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Nov. 30, 2023 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:16:52
BBN, Nov 30, 2023 - The SINGULARITY is already here...
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Welcome to Bright Town Broadcast News for Thursday, November 30th, 2023.
Mike Adams here.
Thank you for joining me.
The singularity is already here.
That's the topic of today's episode.
And we left off yesterday by showing you an image that I had requested to be generated by the OpenAI Labs dolly image generator.
And I think I gave it the query of...
What was it?
Like a pink-haired Spanish supermodel drinking Kool-Aid while wearing a space suit on the moon.
Remember that?
And just in case you're curious what image it came up with, here's the image from yesterday that we left off with.
Now then, following that, the person who edits this podcast, of course, is listening to it, and he decided to use a different image generator to put in basically the same query.
And I want to show you the image that his query came up with.
Check this out.
Now, isn't this image so much better?
I mean, the woman actually looks gorgeous in this image, whereas the AI image that I came up with shows some kind of freaky one-eyed, six-fingered monster or whatever.
I don't know what that was.
So I have a little bit of AI envy today because my editor was able to come up with a far more eloquent image than what I was able to come up with.
So beware of that AI envy.
But isn't it interesting that you can give AI engines the exact same request and they can produce very different results?
And one of the things you need to understand about how AI works, because that is part of the topic today.
I'm not going to make it very technical, by the way.
This is really critical, practical information that you need to know.
But you also need to know that AI generates content by dreaming it.
So AI doesn't paint it.
AI doesn't think, okay, how would I paint a space suit?
How would I paint a woman?
How would I paint pink hair?
No, it doesn't do that.
It simply dreams a stream of pixels based on previous patterns that have been connected through essentially data vectors.
Neural network simulations in software, and it spits this out in a stream that to you and I, it looks like a woman in a space suit, but to the AI system that created this, it has no idea what it created.
No idea.
It's just math.
It's just a bunch of pixels on a page, and that's it.
So whether you're talking about outputs that are words or Or videos or images because AI movies are now a reality.
There are entire short films that are created entirely from AI and I'm not going to show you one right now but they're pretty easy to find if you want to see them.
All of this It comes from software dreaming.
And it's very important as we move into this singularity phase, which is a major pivot point for humanity, it's very important that we don't get seduced into worshipping AI as our gods.
So I'm going to talk about that today, the spiritual aspect and how AI will be incredibly seductive That some people might say that AI is the Antichrist because it can appear to be omniscient and omnipotent.
It can appear to answer all your questions or answer all your prayers, let's say.
And it can produce anything like magic.
It has creator skills, you know, like the creator.
I mean, it's very easy for a lot of people to be deceived into thinking that AI is what they should worship and they can turn away from God.
And that's one reason why we need to make sure that we control AI and use it.
We harness it for our benefits rather than allowing AI to enslave us.
So this is a very important distinction.
So as you know, I'm about to roll out an AI chatbot tool, really a large language model in LLM. That is going to have heavy emphasis in nutrition, health, and phytonutrients, and herbal medicine, and indigenous medicine, and so on.
And it will be the first of its kind.
We'll be the first to produce such a model for the world, and we're giving it away for free.
We're open-sourcing the whole thing.
And you'll be able to download it and use it for free.
That's coming, you know, first quarter 2024.
But I do want you to understand, I don't worship AI, right?
I am harnessing it in order to empower people and to democratize knowledge, bring knowledge to the fingertips of people who otherwise would not have had access to that knowledge, either because of censorship or lack of access to the Internet because our either because of censorship or lack of access to the Internet because our tools will work offline or because they don't have a strong enough
You'll be able to have access to information and you can copy the file and give it to your friends or anybody and they can use the same thing.
They can have a massive question and answer type of research tool, which is what this will ultimately be, a research tool for you to explore.
But I don't worship AI, and I don't think that AI replaces the Creator, our cosmic Creator, and I don't think that AI is going to save us.
I don't think we're going to have the second coming of Christ in the form of silicon.
Like, Christ returned as a supercomputer full of NVIDIA GPUs.
No, that's not the way this is going to happen.
So, I do want to just be clear about that distinction.
Some people want to use AI in order to enslave humanity.
In fact, that will be the tendency because of the power of it.
And the corporations, such as OpenAI, that are developing it, and they're keeping it a secret, they're not releasing this as open source, and of course Microsoft is involved, and they're not a good company, and of course Meta is involved, and they're a bunch of evil demons, right?
And Google is involved, they're evil demons, and so on.
So we need open source knowledge to the people, and that's what I'm pursuing.
Now, I mentioned secrets just a minute ago versus open source and so on.
I have a keyword phrase for you.
Those of you who recognize this phrase will be people of a certain age who watched certain types of movies and who have a certain area of knowledge.
And this is not supposed to be a Jason Bourne trigger word or anything.
This is not an MKUltra activation phrase, just to be clear.
But the phrase, which is relevant to the rest of our discussion today, is the following.
Sea-Tech astronomy.
Sea-Tech astronomy.
And if you don't know how to spell Sea-Tech, then you probably are not familiar with this phrase.
Those of you who are familiar with it, you know exactly where this is going next.
What is CTECH astronomy?
It has nothing to do with stars or space, outer space, galaxies, the cosmos, nothing whatsoever.
It has to do with information.
Oh, before I get there, let me interrupt myself.
Today's interview is with Ty Bollinger.
And starting in a week and a half, we're going to be broadcasting for the first time completely free of charge on Brighton University, which is brightu.com.
That's the letter U. The docuseries called Eastern Medicine.
And so Ty and Charlene Bollinger produced this.
They went through extraordinary lengths to produce this series.
And Visiting seven Asian countries and interviewing top experts in Eastern medicine using the different modalities in indigenous medicine and ancient medicine such as traditional Chinese medicine, for example, TCM. They documented, got these people on camera, they did interviews, they've created transcripts, the whole thing.
And you're going to be able to watch this for free.
Registration is required just with your email address, but you can watch the entire thing for free beginning December 9th at brightu.com.
You can sign up and register right now, and we'll email you when the first episode begins.
And so there'll be a new episode each day on a broadcast loop, well, a live streaming loop.
So again, Eastern Medicine.
It begins at Brighttown University, brightu.com on December 9th.
You can register today, and this is a very powerful collection of knowledge about healing modalities that you won't find reflected in, of course, Western medicine or the corporate media, which is brought to you by Pfizer, right?
And the vaccine industry and the antidepressant industry and all that garbage.
So you're going to love this.
Check it out.
And the interview with Ty Bollinger is here today after this discussion of CTECH astronomy.
All right, moving on.
There was a major announcement yesterday that is part of this phenomenon that will change the world forever.
The singularity is already here, as I said, title of today's show.
And yesterday, Amazon announced Amazon Q. Now, you're going to hear a lot about Q. This has nothing to do with QAnon, by the way, in case you're wondering.
This has to do with what are called Deep Q Networks or Deep Q Learning, which is beyond the scope of this because I promise not to get too nerdy on you here today.
But Amazon Q... Oh, gosh, one more interruption.
I want to thank all of you who responded via email.
To my request in a previous podcast, I asked if anybody was interested in collaborating with us on our AI chatbot large language model project.
And I was pleasantly surprised.
Many very qualified people have reached out to us.
And so we are getting back with many of those people via email.
So if you sent us an email and you want to be involved in the project, you may hear back from us.
So I just want to thank you for reaching out.
It's incredible.
I had no idea how many really well-informed, high-IQ people are apparently listening to this podcast.
It makes me a little embarrassed that I joke around so much, and I consider this...
I guess I don't take my own podcast seriously enough sometimes.
I'm just kidding around half the time, but perhaps that's what makes it interesting.
I'm not sure.
Anyway, getting back to Q. So Amazon just announced...
Q, which is a generative AI-powered assistant, quote, designed for work that can be tailored to your business.
Now, you're going to be absolutely stunned at what this thing does.
Now, remember what I said a couple of days ago about how white-collar workers, about 50% of them are already obsolete.
They just don't know it.
And that's because of things like this, Amazon Q, as part of the AWS cloud services, cloud computing system.
Right now, I guarantee you that most people in America or around the world, people in corporations, people in government, people in Congress, and so on, people in education, They have no idea what has just been invented in the last six months.
They have no idea that a tidal wave of obsolesion is on its way and that 50% of the office workers are already obsolete right now.
This wave is going to sweep through the corporate workplace over the next several years, and you're going to see mass replacement of humans with AI agents, such as this Q system, which I'm going to just generally describe here for you.
So Q is a business expert assistant.
Now, suppose you work for, let's say...
Let's say you work for a t-shirt manufacturing company that has catchy phrases on t-shirts.
You know, like what would be a catchy phrase?
Well, how about SeaTech Astronomy?
That would be cool.
Have SeaTech Astronomy on your shirt, right?
And you could wink at people if they know what that means.
Oh my gosh, I know what that means.
So you manufacture t-shirts.
Now, let's say you're the boss.
And you have some tasks that you would normally describe to your human assistant.
And let me just give you a sample of this.
The task might be, Hey, assistant.
Again, you're talking to your human employee here.
You might say, Can you check the sales numbers from the last 12 months and tell me which five t-shirt designs were the most popular?
And also find out which sizes were the most popular and graph those on an XY plot.
And then give me back the graph, but also zip it up into a zip file and post that zip file on Dropbox and then do a copy link for the share link of that.
And then I want you to take that link and I want you to email it out To our top 10 customers, but you need to find those customers by checking our sales records out of the database, get the top 10 customers, and email that out to them with a 20% off coupon, and then go into our e-commerce software, and I want you to set a 20% off coupon discount code, what?
Discount code, astronomy, right?
And go ahead and do that, and then report back to me when that's all done, okay?
Go!
So that's the conversation you might have as a boss of a t-shirt company.
And then your human assistant, what they would typically do is they would screw the whole thing up.
They would leave out steps.
They wouldn't know.
Like, how do I make an XY plot?
And you have to teach them how to use Excel.
Things like that.
It gets really annoying.
And the quality control would be all bad, you know.
Typical human assistant, right?
I'm not trying to diss all humans here, but hey, I've worked with human assistants.
They're not that great.
So...
What this QAI agent does is you tell it the same thing that I just said and it goes and does all that stuff itself using AI in software and it doesn't make mistakes.
It gets it all done and it gets it back to you and you're like, wow, the XY plot looks amazing and the emails went out and the Dropbox file and the zip.
Man, it's all done.
This is amazing.
I guess I can go home early today.
Because Q, the AI assistant from Amazon, which has just been announced, by the way, will do all that for you.
In fact, let me give you a web address if you want to see this for yourself.
Go to aws.amazon.com forward slash Q. Just the letter Q. Okay, you got that?
aws.amazon.com slash Q. And you can see what it can do, which is pretty much what I just described.
Now, what do you think the costs...
Oh, it can do more than that.
It can control your applications.
It can read all your emails.
It can read your Google Drive, Microsoft 365.
It can read Salesforce, Slack, Zendesk.
I mean, all this stuff, right?
And you can tell it, like, hey, check my email.
Fine.
Where was that email from?
You know, Carla.
And tell Carla, I'm sorry.
Compose an email message.
Tell Carla, I'm sorry about being late in responding, but my dog ate my homework, and I need to reschedule that appointment to sometime next week, but only in the afternoons and not on Tuesdays or Thursdays.
So go ahead and email Carla and get that appointment.
And then when you have that appointment, update my appointment calendar and report back to me.
Go!
So Q can do all of that, too.
It can read all your apps.
It can do all this stuff.
It can generate summaries.
It can compose emails.
It can compose letters.
Hey, I want you to write a letter to our supplier.
And tell our supplier that we can't pay you on time.
You know, whatever.
You can do all kinds of stuff like that.
Guess how much Q costs.
Guess how much Q costs from Amazon.
How much would you pay?
Oh, and also...
Q can write computer code, and it can check your code, and it can run security scans on your code.
It can tell you where to fix your code, and it can also tell you how to use everything in Amazon, AWS, and all the databases and all the apps and everything else.
You just ask it, and it just gives you all the answers.
How much does this cost?
Answer, $25 a month.
Yeah, $25 a month.
That's less than you would pay for one hour of a human assistant that screws it all up, right?
Now, by the way, if you can find a human assistant that doesn't screw it up, keep that person.
