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May 28, 2024 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
49:27
Humanity must ABOLISH modern slavery to survive - an interview with Cory Edmund Endrulat
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Welcome to today's interview on Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon, and today we're going to be talking about human freedom in an age of technological enslavement and demanded obedience.
We're living in a world where AI systems and AI-powered humanoid robotic systems are about to take over both our white-collar and blue-collar workforces.
And what are the implications of this, especially when a lot of the AI systems are controlled by corporations that do not have humanity's best interests at heart?
Joining us today is a fascinating man.
Corey Endrelott is his name, and his website is called theliberator.us.
I believe that's it.
Did I get that right?
The Liberator?
Yes.
Okay, it's not.
Okay.
Theliberator.us.
Sorry.
Welcome to the show, Corey.
It's great to have you on today.
Thank you.
We're ending human slavery.
But, you know, there's these other forms of slavery that are manifesting in this entire reality, and we need to understand it.
Because as we move into this age of AI and technology, this is a whole new ballgame for humanity.
I wish a lot more writers of the past wrote about it.
I mean, there's people like you who are doing video reports hour-long talking about the benefits of AI or ChatGPT, but also the warnings and the problems.
And a lot of people have speculations, I think.
Necessary warnings.
You know, they're they're very confrontational about like with themselves, like should should AI should I be using this?
You know, is this something that's going to help us or is it something that's going to destroy us?
And I actually create a philosophy called naturosophy to really emphasize that natural intelligence beyond the artificial intelligence.
And I often say that you have to use your nature or lose your nature in the sense of understanding that you can actually become conscious of what the technology is doing and master over the technology so the technology doesn't master over you in the same way we would say that you don't become the tools of your tools.
That's well stated.
And let me provide some context here before we jump into this.
So our AI project is found at brighttown.ai.
And people can download our language models for free.
They're open source.
They're non-commercial.
And what we do is we take the base models from companies like Microsoft or Mozilla or Meta, and then we reprogram them using our content, which I refer to as reality-based content, and it's terabytes of content.
So it's interviews, it's articles, it's books, and you've even contributed, by the way, a series of lectures, pro-freedom lectures.
Those have already been transcribed.
Those are going to be put into the system.
To produce language models that are essentially local chatbots that can answer your questions and that hold a lot of knowledge that's practical knowledge.
Survival and growing food and natural medicine and things like that.
However, as you say, and by the way, I'm not a fan of ChatGPT.
I think that the ChatGPT Corporation has already been taken over by Big Pharma.
And if you look at the base answers out of these models, even Mistral and Phi and Llama, Llama 2 and Llama 3, All these base models are pro-pharma, pro-chemotherapy.
They all talk about how climate change is going to destroy humanity.
They're all biased at the get-go, and it's quite an effort to reprogram them.
So I just want to set that as the stage of where we are.
Like, I'm trying to use this tech to help people get the truth and survive, not to enslave them.
But other people are trying to use the tech to enslave humanity.
So go ahead.
Right.
Anything could be used for good or for bad, especially the greatest knowledge and tools, the most powerful tools, the most powerful countries.
America, you know, we're the greatest country on Earth, also the most destructive to all these other countries.
And I think we need to be able to look at these tools as they can do the greatest harm or the greatest benefit in many degrees, depending on the user, however.
And so that's where our natural intelligence is really beyond artificial intelligence, which is why I'm often emphasizing it.
Even Elon Musk said in a tweet at one time, said that we need to increase human consciousness because he realized that's a requirement.
And I'm saying it's a requirement if we're going to ever maintain or continue the evolution of technology.
And I actually don't think it's a surprise that you are developing this model, which I think is awesome, by the way, in all your projects.
Everything you're doing is innovative.
You're always thinking outside the box.
I love that.
That's how I think, too.
That's how we use our natural intelligence for these creations that we have.
The thing is, is that in history, if you look at the abolitionists, which is, of course, one of my focuses, talking about slavery, they were around the same time period as the first rotary press and printing press, and I don't think that's a coincidence.
If you look at a lot of philosophers in history, a lot of them had educative material, powerful material, but they didn't have the ability to share it with the world.
And that was their biggest downside.
And that's why we're often going back now to ancient times and bringing back their works to now because of how applicable it is and universal and timeless.
But they didn't have the ability to print on mass scale.
Once the abolitionists utilized their message and utilized the printing press, their message became thousands of times more effective.
And every evolution of technology has basically coincided with the evolution of freedom.
There's a short book called The End of All Evil by Jeremy Locke.
It I highly recommend it.
Very easy to read.
You can probably read it in one sitting.
It's about like 100 pages.
And it's by an unknown author.
Nobody really knows who wrote it.
But it's so simply written that a child can understand it.
And it talks about using technology for freedom.
And it talks about your infinite value.
