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#BermasBrigade #TruthOverTreason #BreakingNews #InfoWarrior #BreakingNews Show less
We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in.
Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want.
We think too much and feel too little.
More than machinery.
We need humanity.
We know the air is unfit to breathe and our food is unfit to eat.
As if that's the way it's supposed to be.
We know things are bad, worse than bad.
They're crazy.
You've got to say, I'm a human being!
God damn it.
My life has value.
You have meddled with the primal forces of nature.
Don't give yourselves to brutes.
Men who despise you, enslave you, who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think, or what to feel, who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fire.
Don't give yourselves to these unnatural men.
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts.
You're beautiful.
I love you.
Yes, Rothbat.
You're beautiful.
Thank you.
Aha!
Showtime!
It's time to buckle up for making sense of the madness.
And who loves you and who do you love?
Hey, everybody, Jason Burmes here.
And over the weekend, I was looking for a specific lecture by none other than Martin Rothblatt, who you saw in the thumbnail, who you see in the title.
Someone that I don't think enough people realize the significance of.
And that lecture was the from transgender to transhuman lecture that coincides with the book of the same name, right?
And we've covered the fact that this person is at the forefront of not only the transhuman movement, but is maybe behind Pritzker monetarily the second richest transgender individual on the planet.
I would argue, although the Pritzkers are extremely influential, I absorb that more and more that I'm not only in the Midwest, but literally on the border of Illinois.
It sits less than a mile from my house over the Mississippi.
Martin Rothblatt is it.
And there's just so much more with Rothblatt in the arena of technology that is concerning.
And I've often talked about the integration of our military-industrial complex and then the people that are able to present the technology on a commercial level.
So I've got to find this hard drive if we're going to do the from transgender to transhuman one.
In one of my lectures, there's just a small piece of that.
I think it's the one that I have pinned actually to my X account, by the way.
Give me a follow over on X. We're about 200 shy of 47,000.
I'd love to hit that 50K moniker before the year's end.
You just never know.
You sometimes get boosts by going on other shows.
Extremely difficult on the platforms I'm on, YouTube, Rumble, X.
They say they're free speech platforms, but again, the algorithm is clearly pushing individuals and motives and suppressing others.
Even Grok on this channel has shown that.
So I really could use those follows and the retweets, all that stuff.
There's a ton more in the news we could have covered today.
I'm actually going to be having Stuart J. Hooper on later.
We're going to be covering a lot of the global politics.
But this is an issue that when I really dug into more of it, there were so many other videos that I had not seen on Rothblatt, despite knowing the ethos.
Okay.
So there are two videos in particular that we're going to play before we play the keynote.
We're going to play the introduction of Rothblatt by one of Rothblatt's little like minions, right?
And somebody who is, again, when you look at the integration of the military industrial complex, DARPA, you know, he's an ex-Fed.
It's an interwoven, interwoven deal where, oh, you can keep classified information.
We're going to try to commercialize this technology.
It doesn't always work out.
And the big one on this DARPA keynote, which is like not quite 10 years old, I think it took place, I believe, if my memory serves me, in September of 2015.
Don't hold me to that.
Somewhere in there.
I don't think it was quite a decade.
It was nine years and change.
But again, Martin Rothblatt is giving the DARPA keynote.
On the peripheral, and this is going to be something we'll get into in a moment in like a sub-section of this story.
Rothblatt is heavily into both the satellite and the satellite radio business.
So Rothblatt, like with Sirius XM, Howard Stern's boss, okay?
And discussed on the show many, many times.
Megan Kelly is going to play into this.
This is a part of the story that I did not know about when commenting on United Therapeutics.
And this keynote is really via United Therapeutics, Transhumanism, what is known as xenotransplantation, for those not aware.
And these kidneys that have been grown in pigs with human genetics and then transplanted into humans, at least on a commercial level, have failed.
And when I talk DARPA, I often talk NASA, right?
So when we talk about 3D printing biological materials, okay, bio-nano printers, a lot of that is done through NASA in microgravity situations.
In fact, they do it on the ISS.
