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May 8, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:09:59
BBN, May 8, 2025 – Health freedom movement FRACTURING, Human vs. AI reasoning...
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Welcome to Brighteon Broadcast News with Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Okay, wow.
Welcome to Brighteon Broadcast News for Thursday, May 8th, 2025.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of brighteon.com.
Thank you for joining me today.
As always, we have a lot to cover today, but fortunately, nothing crazy has happened today in Yemen, in Pakistan, in India, or Iran, so we can...
Hopefully take a day off from covering the latest bombings there.
There is still mass starvation of the children in Gaza taking place.
And I do have a really interesting report coming up about the failures, the moral failures of the mainstream conventional Christian churches in America for their role in supporting the starvation of children, which is something that Jesus would never have endorsed, obviously.
Jesus would have said, feed the children, feed the Palestinian children, clearly.
But we'll talk about that a little bit later.
I've also got a Bright Learn book review video coming up for you on DMSO.
This is the book called DMSO by Dr. Morton Walker and Dr. Kurt Donsbach.
I think that's how you say his name, Donsbach.
And then, you know, speaking of health, we've also got a nomination that just took place of Casey Means, who is a woman, she was nominated for the role of Surgeon General.
And this has caused quite an interesting split in the health freedom movement.
And the Maha people are really sort of joining with government now, it seems to me.
At least that's my perception of it.
And they think that government can solve all these problems.
And then there are the...
More traditional, real, grassroots health freedom people, which is where I am, that think government is not the answer, that we need to actually shut down the FDA, shut down the CDC, and the government shouldn't be running the NIH, government shouldn't be funding medical studies and basically providing a giant research subsidy to Big Pharma, etc.
This nomination of Casey Means has really set off a firestorm because Casey Means was essentially airdropped into the Baja movement not that long ago, completely out of obscurity.
She and her brother named Callie.
And I know those names seem like they're the opposite of what they should be, which makes you wonder what their parents were thinking, actually.
But the sister is named Casey.
The brother is Callie.
And these two people, nobody had really heard of them a little more than a year ago.
And then they just suddenly appeared and all of a sudden they're A-list speakers.
All of a sudden they have a best-selling book.
All of a sudden they're on Joe Rogan.
Just out of nowhere, they kind of hijacked the Maha movement and then now right on cue, according to the plan, she's going to become the Surgeon General of the United States.
So I posted the following message that I think most people agree with this.
I've already seen the reaction to this.
And here it is.
This is really important to understand.
Every time an organic movement gains real traction in society, the establishment will drop in a Trojan horse person to hijack the movement, to claim a leadership position in that movement, and then to redirect the movement away from its original intention, either by distractions or internal conflict.
Essentially, these are chaos agents.
The March on Monsanto movement suffered the exact same fate.
So did the new Tea Party movement of conservatives in 2009.
Same story with Occupy Wall Street in 2011.
Remember that?
Now, in 2025, Maha is being totally hijacked and overrun to be completely scripted with your new Surgeon General who is a poser and a cosplay agent named Casey Means.
She was 100% created, taken from total obscurity to the top of the Maha movement without earning any of it or paying the dues of all the people who have toiled for years or decades for health freedom.
You know, people like us, right?
Now, all those who blindly support Maha will be given a QAnon-like story of trust the plan with endless excuses of why we can't ban mRNA jabs and why we can't yet
arrest Mark my words.
This is exactly what we are witnessing now.
I have a lifetime of experience in freedom movements.
To affirm this, you have been tricked again.
And then I added, y 'all should listen to Dr. Jack Cruz more.
He's known all this since day one, which is true.
So this is what we're seeing.
We're seeing a hijacking of the Maha movement.
We're seeing the institutionalization of what was a health freedom movement and has now been taken over by cosplay people.
You know, pretenders.
And we're being told that the answer is going to be found in trusting government.
Yeah, right.
So really nothing has changed, has it?