And it talks about how those who promote evil and slavery don't want you to utilize your value or see your value or utilize your freedoms and create new things.
And so there is a difference between utilizing something for independence or being dependent on that thing and that thing being created by somebody else and you not knowing what that thing is doing to you.
And that's where mental slavery comes in.
The worst form of slavery is where you don't realize you're a slave.
And I call technology the second government.
For the reason that it can replace our reality and our authority that we put in nature, and this is where we have to be careful.
So that's why I'm emphasizing natural intelligence, and then being able to develop all these technologies as we do, we can only keep those in check so long as we have natural intelligence, or at least a higher conscience.
I completely agree with you, and I think the timeline of the introduction of this into the life of, at first, a child developing into an adult, timelines are really critical here.
In my view, a developing young child and teenager should not be inundated with technology because they need to develop their natural intelligence and the ability to think for themselves and the ability even to intuit in certain cases by understanding and being connected to the world, the real world around them, nature for example.
Only after you have developed your own ability to think, then is it appropriate, in my opinion, to then introduce technology to say, oh, wow, so this can expand your thinking.
But you have to have that fundamental base.
And yet in society today, it's all backwards.
As you know, Corey, it's backwards.
So they take a three-year-old and they set them down on the floor, here's an iPad, you know, start playing games.
And then when they're seven, like, here's social media, connect to all your friends.
Yes.
You're fake friends, and then they never develop the idea of thinking for themselves, ever.
And we see so many problems associated with technology from the identity, as you mentioned, fake friends.
I mean, see how many people...
We have a loneliness epidemic, and yet we have social media.
You'd think we'd be more social, no, we're anti-social.
The things we're creating to prevent the problem or solve the problems are actually causing the problems.
That's because we aren't seeing beyond it.
So one of the key points I make in regards to natural intelligence and artificial intelligence is being able to see beyond the illusion.
So for instance, I'm now doing this on a computer, right, through a webcam.
You can recognize that.
Everybody who's watching the video right now might be able to understand, yeah, I'm, you don't see me in person.
But there might become a time where you don't know that this is reality or not reality.
And that is where the issue really arises, is where we don't know what is reality and what's not.
So let's say a kid is raised into technology, they have an iPad and all this stuff around them and they're surrounded by it.
They can't see beyond the reality that they place themselves in just as much as the individual who's born into a country is naturalized into that country.
And they're basically born into that system.
They feel like they're a part of it.
They're attached.
It's like a body part.
And they can't get rid of it.
And the same thing with our phones.
It's like how many people can go outside their house without a phone?
Or even like sleep without a phone?
Or do anything without a phone?
Or their car?
I mean, this is why a lot of writers have said throughout history, we're slaves to cars, we're slaves to technology.
And it's not that we can't use technology.
It's not that technology is evil.
It's that we can't We have an inability to see beyond its use, and that's because we lack the consciousness and the natural intelligence to see beyond the illusion.
So I agree with what you just said.
There's another layer to this, which is about who controls the tech.
So, of course, I'm a fan of decentralized content, decentralized knowledge, decentralized power.
But, of course, technology lends itself to be centralized in the hands of the few.
The wealthy, such as Elon Musk, for example, or the founders of Google or the people running YouTube or Meta, the Mark Zuckerbergs of the world, And regardless of what our viewers think of Elon Musk, I think it's wrong to have that much power in the hands of one man.
Why should one man or woman be able to decide who's allowed to speak on their platform?
That is inherently wrong, even if the person is currently behaving in a way that you agree with at the moment.
Tomorrow, that could change.
So power needs to be decentralized.
And that's one reason why I'm doing our AI LLM project, because you can download it and run it locally.
It doesn't run in the cloud.
But almost all the services of big tech, of course, run in the cloud, which means that every person using that system is getting fed the same centrally controlled information.
It's sanitized.
It's censored.
It is altered in order to present a particular worldview that is a distortion of reality.
Your thoughts, Corey?
Absolutely.
I think this is why it's actually great.
There's people like yourself who are constantly investigating, trying to see what is these norms that are pushed upon society, these very standardized answers.
It's very mechanized.
And you see this with medicine too, with pharmaceutical medicine.
Oh, you have this illness, this disease.
Well, now you're labeled this.
Now you have to do this.
It's missing that human, personal, individual touch.
And this is why I have a big medical project with all, you know, these whistleblowers talking about their experiences in the system, lacking this right brain feminine influence because we have a very left brain masculine based medical system that says, you know, we have to look at the statistics.
Carl Jung made a similar observation in his book, The Undiscovered Self, his final book before his death, talking about how we're looking at the world through a scientific lens, but we're missing this human element.
I think this particularly hits it on the nail when it comes to natural intelligence versus artificial intelligence, because I'm not against science.