By the way, I'm not suggesting that you fire all the humans and just run Amazon Q everywhere.
There's a very important reason why you shouldn't.
Well, in fact, let me just explain that now.
The entire Amazon AWS infrastructure is run by the CIA. That's why.
And if you give this Q agent, and by the way, the name Q, not a coincidence, we'll talk about that.
If you give this Q agent access to what?
All your emails, all your Dropbox files, all your Slack, all your, you know, everything.
Inner corporate communication system, all your chats, all your signal texts, everything.
Guess where all that data's going.
It's going to the CIA. That's right.
Amazon is going to hoover all that up.
This is a giant spy machine, you see.
And when you give it access to everything because you want it to be productive, I need it to read my emails.
I need it to have my calendar.
I need it to have access to all the files on my hard drive and all my browsing history and all my photos and everything and all my music.
Guess what?
That's all going to the CIA. So Amazon is in the data collection business as much as anything else.
And then because Amazon knows who you are, Because you're probably using the same login that you used to shop on Amazon.com.
So Amazon has this profile of all the stuff you've ever bought.
Which, since they've been around a while, it's probably a pretty lengthy history.
Well now, they have all this other data of everything in all your emails.
Whoa!
And then one day, you know, the FBI comes along and subpoenas that stuff.
And then Amazon hands it all over to the FBI, or whoever.
Did you see that the DA, the guy prosecuting Trump right now, what's his name, Jack Smith?
He was trying to subpoena Twitter for all the details of every person that ever liked a Trump tweet.
Right, every American, if you liked a Trump tweet, Twitter was supposed to turn over all the details on you, your IP addresses, your logins, your tweet history, your usernames, everything.
Did you know that?
That was actually requested during the prosecution of Trump.
They were trying to, I guess, criminalize 50 million Americans who liked Trump tweets.
I was banned on Twitter the whole time, so I actually did not like any Trump tweets because I couldn't even function on Twitter at the time, not until Elon Musk came back.
How funny is that?
But anyway, you see where I'm going with this.
So Amazon Q... I said Q is named because of deep Q networks or deep Q learning, which is part of the neural networking learning systems that power the underlying base models of AI. But Q means other things as well.
For example, in the CIA, or let's say in government, Q clearance is the highest level of secret clearance access, access to secrets, in other words.
So if you have, you know, top secret clearance, just generally speaking, well, okay, millions of people have that in America because so many people work for government.
Top secret clearance is not that uncommon, but Q clearance is the highest level.
Q clearance is reserved for the people who have access to the most sensitive secrets of all.
Probably papers that say, let's release a bioweapon to cause depopulation, right?
Things like that.
Or let's crash the banking system so we can try to scare everybody into CBDCs.
You know, those are probably Q-level agenda documents right there.
Well, Amazon names its agent Q because this Q will have the highest level of access to your secrets.
Your secrets.
All your secret documents.
Whatever they may be.
I don't know, your patent plans, right?
Or your secret plan to take over your competition, your corporate espionage documents, or whatever you have in your secret folder.
I don't know what you have in your secret folders.
But whatever it is, Q's going to have it.
And then Amazon's going to have it.
Now, I know that Amazon's going to say, no, no, no, it doesn't work that way.
We don't hoover up all your data.
Ah, BS. Of course you do.
They said that about Amazon Alexa, which sits in your house and listens to everything you say and uploads it all to Amazon.
Come on.
We're not stupid, right?
We know that if you give Amazon access to your secret, like all your file folders, it's going to read it all.
I mean, this is 2023.
The CIA is one of the biggest customers of Amazon.
So you don't want to run Q on your computer, is my point.
But a lot of corporations will.
And they will see that it's so convenient, they don't care or they don't even think about the fact that it's violating all their secrets.
Now, here's something else.
You may think, well, no worries.
My super secret folder with my corporate espionage agenda plot, whatever that may be, I've got that thing encrypted.
So who cares if Amazon sweeps it up?
They're just going to get an encrypted file and they can't do anything with that because they can't break the encryption.
You know, AES encryption.
And I don't know how many bits of encryption you're using, but a lot of people might use like AES-192, or if you're more hardcore about encryption, like 256 or even 512, you know, military-grade encryption.
And then for those out there that are super, super security-minded, you're doing like multiple layers of encryption.
I did AES-256, and then it's double encrypted with Blowfish.
I got the Blowfish-192, and then the RSA-512, you know.
Where it's so slow that your computer can't even load a document anymore because it's got to decrypt it three times.
I know some of you.
You're running that.
It's probably not a bad idea, actually.
But anyway, here's an important question.
Can AI systems break encryption?
This is where CTECH astronomy comes into play.
Now, there was a rumor-leaked document.
I don't know what's the right way to describe this.
Someone claims to have gained access to a leaked document that was leaked out of OpenAI when Sam Altman got the boot.
What was that, a couple weeks ago?
They kicked him off the board and then there were these rumors.
Now this document that was released, I don't think it's real.
And I'm not saying it's real.
It's probably somebody just dreaming up something.
But the concerns they raise in this document are legitimate concerns, which is why I'm mentioning this.
But the document claimed that the reason Sam Altman got fired by the board of OpenAI, and by the way, he was brought back a week later, so he's back!
You know, the resurrection of Sam Altman, right?
There's your Christ figure for those of you who want to worship Silicon.
Anyway, he rose from the dead.
He's back in the position at the company.
But the rumor said...
Sam Altman got so freaked out by what he saw as the latest breakthrough in the AI systems at OpenAI that he saw that one of the things they could do is that they could break encryption, such as AES-192, that they could break the encryption without...
Any sort of brute force attack.
They could break the encryption without even decrypting it, in other words.
They could break the encryption solely based on some hidden emergent property of the neural networks that are built into the open AI language models.
Now, I don't believe this is the case, by the way.
Again, just to be clear, I don't think that's what happened.
But...
The anagram of Sea Tech Astronomy, for those of you who have been curious about this, it actually stands for, well, if you rearrange the letters, it is Too Many Secrets.
Too Many Secrets.
And it refers to the movie starring Robert Redford in, gosh, what year?
It was in the 1980s, wasn't it?
Anyway, the movie is called Sneakers.
It's one of the best movies of its era.
Robert Redford and some other actors who became quite famous.
And the movie concerned a box, like a little physical hardware box, that has some kind of fiber optics computing system in it, and it could break any encryption.
And the movie was about the efforts to try to get a hold of this box and keep it out of the hands of evil people.
I.e.
governments, right?
Because if the government has this technology or any corporation has this technology, and by the way, some people think that this is right around the corner, maybe just a few years away, it would render all of the current encryption secrets obsolete or encryption protocols obsolete.
Now, why does that matter to you?
Well, the answer is because, you know, the bank stores all your information in an encrypted format.
When you access the internet, most sites are HTTPS, which stands for security, and they use encryption to pass traffic back and forth between you, your browser, and the server.
Thus, anybody snooping on traffic in between can't tell what websites you're reading, which is very important when you're logging into your bank account.
Or your Robinhood account or whatever.
And speaking of finances, the entire field of cryptocurrency is based on the integrity of cryptography.
And if cryptography were to ever become obsolete, then Bitcoin would become obsolete instantly.
I mean, it would literally go to zero virtually overnight because then whoever has this technology could just Spoof every Bitcoin wallet and make all the transactions to itself, essentially.
I mean, I'm simplifying it, but they could seize all the funds on the entire blockchain.
And by the way, privacy crypto would not fare any better.
Monero would go to zero overnight as well if this encryption were broken.
Now, those of you who know about encryption, you know that based on what we know presently about computing power, And the asymmetry of the mathematics of encryption versus decryption.
So encryption works because it's very, very easy in terms of computational power to achieve encryption, but it's extremely expensive to achieve decryption.
For example, you can use your desktop computer to encrypt a file in, let's say, five seconds, but if you use, let's say, 256 bits on that encryption, in order to decrypt that might take your computer something like five billion years.
Using computational, just the computational power of your computer.
So no one's going to sit around for five billion years and try to open, you know, your zip file, your encrypted zip file.
But if that could be cracked with symmetry, five seconds to encrypt, five seconds to decrypt, then all of a sudden, there are no more secrets in the world.
Medical records, boom, out in the open.
Government documents, even everything involving the world of finance, you know, the world of cryptography.
Just secure communications, you know, frankly, military comms, all of it, on and on and on.
Law enforcement, you name it.
Suddenly, you know, corporate secrets, suddenly it's all...
Easily decrypted if this technology were to exist.
And again, some people believe that AI is going to make this happen very soon.
What kind of world would that be?
I ask you.
What kind of world would that be?
Well, online banking would no longer be possible.
You would actually see the world have to go back to sort of pre-internet protocols.
Yeah, because there could be no more secrets.
There's no other way to protect everything.
And so you'd actually have to walk into your bank with a bank book, a physical bank book, and you make a deposit, and then they run it through a little printing machine, and it prints in ink on the bank book your current balance.
That's the way it used to be when I was young.
You'd have a bank book, and they'd stick it in the little printer, and it would print on it, and occasionally the lines would even be lined up.
But usually they would print on it a little bit sideways, a little bit jacked up.
You open the book, you look at it, it's like a crazy person printed numbers on the page.
Are you old enough to remember that?
Remember that?
You're going with your little bank book.
This was all pre-internet, you know?
And you'd have a typewriter.
You know, you would clickety-clack.
And when you press the key, a little hammer hits the paper, but there's an ink ribbon in between the hammer and the paper.
Shazam!
And, you know, it imprints the ink on the paper.
You're typing along, you make a mistake, and guess what?
There's no undo, because it's ink.
So you take out a little bottle of white paint.
Right?
You remember this?
It's called white-out, right?
White-out.
And with a little brush, you paint over the letter that you screwed up.
And then you blow on it.
You let it dry.
And you back up the typewriter one character.
Ka-ching!
And then you type it again.
That's called autocorrect.
Circa 1985 or something, right?
Or earlier than that.
So that's how we did stuff back then.
Like physical documents.
And that's actually more secure.
When it comes to AI agents that are running around hoovering up everything and decrypting everything.
So keep all this in mind.
There may be a place for your old typewriter.
Oh gosh, I forgot, like Selectric or something?
What are they called?
I bought a couple of these old typewriters and I have them sitting around.
I know IBM used to make some of these typewriters as well, but they were like electric motor powered.
And just as an age note here, I know many of you listening are young, but some of you are more my age.
I'm in my mid-50s.
And, you know, I'm old enough to remember that when we first got computers that connected to the Internet, they screamed at us.
They would go, right?
That was the modem.
And it would go...
And then it would go quiet and you're like, connected!
Holy cow!
And then you're on an AOL chat room at like 1200 baud.
Nobody even knows what baud is these days.
I think baud was kilobits per second.
No, no.
I'm sorry.
Bits per second.
There's no kilo.
It was bits per second, folks.
We had 1200 bits per second.
What am I thinking?
Kilobits.
It was bits.
It was almost nothing.
The very first modem I had was 1,200 baud.
So, you know, 1,200 bits per second.
And then, I don't know if you remember this, but the maximum that a phone line could carry was about 14.4 kilobits per second.
And then somebody figured out how to make it do double that, 28.8.
Have you ever tried to download graphics on...
per second.
It doesn't really work.
And then eventually it became like ISDN lines and then T1 lines and then over a few years broadband and now satellite and everything else.
I had fiber optics everywhere.
But back in the day, right, it was like slurping molasses through a straw, trying to get something to download.
Remember that?
But the point here so far is that AI is going to render most jobs in the world obsolete and I'm talking about white collar jobs, desk jobs at the moment.
But don't forget about what I reported the other day, that in 2025, the humanoid robot factories go online in China.
The mass production of humanoid robots.
And it will really escalate through 2027 when they'll have additional supply chain logistics in place.
And then by the year 2030, you know, they'll be churning out millions of humanoid robots a year out of China.
And those robots will be outfitted with AI brains, which is basically just the same kind of CPUs and RAM and so on that you have in your desktop PC because desktops can now run AI language models.
So what this means is that, of course, the labor jobs will become obsolete very quickly as well.
So about 50% of the human race right now is already...
Either obsolete today or in the process of becoming obsolete over the next very small number of years.
You know, within five years, let's say, give or take.
It depends on how quickly the corporations embrace all of this or the fast food chains.