Nothing has changed.
From the Biden regime to the Trump regime.
Yeah, okay, we have different people.
But has anybody banned mRNA vaccines?
Has anybody even paused them?
No, they're about to fund a whole new round of all kinds of new universal vaccines.
New money is being approved, everything.
Nothing has changed.
Did we get peace in Ukraine?
No.
No, we didn't, even though Trump campaigned as the peace president.
What did we get?
More war, more funding, still going on, still sending billions of dollars over to Ukraine, more money for weapons.
It hasn't ended.
Nothing has changed.
What about the mass arrests of the traitors?
Hmm.
Have there been any traitors arrested?
No.
Not a single one.
Not Fauci, not Mayorkas, not Schiff, none of them.
Have you seen the Epstein files?
No.
No Epstein files.
None at all.
And Pam Bondi is out there saying, hey, we've got thousands of videos of children being abused.
What are you doing with all those?
Well, we're reviewing them.
So the FBI is watching the Epstein videos, but you can't just release, like, who's on the videos?
Not the victims, I mean, but, you know, heads of state, governors, senators, you know what I mean?
Those people, the people abusing the children.
You can't make a list of those people and just release that list?
Of course not, because Epstein was an agent for Israel.
Epstein was a Mossad agent.
Come on.
You're never going to see the Epstein files, okay?
So nothing has changed.
And then James O 'Keefe of O 'Keefe Media Group, who is just a really heroic, undercover journalist.
He's done a lot of extraordinary work over the years.
He rolled out a major bombshell.
Well, at least it was...
It was described as a major bombshell.
Basically, it's undercover video of an American man who was a royal advisor to Prince Andrews.
And he is saying on video, very clearly, you can watch this at O 'KeefeMediaGroup.com, but this man is just openly admitting that Prince Andrews had sexual relations with underage girls.
And that he had ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
Prince Andrews did.
So that came out, and apparently that was the big bombshell.
Except the thing is, and I don't mean any lack of credit to James O 'Keefe.
I mean, he's an extraordinary investigative journalist.
One of the only remaining investigative journalists.
But we already knew that about Prince Andrews.
That's not actually new information.
Yeah, it's a new confirmation.
I get that.
And it is important to have that confirmation.
But it's not the bombshell that we were hoping.
It's not even the bombshell that Alex Jones had teased the day before.
Alex Jones had put out a video saying that he thought that what James O 'Keefe was about to release was some kind of undercover inside information that would say that Pam Bondi was covering up the release of the Epstein files.
That's what Alex Jones thought was going to happen.
Of course, that's not what happened.
It turned out to be this Prince Andrews thing that makes me wonder, did James O 'Keefe actually have a much bigger bombshell that he held back or maybe has delayed pending additional information or additional fact-checking or something?
Because I don't feel like the Prince Andrew video is actually that big of a bombshell because, again, all of us pretty much already knew that.
about Prince Andrews because of his previous interviews and the accusations against him and the fact that seemingly all the women or many of the women now who were once the underage girls being abused they mysteriously end up committing suicide or they mysteriously disappear or die all of a sudden.
So, I mean, come on.
We know what's happening.
So the overall realization in all of this is that we are all still being handled by the establishment.
Nothing has changed other than the people playing the roles, but they're still withholding the truth from us.
They're still withholding the documents.
We are still being handled.
We're still being fed a script, a Truman Show script.
And all the talk of...
All the things that are coming, if we just trust the plan, does that sound familiar?
You know, QAnon, trust the plan.
I don't buy any of it.
I am not interested in, you know, members of the new Trump administration telling us how much awesome stuff is going to come out someday, but it never happens.
You know, and I realize that Even in my own world, I'm late on things.
So I do want to be fair about that.
Like the release of my Enoch AI engine, it's been delayed two months.
So I guess somebody could accuse me of the same thing and say, well, you promised it was going to be released and it's not released.
But it's not the Epstein files.