I mean, you're a scientist, Mike.
I love the scientific work you do, but you don't forget about your humanity in the process.
You're still a personable individual.
You're not just purely looking at just statistics.
You care about people and you care about their feelings.
But you also recognize the facts, right?
So being able to cipher through this can be difficult because some people are very emotional.
And they let their emotions override all their actions.
And some people let their analytics get them so close-minded, they're skeptical of everything and they're not open to anything, right?
Like new sciences, for instance, quantum sciences and spiritual sciences and the philosophy in ancient history, all that stuff, which is still up for air and for grabs.
I mean, just look at the pyramids and see how much mystery is regarding Atlantis and these different ideas.
But someone from the science field said, no, you can't question that, right?
Oh, COVID?
No, you can't question that.
The experts say this.
And this type of expert authority mentality is the issue, which is why my focus is always with the everyday person.
So when we empower the everyday person with the information, with the tools that are only for the select few, absolutely we're giving them the power that they deserve to be free because knowledge is freedom.
It's a prerequisite.
It's a requirement.
The idea of the occult, which is hidden, hidden knowledge.
There's these few people at the top of the pyramid.
That is occult knowledge.
They're keeping it to themselves.
Knowledge is power, and they're keeping it away from the masses, those in the bricks of the pyramid, and they're keeping them in darkness.
But when you take away those bricks, the light gets revealed to everybody.
They call this light Freemasonry as opposed to dark Freemasonry, where someone's trying to conceal the light from everybody else.
See, there's different sides to Freemasonry, light and dark.
To them, light is knowledge.
Dark is ignorance.
And we're kept in ignorance.
And we keep ourselves in ignorance.
And that's where mental slavery comes in, which is why my work is with the everyday person.
It has to be because we enslave ourselves.
We are not seeing past the illusions.
We're allowing ourselves to give up our own power, which we absolutely have.
It's astonishing to me how many people they don't see through the illusions, they use Google as a search engine, and they never see what's missing from the search results, which is the whole point.
So our information reality is being reshaped and strictly limited to the point where I say that human knowledge is on the endangered species list at this point.
Right.
And what what Google and other services, big tech services are doing is exterminating human knowledge in order to dissociate people from the things that work.
A great example of that is the rise of Rockefeller Medicine and the FDA, founded in 1906, then systematically outlawing Native American medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, Amazonian medicine, Tibetan medicine, herbs and remedies and things that were known to be effective and to work, even when they did not know the scientific reason why it worked.
They never diagrammed the molecules in their medicine.
They just knew that this medicine produces this result.
And that's also a kind of science.
It's kind of a cultural, you know, indigenous cultural science, you could say.
You don't need to know the molecules, even like traditional Chinese medicine.
It talks about meridians in the body and, you know, the lung meridian and the kidneys and how it's all interrelated.
They didn't have to open up people's bodies and dissect them and take their organs out in order to know this.
They knew it functionally.
But all of that knowledge is being obliterated by big tech today.
Right.
And I love to hear scientific explanations as to how our ancients knew this knowledge way before we even had microscopes and all this stuff, because it is quite amazing.
And this is where this power of natural intelligence comes in, to see way more than just what we see with science.
And again, Carl Jung, who I think is a reputable source, he's a psychiatrist who looked at people's minds, he looked at the shadow that people had in their psyche, that particularly I have a lot of references for in my slavery book for that reason.
I mean, he even refers to the state and technology as a sort of slavery.
He says that in his own words.
He calls it state slavery.
And so I bring a lot of this to the surface in my work, very extensive.
I'm willing to give you my book for free as well, Mike.
Here it is, my rendition of my Slavery Gone for Good book.
I actually have bookmarked a page talking about technological slavery, and it's because I also interviewed David Icke regarding the subject, and this is what he had to say about it.
He said, artificial intelligence will do more and more of human thinking until human thinking as we know it now will be negligible.
Now I'd like someone to define a more extreme level of slavery than to have your entire perceptual processes externally controlled and dictated so that you not only have your body enslaved, you have your mind enslaved.
And as you know, when we talk about slavery and slavering the mind is the whole foundation of it, people won't even have their opinions manipulated or their opinions silenced.
They will be given their opinions through AI's connection to the brain.
And again, I see this as a parallel to the governments that presume to give you your rights when you're just born here.
Oh, you're just born here, so you must sign this birth certificate.
You're a part of the system.
This is the rules you have to play by.
We provide it.
It's given to you.
Basically, they're assuming to be nature.
They're assuming to be God and its authority.
Technology can do the same thing.
Not that it is, but it can, because it is one of our inventions.
see it's one of our inventions, that's where it's the problem.
Many people will see government or slavery or technology as sort of just ingrained within the natural universe, as if there's just no separation between ourselves and what we create or our mind and our heart and our body.