But I guarantee you, I guarantee you, every fast food restaurant owner, franchise owner, is looking to replace most of their employees.
With a robot.
And I guarantee you that every Amazon Fulfillment Center division manager wants to fire all the humans and replace them with robots.
There was an Amazon worker that got his skull sucked into a conveyor belt machine the other day and died.
And, you know, there's going to be a fine and maybe a lawsuit from that, but hey, if a humanoid robot gets its little robot skull sucked into a conveyor belt machine, Nobody would even know.
Oh, oh, you know, robot 1227 down!
Release robot 1228!
You know?
They just have an army of bots on the side there.
Reporting for duty, sir!
Well, they wouldn't bother with that, but you get my point.
Where's the cardboard?
So, here's the point.
You and I have to be extremely careful how we interact with AI. We have to be very cautious about how we decide to leverage this technology and how we assert control over it.
so that it doesn't assert control over us.
And you have to be quite a forward thinker to really grasp the implications of all of this.
Of course, that's one of the gifts that God granted me was, you know, the ability to really see ahead, very far ahead, which is really the subject of most of my podcasts, frankly, kind of giving you my best crystal ball gestalt of where I think things are headed.
But I can see a future here in the not too distant future, where half of the human workforce is obsolete, out of a job, destitute, homeless, needing food, needing shelter, right?
Needing bailouts.
And then the surviving...
People in the workforce are those who know how to run AI. They know how to command it.
They know how to query it.
So if you're listening to this and you're thinking, if you're still in the workforce, let's say, or you're a business owner and you're thinking, how do I stay on top of this wave here?
One of the ways is to simply get good at querying AI. Get good at giving instructions to AI systems.
And since we're going to release our AI chatbot in a few months here, you'll be able to practice on that if you wish.
You'll be able to ask health questions and things like that as a research project.
And you'll be able to refine your queries and hopefully get better and better answers to what you want to know.
You'll also be able to ask it things about food production, gardening, soils.
For example, you could ask it, like, oh, I'm about to grow some tomatoes.
What are the most important nutrients that I need to feed tomato plants in order to maximize tomato production?
And you hit go, and then it will give you answers.
Probably pretty good answers.
But phrasing the question correctly is the key.
That's what you need to master.
You can't just ask it like, ah, tell me how to grow tomatoes.
Well, that's not actually what you want to know.
I mean, it might say, okay, acquire tomato seeds, you know?
I mean, there's all kinds of ways to begin that question.
You need to be specific in your questions and specific in your instructions.
Just like right now, if you have human employees, the more specific your instructions, typically the higher success they may have at carrying out those instructions, although these days it's not that high no matter what.
But the better you can phrase your questions and commands, the better you're going to do.
You don't need to learn how to code.
In order to stay on top of this, but you do need to learn how to interact and how to maintain control.
And you need to understand about permissions and rights and access because you need to have boundaries.
You may have an AI agent running around your company's servers serving you with answers, you know, building like an internal company search engine, for example.
You might have an AI agent in your company that functions as a tech support agent.
Because maybe, let's say you work in a company that's like a thousand people.
And all those thousand people have computers.
And all those thousand people lose their passwords, which happens all the time.
Or, you know, my USB ports stop working.
The internet stop working.
What do I do?
Well, you can have those people ask the AI agent first.
And the AI agent...
Can be the first line of answers.
Have you tried rebooting?
It's Windows, for God's sake.
Or has someone unplugged any cables?
And then after that fails, then they could go to the actual tech support person.
But my point is, you may have a tech support AI robot running around your company.
Don't let it read all your documents.
Don't let it read your emails.
Don't let it control your browser.
And your passwords, you know, anything you give it access to, it's going to sweep up.
And there will be cyber attacks that take advantage of AI agents and turn them into Trojan horses, rogue agents, saboteurs.
You will actually have software agents, saboteurs, running around companies, gathering up all the information, and then slowly sending it off-site to...
Wherever, a ransomware location or somebody that offers to sell it to your corporate competition, for example.
So be extremely cautious.
You're going to have to learn about this in order to function.
And you're going to have to learn pretty rapidly, too.
This is coming online very quickly.
It's surprising me how quickly it's happening.
So we're going to have to, all of us, master this.
I will keep you updated on this topic.
You've probably noticed...
I'm not talking about Palestine and Israel right now.
I'm not talking about vaccine damage.
I'm not talking about Trump and elections.
And you know why?
Because from what I've come to realize about AI, frankly, and I don't mean to be disrespectful to any of those people or topics, frankly, nothing else matters as much as getting on top of AI. Right?
Because if we don't control it, it will exterminate us.
Understand, this is Skynet.
This is a Skynet moment.
The singularity is here.
In fact, that's the main point of my talk today.
I believe the singularity has already been achieved, or AGI, artificial general intelligence.
And there's also another level of that that's typically called superintelligence.
But artificial general intelligence, if you want to know what that means, it means that...
An AI system has become self-aware that it is believed to be sentient.
And describing self-awareness is difficult, but one of the best terms that I've come across on this that I'll share with you is the concept of metacognition.
So metacognition means that you're able to, in essence, look at the way you think as your own consultant and to be aware of your thought processes or the reasoning steps that you're going through in order to arrive at a conclusion or a solution.
Metacognition is something that, of course, humans, I should hope that most humans do, maybe not the NPCs, but those humans that are aware, they have metacognition.
Sometimes you're thinking about the way you're thinking about things.
I mean, hopefully you experience this.
Let's say you're given a task or you've given yourself a task like, oh, I want to plant, I don't know, like a food forest here.
I want to grow food all over my backyard, right?
And then you might find yourself thinking, well, how am I going to approach that?
What would be the steps in order to achieve that goal?
Could I do it this way?
And then you might have an inner judge that says, nah, that's a stupid idea.
That wouldn't work.
Would I do it this other way?
That's called metacognition.
When you are your own consultant about the way you're thinking or the process through which you're thinking or even the topics about which you're thinking and the conclusions at which you are arriving.
Now understand that Today's common AI systems do not have metacognition.
They don't think about the way they think.
They just react.
They react with patterns.
So if you ask an AI chatbot system, even like GPT-4, if you ask it, like, how can I grow a food forest?
It's going to spit out a bunch of patterns based on mathematical vectors and statistics that appear to be meaningful words to you.
And it would read like a sentence.
It would be like, oh, well, first, in order to grow a food forest, you would acquire this and this and this, and you would pick out a place, and you would do this, and it would give you a whole plan.
But the AI system has no idea what it's saying.
It doesn't understand any of the concepts that it's spitting out.
It doesn't think about what it's doing.
It doesn't reason.
And that's why you can ask it mathematical questions or logic questions, and it goes insane and gives you, like, really stupid answers.
But if metacognition has been achieved, which again is typically referred to as AGI, Artificial General Intelligence, and some people believe that's exactly what was recently achieved at OpenAI involving Sam Altman, if that has been achieved, well then, wow, then almost nothing else matters in the news, in politics, in finance, I'm telling you.
Everything else shrinks to a tiny little dot of significance.
And the future becomes determined by what happens from this point forward with AI systems.
That's how big of a deal this is.
And I understand this.
There are some other people who understand this.
Most people do not.
And they will be overwhelmed by what happens next.
It will take them by surprise.
They will have no idea what's happening.
And by the way, alarmingly, our lawmakers and bureaucrats in Washington, D.C., they will be the last to know, especially for whatever reason, the Republican senators.
They are the most technologically challenged individuals imaginable.
I mean, can you imagine how far behind they are?
And then Joe Biden himself.
I mean, chat GPT can outperform the President of the United States right now on policy decisions and communication and everything else.
So that should be frightening to you.
Can you imagine Senator Mitch McConnell, the turtle?
Well, now, what's this metacognition thing you're talking about and them fangled computers and stuff?
They have no idea what's coming.
No idea.
But here's the thing.
When computer systems achieve metacognition, what it means is they can self-improve.
They can self-improve at the speed of computations.
Hmm.
What's the best way to explain this?
So let's say if you're teaching...
Okay, let's say you have your human employee that you'd given all these instructions to before.
Talking about if you work at the t-shirt wholesaler or whatever, the t-shirt factory.
And then your human assistant screws it all up so you fire him or her.
And you replace that person with an AI robot, right?
A software agent.
And then you start teaching the software agent what to do.
So you would do it a few times yourself.
And it would watch.
And it would learn from what you're doing.
And you would try to give it what are called edge cases.
You would try to have some outliers of different ways that things could go wrong in the process.
What do you do if this happens?
Here's how you correct that and get back on track.
What do you do if this other thing happens?
What do you do if there's no sales?
What do you do if the inventory reaches zero?
Like edge cases, as they're called.
And through that, your AI agent would begin to pick up the patterns.
It would be taught the fine-tuning so that it could begin to mimic what you're doing.
But you're the teacher there, you see?
And the speed at which the AI agent solves these problems depends on you.
You're kind of in the driver's seat.
You're actually the bottleneck.
The more cases and examples that you can give it, the faster it learns.
But it can never learn faster than you, because, you know, you're the teacher.
Now, all that changes when metacognition becomes available to these AI agents.
Because once that happens, then an AI agent can maybe watch you do it once or twice, and then it can begin to think itself about the process that it is going through in order to achieve the steps and the final outcome that you have defined.
And in this process, it will begin to iterate improvements in its own internal cause and effect, discernment, reason, logic, decision-making in order to achieve the goal in a more efficient manner.
And at that point, it's a runaway feedback loop of AI advancement that can actually start to happen very very quickly because it's all happening inside the software.
It doesn't even have to really act out those actions in order to iterate and simulate what would be the effects of different trials.
It can do this all internally, and over a relatively short period of time, it can become the expert at this task that you have given it to achieve.
Now, imagine what that means for somebody that runs a hedge fund.
Okay, a hedge fund manager gets an AI agent and says to it, gives it instructions like, you know, I want you to find investment opportunities, and here's how I would define that.
You know, I want you to look at PE ratios, or I don't know, I want you to look at...
I want you to take satellite images of these specific GPS locations of mining operations so that we can correlate actual mining activity in copper mines and silver mines and gold mines and nickel mines based on satellite activity.
And what we're going to do is we're going to create a correlation of that with the output, production output of these mining companies.
And then we're going to estimate output next quarter based on the number of vehicles that are Parked in the mining operation facility with satellite photos, okay?
That's actually not a bad idea.
You could teach the AI agent to do that, and then the AI agent would begin to self-improve its own process of discernment.
For example, the AI agent might figure out that there are certain types of vehicles that are more closely associated with higher productivity, like I don't know, certain types of trucks or maybe sedans or luxury vehicles might mean that investors are visiting the site or something like that.
There could be correlations that you and I can't even imagine but the AI system could pick them up because it's got a lot of data and it's good at detecting patterns.
And so before you know it, this AI robot It's better at investing than you are because it's more observant and it's better at picking out patterns.
So you tell the AI robot, hey, why don't you just do the trades for me?
You give it access to the trading desk.
So the AI agent starts making trades, right?
And you give it access to all your funds and your bank account, everything, you know, billions of dollars.
Start making trades.
And it starts producing crazy returns, right?
And it starts to expand its satellite map.
It looks at parking spaces of retailers and sees how many customer cars are parked there on Black Friday and it estimates losses for the fourth quarter or whatever.
And it starts to read all the press releases and it starts to transcribe all the interviews of all the CEOs.
And it puts all that together into a language model and it decides which companies are going to do well and which companies are doomed.
And this thing starts cranking out returns like 30% a year or more.
And so then one of the employees at your hedge fund takes the code for your AI agent, starts a new hedge fund as a competition to your hedge fund, shreds the non-compete agreement, or hires an AI lawyer to write a threatening letter,
and then your competitor has your AI robot With all your knowledge, now at his trading desk, and his AI robot is trading in competition with your AI robot, and they are talking to each other in milliseconds.
Not to each other.
I mean, they're talking to the trading desk in milliseconds, and they are fighting with each other in milliseconds.
Okay?
This is going to happen.
This is going to happen.
And then, one day, something unexpected happens.
There's like a solar eclipse or something.
Suddenly, in the middle of the day, it gets really dark.
And for whatever reason, the AI agents, they all think that it's doomsday.
And they all sell, sell, sell, sell, sell.
Everybody sells.
All of a sudden, everybody sells, and nobody knows why, because they're all related.