So much of this technology, again, that interweaves with DARPA, interweaves with NASA.
It's the same thing.
Again, I'd be remiss if you can't make the connection with satellites and that technology and Martin Rothblatt.
And you notice that all of it, whether we want to admit it or not, well, what is Sirius XM radio?
It's about entertainment.
It's about a narrative control.
It's about pushing a culture.
And there's this whole University of the Victoria thing I could have covered where they're promoting and pushing forward this trans ideology and trans history and trans movement.
And as I've stated before, transgenderism is a step into transhumanism.
Very open.
In fact, Rothblatt has their own religion, TerraSim, that is the trans religion.
We're going to demonstrate all of that and much more.
This is going to be kind of a can't-miss episode.
We're probably obviously not going to get through the entire keynote as I am going to constantly be interrupting this.
But I think it's important to look what they were saying then and where we are now.
So we can also look at the over-promises of so much of this technology, okay?
And some of the admissions.
Now, like I said, I had a few videos for you.
Yes, the keynote's going to be the key.
The first video is actually going to be all the way back in 2008.
So you can get a cringe-worthy idea of the type of policies and politics and push that Martin Rothblatt got behind Barack Obama on.
I know a lot of people are going to be, I mean, I talk about a lot in 2008 when they started to develop that relationship with YouTube, right?
Remember, Google buys YouTube.
YouTube's the big thing now.
It's establishment.
They want the people's voice.
So this is a part of like YouTube, upload your promotions or your questions for these people.
So this is at a 2008 convention.
We're going to play that video.
And then this is a video, again, probably from not quite a decade ago, eight, nine years ago, at this forum where Rothblatt makes a couple of admissions about AI that I think are super important and super relevant.
They are that, number one, AI is more of an art form than a science.
Although we should always trust the science, right?
And then the fact that they're debating these things when true AI, and this is nine years ago, could be even 100 years away.
And what true AI is, that's a question for another day.
But we're going to drop all those videos.
What I need you to do is drop those thumbs up, share, subscribe, let people know about the broadcast.
Follow me on the all platforms, X Rumble, support on Rockfin is appreciated.
And if you can, again, there are no paid gigs.
We need you now more than ever.
Do want to thank Rebecca and Terry as the last supporters over on the buy me a coffee.
$5, $10, $15, big donors.
Need you now more than ever.
Again, sharing the documentary films as well as these shows also helps.
Let's get into it.
So again, one of the reasons that I do this is trans religion, TerraSim, all Rothblatt.
It doesn't even have 100 subscribers.
It's got more videos than subscribers.
All right?
Like when I tell people, take a look at this.
I'm transhuman.
I'm going to become digital BBC clip.
Like I keep telling people the delusion of separating you from your biology.
It doesn't matter what you think you are.
You're a furry, you're a man, you're a woman, you're a baby, you're neither.
As long as they can separate you from a core part, the core part of your reality, that in essence, you will base a lot of your personality that comes from the nurture part of society around.
What do I mean by that?
People gravitate towards the things that they get positive reactions from, right?
Some people are born extremely physically gifted, both in the face and the bod, some people not so much.
I mean, those are going to weigh in to certain things.
Some people are gifted with the gift of gab.
Some people can't speak as well.
Some people are very, very muscular and physicality and running and they're able to do things.
Okay.
Yeah.
Some things are hard, right?
And the thing is that you can build on all those things.
That's like the great thing about life, but it does help shape us.
They want to separate you from the very basis of what you are.
And they want to convince you that your consciousness isn't really real.
And if you just let them track, trace, database everything you do and get under the skin as well in this internet of bodies, they'll be able to upload your consciousness.
Okay.
They'll be able to upload your con in some kind of wonder world.
No, not real.
No, So anyway, the religion's real.
It's as real as it gets.
I have not watched the truths of Terra Sim 528 Hertz meditation.
Maybe somebody's going to do that, but like, you know, from what it looked like to me, it's just a bunch of gabber deg, a trans religion for technological times.
Barack And Trump's Plan00:04:42
So I haven't actually shown Rothblatt in the video.