And, you know, coming from an Eastern perspective, these parts are all integral.
You can't leave one out.
You can't be super analytical or super emotional, like I said.
You need to be able to have a balance.
You need to be able to be holistic.
You need to be able to look at the whole body to get to the root cause.
So absolutely, I think we need to take a holistic approach if we're going to deal with this problem.
And that means, you know, not just discounting it then.
Right.
I want to add that language models can be particularly convincing to people because they simulate human consciousness, and convincingly so.
A lot of people would talk to, for example, our language models right now, and they would be convinced that it is a conscious being.
You know, the so-called Turing test, as it's called, which is actually a very bad test.
Pretty much everything that we're releasing today would pass the Turing test, but none of it's actually aware.
These are, in essence, statistical parlor tricks.
At least at the level that we're playing with right now, 7 billion parameters, 14 billion parameters, it can spit out a sentence that sounds convincing on any topic that you want, but it can't plan.
There's no planning.
It's only predicting one word at a time.
It's only predicting the next word in a sequence.
And it doesn't have goal-oriented behavior.
And it can't plot against you, and it doesn't have any memory of what it just produced, you know, two seconds ago.
But Mike, we can create all that.
Don't you understand?
We're gods of this universe.
We can just program everything.
You know, we can just change our gender.
We can change anything we want, because this is what we are as human beings.
This is social Darwinism.
Yeah, right, exactly.
But what I do want to get to, though, is the next step, which is putting AI behavior models into humanoid robots.
So, like, right now, Corey, the world of AI is very virtual, right?
It's pretty easy to have that dividing line between, okay, this is an AI-generated image, this is AI-generated text, AI-generated film, versus what's real.
This is a desk, this is my water bottle, this is my smoothie.
It's a pretty clear dividing line.
But when you start having AI-powered humanoid robotic systems that become very commonplace, they're parking your car for you, you know, or they're going shopping for you, they're making dinner, you know, chopping up the carrots and hopefully not wielding knives against chopping up the carrots and hopefully not wielding knives against you, then those lines become very easily blurred.
What are your thoughts on what happens as humanoid robots, which will be mass-produced in the next couple of years in China, when they start being outfitted with AI behavior model systems, speech recognition, and text-to-speech engines, and then they start being used commercially and even residentially and then they start being used commercially and even residentially for non-commercial purposes across our society?
you Well, it's going to create a whole other ballgame of symptom management and a bunch of other problems that don't need to exist, as with our usual inventions that we usually create out of a lack of something natural.
And that's usually how it goes with a lot of our man-made things, is we usually create them in response to missing something more in our life.
So, for instance, we'll go on social media or we'll go on a dating app because we can't socialize normally as we have for thousands of years face to face.
These technological interfaces are basically enacting replacements upon the human intelligence and the natural intelligence, God's intelligence, whatever you want to call it.
And when you recognize that, that means it's never really going to work.
Even if we think it's going to work.
Even if we think we've got it all figured out.
And that's the funny thing.
Is when we think we've got it all figured out, human beings will be stumped time and time again to realize they don't.
Because they continually think they're the gods of this universe.
So they'll create new philosophies thinking this is the best philosophy.
They'll create new governments thinking this is the best government on earth.
They'll create new systems of control, of medicine, thinking this is the one cure to all cancer.
They're still trying to find that, and cancer cures are literally everywhere in nature, as you know.
So when the answers are just given by nature, as evident by my message, nature is the answer, what are we doing to create our own answers that we use through technology?
If it's not to aggregate and help those natural processes that are already there, what is it doing?
And you can make that case and say, well, isn't the robot that's helping me cook helping me with my natural processes?
Maybe.
But at the same time, it's going to take away that bonding experience you had for cooking or the time and care that you put into making your own dish and realizing that cooking is a skill.
And then what happens when you lose that robot?
Now you can't cook for yourself and now you're dependent on the robot.
There's a lot of problems of attachment, which is why Buddhism and a lot of the Eastern philosophies talk about materialism and this problem in regards to spirituality.
Again, materialism versus spirituality, natural intelligence versus artificial intelligence, these have a tie.
Just as much as slavery versus God's government.
Government of man versus the government of God and natural law.
I love how every time that you say something, It brings up these intriguing ideas and questions.
So let me respond to one thing there.
So I live on a ranch, and I have a lot of very practical skills and things in which I engage, you know, chopping firewood for the winter, for example, changing the valve stem of a tractor tire, which was something that I was doing yesterday, taking care of chickens and goats and other animals and dealing with irrigation systems, planting trees, all these kinds of things.
So I'm experienced enough and mature enough to know how to do all these things.
If I had grown up with a robot that did all that, I would not know any of that.
Now, we live in a country where most of the younger generation, although there are exceptions, but most of the younger generation, they don't know how to do anything real, as you are well aware.