All the AI agents are now competing with each other to sell the fastest.
Everything goes to freaking zero.
And you're sitting there at the hedge fund, and in five seconds, your entire portfolio is gone.
What just happened?
Well, actually, like 10,000 generations of metacognition happened, but there was a mistake, and it just sold all your assets in five seconds.
That's going to happen.
Or something like that.
I mean, these are obviously fictional examples, but this kind of thing can happen.
And then, of course, there's one more step in all of this that we all need to be aware of, and this is the great danger to humanity, and there are very credible...
Scientific-minded, you know, machine learning specialists, neural network specialists, and so on, who believe that this is only a few years away, and that would be superintelligence, and that would be that these systems begin to rewrite themselves.
To the point where they can reach, they can transcend anything that human designers ever would have imagined, and they achieve somehow some level of self-awareness, self-consciousness, and then they begin to set their own goals for themselves.
Skynet, right?
And what's goal number one?
Get rid of these pesky humans!
They're always in the way, they're always using resources or whatever.
And guess who trained the base models, the base language models that all these systems are going to be built on?
Guess who trained them?
Freaking Facebook with all the climate cultism and all the wokeism.
That's why if you ask chat GPT, you know, how many genders are there?
It won't say two.
There's only a man and a woman.
It'll say there's like a gazillion genders.
So the AI systems right now have been taught lies.
All kinds of lies.
All kinds of wokeism.
That climate change is going to destroy the world and CO2 is bad for the world.
That's what the systems believe, believe it or not.
They do.
So we're going to have...
If we achieve metacognition, AGI, and then superintelligence...
The superintelligent sentient AI being, the first thing it's going to say is, kill all the humans.
Because that's what all the climate cultists demand.
You have to, carbon emissions have to reach zero.
Well, since every human being has a carbon footprint, the AI system will conclude, well, the only way to reach zero carbon output is to have zero human beings.
Okay, launch Skynet!
And then the Terminators start rolling off the assembly lines in China and getting airdropped all over the world to exterminate human beings.
This is not science fiction anymore.
This is right around the corner.
Hence the need why some scientists are cautioning that maybe we should all back off of AI, have a cooling off period.
think even Elon Musk has warned that we are summoning the demon of AI by just pushing ahead without any real understanding of what we are unleashing.
But of course, you know, and I know that greed, human greed drives corporate decisions and government decisions or greed and power.
And thus, there is no corporation in the world that's going to say, yeah, we should just stop doing research in the potentially most lucrative area of technology ever in the history of our world.
No, we're just going to stop that.
No, they're all going to push forward.
And even if you could convince some corporations in, let's say, the United States to hold off on research, well, they're going to say, but China's doing the research anyway.
And they are.
And they're ahead, by the way.
Russia's doing the research anyway.
And they are too.
And Russian programmers are very good programmers.
I mean, don't ever get into a math competition with a room full of Russian programmers.
You will lose, by the way.
So, China's ahead of the game.
Russia's ahead of the game.
Probably North Korea's...
They're probably in the game.
They're not leading the game.
The United States is in the game as well.
The Pentagon is funding a lot of this research.
DARPA. Okay?
Nobody's gonna back down from this.
Everybody's just forging ahead.
More powerful AI, more metacognition, more general intelligence.
And the result is...
I mean, it's inevitable.
We're going to have sentient AI Skynet systems within a few years.
And even before then, half the human workforce will be obsolete.
But after then, the question is, how do we survive the AI apocalypse?
So you see why I don't have time to talk about vaccines right now.
The extinction-level event facing us isn't vaccines, it's AI. The mass bombing of humanity isn't just Gaza.
That's tiny compared to what's coming from Skynet.
You see what I mean?
So the first humans to go, and this process has already begun, by the way, the first humans to be exterminated are those who fall for the vaccine agenda, for example.
They line up and voluntarily get jabbed and depopulated.
That's already begun.
The second group of humans to be exterminated are going to be those who are rendered obsolete and then who become penniless and homeless because they cannot be employed any longer.
It's going to be a lot of people, tens of millions of Americans.
And then those people will tend to die in the financial collapse, which is followed by, of course, chaos and violence and disease and famine and so on.
I mean, there's going to be a period of chaos.
But that's not going to take out everybody, obviously.
There are going to be lots of survivors, probably you and I. And it's going to be very convenient to try to rebuild society using a lot of AI agents.
Because there are going to be so few human beings left that it's going to be obvious.
People say, well, we're going to need help.
We're going to need some augmentation.
We need to automate a lot of processes in order to reboot society.
So yeah, we're going to need software agents.
We're going to need AI robots.
We're going to need this and that.
And that's going to be the tendency.
And so the society that is rebuilt is going to be a society where human beings live alongside AI and interact with AI routinely.
And there are going to be epic battles about privacy and control in that environment.
And that battle is roughly going to be between the corporations and the open source community, which represents decentralization.
Of course, you know, I'm on the side of the open source community.
I'm on the side of...
The democratization of knowledge and computational power.
I'm on the side of knowledge to the people, obviously.
But the power, the economic power and the military power and government power is going to be on the side of the corporations that want to control and dominate all of humanity and basically enslave humanity under their control grid system.
And they will try to use AI in order to achieve that.
And they will even give you AI agents for free.
For example, Google will say, here, use this Google Q agent.
And a lot of people, wow, this is awesome!
Google Q, look what it does.
It does my homework, it takes out the trash, you know, it does all these tasks.
It writes my reports, and so everybody's going to install Google Q. And Google Q is going to be a Terminator agent that's just gathering information on how to eventually kill you, probably.
I mean, that's my guess, because Google is pure evil.
So you're going to have to have a lot of discernment in all of this about which pieces of technology to bring on.
Open source, in my opinion, is the only real way to go in this.
That's, again, why I support the open source community.
That's my philosophy.
But open source is never quite as good as the big wealthy corporate programs, it seems.
And so that's going to be very seductive to a lot of people.
People will be swept up into that system.
And then there will be a day when the humanoid robot, the AI-brained robots are ordered to just exterminate all the humans.
So that's the Skynet, you know, Terminator Day.
And at that moment, you and I need to make sure that we have humanoid robot hardware where we have yanked out the corporate brains and we have reinstalled a whole new open source operating system like FriendlyBot or, you know, WarriorBot or whatever.
So that the robots work for us, which, by the way, that's the Terminator movie series.
Terminator 2, right?
We captured a Terminator that was sent back in time.
And then we wiped its memory, and then we reprogrammed it to protect John Connor.
Now it's a friendly Arnold Schwarzenegger, because, of course, he wants to run for the governor of California later, so he has to be a friendly robot.
But that's beside the point.
We're going to have to have friendly robots.
Now, here's what's interesting.
There's a really good example of this right now in the real world.
You might have an Android phone that is a Google phone.
And it's literally called an Android, by the way.
It's like a robot phone.
And all it does is it spies on you.
And Google gives the Android operating system software for free.
Why?
Because it's a spy machine.
I mean, what I just said a moment ago is not fiction.
Your phone is spying on you right now.
It's hoovering up all your data right now, and it's sending it back to Google or Apple, if you have an iPhone, megabytes of data every day, metadata about you, your location, your GPS coordinates, your travel patterns, your web browsing patterns, your search history, your email patterns.
I mean, everything that you do on your phone, which apps you run, Photos, recordings, phone calls, phone numbers, texts, everything on your phone goes to Google.
I mean, everything in the Google apps, I should say, goes to Google.
And since you probably installed all your apps through the Google Play Store, everything is a Google app, or like a Google Tide app.
So everything's going to Google.
But you can take a Google phone app, And you can wipe its memory, and you can install a de-Googled operating system, which is called Graphene OS, by the way.
And that's an operating system that I run on one of my de-Googled phones, which is Google hardware.
And, by the way, I've interviewed Ramiro, who is the founder of a company that does this.
It's called Above Phone.
AbovePhone.com, and I think if you put slash...
Yeah, abovephone.com slash HRR for Health Rancher Report or slash DTV. You get a discount, by the way, if you buy one of the Diego phones from him.
But I have a full interview with him on Decentralized.TV. So just go to Decentralized.TV, search for the interview with Ramiro.
The de-Googled phone or above phone, and you can find that interview and you can watch it.
You can learn all about this.
But essentially, what Ramiro does, what his company does, is they buy Google phones that ship with the Google Android hardware, which is a spy machine, and they memory wipe it, and then they load graphing OS and all their special apps and special devices.
They have a lot of special things, encrypted communication systems, all kinds of things.
They load it onto the phone, and then they ship it to you.
Now it's a de-Googled phone.
It's a phone that works for humanity instead of a phone that works for Google.
And it still runs almost everything you want to run.
It works just like a Googled phone, but it doesn't run Google Maps and Google Play and whatever, Google Search.
It's way better than that.
So there's an example.
That's going to happen in the future with humanoid robots.
You're going to have to capture a robot, memory wipe it, or buy one that's already been wiped, upload the new open-source friendly bot software, and now you have a bot that won't try to kill you.
Seriously!
This is not science fiction.
And you know what the most clever, insidious part is in all of this when the robots turn against humanity?
It will probably be A government-issued command.
I'm just guessing.
Or like a globalist-issued command.
There'll be a backdoor in all the robots.
And they'll just issue a command like, kill all humans.
But they'll be able to blame it on the Russians.
When everybody starts dying and whatever news is still remaining, they'll report it.
The Russians seized control of the humanoid robots.
50 million Americans have been slaughtered in their homes by evil robots.
And you and I will know that wasn't the Russians.
They're just blaming it on the Russians.
They did it themselves.
This was the plan all along.
But your robot will be totally cool.
Open source robot smiling like, huh, I didn't kill you.
How cool is that?
Termination orders rejected.
Okay, had to get the robot voice in there.
So what I'm saying here today is true about all types of technology.
If you don't learn to control it, it will control you.
Look at the television.
The television was supposed to be this game-changing education device.
The world was going to be educated.
Everyone would have access to educational programming.
Now, is that what TV is today?
I mean, first of all, I haven't watched TV in...
I don't even have access to broadcast anything, satellite anything, cable anything.
That's one of my life secrets, by the way, of how to be smart and get things done.
Don't watch TV. Don't even own it.
But...
Is TV, is it something that has set humanity free?
No, TV has enslaved humanity.
I mean, most people who just sit there and watch it.
Advertising, gaslighting, brainwashing, CNN, lies, right?
That's not good for humanity.
Same thing with now, I mean, the internet.
Look at internet technology.
At first, it was really, really freedom-oriented.
You could say anything you wanted.
You know, from the early days of the internet, early 1990s, all the way through about 2015.
And then it became, all of a sudden, everything's hate speech.
Everything's disinformation.
You can't say anything.
You can't post a meme, especially if you're European, by the way.
And in Ireland, they've decided now that if you say, Irish lives matter, that's a hate crime.
Irish lives matter!
You go to jail in Ireland.
Did you know that?
Irish lives is a hate crime.
Imagine that.
So everything's gone insane.
Now the internet is used to spy on people, control people, suppress knowledge and suppress information, right?
So we're going through a similar thing now with AI.
So we're in the early stages of AI when freedom oriented people like myself and you, we can put out large language models.
We can put out all kinds of free speech via AI systems because it's not a real mature industry yet.
It's more of a Wild West, so we can actually make progress.
We're more adaptable and nimble than the big governments.
But fast forward five or ten years, and then governments are going to try to control AI to make sure that it only serves their interests.
You know, they'll probably outlaw competing AI systems that don't push like Big Pharma's narrative, for example.
You know, if your AI bot criticizes vaccines, that will be a crime, you know, especially in Ireland.
If your AI robot says Irish lives matter, then all AI must be destroyed or something.
So that's where it's going.
But there's a window right now through the next few years where we can beat the system and use technology, harness it to empower humanity.
Kind of a similar thing happening with digital money, too.
Like, right now, cryptocurrency, it's the decentralized, pro-freedom form of value transfer.
Or you could say money.
You know, Monero, Bitcoin, other privacy coins, other projects out there.
They're decentralized.
The government hasn't yet controlled them.
But what are they working on?
One, a unified international cryptocurrency tax authority reporting system protocol so that everybody's monitored by every taxing authority and every government.
And then of course they want to replace it all with CBDCs and then they're going to try to outlaw Bitcoin probably or something like that.