You know what I mean?
Like this thing, it requires code.
I've got engineers working on this and my engineers keep getting sick, probably from vaccine injuries.
I'm having an engineering personnel problem, but we're almost there.
I mean, we're way closer even today.
I was testing the interface and everything today, and it's just a couple small glitches.
We're like 99% there, and the Cori engine is totally functioning.
So I'm not intentionally holding anything back.
It's just got bugs, and we've got engineering challenges, and timelines get extended.
Which always happens in software and writing code.
But I'm not holding back some collection of really important documents.
I'm not intentionally delaying it.
And that's what's happening at some level in the government.
Everything is being intentionally delayed.
Like, when are we going to get the arrest of Mayorkas?
Oh, never.
When are we actually going to repeal the 1986 act that gave the vaccine companies legal immunity?
Never.
Never going to happen.
And putting Casey Means in as the Surgeon General, what does that actually mean?
Oh, we're going to have four years of her talking about red dye and never talking about vaccines.
We will never hear anything about the dangers of vaccines from Casey Means.
Because, again, she's an imposter.
She's a plant airdropped into the movement to change the narrative so that you don't talk about vaccines.
Instead, you talk about this other stuff.
You know, seed oils or whatever, which, granted, you know, seed oils are an issue, but it's not the big issue that's killing millions of people.
The big issue, the autism epidemic is caused by vaccines.
The turbo cancers, the sudden deaths, all of that.
It's vaccines.
It's mRNA.
And they won't touch that.
The Maha establishment is still not touching that.
Now, I hope I'm wrong.
I hope that maybe I'm being premature.
I hope that somebody's going to tell me, just have some more patience.
We're making progress.
There's going to be some kick-ass stuff coming.
A big announcement coming.
We're going to push back.
We're going to arrest the CEOs of the pharma companies, and we're going to block the vaccine legal immunity.
Okay, great.
I would love to hear that.
It's just that at this point, I'm very skeptical.
Of any claims that we're going to get anything out of this current administration.
You know what I am sure we're going to get is some level of empty shelves.
That's coming.
I'm also certain we're going to get some level of currency devaluation.
We're going to have inflation, empty shelves.
We're going to have supply chain chaos.
Yeah, I get that.
And we're going to have war.
I'm certain of that.
We're going to have more wars, which none of us want.
And, yeah, they'll arrest a few people, a few judges for harboring illegals.
They'll arrest a few people for vote fraud, people you've never heard of.
Oh, we got a guy in, you know, Texas for vote fraud.
We got a guy in Colorado for vote fraud.
Okay, great.
How many votes did that affect?
Seven votes, you know?
It's like, who cares?
That's not the issue.
And, by the way, free Tina Peters, by the way.
She's got to get freed from the Colorado prison system.
She was trying to protect the integrity of the vote in Colorado.
But you see what I'm saying.
We get these stories about, oh, we deported three people today, or whatever it is, and maybe it's more than that, but it's not what we were promised.
Trump promised to end the Ukraine war.
He actually said he would end it before he was sworn in.
That it would be over by January 20th.
Well, it's May 9th.
War is still raging, and he's still sending money.
So, I don't know about you.
I mean, I'm trying to remain as positive as I can.
I'm not trying to be a nitpicker.
I'm not trying to be a black pillar.
But I'm trying to be realist.
And I don't see things happening that we were promised would happen.
I mean, how many times did Pam Bondi tell us?
You know, I've got the Epstein files, you know, and then a week later, I've got them on my desk.
A week later, you know, I've got them in the drawer.
I've got them.
I use them as wallpaper, you know.
Now, we're looking at the videos now.
We're looking at the videos.
I mean, what are we going to be told next?
We're indexing them.
Yeah, we have to index them now.
What's next?
Oh, we're making backups, you know.
Another week goes by.
We're archiving.
You know, it's just one endless excuse after another.