They can't plant a tree.
They wouldn't know even where to begin.
They're not hands-on unless the hand is on their phone, and that's the only thing that their hands are on.
This is my focus, Mike.
You have to understand, my generation was the last line.
I'm serious.
I'm 23, and the last line before this next age of this generation that doesn't understand, this is just born into technology.
My iPhone was released when I was eight years old, so I still had a little experience of not being on technology.
But now, after my generation, basically, we just hit the line.
You know what I mean?
So I feel like I'm in a position of more obligation to have to decipher the natural versus the unnatural in this world, especially since I studied natural law and then natural medicine, and you just see it everywhere you look.
It's like...
We aren't seeing that there's answers everywhere around us.
So what are we doing trying to create solutions to things that we could have better solutions to just by understanding the world we live in?
That's my continual question.
So, continuing with that, then...
If I were to have a robot today to come help me on the ranch, I wouldn't lose the knowledge of the skills that I've already done a thousand times.
But I could be more productive, let's say, theoretically, with a robot, as long as it was an open-source local robot that wasn't spying on me all the time and reporting to the cloud.
That's the other thing that robots will do.
There'll be spy machines spying on you constantly.
So many concerns.
Yeah.
It opens up a can of worms.
But again, if a young person who doesn't know these skills takes on a robot and then it's only going to take about a week before they're like, robot, do that.
Robot, chop the wood.
Robot, plant the robot.
Do the dishes.
I'm going to sit here and play video games or whatever.
And then it becomes the robot is living the life of this child or the teenager.
Like, robot, live my life.
I'm just going to veg out here in front of this TV or whatever they're doing.
And so you lose humanity is what happens.
I have another quote relevant to what you just said, if you don't mind me mentioning it, from Gandhi.
He says, we should not use machinery for producing things which we can produce without its aid and have got the capacity to do so.
as machinery makes you its slave we want to be independent and self-supporting so we should not take the help of machinery when we can do without it we want to make our villages free and self-sufficient and through them achieve our goal liberty and also protect it i have no interest in the machine nor do i oppose it if i can produce my things myself i become my master and so need no machinery
now i know it sounds like a very anti-technology position coming from mahamma gandhi there but notice he doesn't say he opposes it and he says that he needs no machinery and The word need is very important here.
If I say I need my phone, or I need this pill, this drug to really fix my health, oh, I'm a diabetic, I identify, I attach with this thing, That's an issue because, again, you're assuming what you attract, what you say you need is part of your essential nature.
So if we say we need slavery on Earth because who will pick the cotton?
We need slavery because, man, for thousands of years, that's how the systems work.
It's like the family structure.
It's like the government.
We need to have them because that's the way humans have always done things.
If we believe that, then we believe it's as natural as our family.
We believe it's as natural as just normal human interaction.
Divinely dominate over others and tell others how to live their own lives.
I mean, for thousands of years, people believed that.
It was natural.
They thought it was essential.
And there was no question as to if it was unnatural.
Well, luckily for us in technology, a lot of people are questioning if it's not necessary.
But many people are going to fall into the trap because that's what the nature of an illusion is.
They fall into the trap of seeing something as reality, thinking it's reality when in reality it's not.
So being able to decipher is where I have to put my focus, which is why I think permaculture is also another relevant solution to this.
Not only is it a solution to the economy and to feeling good.
I mean, there's benefits of just having a single plant on your desk.
So imagine being in nature as a whole.
But, you know, there's benefits for your health.
There's benefits for the local economy, the environment and the soil, the habitat, everything.
But also it connects you with nature hands on.
So permaculture to me not only is the solution to our freedoms, but also to this problem of technology, because now we're encouraging people to interact with nature directly.
Yes.
I just want to bring that up.
That's important.
However, I would add and maybe counter a little bit that permaculture is so much easier when you have a backhoe.
You need machinery to reshape the land, to build the swales, to affect water flow.
I could not do what I do in terms of growing food without machinery, which means a combustion engine, which is considered low-tech.
I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for machinery.
I wouldn't have found your website, your research.
I wouldn't have written this book.
I wouldn't be on the interview right now.
I'm not discounting it.
I'm saying that we recognize that we don't necessarily need it, and that our life is not dependent on it.
And that's where the key comes in.
Yeah, I absolutely hear you on that, too.
And I can live off-grid.
It sucks, by the way.
You're constantly working.
You're incredibly busy just to take care of everything.
I don't want to live entirely off-grid without electricity.
It's just that you're perceptually seeing that you're not a slave to it.
Yeah, exactly.
But just let me finish the thought on permaculture.
If you know what you're doing, if you have a permaculture plan for a piece of land, you can come in one time with machinery, reshape the land, reshape the contours, capture water, create areas that are beneficial for long-term sustainable food forests,
and then after that, Right.
centuries to come.