So this is Forbes from summer of 2024.
And again, Rothblatt gets put on like these billionaire women's lists.
And Megan Kelly, who's gotten better over the years, certainly not perfect.
There's a lot of problems I have with Megan Kelly.
Okay.
But I do think that she was kind of blindsided by a lot of it.
I also think she's got that entertainment persona, you know, wants to get paid.
And Rothblatt is still, you know, still the boss over a serious XM.
And she just basically like, look, I'm not going to call Rothblatt a woman.
I believe her to be a man.
It was all on X.
And, you know, oh, this is by thepinknews.com, by the way, obviously.
One of the many outlets that, who knows?
I'm not saying USAID may have been involved, but I'm not saying I know how something like that could be profitable.
So, again, thumbs it up, subscribe, share.
We're going to do our first video right here.
I'm tempted, I'm tempted to sit here.
It's tough.
It's cringy, folks.
I'm not going to lie.
Here's Rothblatt in 2008 stumping for the Barack Star.
I want Barack Obama because he's quite a man.
He's got what it takes to change the land.
Creating change requires lawmaker votes, and only Barack Obama knows how to float that boat.
Barack Obama has got quite a plan.
Gets us out of Iraq.
It's not our land.
So let's just stop right there.
I've got to do it.
Obviously, it's a little bit of a rap.
Okay.
But let's just take two of those things.
There was some truth in there and there's some lies.
Barack Obama didn't get us out of Iraq.
Nope.
Didn't happen.
Not a real thing.
Didn't shut down Guantanamo Bay either.
However, he was able to get lawmakers to start passing these different laws and putting people in place.
And Rothblatt, very much behind the men and women's bathroom thing.
And what is now transgressed, pun intended, into the mutilation of children.
In New York, I was talking to my brother.
And it's like, you know, it's like it's not like they've stopped anything under Trump here.
And I know they haven't because I had that experience in Oneana.
You know, I haven't been back to Oneana since, geez, it was in October when I had to go and then go all the way downstate to my buddy's funeral.
And I had been there in April for my alumni weekend.
It was the last time I saw my buddy alive.
And it was terrible then.
It was worse in October.
I mean, drug addicts everywhere.
All the, I mean, the policies from New York have ruined this once very quaint area that was a fun little college town.
And the summer, nice little tourist destination.
It's disgusting.
My buddy was like asking me why I'm not coming in a couple weeks.
I'm like, I have no desire to come.
He even tried calling me late night.
I was just like, no.
Those are the type of policies.
Even though you started to see them creep in prior to Trump, it was pretty crazy.
And then during Trump, they accelerated in New York and they became even nuttier.
So in that way, this rap is right.
But the idea that those policies were good, no bueno.
No, they were not.
And then on top of that, okay, Rothblatt talking about Iraq.
It's a joke.
It's a bad joke.
Security means fighting smart, and only Barack can play those cards.
Barack Obama loves the USA.
He reminds us all of JFK.
And Barack Obama, you know, great patriots.
Artificial Ethics Group00:12:19
They need to think outside the box.
And only Barack can walk that talk.
So, Barack Obama, he's quite the man.
He's got what it takes to lead the land.
Check out Barack Obama Boogie Woogie number five on YouTube and get the rest of the story.
Thank you.
Barack Obama, boogie woogie number five.
So I don't know if it gets any cringier than that.
It's pretty bad.
But this is not a dumb person.
This is a very intelligent person.
A very, very predatory person to get into the position that they're at.
Don't fool yourself.
You know, no matter what you may think of their life decisions, this is a person that's very much pushing transhumanism and has the billions to do so and has the connections to do so.
So This is, again, I think an even more important clip because Rothblatt really is on the inside of artificial intelligence and how far it really is.
And Rothblatt also, in actuality, knows that it's narrative-driven and controlled.
And that's why in this clip, it's talking about it as an art form.
So let's go here.
I'd like to ask you to think of AI not as a science project, but as an art project.
If the human is the most delectable part of reality, then indeed it is the most important subject for art.