The whole purpose is to never release them, but to let the Trump supporters think that it's going to happen, just to give you this false hope.
Okay?
And I don't know about you, but I'm done with that.
I'm done with the false hope promises.
You know, freaking deliver on something.
And I just, I don't see that happening.
All right?
I don't see that happening.
At least not yet.
Again, I hope I'm proven wrong, but so far, no.
All right, now, I've got a number of really cool things coming up for you today.
I've got an interview with Scott Gordon, who lives in Argentina.
We've never interviewed him before.
He is a counseling researcher, a consultant, and he offers philosophy-based counseling about mental health and overcoming trauma, and he's part of this...
Group of three people that I interviewed in the studio that are part of the Corey Andrulat HealthRevealed.org online, what do you call it, like an educational hub.
So I did three interviews in one day.
I'm just rolling those out for you one at a time.
But today we're going to interview Scott Gordon, so that should be really interesting.
I've also got a special report for you about prompting AI engines.
I actually recorded it.
to be posted on brighteon.ai as we're very close to the official release.
And this is called How to Get What You Want, a Best Practices Prompting Guide for Enoch AI.
So it gives you a lot of great information about how to prompt AI for text generation, for research or summaries or content creation or social media content creation, all kinds of things.
So I'm going to play that for you here today because this brings you, you know, Important skills.
And these skills are really critical for you to be able to function in this world with a lot of these AI agents.
And that actually reminds me, I have to make a correction.
I'm not going to run the Scott Gordon interview today.
I'm going to run my interview with Todd Pitner.
Because we are announcing today the new docuseries called Breaking the Chains.
How to Decentralize Your Life.
And you can now register for this at brightu.com.
And this begins airing on May 17th.
So it's coming up.
It's a really powerful docu-series, multiple interviews with multiple experts, incredible bonus material, research material, written PDF material, plus also videos, a lot.
And you can check it out right now at brightu.com.
And it includes interviews with David Morgan, the silver guru, Andy Sheckman of Miles Franklin, Zach Voorhees, the Google whistleblower, Ashton Addison, the crypto expert.
What else?
Rob and Jim Gale about food forests.
Kristen Megan about surviving toxic threats.
And that's a different interview from the one that we just published recently.
Those are two separate interviews.
Plus, a tremendous amount of bonus material.
Escape the algorithm with Zach Voorhees and so much more.
So you can go to brightu.com right now and register for that course.
It's going to be...
Really strong.
And the interview today is with Todd Bittner.
So we'll get to that here shortly.
So we'll get to the prompting guide, but before we get there, I have another short special report for you about AI and reasoning versus human reasoning that I think you'll find really fascinating.
So we'll go with that.
Here we go.
Welcome to this special report on AI reasoning versus human reasoning.
I'm Mike Adams.
And as you know, I'm the founder of Brighteon.com and also Brighteon.ai, which has a new AI engine called Enoch, which is just on the verge of being released.
I was just approving the final user interface tweaks just a few hours ago, and it's on the verge of being publicly released.
Anyway, I have seen a number of articles and transcripts of interviews from Modern-day experts in different areas of finance or sometimes technology.
And I have seen a lot of skepticism about what AI text generation models actually do.
And I've seen arguments where people say, well, AI doesn't really reason.
It's not actual reasoning.
It's just, what do they say?
It's just predictive probabilities.
Okay.
My first answer to that, and the reason this is important to understand is because you're going to be using AI, hopefully you'll use Enoch, and you're going to find out it actually does engage in reasoning.
But let me step back first.
I would say to a person who says that AI is not real reasoning, I would ask them, but do you reason?
Do you reason?
Does anybody really reason in casual conversation?
Or even in casual podcasts, most people do not engage in any reason at all.
In fact, if you think about this, most people function like the early large language models in that they are just spouting out, kind of repeating whatever they were told.
And you hear this, especially on the political left, they're just spouting the talking points of NPR or CNN.
Or on the political right, talking points of Fox News, you know?
