other, China's Agibot, a startup you may not have heard of yet, but one that's moving at terrifying speed.
And here's the shocker.
Agibot plans to deploy a 5,000-strong humanoid robot army this year, directly challenging Tesla's dominance.
This isn't just competition.
It's an all-out war for the future of robotics, and the winner could dictate the rules of automation for decades to come.
A Chinese robotics startup has just announced plans to build up to 5,000 humanoid robots this year.
That's not just a random number.
It's a direct challenge to Tesla's Optimus project, which set the same target for its humanoid robot production.
We're now seeing the beginnings of a serious robotics showdown.
Yeah, and who can replace the humans most quickly there?
I thought it was kind of interesting that they call the Chinese companies called Agibot.
It kind of reminds me of...
Karen on her mother's side is Italian.
She talks about agita, you know, heartburn, you know, agitation or something like that.
And it's kind of my feeling when I look at these robots, I get agita.
So I think it's appropriate that we would call it Agibot.
5,000 of them.
You know, you're going to have, that company was founded by a Huawei engineer, very young engineer, a genius who He won some kind of a competition or something like that.
And just for fun, he created a robotic dog.
And somebody showed a picture of it on social media or something like that.
And all of a sudden, he just got flooded with offers of investment capital for people.
Perhaps I was coming for Xi Jinping.
I don't know.
But any company that's there is going to have it.
But they're now going to try to manufacture as many robots as Elon Musk is doing.
And as the guy who has the figure robots said, I think it was the figure robot guy, said, hey, if we had whatever number we could make right now doing these functions that we already show, we've got customers out there who will take them.
They're more than willing to replace you.
You're not going to be replaced by migrants coming across the border.
They're pulling people, for the most part, there's people coming in that were doing agricultural work and things like that and doing it cheaply, slave labor.
But the slave labor is going to be replaced, the cheaper labor that is coming in, is going to be replaced by robotics.
And when you had Howard Lutnick, who was on with Margaret Brennan on Sunday, and I played the part there where she was repeating what Saturday Night Live had done.
She didn't really have any understanding that she could challenge Lutnick on all this.
He just laughed it off.
You made up these numbers.
Did you use artificial intelligence?
These numbers aren't really anything that has to do with any tariff rates.
She didn't pursue any of that because it was obvious that she didn't have anything more than a Saturday Night Live understanding of those issues.
But later on, he's talking about how we're going to bring all these factories in and she did interject and she said, yeah, but in those factories you're going to be using robots.
He goes, yes, that's true.
But the key thing is that the people who will be owning those factories will be people that are with us.
That's really what this is about.
It's about Trump and his technocrat friends owning the robotics factories.
And they're not about creating jobs for you.
Not at all.
The Common Man.
They created Common Core to dumb down our children.
They created Common Pass to track and control us.
Their Commons Project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation.
Deception. Intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
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