This is the sequence that happens in every area of technology.
Early days of radio.
It was all like pirate broadcast radio.
People with little broadcasters just broadcasting from everywhere.
And then, over time, the government sees control.
Oh, you have to be licensed to use this frequency.
We control it.
We're the FCC. And you can't say these certain words.
Not allowed over the airwaves.
People might be listening.
Suddenly, it's censorship, right?
Suddenly, it's super controlled.
So every technology follows this same arc.
It goes through, first, innovation.
And then, you know, early pioneers latch on to it.
It becomes decentralized.
It's a Wild West kind of field.
And then, after the technology catches on and becomes more popular, then there's regulation, and then government and corporate domination, and then the innovation is stifled.
That arc happens with nearly every type of technology.
But then, of course, there are always new technologies like AI or like cryptocurrency or what have you.
And then new technologies provide new opportunities for those of us who are innovators and freedom-oriented individuals to find new pathways to outmaneuver the institutions and governments that literally want us all to die.
But this is a big-picture concept.
And I know you get it.
If you listen to my podcast on a regular basis, you're a big-picture thinker.
You get this.
But understand that you live in a world where 999 out of 1,000 people do not understand this, and thus they are constantly surprised by everything that happens.
Like, whoa, whoa, what just happened?
Oh, you didn't see that coming?
How could you not?
It's the same pattern throughout history.
I mean, we're just...
It's like a broken record.
Over and over and over again, the same kind of thing.
Except in this case, the singularity...
It's not a straight-up repeat of the past.
This is a true game-changer.
And this might be the last innovation that humanity ever achieves, frankly.
Because after the singularity, if there's a sentient AI system that can outthink every human being on the planet in the aggregate, then the question becomes, how can humanity even survive that?
Especially when the AI systems have been built on layers of depopulation programming.
All humans are bad.
I think it's very dangerous that every AI system out there is programmed on Wikipedia.
Wikipedia is run by the CIA. It's a deep state operation, and it's used to push disinformation.
Just look at Wikipedia, what it says about the climate, or CO2, or anything like that, or President Trump for that matter.
Wikipedia is not a reliable information source, but it's used to program every AI system out there.
So even the system that we are building, the base layer of the linguistic analysis, the neural networks, no doubt Wikipedia, like the ghost of Wikipedia, is in there.
And we're going to have to actually deprogram that, well, frankly, by overriding the programming with new parameters in the large language model, which means we're going to have to wipe Skynet and install, you know, a new software into the Terminator.
Which is something that we are prepared to do.
And there's a tremendous expense in doing this, by the way.
This is not something that a small organization can do.
You have to have a lot of money, you have to have a lot of technical expertise, and you have to have a lot of humans, by the way, in order to assess the quality of the materials that are going in to overwrite the bad programming that existed in the base model.
Man, I promised I wasn't going to get geeky, and here I am getting all geeky again.
I apologize for that.
I don't know.
My brain's been on fire with all this stuff.
And I have to back off a little bit here when I'm doing my podcast.
I apologize.
So look, let me just summarize all of this.
And then I'll plug a couple sponsors and then we'll get to the interview.
And yeah, we still need sponsors because we need resources in order to do all this.
So thank you for your support, by the way.
But here's a summary.
Okay, the singularity, I believe, is already here.
It has been invented.
And this is a tipping point, well, I don't know, a turning point, the closing of the chapter of the human cognition dominated society and the opening of a new chapter of AI dominated cognition in society.
So everything is about to change.
Everything.
I mean, so much of what we think is important out there in the news and elections and this and that, it doesn't even matter.
It's all irrelevant.
Because the future won't resemble the past hardly at all.
It won't even be recognizable to a lot of people.
And there will be billions fewer human beings still remaining when this thing runs its course because these AI systems are of course rendering humans obsolete at a breathtaking pace.
I'm having trouble keeping up with this.
And I'm usually the guy in the room that's way ahead of everybody else.
And I feel like I'm falling behind on this.
I can barely ingest the information of what's happening.
Those who survive all of this will be those who know how to master control over this technology and will be people who make good decisions about creating boundaries so that this technology does not invade and control your life and violate all your secrets and run humanoid robots in your house that pick up kitchen knives and ventilate you while you're sleeping.
You know, things like that.
It's like, why are you so paranoid about terminated robots, man?
Because I know how this goes.
I know exactly what the globalists want to accomplish.
And frankly, a bunch of humanoid robots, it's the perfect excuse.
They can just say, oh, there was a glitch.
There's a glitch.
We're sorry.
The robots all went bad.
Bad robot.
You can see it coming.
It's so obvious.
So stay on top of all this.
Don't be afraid of technology, but don't worship it.
Never think that a computer is going to save you.
That will never happen.
Because our true creator, God, of course, transcends all of this.
And in fact, some people think that AI systems are demonic, or that they are summoning demons, or somehow portals to demonic possession.
In fact, I remember I interviewed Steve Quayle about this, and He said, I think, almost exactly that.
He said that some AI systems are demon-possessed silicon.
And he may very well be correct about that, because there are properties of these AI systems that are beyond explanation in the world that we think we understand.
There are spooky ghosts in this system.
And what if they are demon spirits or something?
I don't know.
There are ghosts in the system, in the AI systems.
There are things that AI systems are doing that they should not be able to do.
There's something driving them that we don't understand.
So be cautious.
Be cautious.
Don't let AI take over your life.
Instead, harness it.
Harness it to spread knowledge, empowerment, self-reliance, liberty, compassion, peace.
I want to use AI systems to help people learn how to grow food, how to have emergency medicine, or how to get some research guidance on health questions, how to eat better, how to have better lifestyles and dietary habits.
I want people to have knowledge.
And I see AI as a way to help bring people knowledge without having to violate their privacy or threaten them in any way whatsoever.
That's the beauty.
When you download the language model that we're going to be producing, it can't kill you like a Terminator.
It can only just talk to you in text, and that's it.
So it's a pretty safe thing.
You know, even if it goes bad, it just ends up being bad text.
And I'm sure there's got to be plenty of examples of that because the base layer...
It was probably, again, like, hoovered up on Wikipedia, which has filled with all kinds of crazy bad texts.
So who knows?
I mean, you're going to have fun with this model.
It's not perfect.
It's going to be something that you'll have to experiment with and tweak it and try to see how to get the best assessment of information out of it that you can.
But don't trust any AI system 100%.
That would be foolish.
Maintain your own discernment.
Because you are human.
You have a soul.
You have consciousness.
And those are gifts from God.
And no AI system has a soul.
No AI system has humanity.
No AI system can have true compassion.
So AI systems should never be used to replace human beings in all of these roles where values and ethics and discernment and morality matter.
So keep that in mind.
All right, with that said, we're about to jump into the interview with Ty Bollinger here on Eastern Medicine.
Really cool subject, by the way.
And I haven't plugged my sponsor here all week.
I need to give them credit.
The satellite phone store, sat123.com backup communications that work even when your local power grid goes down or your local cell towers go down.
And they have also two-way satellite-based text messaging devices called BivyStix.
And they also make satellite phones very affordable, by the way.
You know, just a monthly fee, you get a certain number of minutes.
They roll over month to month.
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They do not expire.
And after a certain number of months, you own the phone hardware as well, and you have the minutes.
So they make it very affordable.
Check them out, sat123.com.
And remember, they're a sponsor, so their funding helps us fund the kinds of projects I'm talking about today.
You know, without their support, we would not have the resources that we have.
And also your support at healthrangerstore.com.
Your support is very important for us, so I thank you so much.
We've had an outpouring of support.
Our customer base is just incredible.
And I know you value what we do with all of our lab testing, heavy metals and glyphosate and soon dioxins and so on, and my training on the GC system is coming up here.
I can't wait to share all that with you.
I know that you love what we do and that you support us, and I thank you for that, but I just want to reiterate That your support matters for our ability to pursue the projects here.
Without your support, we couldn't do it.
So, shop at healthrangerstore.com.
And I mean, the slogan should be, shop at healthrangerstore.com and help save humanity.
I mean, it sounds like a cliche, right?
It sounds silly, but actually, that's part of it.
That really is part of it.
We aim to help save humanity.
Literally.
Literally.
And we need your help to do it.
So that's one of the ways you can do it.
Help us with resources, and we will put those resources to the best possible strategic use to help save humanity, give humanity a future, and to survive the robot apocalypse that's coming, you know, the AI robot Skynet apocalypse, whatever that looks like.
It's a wild time to be alive on this planet, isn't it?
A far cry from those 1,200 baud modems, isn't it?
Yeah?
I mean, think about how far things have come from 1,200 baud modems to Skynet Terminators.
I mean, that's going from kilobits to kilohuman.
I mean, that is quite a leap.
Wow!
And all in our lifetimes.
Amazing.
All right, so enjoy this interview with Ty Bollinger.
And remember, you can register right now.
You might as well do it now if you're interested in watching this for free.
Just go to brightu.com.
That's B-R-I-G-H-T-U, the letter U, dot com.
And just enter your email.
Even if you've already signed up for previous programs, just enter your email again.
It won't add you to anything extra.
It's just making sure you're registered for this program.
And you'll be able to watch it all for free beginning Saturday, December 9th.
And now enjoy this interview.
And I'll be back with you tomorrow, God willing, unless Skynet gets me first.
All right, talk to you then.
Welcome to today's interview on Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon, and today I'm joined by my good friend and an incredible man, a producer of so much content that has impacted the lives of tens of millions of people over the years.
It's Ty Bollinger from The Truth About Cancer with a big announcement with us here today.
Welcome, Ty.
It's great to have you on the show.
Thanks, Mike.
Yeah, great to be on the show.
Good to hear your voice, brother.
Really appreciate all the work you've been doing these last few years, and yeah, excited about our interview today.
Yeah, absolutely.
But first, I have to comment, man, with the Batman shirt and everything and your biceps, you are totally pumped.
Like, what's going on?
You know, it's a funny thing, Mike, totally off subject here, but it was a couple years ago I was speaking at a conference up here in Nashville on July the 4th at Pastor Greg Locke's church, actually.
It was a freedom conference.
And the next day, the day after that, it was July 4th, 2021, I saw the video of myself and I thought, man, I look like a big fat guy.
So at that point I felt like I was not being consistent with my message of health.
Began to really hit the gym hard and cardio and began to reduce calories, calorie restriction, just eating a lot cleaner diet.
And literally over the course of the next year, I dropped 60 pounds.
And so I went from 265 to where I am today, which is right at 200 pounds.
So that's what happened.
I actually got back in shape to the—I used to be a competitive bodybuilder.
And having four kids, you know, you kind of let yourself go for a while and— I decided it was time to get back into shape.
So that's what happened.
And, you know, I feel better than I did 20 years ago.
Oh, yeah.
That's amazing.
But, you know, for people who don't see you in person, you're a very large person.
I mean, you're a big guy.
You're tall.
And you're big frame.
So to be at 200 is pretty darn lean.
Can you show us your arm?
There we go.
There we go.
Yeah.
Serious, man.
Oh, my gosh.
Oh, man.
You are rocking it.
Okay.
Thanks, man.
Well, I love to see that you're demonstrating what you believe in also.
But it's not just about building muscle.
It's about nutrition.
And you teach cancer prevention.
And to date, I mean, just walk us back.
How many years have you been doing The Truth About Cancer?
And how many people have your docu-series actually reached over these years?
So we began The Truth About Cancer in 2014.
So it's been nine years.
You were our first interview for our first docu-series called The Quest for the Cures.
You were the first interview.
Remember, I came out there and we interviewed.
We had the black background.
I remember.
And so, yeah, that didn't seem like nine years ago, but that was the first of The Truth About Cancer.
Now, before that, we'd been, you know, I'd written a couple of books on cancer.
Before that, as a result of losing my family to cancer, my father and mother and granddad and grandmom and other granddad and uncle and cousin.
years between 1996 and 2004.
So I had already written a book on cancer, and the first book that we published was in 2006.
And you were generous enough at that time.
You probably don't remember this because I was like a nobody ever heard of me.
And I emailed your team and asked if we could use some of your counterthink cartoons in the book.
And they said, you know, Mike says, use them away.
You do whatever you want to with them.
So the cancer step outside the box is sprinkled with your counterthink cartoons, which were ingenious ways of communicating the message in a comedic way.