And so it has been, so we have been throughout the ages in sculpture, in painting, in literature, in theater, in film, and now in AI.
We are creating AI as a work of art.
I believe that we should trust in the promise of AI because this work of art, this replication of a human mind, will prove to be fascinating to people throughout the world and for decade after decade.
We will each try to one-up ourselves to see if it can be done.
Is this really a human mind?
Have we painted a human mind yet, not with colors, but with code?
I trust in the promise of AI because already decades, maybe if we listen to our opponents centuries away from there actually being an AI, we've taken time out of our day to gather here and to begin to debate the ethics and the rights and wrongs of how do we want these AIs to be?
What kind of restrictions do we want on them taking our jobs?
What kind of rights and obligations should they have?
We are a pretty impressive group of people to be thinking about the ethics of something which some believe, many believe, to be a century or more away.
So think about that.
It's not really about science, because they have never been able to create consciousness.
When I say they, science, can't explain it.
What I will say is this, and I often talk about it.
I am completely ignorant to so much of what's going on around me, and I am accepting of that.
There are invisible waves right now running through my house that help this message get out to the rest of you throughout the rest of the world.
Many of you watching on a device like this through those invisible waves.
That's just one type.
There's so much outside of our visible spectrum of reality and so much that we do not understand about that reality, we would be remiss and arrogant to act like we could either replicate or extract that and I think create it or they would.
I'm not saying it could never happen.
Who knows what happens in the future, but I do believe any kind of quote-unquote consciousness that they create will be a cheap facsimile as such.
So with that being said, okay, like I said, we're going to start with this little intro from this person who works for Rothblatt, who's a Fed.
And this is a DARPA keynote via transhumanism, bio-nanotech.
I want you to hear the things they're saying out of their own mouths.
And remember, it's constantly going to be sugarcoated, right?
Like think about Rothblatt talking about human beings, the most delectable or delicious part.
I mean, okay, weird, weird, odd.
It's always going to be presented in a positive manner, no matter how Frankenstein-mad scientist it is.
So here we go.
My notes are for Martin.
But I know enough about Martine, who is my boss, and I'm happy to tell you is the first ever conflict of interest I've ever had as an ex-Fed.
Martine gave me the opportunity to develop that conflict of interest when I joined her company, United Therapeutics.
There's a bio in your package, and Martine is very easy to learn about in terms of her lineage and how she got to where she is.
But I'm going to reconcile it or redact it just for the group here and focus on her innovation.
If you'll allow me just about 15 to 20 seconds on this.
So in DARPA, it's about enablement.
The program managers come in with the vision.
They're supported by ACETAs, which are our extraordinary fuel cell that helps us to get the work done.
So the combination of that partnership is broken without your part of the partnership.
And that is the performer community.
We learn from the performer community without a doubt.
It's very helpful to us then to see these occasional bright sparks in the wilderness that happened outside of DARPA's fold.
In DARPA, you get an unfair advantage.
It goes far beyond the support that you get.
You're given an unfair access that the competition doesn't have to technologies that lever your own expertise, your own passion, your own energy.
Let me just stop right there.
Do you understand why we're doing this?
Do you understand how time and time and time and time I reiterate this stuff?
Here you got a guy who works for Rothblatt and an ex-Fed telling you how the DARPA system works and how they choose people in certain arenas to work with technologies that the public arena does not have.
Okay, does not have that cater to their skill sets.
I mean, I could do an entire episode alone on the magnitude of that statement.
And it's just so casually made and it's no big deal.
Because listen, a lot of them, I mean, do you think this has a bunch of views over on YouTube?
It doesn't.
As small as my audience is, and boy, we wish it were larger, but as small as my audience is from my audience, five to ten times the amount of people that have watched, at least, up to maybe even 100 times the amount of people that have watched this, at least will now see this.
And that's a little bit.
All right, let's keep going.
So when a group does this outside of DARPA without that access, without that global intellect brought to bear and put on a laser focus through the contracts and the deliverables, it's really extraordinary.
In my search globally, and I do venture capital in China, I sit on the Singapore National Academy of Science in terms of redirecting Singapore funds.