So there is a role to bring in machinery, but we don't have to, if we're smart, we only use it to set up the conditions of nature taking over.
Right.
Right?
So again, the artificial, the man-made supporting the natural.
That's right.
Like, here's a great example of this.
On my ranch, let's say there's an area where there's a lot of rainwater just running and creating a ravine.
So it's eroding the soil.
Nothing wants to grow there because the water's not being captured, okay?
So I bring in a bulldozer, let's say, and I make a little tank, as they're called in Texas, a little pond with a dam just to capture the water and And have a buffer before it runs off, okay?
So it's got a spillway.
That alone, if I do nothing else, trees will start to grow there because the water sticks around.
And I've seen this so many times on what I've done on my ranch.
I don't have to plant.
You'll start to have dewberries.
You'll start to have acorns.
You'll start to have wild food with no effort on your part because that's where Mother Nature takes over.
But I had to intervene and hold the water.
There's a good example of that.
Act only when necessary.
This is part of the Taoist philosophy, too, of what they called Uwe because you gain muscle when you're resting.
You exercise in the gym, but it's only when you're resting is when you gain muscle.
When you put the plant in the ground, that's like 1% of the job.
The rest of the 99% is the plant just being there, sitting there.
So, in Taoism, in a lot of Eastern philosophies, it's this idea of being able to let life be.
Being able to be, in a way, content or know when to let go.
This is where meditation comes in and what they call effortlessness.
Being able to recognize that if you're a master at something, it's effortless.
It's natural.
They equate the word natural to the word essentially effortless because if something is so good, you don't have to really convince someone that it's good.
It will demonstrate its ability.
The actions demonstrate, show by example.
The plant in our reality, everything manifests on its own.
Our heart is beating on its own.
Our lungs are breathing on its own.
This is spontaneous.
And because of this spontaneous order, it's like this amazing order from nature, which is incredible.
It's like this machine that humans can't replicate.
If we tap into that and recognize that, we only act when necessary because we've got to be very careful with this machine.
This machine is powerful.
It can do a lot of things.
And we could even mess ourselves up a lot, as we have.
And we still have a great ability to do things because nature allows us to do so.
But it's really just seeing that most of our reality is actually manifest from this yin, or this feminine energy.
Because without darkness, you don't have light.
So when we talk about power, when we talk about freedom, when we talk about actions and what do we do in technology, it's about recognizing those things that we don't see.
And it's also about recognizing when not to act.
That is more important than when to act and what we do see.
And so I want to emphasize that, right?
Because it has to do with natural law too, seeing laws that are all around us that are always at work, yet they're not necessarily physical or they're not always immediate because karma can take time.
We need to be able to observe and sit back and listen.
And we can only do that with our feminine yin side.
But if we're masculine, always got to have a grip on everything, got to control all these people, got to control all of nature, make sure that everything's perfectly controlled.
This is why gardening is not as popular as permaculture, because it's all controlled, whereas permaculture is saying, let's work with the natural environment and the forest, and let's replicate the forest in a food forest, an edible food forest.
So all they're doing is they're learning from nature and applying it to their own life and recognizing we need to eat food, so this is our human nature in relation to the natural world around us.
We're basically harmonizing the two.
And so this is why I make a differentiation between the man-made and the unnatural.
Just because something's man-made does not make it, by definition, unnatural.
And food and food forests, it's not structured.
It's not monoculture.
It's very diverse.
Now, I want to show you, go ahead and show my screen.
This is Kubota with its new autonomous AI tractor that sprays pesticides automatically on rows of monoculture crops.
You can also put a shredder on it and you'll have an AI tractor robot running around shredding things, hopefully not running over your dog or children or other things like that.
This is what's being pushed by a tractor company now.
Of course, all electric, no combustion engines allowed.
But this kind of automation is only possible when you have monoculture crop rows on land that's cleared of trees, land that, frankly, would be dead if they weren't falsifying the production by adding the synthetic fertilizers and so on.
To me, this is horrifying.
I mean, I don't want an AI robot tractor spraying toxins on food crops.
And their excuse is probably like, we need to feed a lot of people.
There's a lot of demand for food, but then what about decentralizing it all and teaching people how to grow their own food and having everybody have some small food forest, which can be done in a very small section or area, or vertical farming or all these other techniques.
And then people can trade and barter with each other.
Now you're helping literally everything.
The economy, people's self-sufficiency, their connection with their neighbor, with themselves, with nature.
I mean, this is all about stacking functions, right?
That's a principle in permaculture within itself.
Yeah, and by the way, then local farming also produces more local connections, which creates redundancy and resiliency, stronger families, stronger communities, whereas if you have just one rich farmer who's got the latest robotic tractor and he's farming 5,000 acres because he just hits go...