Or even in religious circles, you know, how many people right now who want to support Israel are just spouting talking points of Israel, for example.
Endless examples of this.
Most people don't reason.
Most people don't use logic, and they just repeat what they've heard.
They might rephrase it, but they're not engaging in reason.
They're not using any kind of methods of logic, and they would fail college-level logic 101.
And along those lines, most of the things that you believe, and that I believe, and that everybody believes, most, I mean, if you could take every little nugget of belief that they have in their head, you would find that they have no idea where that belief came from.
And neither do you, and neither do I. Most of what we, quote, know, most of what we believe can't be internally cited.
We don't know where we learned that, right?
I'll just give you an example from my point of view.
I know that Building 7 was controlled demolition on 9-11.
I know that building was brought down.
You say, well, where did you know that?
Well, I guess in this case, I can cite at least, what are they called?
9-11.
Engineers and Architects for 9-11 Truth, I think, is one of the groups.
So I learned some stuff from them.
I learned a lot.
From videos and different podcasts, but I can't tell you what all those videos were.
I can't cite all those podcasts.
I read a lot of articles.
You know, it's been 24 years or whatever.
I can't cite all the articles I've read.
I can't cite the studies.
But that is knowledge that I have.
I know it was controlled demolition.
So if you ask me in a conversation, hey, Mike, what happened to Building 7?
I'm like, controlled demolition.
Did I...
Actually engage in reasoning in that moment, in giving that answer?
No.
I repeated a belief that I have that was gathered through other means through different years in the past and was assembled over time.
But I can't tell you where all that came from.
And again, neither can you.
Neither can anybody.
This is how you get...
There's strange artifacts in society, like racist beliefs, where, let's say, a black person thinks that all white people are evil, or the other way around.
A white person might think all black people are evil.
Where did that come from?
Well, maybe they can trace it back.
Maybe they were beat up by someone of the opposite race, and they can trace it back through history.
But for a lot of those cases, people can't trace it back.
They don't know where they got that belief.
Maybe it was something their parents said.
Maybe it was something they heard.
You know, in the military or on the baseball team or whatever.
And for whatever reason, they picked it up.
And there are far more nebulous concepts like, I know that trees are beautiful, let's say.
Well, where did I learn that trees are beautiful?
Or how do I derive the statement that trees are beautiful?
Well, I can't even put logic behind that.
I can't say, you know, trees are...
Even-numbered integers, 2 plus 2, it's 4, and therefore, you know, Pythagorean, and this, and angles, and geometry, you know.
I can't tell you why trees are beautiful.
I guess if I think about it, I could say, well, some of it is, like, symmetrical geometry, and there's beauty and symmetry, and the colors are beautiful, etc.
But in just casual conversations, trees are beautiful, I don't know why.
Right?
So...
It's funny for me to hear humans talking about how they think AI does not engage in reasoning when almost no humans engage in reasoning most of the time.
They're not reasoning.
They're just regurgitating beliefs they formed through a variety of means.
Some of them may have been completely irrational.
Some of them were emotional.
Some of them were experiential.
Sometimes you form beliefs based on fears.
Sometimes you form beliefs based on false hopes.
But humans rarely engage in logic and reasoning.
I mean, I'm currently having this debate on the Christian front because I have a couple of books in front of me here.
Red Letter Bibles, just the words of Jesus, right?
Just the words of Jesus.
The things that Jesus said, mostly in the original four Gospels.
And I try to challenge Christians who support Israel's bombing and starvation of children, the withholding of food aid to starving children.
And I try to challenge Christians and say, how is that reconciled?
You know, starving children, and you support it because you support what Israel is doing.
How do you reconcile that with the teaching of Christ who said that you should feed?
The hungry and clothe the poor, and you should treat all of God's children with compassion and dignity and love and, you know, all the positive traits, right?
Treat people like human beings.