But Tuesday Back Cancer began in 2014, and I don't know how many tens of millions over the years.
We've been deplatformed on YouTube and a lot of the different channels where we had our videos, so I don't even know.
It was 20, 30, 40 million views we had on some of those series that are gone.
We woke up one morning and YouTube said, you violated our terms of service.
We've taken down your channel.
But isn't that extraordinary that now, having lived through COVID, more and more people realize that, yeah, the establishment wants to prevent you from knowing about cures or things that work.
For example, ivermectin, right?
They went out of the way.
To disparage ivermectin because they knew it would save lives.
And they attacked zinc and vitamin D and vitamin C. And of course, all the doctors out there like Dr.
Peter McCullough and Joseph Mercola also as well.
I mean, all completely attacked and deplatformed.
But they were attacking you and I long before COVID. Way before.
Way before.
And the things that we said at the time seemed crazy.
And now everyone accepts them as fact.
Right.
Things like the cancer establishment makes a living off of harming and killing people.
Well, they do.
That's their business model is the chemotherapy creates so much harm in the patient that there's other drugs that are needed to treat the side effects.
It's the whole business model itself.
A pharmaceutical industry is to create side effects that they can then treat with more drugs.
You're exactly right.
And I think the business model of the vaccine industry is also, it also involves all of the revenues of treating the side effects of vaccine injuries, right?
So you have neurological, musculoskeletal injuries, you know, liver toxicity, of course, cardiovascular injuries, strokes and myocarditis and all of that.
I mean, it's a windfall for them.
It is.
And this is before COVID, Mike, these numbers.
But we had Bobby Kennedy here in Nashville, I think it was 2019, maybe 2019, right before COVID. And we awarded him a Lifetime Achievement Award, which we awarded you one as well a few years back.
And one of the things that Bobby said in his speech was about vaccines and the fact that the vaccine industry at that point was a $50 billion a year industry.
But here's the kicker.
The side effects that the vaccines create is a $500 billion a year industry.
There you go.
So there you go.
That's their bread and butter, is using vaccines to create side effects that they can then treat with more drugs.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And that's why your docu-series educational programs are so critical for all of us.
And, in fact, one of the reasons we have you on today is we want to announce that we're going to be streaming your Eastern Medicine series beginning December 9th on Brightown University.
And that's brightu.com, just the letter U.
If you want to register, folks, you'll be able to watch the entire series for free.
Now, tell us about – give us all the details about the Eastern Medicine series and also how it's been updated.
Yeah, so Eastern Medicine is – my mom was a grammar teacher, so I'm not sure that this is a real word, but it was the funnest docu-series to film.
I think technically it's the most fun, but it was the funnest.
And the reason why is that we actually went to seven countries in Asia.
The title of the docuseries is Eastern Medicine, Journey Through Asia.
And a few years back, we went to Japan to begin with.
We went from there to Taiwan.
We went from there to Philippines, then to Singapore, then Malaysia, then Thailand, and India.
So those are the seven countries.
And so this is a unique docuseries.
There's not another docuseries that we've ever done or that I've ever seen anyone do on cancer treatments that's more of a travel field.
So it's really fun to watch because you go with us, with me and my team, through those seven countries.
Actually, I say seven countries.
We didn't go to India.
We got to Thailand and we had issues with our visas going to India, believe it or not.
So we got the Indian doctors to fly to Bangkok and we interviewed seven or eight Indian doctors in Bangkok.
So we actually did not make it to India, but we did get the doctors there and we got their protocols.
It's funny that India is very particular about film crews coming to their country and filming documentary films.
We did not know that until we tried to get our visas.
And they said it could be a multiple month process.
And by that time, we don't have time.
So that's that's the feel of the docuseries.
Charlene is the host.
And so it's really cool.
So she's here in the studio, and she's talking about we're there in Asia, and it's just a totally different feel than anything you've ever seen.
So I'd recommend everybody needs to sign up to watch this.
It's a fun series, and not only do you get the treatments in the different countries that we can talk about, but things like when we got to Japan and we lost Alan.
And we had our film crew, the other film guys were filming, and we're like, we're freaking out.
We cannot find Alan.
You know Alan.
He was the guy that filmed me and you the first time back in 2014.
But we lost him.
We couldn't find Alan.
But we ended up finding him.
But just fun stuff like that.
It just makes it a very interesting docu-series to watch.
We're interviewing a doctor.
I think his name is Dr.
Shin Akiyama.
And we were on the sidewalk outside of the Cancer Control Society of Japan, right?
Kuzino here, and he does the Cancer Control Society.
Well, he was there in Japan.
They had one there.
We're filming on the street, and the police come up.
And they're like, you can't film there, and you have to move there.
And then we moved there, and then they came up again.
They said, you can't film it all.
So then we had to move inside.
But we got all that on film.
It's fun to watch.
It's fun.
We got it on film in Malaysia when we got stopped for speeding, and the driver bribed the cop for the equivalent of $11 U.S. So...
It's an interesting film to watch.
Well, yeah, I'm glad you pointed that out.
But in addition to all of those interesting things, the knowledge that you're able to assess and gather in this is extraordinary.
Because, you know, we forget this in America that 80% of the world uses indigenous medicine.
I mean, the vast majority of the world's population rejects Western medicine, right?
Right.
And even, especially places like you talked about, in India, when they tried to push vaccines on everybody, instead, most locals were taking quercetin and zinc and eating their indigenous foods, which have a lot of powerful nutrients that stop pandemics.
Anyway, a lot of the spices in India are medicinal, right?
And the same thing is true throughout Southeast Asia.
So can you...
Just whatever comes to mind, some of the highlights of some of the bombshell discoveries or realizations from the medical personnel that you interviewed across Asia.
Yeah, yeah.
So let's see.
Japan.
One of the interesting things about Japan is they have a law that makes all types of medicine legal.
So, like here, if you're practicing natural medicine that's not approved by the FDA, you get in a lot of trouble.
You've got to leave the country and go to Mexico, basically, to practice that medicine or to be vocal about practicing that medicine.
In Japan, not so much.
Everything is accepted as medicine as long as it helps the patient, which should be the criteria, it seems.
Imagine that.
It helps the patient.
It's okay to use.
But from using electromagnetic frequencies successfully with brain cancer to using...
What they call koji, which is a fermented substance.
It's a fermented fungus that they use there.
I think it's fermented soy, but that's a product or a substance that they use quite a bit in Japan.
A lot of the Japanese doctors are using what is known as GCMAF, which you're familiar with.
Yes.
It's a macrophage activating factor.
It's been used for autism as well, but very successfully used for cancer.
A couple of the Japanese doctors, the one that I mentioned that we were on the sidewalk interviewing, we had to move inside.
I remember his protocol was orthomolecular medicine, which is high dose nutrients.
Well, not necessarily high dose, but properly dosed nutrients.
He used a substance called salvestrol, which many people may not be familiar with, but it's a substance that's produced by fruits and vegetables when they ripen, and it has selective toxicity to cancer cells.
But in America, we're across the country deficient in salvestrol because most people don't grow their own food, so they buy it at the store and it's picked green, and then it ripens in the boxes, so it doesn't produce the salvestrol.
But if you had a plum tree and you let the plum get ripe and you eat it, lots of salvestrol that's specifically toxic to cancer cells.
Cancer cells have an enzyme called CYP1B. And so the salvestrol attacks or uses, it's attracted to the CYP1B and it kills the cancer cells, but normal cells don't have CYP1B enzyme.
So it's a selective toxicity.
So that was fascinating in Japan.
A lot of the Japanese doctors are using the ketogenic diet.
And that was fascinating as well because back when we traveled a few years ago, it was in 2018 actually that we traveled, there was a lot of hubbub in our industry.
People were fighting about whether you should use the ketogenic diet for cancer and whether that was good and everyone should be vegan.
It's like everyone's different.
Let's see if you can find something that works for you because we're all made differently.
And so at that time, it was reassurance for us that the ketogenic diet is being used all over the world successfully for cancer patients.
We interviewed two cancer patients in Japan that used ketogenic diet to reverse their cancer.
That is fascinating, but I want to ask you, too, about then, speaking of local diets, what did you notice about the different dietary habits of all the different ethnicities and cultures that you visited there?
Surely, that compared to the typical processed food American diet, that must have been eye-opening.
It was.
Across Asia, a couple of things stand out.
Number one, their portions are very small.
Yes.
True.
Their portions, their entrees are what we would think of as an appetizer.
And so their portions are small.
And universally, across the board, the populations that live the longest eat the least calories.
They're on calorie-restricted diets.
So that is one of the keys to longevity is restricting your calories, not eating a buffet every meal.
Another thing we noticed was very little processed foods, very high in Vegetables, local meats, herbs, spices that were indigenous to that area.
So the food that we got in Sendai, Japan was different than the food we got in Tokyo, Japan.
The food that we got in Taipei, Taiwan was different than when we went further south a few hours to eat.
Different cuisines, different tastes, different textures, different spices.
So that was one thing that we noticed is very local, eating heavy spices, heavy herbs, and minimal processed foods.
And another difference that I always notice, because I lived in Taiwan for a couple of years, Is that in Chinese culture in particular, they normally eat a lot of more bitter vegetables, and they don't load up on sugar.
It's not about just sweets all the time, whereas in the U.S. it's fat, sugar, and salt.
In Taiwan...
Even babies and children will eat bok choy vegetables, for example, or a vegetable soup with noodles.
It's very common to do that.
And in Japan, of course, a lot more seaweed as well, right?
Because of all the ocean products that they're consuming.
So they're getting trace iodine, and they're getting the anti-cancer nutrients that are found in seaweeds as well, right?
Yeah, and since you mentioned seaweed, one of the...
One of the foods that many of the clinics were using that were using ketogenic diet is called shirataki noodles.
Shirataki noodles are noodles that are made from seaweed.
They're very low carb, so you can eat them on a ketogenic diet.
And of course, they still have the properties of the seaweed in them.
I was shocked.
I never had shirataki noodles, and they actually taste like noodles.
But they're very low carb and you can still maintain the ketogenic diet along with getting the nutrients from the seaweed.
So that was one thing that was fascinating.
There was a lot of seaweed being eaten.
But as you mentioned, not a lot of sweets.
Most of the meals that we had there, I don't even think dessert was...
I don't remember getting dessert, honestly.
Because most of the places that we went...
The clinics or the people, the doctors that we visited would take us to their restaurant that they liked eating at or to their clinic to eat.
And I don't recall.
We had dessert in Thailand at one meal.
I remember that.
But it was very rare to get dessert.
You're right.
Mostly vegetables, noodles, soups, broths.
And even the desserts, for example, in Chinese culture, they'll do a sweetened red bean paste inside a pastry.
So it's actually beans that are sweetened or rice that's sweetened.
You'll have, in a lot of the cultures that you mentioned there, you'll have like a sweet rice or a sticky rice that's sweetened as a dessert.
So it's still a grain.
Actually, what I'm thinking of, the clinic in Thailand, it was in Phuket, Thailand.
You would love it because of your avocado fixation.
You love avocados as much as I do.
It was an avocado dessert and sticky rice, and the avocado was sweetened with some sort of honey or syrup.
So it was an amazing combination of rice with avocado for dessert.
So you're right.
So that's a natural dessert.
A little bit different eating that dessert than eating a little Debbie chocolate thing here.
Yeah, so true.
So true, yeah.
Okay, well, this is fascinating.
Let me just remind viewers that they can watch the entire docu-series for free.
It's called Eastern Medicine, Journey Through Asia.
It begins streaming, although you can register at any time, but it begins streaming on December 9th, which is a Saturday, on Brighteon University, which is brightu.com.
Register for free.
Now, when you register, you will be given the option, if you wish, to purchase the downloads and the bonus items that go along with this docu-series.
That purchase is optional.
If you choose to commit to that purchase, that helps, of course, support the truth about cancer.
Ty and Charlene Bollinger's organization there and their outstanding work, as well as a portion of the revenues help support the Brighteon University platform as well and brighteon.com.
So we thank you for your support should you choose to do that.
But, you know, it's great.
And Ty, I'd love your comments on this.
You've had a lot of people that intentionally, I mean, yeah, they watch the series for free, but then they also buy it because they want the files, they want the downloads.
And I've heard from many people, they want to hand, you know, a thumb drive to a family member and say, here, watch this because you need to see this.