I work in the Panama Canal Authority for Maritime Security.
I meet a lot of very interesting, multidisciplined people, but no one is a better example than Martine.
The journey that I'll just summarize with her, which she will share in her own story, is one about really transhumanists.
It meets very much the focus of the biology is technology, but she embodies this with her actual experience.
It's not just Cirrus radio.
It's not just her other telecommunications programs.
It's not the co-joined work that she did with the UN for the human genome and human rights.
So this.
So I got to stop it again.
Told you we'd be stopping this a lot.
Did you just hear some of the we talked about the UN, of course the UN.
We've talked about the United Nations and the World Economic Forum and how they've not only partnered in this transgender ideology globally, right?
Talked about the United Nations school in the middle of New York City and the pride and transgender stuff and fifth grade hallways.
All right.
But it's the declarations and treaties that go along with it because it's all about globalism at the end of the day.
It's all these different mechanics.
And Rothblatt is extremely intelligent in that regard.
This guy's just laying it all out.
You meet some interesting people in my line of work.
And he's super impressed that this person is able to do these things in a privatized manner.
But again, if you don't think that this person's working with the people that have worked with DARPA or has a hand up with DARPA or a partnership at the end of the day, look at this guy.
It's that integration.
It's the chicken or the egg, really.
Ethesis, aviator, supreme technophile, has done it again and again in the private sector.
And with her partner, life partner, Bina, has created a vision that has inspired about, I don't know, just shy of 900 people.
We're called the Unitharians at United Therapeutics.
And we're asked to do the right thing at the right time, the right way, all the time.
And this is a great decree for which we can also guide our own management of the programmatic vision.
So with that, what I'd like to do is turn it over to Martine, my boss, and my conflict of interest.
Thank you so much.
Mark.
So here comes Rothblatt.
Thank you.
I think I got my own thing here.
Thanks very much, Mike.
It's absolutely a great pleasure for me to be able to work together with Mike, creating new futures.
Although I am, I really would like that program manager job.
I mean, you sold that position so well, and I couldn't think of a better job.
So if you have a spare one, you know, I'm available.
Okay, thank you.
Thank you.
I can multiplex, you know, I can do.
Yeah.
I'm really excited to be here.
When Alicia first invited me, I said I am a total diagnobo fan of DARPA, always have been.
So to be here speak today is a great honor for me.
GPS and Religious Cults00:08:56
It's also a real pleasure to be able to speak on the topic of biology as technology, which I would say is probably as close to a religion as I could claim for anything for myself.
So it's.
I mean, these people, when you hear them talk about it, think about what was just said there.
Biology as technology is as close to a religion, and this person has made their religion TerraSim.
Think about the COVID-19 44 nightmare, and science is a literal religion, but not because the science worked, but because of the word.
I mean, I'm all for the pursuit of knowledge.
And I get, I get, you know, the way that this is trying to be crafted.
But take a look, science as a religion.
And while in religion, things don't necessarily have to be work or proven to you.
You got to have faith, right?
And science, to me, is the complete antithesis of that.
In science, you have to have repeated experiments with repeated effects.
So a hypothesis can become a fact, right?
It could become a law of physics.
But, I mean, just a lot of scary things being said there because people throw out the transgender movement is a religious cult.
Well, it's not just a religious cult.
It's a step into transhumanism, which is an even scarier religious cult.
Because that leads to what?
Post-humanism.
All right, I'm going to stop ranting and raving.
We're going to get back to Rothblad.
It's the perfect topic for me.
I thought in preparing for this talk, I thought a little bit about the meaning of the words biology and technology.
I'm very much in the school of sort of the Elon Musk school of do whatever doesn't violate the laws of physics.
So when I think about life, I think about Erwin Schrödinger and his definition of what is life, which was more of a physicist's approach to it, of something that increases negative entropy by streaming order into itself.
And technology, really, as I thought about in preparing for this talk, does very much the same thing.
The only real difference is that technology imposes the element of intent.