And it's like, well, what about the rest of society?
What are they doing?
It's symptom management.
That's all it is.
Just like the pills.
We'll keep inventing new pills.
Keep inventing new technologies.
But in reality, the answers are here.
And so we have to work with what is here.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well said.
Let's talk about your website, theliberator.us.
Tell us a little bit about what people can find on your site.
You already mentioned one of your books, but what else is available?
Everything, you need to basically go to create freedom in your own life, to basically network with other people, connect with others in your area or around the world.
I have a networking section on there.
I have coordinators in different states.
Basically, if you can just email them, reach out.
And you can send us an article, turn into a video for you.
We have resources for pretty much everything on there, strategies and tips, like what you can do in your local area.
We have different systems set up like showcases, summits, like campaigns, nonpolitical campaigns, you know, documentaries, live streams, radios, truth music radio.
Everything is basically on there.
We have a learn page and an action page.
That's where I recommend people begin.
I have a video compilation three hours long.
It's also on Brightchown.
Be sure, you know, it's on every platform.
I have it like usually on the top of all my channels.
It's like the most important freedom videos you need to watch.
It's got the best videos, I think, on the entire Internet regarding freedom videos.
It's like animations, very well done, easy to understand.
So if anybody's ever new to these freedom concepts, they want to get to the root cause, I would recommend that Learn page or that video, which is also linked on that page.
And again, my focus is the abolitionist because really they taught us that there's this monumental truth that all government originates in slavery.
And I'm waiting for the historian to challenge me on that and say I'm wrong.
I'm going to go to colleges.
And this is like my public announcement, Mike.
I'll make it a little bit on here, I guess.
I'm going to go to colleges.
I'm going to pull off a Milo Yiannopoulos in a way.
Well, maybe.
I followed him when I was 16 in 2016.
I loved it.
I loved the energy.
But the truth is, my generation needs help.
They have a lot of mental problems.
This generation overall needs help with their freedoms and everything that's going on.
I want to be there for my generation.
I'm going to go to the colleges.
I'm going to make connections.
I'm going to do events there.
And I'm going to share my book.
And I'm going to challenge the professors.
And I'm going to encourage that the students empower themselves and see the value that they have.
Not to be dependent on any doctor, any government, any entrepreneur or person giving them advice on the internet.
I just want to be myself.
And that's what I'm going to tell them.
I'm myself.
Why should you trust me and my words?
Because I'm not trying to be someone.
I want them to be powerful.
I don't want people to look up to me.
I want people to look up to themselves and see the inherent value within themselves.
When they understand slavery, they can set their own boundaries.
They can solve their own relationships, get out of all their toxic behaviors.
They can understand parts of their mind that they've never accessed before.
Slavery is, to me, the pinnacle of what it means to say something is tyrannical or something is evil.
So the opposite of slavery is freedom, and that's everything that's good and loving and everything that people desire in their life, whether they're free from disease or free from being controlled by all the different aspects of society that's In government and even if their parents are overly controlling or even if they feel like the material things, like the technology is taking control of their life and they can't escape it.
Well, they can if they understand the simple dynamic of what is slavery that I define in detail.
How come historians have not observed the nature of slavery and gathered all the material that I've gathered from the abolitionists talking about the full nature of slavery?
It puzzles me, but that's why I created it.
And I hope to effect change on the college campuses very shortly.
Well, that sounds like a very exciting journey that you're on.
And I always laugh when people say, well, America ended slavery.
I'm like, are you kidding me?
What do you do every April 15th?
You file taxes, financial slavery.
Yeah, tell me a government that wasn't founded on war.
Tell me a government that doesn't have taxation, doesn't have imprisoned systems.
That's literally what slavery is founded upon.
How do you look up?
How do you make someone a slave?
Indoctrination, war, jail.
In America, we have actual prison slave labor to benefit corporations.
Yeah.
Don't we have more people in jail per capita than any other nation in the world?
Over like 80% of the world's prisoners.
That's crazy.
And by the way, over 80% of it is victimless.
Right.
That's right.
Extraordinary.
All right.
Well, Corey, your thoughts and your message here are very critical for our time because we are devolving into a theocratic dictatorship at the moment, it turns out.
And under Zionism control, by the way, which is crazy scary to see this happening in real time in front of us.
We need to reassert our freedom, which means we need to understand what is freedom.
We need to understand how slavery is achieved so that we can overcome it and express our true liberty and freedom.
So Corey, I want to thank you for your time today.
Your website again is theliberator.us.
And thank you for contributing some of your interviews for our AI language model project, by the way, that will definitely have a very positive impact on the knowledge base in our system.
Thank you for your insights and everything you've always done.
Seriously, you deserve it.