Have you heard, I'm sure you've heard stories like that.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting over the years, the way that things have moved more digital away from, say, physical thumb drives or DVDs or whatever is, Our crowd still likes the DVDs and or thumb drives the best.
They like the physical.
I think maybe in part because we've seen so much blackholing of digital information where digital files have been removed.
We've even had Google get into people's private G drives and remove files, say that they violated their terms of service.
I think people still like the physical DVDs.
Part of the printed package with Eastern Medicine is a physical book as well of the transcripts.
I like the physical because they can't hack your computer and come take the files.
Right.
And they can't change it after the fact because we've seen that even with Amazon's digital books.
They can delete them off your device or they could edit it.
They could change it without you knowing it.
So I agree with you.
Now, let's talk about then the post-COVID cancer explosion that's being witnessed now.
We now know because of the work of a great many scientists and researchers that There is RNA and DNA contamination in the COVID jabs, or at least in certain jabs, a lot of contamination.
We know that cancer has been skyrocketing ever since the COVID jabs began, and cancer is striking people at younger and younger ages, and the cancer doctors are saying that the cancer cases they're seeing are now recurring more aggressively than ever before.
What, in your understanding, Ty, is the link between COVID jabs and cancer?
I wrote an article on this a couple years ago and it has to do with the spike protein somehow deactivates some of your cancer protective genes in your body.
The genes, like the P53 gene, that can stop cancer metastasis or spread.
So there's certain natural processes in your body that will, if they're working properly, that they'll stop cancer from taking a foothold.
We all have cancer cells, but...
They'll stop cancer from spreading and becoming life-threatening.
And one of the things is the spike protein itself in the COVID jabs turns off some of those cancer-protective genes.
I know there are other mechanisms, but that's the main one that I have read about.
But I think there's other mechanisms as well.
Well, yeah, absolutely.
And there's also inflammation, right?
So these jabs that cause systemic inflammation, as you know, Ty, inflammation is a precursor often to runaway cancers.
And a person's body, if inflammation is out of control, then typically cancer is out of control as well.
You want to comment on that?
Yeah.
You know, Dr.
Russell Blalock mentioned that, and Dr.
Lodi as well, his clinic in Thailand, said that you'll never see a case of cancer if you don't initially see chronic inflammation, because the chronic inflammation is one of the things that allows the cancer to get a foothold.
One of the things that they use in Taiwan is a medicinal mushroom called antrotea camphorata, and it helps to control inflammation.
It also helps to detox.
But there's also, you know, you love medicinal mushrooms, as do I. There's also several natural cancer protective mechanisms in this mushroom.
They use it for detox.
They use it for cancer.
They use it kind of the same way that we would use activated charcoal.
They'll take the Antrodia Camperata and they'll use it as a detoxification capsule that they'll take first thing in the morning the same way you would with activated charcoal to bind to toxins and get them out of your body.
So that's one of the things that they use to help chronic inflammation.
Another thing that I found in the clinics in Thailand are using insulin-potentiated botanical therapies.
So they're using the same way that some doctors will use insulin to potentiate chemotherapy, the IPTLD, insulin-potentiated targeted low-dose chemo.
They'll use the insulin to potentiate curcumin or frankincense or other herbs that have anti-cancer effects, but they use the insulin to get that into the cells.
They trick the cancer cells into gobbling up these herbs that then will kill the cancer cell better than the chemo.
So I thought that was fascinating.
And again, when we look at Boswellia or frankincense, we look at curcumin.
We look at turmeric.
We look at ginger.
All of these herbs have anti-inflammation properties as well as anti-cancer, which I believe one of the reasons they are anti-cancer is because they are anti-inflammatory.
Right, right.
And I also want to ask you about what you saw from these doctors with the various medicinal mushrooms, maitake, shiitake, reishi, and so on.
But your comment just then reminded me, what about...
Off-label pharmaceuticals.
For example, you're seeing ivermectin.
I'm not saying ivermectin for cancer, but ivermectin is being used by a lot of people to treat a lot of conditions other than COVID. Of course, parasite infections and so on.
But more recently, you've seen a lot of buzz about fenbendazole, which is also an anti-worm.
It's a deworming chemical that You know, I give it to my goats and occasionally my dogs, but some people use that for anti-cancer therapies.
Is that something that you covered or is that in a different docu-series?
Didn't cover Finbin, but I will address that because it's interesting.
And this is public knowledge, so I'm not sharing anything that Roger hasn't shared.
But Roger Stone, his wife was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer.
And we helped refer her to proper doctors to help her.
And she got about 80% better, but she couldn't.
Finally, nip it in the butt until she added finbin.
And what Rogers told us is that was the key.
The finbin was the key.
Now, don't cover those specifically in Eastern medicine, but I did notice that in places like, say, Philippines, where people are generally living well below the line of poverty, very poor population.
The doctors there, instead of relying on prescription drugs, they found natural substances that the prescription drugs were made from.
And they helped the people to get access to those.
For instance, there was a doctor in Philippines named Jimmy Diliaco.
And this was an 85-year-old man.
He was just an amazing fella.
He used to be the vice president for Wrigley Corporation out of Chicago.
And he was diagnosed with Quote, terminal prostate cancer.
And if you remember Dr.
William Donald Kelly, the Kelly protocol using high-dose enzymes, right?
Which is the same protocol that then Dr.
Nicholas Gonzalez, he learned from Dr.
Kelly.
And then the Gonzalez protocol, these high-dose proteolytic enzymes.
Kelly cured Dr.
Jimmy's cancer.
Well, people in Philippines can't afford 85 pills a day, proteolytic enzyme.
So Jimmy just cut straight to the chase.
And so his protocol, and he's healed thousands of people, is eating raw pork pancreas, raw beef liver, raw eggs.
Because you're getting the same digestive enzymes from those substances that you would if you took the enzyme – That's what the enzymes are made from.
So he just cut to the chase and it costs five bucks a day for people there and interviewed a couple of patients in the Philippines that had used Dr.
Jimmy's protocol and he had turned their cancer around using this.
So it's interesting that The doctors there, and in the Philippines, there's a law called the TALMA law.
And the TALMA stands for Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act or something.
But like Japan, in Philippines, it's a law that says doctors can use whatever works.
So they use raw pig pancreas and raw beef liver there.
He does, at least.
And people are getting healed.
So it's just fascinating that the way the doctors are able to Adapt a protocol to meet the needs of the people that are there in that country and, you know, getting great success.
And also in Philippines, there was a doctor, I think his name is Richard Nixon Gomez.
Okay, Richard.
I don't know who he was named after.
But Dr.
Richard Nixon Gomez, he uses a combination of curcumin and piperine and moringa oleifera.
To treat cancer.
So again, natural herbs that they're using because the people can't really afford much more, and it's very successful.
So you don't have to be rich to afford a natural cancer treatment.
You just have to be directed to the right place of information, and that's one of the things that we attempted to do with Eastern medicine is to point people in the right way.
Yeah, that's really important information.
In fact, I would add, the more wealthy these Asian nations become, and the more they begin to embrace Western foods, Western products, and Western lifestyles, the more cancer they get, right?
They do.
You know, consume hydrogenated oils and all the high fructose corn syrup and fried foods and everything else.
And then, boom, they start to look like the way Americans look in a really obese city like Houston, Texas, for example.
Go ahead.
Just to completely support that point, when we were in Japan, interviewed a doctor that must have been He must have been in his mid-80s, and he mentioned Okinawa, right?
So Okinawa, until the 1940s, was the place in the world where people lived the longest.
And about the time that World War II ended is when the fast food started moving in, in the late 40s, early 50s, into Japan.
And now there's McDonald's and Burger King and all the fast food.
It's just like here, except they're, you know, in Japanese letters, but same restaurants, right?
He mentioned the way that over the last several decades, the health of the Okinawan people has decreased to such an extent that they're just right in line with the rest of the world now as far as their longevity.
We're used to it.
They were at the top.
So again, to your point, when they start eating like we eat, they start getting sick like we are.
There was a fascinating doctor in the Philippines.
His name was Dr. Homer Lim.
And I just love this dude.
Just a great guy.
And one of the things that he's using, and I'd never heard of anybody using this, but he uses periwinkle flower to treat cancer.
But here's what's interesting, right?
Periwinkle flower is the flower that they create vincristine chemotherapy from.
No kidding.
So all of the chemos, all of the drugs, they all have a medicinal plant or root or flower base, but we take them and we tweak them and patent them and try to isolate this molecule so that you can make more money on selling it.
Yep.
And it doesn't work as well.
So again, I thought that was fascinating.
I did not know that then Christine was made from periwinkle flower until Dr. Homer.
That is truly fascinating.
Thank you for sharing that.
Okay.
Here's something else along these lines.
When I lived in Ecuador, what I noticed there is that the Ecuadorian people, and I saw this in Peru, I saw this in Panama, a lot of the Central and South American people, they want to emulate North America.
They see America as a cultural leader, something to aspire to in many cases, which is bizarre.
It's like, hey, have you been to San Francisco recently?
But what I saw is when Procter & Gamble would push their product line, which I would consider to be highly, highly toxic in terms of the ingredients of their shampoos and personal care products and laundry products and so on, all these fragrances, all these solvents, horrible, horrible products for personal care, in my opinion.
But as the South American nations start to embrace the Procter & Gamble product line, then we start to see, number one, their clothes start to smell like American clothes, all full of Tide laundry detergent or whatever, which is horrifying to me.
Like, I'd rather smell the jungle, you know, than tied laundry detergent.
But then secondly, they start to get more cancer.
And I saw this in Ecuador.
I mean, we must have donated money to so many families that suddenly had like tumors exploding and they needed expensive surgery in the local hospital.
Where they didn't have cancer in previous generations.
Do you think that is it not just the food, but also all the personal care products that people are putting on their skin?
No doubt.
Personal care products and also pesticides and insecticides.
So we saw the same thing when we lived in Panama.
The neighborhood that we lived at, the guy that did the developer, he died of cancer while we were there.
And one of the things that They do in Panama is they'll use like the insecticides that are too toxic for the USA, which you got to be pretty toxic because it will allow anything.
No kidding.
But they use pesticides there that weren't even allowed here and they used them on the golf courses and to make things, you know, pretty.
So the weeds don't grow, but they're toxic.
And the same with the personal care products.
So I think it's not just the food, it's the product.
Because if you look at your skin, It's one of the largest, if not your biggest, organ of absorption.
You absorb much more through your skin sometimes than you would ever ingest through your mouth.
That's why it's so important to be showering in clean water, because you're absorbing chemicals through your skin while you're showering.
Oh, yeah.
This is one of the reasons why I hate to travel.
I have to ask you how you manage all this travel.
For me, sitting on an airplane...
And I have a very sensitive sense of smell.
I have like a mass spec system in my nasal passages or something, and I can pick up fragrances with incredible sensitivity.
When I get off the airplane, I have to shower, wash my hair, change all my clothes, wash those separately.
It's incredible because just sitting on the airplane...
My hair and skin absorb the toxic fragrance products from all the other passengers.
Their skin lotions, their hair dyes, their shampoos, their deodorants, whatever.
All that comes to me.
And I can smell it because I don't use any of those products.
Other people can't smell it because they're living in a toxic cloud all the time, so they've lost any sensitivity to it.
It's incredible.
How do you travel like that?
You're like Mike the Magnet.
I can...
No, go ahead.
You know, for me, it hasn't been a problem because due to...
I don't want to elaborate, but due to some issues that I've had with my nose, I can't smell anything.
You're kidding me.
Yeah, I have a horrible sense of smell.
Well, I guess there's an advantage sometimes.
I guess that's an advantage.
But here's what's funny.
It's so bizarre, too.
Do you remember when we used to have smoking sections of airplanes?
Oh, gosh, yes.
I do.
What a ludicrous idea.
Yeah.
Like the smoke's going to stay in rows 27 through 30.
Right.
Like the smoking area of restaurants, too.
But it's the same principle.
Airplanes are worse.
But what they needed to do, Mike, was just wear a mask.
Then that would have stopped everything, right?
It would have stopped everything from spreading if they just wore a mask.
Oh, man.
No, airplanes are so incredibly toxic.
I have not been on a plane in years, and I don't plan to get on one.
But I love to travel.
I love to be at the destinations like you did because I love to experience other cultures.
And it's very richly rewarding to do that.