Intent means lots of different things to different people, but for the purposes of just, I think, universal applicability, intent involves some level of simulation.
You're running something inside a processor, which, you know, for us is our mind.
There's going to be some selection out of all of those alternative possibilities, and then going ahead and satisfying or trying to satisfy one of the alternative realities that you've run in your head.
So biology, in my view, used with intent, is technology.
And that's a broad definition, but I think it works pretty well everywhere.
So here's just a quick little graphical version of the same thing.
All credit goes to Schrödinger.
You've got this environment that we're immersed in.
And as the living creature, which could also be technology, goes ahead and streams order from that environment, thereby creating negative entropy upon itself.
You have either biology or plus intent, technology.
And then amongst us humans, you have a little bit of both.
So I just want to stop it right there for a second because you notice that, again, this is almost a decade ago.
Other than fawning over DARPA, Musk is invoked in this.
Just as I always talk about Musk as kind of a cutout and a front man, I'm not saying that these people aren't smart, and I'm not saying that they haven't worked hard to be where they are.
It's exactly that, why they're there.
I'm saying they get integrated into the system, especially if they want more and more access.
Sometimes there's technology, sometimes there's just plain biology.
Now, in my particular case, I started by trying to stream order in the area of satellite communications.
My first projects were one to build a GPS receiver that cost under $100 and could be used by Joe Sixpack to fish bass fish in ponds in the south.
Again, as we were told, people said that's absolutely impossible, no way, no how.
Of course, now costs have fallen a couple orders of magnitude, even below that.
But that Hummingbird GPS was a great success, and a lot of fishermen happily knew just where to go in their big bass ponds to find what they wanted to do.
The next project was to have a handheld transceiver that could go ahead and communicate tweets back and forth with geostationary satellites.
There's a Geostar system also used for navigation and control.
That too was something that people thought was impossible, but it really amounted to just what was described at the beginning: going ahead, specifying what you needed.
In this case, one of our customers was from Fort Meade, so it was necessary for the device to actually be able to handle all sorts of unusual threats which worked against its consumer acceptability.
But nevertheless, we streamed order from the satellite communications industry, from the microelectronics industry, from the regulatory authorities, and ended up with another cool consumer product.
So, if you're not feeding into this, again, this person who I keep telling you is extremely influential, who's speaking at the keynote of DARPA, yes, GPS was also pioneered by this person through satellite communications.
So, but in each case, what really happened is it started with a dream and a passion that there is in my mind, and in all of your minds, there's a simulation going on of all these different alternative realities.
Like, maybe there could be a GPS receiver I could fit in the palm of my hand, or maybe I could go ahead and track vehicles and people and aircraft and exchange messages anywhere on the surface of the earth.
And then going ahead and going from that simulation and all the different ways to meet it to selecting one pathway that seems you can actually get it done in like two years rather than two decades because that's no fun to work on something forever.
And you got to remember that GPS was militarized and being utilized all the way back in like the World War II days.
Okay, so once again, this is a person that, yes, don't get me wrong, they're technologically producing a lot of this, but they're doing it through commercialization.
It's kind of like when I talk about NASA and the use of these microsatellites, right?
These small, small satellites that have been able to become possible and commercialized because of the massive production of cell phone microchips, right?
And then finally going ahead and taking the implementation steps of digesting the order that's in the external environment to create a more cool order, a better order, a faster, more efficient, more awesome order in a new environment.
So that's technology as biology.
Another example that I want to point out is that the crucial role of using biology as technology goes beyond the things that we'll probably hear a lot about today, beyond the genes and codons.
And the human mind, as we just saw a brilliant presentation of, is a magnificent piece of biology.
So the next telecom product that I created was a satellite radio system that could broadcast hundreds of channels of commercial-free CD quality music throughout the United States.
And again, it started off with a simulation.
Okay, there's 100 different ways to do it.
I'm going to select down to these three ways I'm going to implement.
Inventing SiriusXM00:05:19
We ended up with this beautiful, totally functioning SiriusXM satellite radio system.
The only problem was that, you know, people were not buying this system in the numbers necessary to pay for the $100 million launch costs of satellites and the multi-hundred million dollar cost of building satellites.