If anybody I can ever observe in independent media, you've done the most projects and I'd say the most innovation regarding different things.
Somebody should have developed an AI chat model.
The fact that you're doing it is amazing.
Well, we're just getting started, man.
Wait till you see what we have in mind over the next year.
It'll blow you away.
One final thought.
I would love to see an action page on your website, Natural News.
Just my personal tip.
Overnight, we can affect change in independent media.
If you and Alex Jones, or some of the biggest names, told your followers to stop paying taxes, just putting that out there.
One town, one community, that's all it takes.
That's how simple it is.
Henry David Thoreau said we could have a peaceful revolution that way.
Leo Tolstoy said that's the solution, is noncompliance.
Non-compliance, withdraw consent.
It's coming from me.
You don't have to say it.
It's coming from me.
I know it's a bold one.
It's one that requires a sacrifice, but there has not been freedom ever achieved without sacrifice in history.
Well, there would be about a million unemployed accountants who mostly just work for the IRS, but somehow we have to pay them to do our taxes to pay the IRS. Yeah, the system's all jacked up, that's for sure.
But we'll talk about noncompliance more when we do another interview with you down the road.
I look forward to talking with you again.
Thank you for joining me today.
Very grateful.
Thank you so much.
All right.
Thank you, Corey.
Have a great rest of your day.
And thank you for watching here on Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon.
And don't forget to check out our Brighteon.ai model.
That's at Brighteon.ai.
That's what we were talking about earlier.
You can download that.
It's free.
It's non-commercial.
And you can run it locally.
And we're releasing new models.
Every couple of weeks, we've got some big ones coming out that are filled with knowledge for self-reliance so that you don't need Google to tell you what to do.
You don't even need an internet connection.
You can just use it locally on your own computer, and no one can ban it.
No one can censor it, and no one can surveil it.
So, yeah, we practice what we preach here.
Thank you for watching today.
Again, God bless you all.
Take care.
I've got some great news.
We have some exciting new products at healthrangerstore.com and some old favorites that are back in stock.
Let me show you what we have.
If you'll go to the camera here on the desk, we've got quercetin that is now available, plant-based quercetin.
Which is extremely popular right now.
Check it out, healthrangerstore.com.
We've got pine needle nasal spray, which is made from the loblolly pine that is very high naturally in shikimic acid.
And I actually harvested those pine needles myself, by the way.
So that's a really exciting project.
I won't travel without it, by the way.
Even public speaking, I always use that to rinse my nasal passages before going out in public.
We've also got back in stock now laundry detergent powder.
And remember that we don't use any toxic fragrance chemicals of any kind.
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If you want laundry detergent that's clean for you and clean for the environment, then you can get that at healthrangerstore.com.
Blueberry vanilla pancake mix powder that is a fan favorite.
We keep running out of that.
We've got that back in stock.
We have a seven-seed snack mix now that has this combination of really high-nutrition seeds.
This is going to be a very popular product.
You can add it to cereals.
You can add it to mixes.
You can eat it as a snack all by itself.
I know people are going to love that one.
We've also got Chaga mushroom powder back in stock there as well, and a few other products.
Check out our website, healthrangerstore.com, and there you'll see the specials that we have.
You'll see right there is Memorial Day specials that we have.
We've got lots of things back in stock.
We're able to offer discounts from time to time, and new products are coming in regularly.
And, of course, every purchase that you make at HealthRangerStore.com helps support our infrastructure, what we're building for you, the platforms for freedom of speech like Brighteon.io, the free downloadable AI language model tools at Brighteon.ai, the free downloadable AI language model tools at Brighteon.ai, helps fund this platform, the free speech video platform, Brighteon.com, as well as NaturalNews.com and other efforts that we're undertaking.
Everything that we do is designed to support the infrastructure of human freedom.
We want you to be healthy.
We want you to be well-off.
We want you to live with abundance and inspiration, and with a sense of optimism about the future, which I know is difficult these days, given all the insanity in the world, but one of the things that helps you the most is staying healthy.
And that's why we do laboratory testing, extensive testing for all the products that we sell at our store.
And that's why we choose clean, organic, certified organic, raw materials, ingredients for all of our products.
So again, shop at healthrangerstore.com.
You'll be doing yourself, your health, a favor while also financially supporting us so that we can continue to build the infrastructure of human freedom that benefits you and everyone around you.
And thank you so much for your support.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon and the Health Ranger Store.
And God bless you all.
Have a wonderful day.
Take care.
A global reset is coming.
And that's why I've recorded a new nine-hour audiobook.
It's called The Global Reset Survival Guide.
You can download it for free by subscribing to the naturalnews.com email newsletter, which is also free.
I'll describe how the monetary system fails.
I also cover emergency medicine and first aid and what to buy to help you avoid infections.
So download this guide.
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