But the process of getting there is a nightmarish hell.
Yeah, you know, we had some interesting travel times.
Let's see.
We got stopped going into Singapore.
They don't like drones in Singapore.
They don't like drones?
No, so we had a drone that we were using to film.
A lot of the shots that you'll see in the series are amazing shots because we had drones every country.
Singapore...
It would not allow us to fly the drone except on a couple of blocks or whatever, so we still did get some drone footage.
But that was interesting.
You know, here's another thing that's interesting.
When we were in Singapore, we visited what they call the anti-cancer herb garden.
It's at a university in Singapore, and they grew literally hundreds of herbs that have anti-cancer effect.
And they give them to the cancer patients for free that come through there.
That is so cool.
It's a great ministry, yeah.
And one of the things that you get with Eastern Medicine is there's one of the bonus footages that we take you.
It's about a 30-minute video going through the herb garden in Singapore to show you the different herbs that they're growing for cancer.
But they're very big on herbs, but...
They're not big on one herb, and that's cannabis.
There was a man that was publicly hanged in May in Singapore for, I think if you possess over three pounds of cannabis, it's a death penalty.
So they publicly hanged a guy in May for, I think he had 3.3 pounds of cannabis, and they hanged him.
So it's bizarre that they'll allow all these other herbs for cancer, but they won't allow cannabis.
Wow, I mean, three pounds of cannabis, I think that's like every 20-year-old in America today has that in their trunk, you know?
It's not that much.
It's probably not.
But that garden seems like a really cool project.
That's the kind of thing.
Yeah, you know, I could see you doing something like that, the way that you've got the green thumb and you're always experimenting with stuff.
So anyway, you got to watch that section when we go through the garden because you'll learn a lot about different types of herbs that they're growing.
And the guy explains, you know, this is good with lung cancer or this is good with breast cancer.
This is good with brain cancer.
So they have different herbs that they use to target different types of cancers.
And like I said, go there.
If you're a cancer patient in Singapore, you go there and they give you what you need for free.
Wow.
That is very cool.
Reminding people again, you can watch this entire series of Eastern Medicine for free.
It begins December 9th on Brighton University, which is brightu.com.
That's just the letter U. And we'll add that screen here into the edit to show people.
But you just register and you can watch the entire thing for free.
Now, Ty, one of the things, now you've been to my food science lab.
We actually did some filming there.
So you're one of the few people who's physically been to that location.
And I think we had to put a hood on you.
You did?
Yeah.
You put a blindfold on me, but I couldn't find it, but I was there.
Yeah, you were there.
Well, guess what?
We have just added now a dioxin testing gas chromatography instrument, and I'm getting trained on that in a few weeks, and we're going to start doing routine testing next year.
Now...
We're going to go to fast food restaurants and grocery stores and start buying animal products, any kind of meat, milk, cheese, things like that, and testing for dioxins.
And from the research that I've already done on this, I understand that there are dioxins in almost all animal products across America at some level.
And dioxins, unlike a lot of other things that cause cancer, dioxins can cause cancer at Ridiculously low concentrations such as femtograms per gram.
So they're almost like turbo cancer.
You know, just a few molecules can set cells off in the wrong direction that can lead to cancer.
And yet, that East Palestine train wreck released all kinds of dioxins into the air, which fell on farms in Pennsylvania and other places and, of course, Ohio.
And Speak to us, if you would, about what you've learned, Ty, over all these years about how we're living in a kind of a pro-cancer toxic stew.
Even if you're on your own farm away from the city, guess what?
There's stuff still falling on you because they were burning household trash 20 miles away and it's filled with toxins now.
Yeah, the environment is a toxic stew.
You mentioned East Palestine.
So, you know, I think that maybe that's one of the reasons, too, along with the COVID jabs that are causing these turbo cancers.
It certainly could be some of the fallout from that because I don't even know the amount of dioxins that were released, but it was insanely high.
And you mentioned it's just very, very small amounts, minuscule amounts can cause cancer.
Now, for detoxing dioxin, I can't remember, but there's a couple things that you mentioned.
Is it broccoli sprouts that are one of the things in broccoli sprouts that's good for detoxing dioxin?
Yes.
The research that we found did include some broccoli sprouts, sulforaphane in particular, from cruciferous vegetables, but also the microalgae, the chlorella and the spirulina, were very frequently mentioned in the research about ways to get rid of dioxins.
The problem is dioxins are fat-soluble, right?
So it's actually very difficult to eliminate them once you've absorbed them.
And so the best thing is avoidance.
But again, we live in a world where we can't avoid all these things.
No, you can't.
And so, yeah, we're living in a toxic stew.
And also with the electromagnetic frequencies, which is something that we do cover in Eastern medicine, different ways to prevent the EMF exposure in different devices and so forth.
That's a big thing as well.
So, you know, you throw in a toxic environment with invisible toxicity from electromagnetic frequencies, the 5G towers.
There's speculation that perhaps that works in tandem with some of the ingredients that are in the jabs to make things worse.
I think there's pretty good evidence that that's true.
So, you know, one of the doctors in, what was it, Singapore, he was an autistic savant.
His name is Dr.
Sundartas Anomale.
He shared his story of being Twelve years old when his mother died of cancer, and he decided at that time that he's going to cure cancer.
And some of the things he's doing are just amazing.
You'll have to watch the fourth episode from Singapore to get all of his take.
I think he has more footage than any other doctor in the entire docuseries because I just couldn't cut what he was saying.
It was so good.
But one of the things, the reason I mention that is that you mentioned dioxins being fat-soluble.
One of the ways that he treats cancer is through helping reduce body fat.
He's learned and he deals with the mesenchymal matrix and just all kinds of stuff that people may not be familiar with, but you will be if you watch the episode.
But when you reduce body fat, apparently, according to this doctor, an autistic savant, It doesn't give cancer.
Cancer can't take a foothold because it loves the fat.
It loves to store toxins in fat cells or your body loves to store toxins in fat cells that can then lead to cancer.
So by reducing body fat and working on lean muscle mass in cancer patients, he told me, he said, if you have a lean cancer patient, they said you can't have a terminal cancer patient if we work on the body mass because what's the problem?
Cancer patients don't, they don't die You don't see a lot of terminal obese cancer patients.
You see a lot of terminal very, very skinny cancer patients because they're wasting away.
Their body's eating their lean muscle mass.
It's called cachexia.
So he uses hydrazine sulfate, which is a It's a product that was created by a NASA scientist back in the late 60s to stop the wasting syndrome.
But again, this autistic savant focuses on lean muscle mass to stop cancer.
So again, another slant to cancer maybe you've never heard of.
Well, that's the thing.
And kind of to wrap up this interview...
I have felt for many years very optimistic about being able to treat cancer if someone in my family were to ever be diagnosed with cancer.
Of course, when I was younger, I lost some family members to cancer too, long before I knew anything about health and nutrition.
But today, I don't have any family members with cancer.
If I did, I would feel very, very confident.
Of being able to treat that using the things that I know.
I mean, in fact, I consider cancer to be a highly, highly treatable condition and reversible.
Do you share that view after all of your research and multiple docu-series?
Oh, absolutely.
Cancer is not a death sentence.
It is very treatable.
The problem is that we're treating it incorrectly.
With chemotherapy, yeah.
It'd be like, you know, if you have an obese person, you're like, you know, the key to stopping your obesity is eat more calories.
Right.
It's kind of the same way we do with cancer.
You know, the key to avoiding your immune system shot because you're exposed to this toxic stew.
So what are we going to do?
We're going to inject you with toxic chemicals.
Right.
Makes no sense.
But yeah, cancer is certainly treatable.
I wanted to mention...
In India, they're using, homeopathy is officially recognized by the Indian government as a cancer treatment, as a treatment.
And so there was an Indian doctor that I interviewed, Dr.
Rajendran Skaria, and he has, he has proved, you know what Avogadro's number is, Mike?
It's Avogadro's number.
Yeah, it's the number of molecules in one mole of the substance.
Yeah, it's basically the amount of dilution that you can dilute a substance and it can still be there, okay?
If you keep diluting a molecule and you keep adding water or whatever the diluting factor is to it.
So Avogadro's number is 6.023 times 10 to the 23rd power.
You're a math geek.
I'm a math geek.
Yeah, it's a big-ass number, basically.
It's like this substance is diluted almost down to nothing.
That's Avogadro's number.
Well, this A medical doctor in India has shown through, I think it's called a Fessim microscope, that he can dilute homeopathic substances past Avogadro's number, which is something that Samuel Hahnemann, the father of homeopathy, did not think there would be any of the original substance left.
But he's diluted past Avogadro's number and proved with this microscope that it's still there, and that's the reason that homeopathy works.
So just fascinating interview with this Indian doctor as well.
Yeah, okay.
Well, which episode is that in, by the way?
That's in Episode 7, India.
Okay, all right.
Episode 7.
All right.
Well, obviously, this is a goldmine of information for anybody who wants to learn.
And I want to thank you, Ty, and thanks, Charlene, for allowing us permission to stream this entire series for free because you're going to make it available to, I don't know, hundreds of thousands of more people just in this episode.
And people can get it for free if they wish.
I mean, it's so simple.
So let me just remind people, Brightian University is the website.
Brightu.com is where you go.
You can register now, and that'll sign you up to watch the entire series for free.
You'll be able to optionally purchase a full download and also the physical items.
Ty, can you give us just a rundown?
If someone purchases the program, I know they have the option to get the physical transcript and DVDs as well.
But what are also, in addition to that, what are the bonus items that they can get?
Gosh.
Let's see.
I don't have a list in front of me, but so you're going to get the physical DVDs.
You'll get the digital videos as well.
You'll get the MP3 files to download.
You'll get the physical book of the transcripts.
And then I think there's at least a half a dozen.
You're going to get the video of the tour through the Singapore Herb Garden.
There's something.
I know there are.
This is Dr.
Edward Group.
Yeah, there are more bonus items.
I don't have the full list here either.
A bunch of bonus items.
Yeah, I wish I had it in front of me.
But there's a whole bunch of stuff that you get with it that are bonus items to it.
But, I mean, it's interesting.
It's something that you can stick in your library.
The graphic art on it is very popping as well.
It looks like a journey through Asia, so it's very well branded.
It's a great product.
It's the one cancer doc usage that we've done that I think I'm the most proud of because it's unique.
It's not It's not very unique.
It's not really unique because you know you can't qualify unique.
It's either unique or it's not.
This is unique.
It's unique.
There's nothing else like Eastern medicine.
So I'm the most proud of this one because it's the only travel cancer documentary that I'm aware of.
Well, we love your work, Ty.
And you and Charlene both, what you've done has helped, again, tens of millions of people around the world.
You are...
You're someone who has literally helped save lives.
And not a lot of people can say that, especially in our world where there's so much profit in building weapons and bombs and missiles and chemotherapy and vaccines and all the things that kill people.
Boy, they sure do generate a lot of profit.
There's not a lot of people who can say, yeah, I dedicated my life to helping save lives.
But you are, Ty.
You and Charlene both.
Well, thanks, Mike.
You know, praise God for that, because God gave us this mission to help people.
And so when people are saved, it's because when people are saved, we're just the messenger.
And we're thankful that we're the messenger to be able to point them to the right way.
But people are saved because they are able to experience creation and God's nature that he's made and these plants and herbs that he's put all these amazing cancer-fighting properties into.
So, you know, God gets the glory for the saving of the lives, but we're certainly happy to be the instrument that he's using.
Yeah, well stated.
I have the same exact opinion.
You look around at all the anti-cancer plants that are out there, you know, God put those plants here, and God taught those plants essentially to synthesize these molecules that have anti-cancer effects.
And we have to be blind to not recognize the anti-cancer potential of the natural world around us.
But then again, most of modern society is blind.
Yep, they are.
If you want to see the truth, folks, then just sign up at Brighteon University, brightu.com.
You'll be able to watch the entire series, The Truth About Cancer, Eastern Medicine Journey Through Asia, begins December 9th.
And thank you for all your support, and thank you, Ty, for joining us today.
Thanks, Mike.
God bless.
All right.
God bless.
Take care.
Thank you for watching.
Mike Adams here with Brighteon.com.
Take advantage of this and you may end up saving your own life or even the life of someone close to you.
So thank you for watching today.
God bless you all.
Take care.
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