So we needed to co-opt biology as a technological adjuvant to make it happen.
And there was a guy who was on AM and FM radio when he was not being banned or fined by the Federal Communications Commission.
And this individual's personal magic was what turned SiriusXM from a would-be technological bankruptcy to a huge success.
Let me just talk about this now.
You know, I often talk about Stern and how influential he was to me in my lifetime.
First book I always say, first book I ever read for fun, for fun, was his first book, Private Parts.
And then I read Miss America also.
And I love both those books.
He is somebody that was able to, like, the only reason that I ever was interested in SiriusXM was Howard Stern.
And originally it was Sirius, but all the systems were essentially going through these networks, you know, this satellite system that was built by Rothblatt.
Now, this really shows you the intelligence of this person and the savviness to infiltrate the culture.
Don't get me wrong, he's largely become very, very insignificant, but he's still a powerhouse to the boomer lefty crowd.
And it's so funny because his politics have completely changed, have completely changed.
I mean, Howard Stern was revolutionary, not just for SiriusXM, but he made his radio show into a television show.
So later on, when podcasting would become big, at first, yes, it was just like the audio stuff.
Bill Burr pretty much does the audio stuff.
But now Rogan, for instance, is the best example of the video stuff.
And everybody's doing the video stuff.
Okay?
So let's get back to Rothblatt on Stern.
So I have this little audio clip that you could see just how much this individual loves this system.
And approximately a third of all the people who subscribe to SiriusXM subscribe because of this guy.
In fact, I have had more people thank me for bringing Howard Stern into their little hamlet from the Canadian border of New Hampshire down to a small place in Nebraska than I've had people thank me for our medicine saving their children from pulmonary disease and cancer.
It's crazy.
Oops.
I'm sorry.
Audio, please.
This is an exciting time.
I mean, you invented this whole deal, and here we are.
We're enjoying it.
And as a broadcaster, I said this to you in the hall, and I'll say it to you on the air.
I thank you if you hadn't invented this medium.
I mean, the fact that I'm getting to look at the inventory, this is like me meeting Marconi.
If you hadn't invented this medium, I would have been out of the radio business.
I liked it better when you said this is like meeting Martin Luther Queen.
Oh, that's true.
That's a whole other thing.
But it's just.
What do you got?
I got to tell you something.
I am so grateful that you invented this medium.
I mean, I am flourishing here and also able to be part of something from the ground up.
But I mean, this has got to be nuts.
This was a dream in your head, and now you're seeing it all come together.
What is your...
So, now let me just stop.
Um, I want...
Oh, didn't want to do that.
That's fine.
See, I hit some buttons and bad things happen.
But anyway, it'll be easy to come back to Stern.
Right?
Where were we?
Let's see.
Well, it's muted right now.
But anyway, I want to talk.
Oh, no, come on.
There we go.
Basically, Stern also pioneered the fact, because like talk radio is very rigid.
And now, like, don't get me wrong.
We're doing making sense of the madness right now.
But the truth of the matter is, see, I don't know exactly there is.
It's got to be that.
Boom.
That the language barriers, the barriers, if you will, of what content was appropriate, Stern shattered those.
So it's even a bigger betrayal.
All right.
So let's see.
We should be just about where we were.
And we will unmute...
Did you say that?
I did.
You're a witty...
...part of something from the...
Biology As Technology00:07:49
Thinking about biology as technology, the brain is like, you know, I'm not going to be able to say it's the coolest part of biology because what goes on in every single cell is awesome beyond comprehension.
But, you know, the brain is a crucial part of biology.
And we've got to co-opt brains to make a lot of our technology truly happen.
And that's what the story of SiriusXM was.
We've got to co-opt brains to make these technologies happen.
I mean, I was talking about kind of like marketing brilliance and shifting the narrative, but right there, co-op brain.
I mean, that's like psychological warfare.
That's the old brainwashing.
All right.
So the next thing that happened in my life is as I was doing SiriusXM, my youngest daughter had a failure of biology in which her system, her DNA was no longer coding for enough of an absolutely crucial molecule that's necessary to keep blood vessels open and free from occlusion.
So it was a failure of biology.
Here what we did is we went ahead and said, okay, we understand what the failure is.
Let's take that biology.
Let's take that molecule.
Nature developed this molecule over hundreds of millions of years of trial and error.
Even mice without this molecule prostacyclin are non-viable.
We can replicate that molecule.
Oh, but this molecule is so necessary and used so continuously in the blood vessels that it only has a 30-second half-life.
How can you give somebody a medicine that has only a 30-second half-life?
Well, the way to do is to stream it continuously, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year for a person's entire life and make it so easy and seamless that the individual can go rollerblading, snowboarding, live a real life.
Nobody had ever done this before.
Before we got the FDA to improve this technology, there had been no other medicine that was streamed 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, subcutaneously for a person's entire life.
We did it.
We got it approved.
My daughter is now 31 years old, happy and healthy, as are thousands of other young women and men with this disease.
So family.
Now, look, again, I'm for technology empowering humanity.
The tale of Rothblatt and being able to develop this drug and all these things, you know, kudos to them for saving their child's life.
At the same time, I think that more and more we need to start looking at what's causing, again, these epidemics.
And that gets us into the Maha and the Kennedy.
And look, I want to be reporting more on that.
That we're, you know, getting more and more results.
But it's a long road.
So let's continue here.
Got about five minutes left in the broadcast.
Let's get the thumbs up, subscribe, and share.
If you are new, go check out the alt platforms and check out the links down below for support.
Value of biology can be fixed with biology, the molecule as technology.
Intention, I mentioned like the key to this whole biology as technology thing is that technology is just biology with intent.
Intent is Darwinian variation and selection at hyperspeed.
So just because technology does not look like these biology textbooks, anthropology textbooks of worms to fish, you know, to mammals, to reptiles, to mammals, to us, doesn't mean that it's not happening.
All around us, we humans are the most important environment for technology.
And we can affect that environment with our own intention.
Intention is how we mutate different products.
As we were told, fail fast, fail often.
I just have to stop it here.
Do you notice how this person promotes Darwinian ideology?
Because these people at their core are social Darwinists, but also have to kind of subjugate the idea of any type of deity, any type of higher power, et cetera.
So he literally says there doesn't have to be any evidence for that and then translates it into social Darwinism as human beings exerting their intent.
Now, we're not a mutation, but through competition and the actual pursuit of the secrets of the world, of nature, all right, that's what science is, then we can push humanity forward.
But if you're basing it on a lie, Darwinian evolution, I mean, look, folks, I'm a big, big, big believer in microevolution, adaptation, if you will.
And like it gets that species to species evolution, come on now.
Come on now.
Another couple myths here left in the broadcast.
That's Darwinian variation in selection occurring at hyperspeed in the human environment.
When people fret and worry about things like the Luke Arm and robots and whatnot, and they watch all the dystopian Hollywood movies and believe that stuff, I tell them, you know, it's just fantasy, really, because there is no market for a crazy robot.
And yet, Musk is out there telling you, and this is our Hitler robot thing, boy, oh boy, we may, I mean, there's another 30 minutes left in this, we may do another broadcast on the second half of this one because it is just so important.
I mean, Musk is out there saying by 2045, or 2040, rather, not even 2045, in 15 years, that humanoid robots are going to outnumber the amount of people on the planet, maybe even two to one.
It will be the largest product in the history of humankind.
Think about that.
We are the environment, okay?
We are the Darwinian environment in which all this technology has to operate.
We all have dogs because they're nice.
I love dogs.
I have four dogs.
What's going to happen to the dog that bites my arm?
It's going to be put down.
I mean, that's just the way it is.
Okay, so there's another end-stage organ failure that cries out for technological biology.
We're going to stop it there.
I hope you guys found this one interesting.
This is the type of stuff that we do here.
It's really outside of the mainstream media.
It's outside of the majority of the alternative media.
And it is not about left or right.
It is about right and wrong.
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