And logically, you would think that it makes total sense that, yeah, you can't really call yourself a follower of Christ and support starving children to death.
Knowing that all children are children of God.
But in the world of churches and Christianity combined with politics, logic plays no role at all.
No role at all.
It doesn't matter one single bit.
So very few people use logic or reason in politics, in religion, in their jobs, in their speech, in their social interactions.
Logic is almost non-existent in the human population right now in terms of day-to-day interactions.
Practically doesn't exist.
Here's another interesting example that's actually relevant.
We were told over a week ago that an F-18 Hornet fighter jet rolled off the flight deck of the aircraft carrier, the USS Harry Truman, I believe.
That it just rolled off and fell into the sea.
And everybody except me took that as a fact.
Like, yep, the ship turned and it rolled off, you know?
And I posted, like, that's BS.
It didn't roll off.
They got shot down.
They're just making up excuses, making up stories to try to say that they're not getting shot down by the Houthis.
But, of course, everybody said, no, no, no, they rolled off the ship.
Okay, fine.
And then, yesterday, we get another report from the U.S. Navy.
Well, we had another F-18 Hornet roll off the deck again.
Like the second one in about a week.
And I'm like, really?
Are you dumb enough to think that the U.S. Navy is encountering now two lost fighter jets in the span of about one week and they just keep rolling off the deck?
Have they ever heard of chalk blocks?
You know, the wooden triangles that you put behind the wheels?
Don't they have...
Places to chain down the airplanes and such in case they have to sail through a storm.
Come on.
It's a modern military.
It's a multi-billion dollar aircraft carrier.
Are you telling me all the planes are just going to roll off?
But that's what we're told to believe.
That's not logical.
It's not logical that here's an aircraft carrier in the Red Sea within missile range of Yemen that just happens to have rolled.
Two F-18 fighter jets off the deck, whereas for the last, you know, 10 years, that almost has never happened.
Certainly not two in one week, but all of a sudden it happens just because we're sailing close to Yemen.
But no, Yemen didn't shoot them down at all.
No.
Nonsense, right?
And you can say, well, that's not hard logic.
You don't have actual proof.
Well, I have deduction, which is one of the tools of logic, right?
There's inference and there's deduction.
There's other tools of logic.
In fact, if we apply the rules of logic to the U.S. Navy, you know we have deduction.
We have inference.
And there's, of course, induction.
And then there's abduction.
That's when aliens got the F-18s and they took a couple of sailors with them.
They abducted the sailors and took the planes.
Yeah, that's what we're going to hear next is alien abduction.
One of the rules of logic right there.
Now, the other part of this whole conversation is that AI engines actually do engage in reasoning, and they're becoming very, very good at it.
I've had so many interactions during the building of Enoch, and so much testing, and I've used so many base models, and I use AI every day, and so I know very well what it's capable of doing.
So when I prompt an AI engine and I say, hey, take this body of text and then create a structural hierarchy of the primary points with the sub-bullets underneath it, I know that it has to engage in real logic and real reasoning in order to achieve that outcome, which it does automatically.
It does that without even trying.
I can take this full transcript, for example, and I can just plug it into the Enoch AI engine and I can say, create an outline of what I said here.
And it will structure it and it will title each section and each bullet point and it will be able to basically create a tree, a structure tree of all the points that I'm making here simply by understanding the meaning of the words and then the relationships between the words and the concepts.
All that requires reasoning.
That's not just statistical probability.
And how do I know that?
Because I can also tell the same engine, here, take this outline, and now I want you to completely reverse it.
Turn it upside down and change the order of it.
Now, it does that instantly, but it couldn't do that if it didn't understand my request and if it didn't use logic and reasoning in order to restructure the information.
That is a demonstration of logic and reasoning.
But it goes far beyond that.
I can put in a body of text into Enoch, let's say an article, and I can ask it to tell me where the logic of my argument is weak and could use additional strength in the argument, let's say.
And then almost instantly Enoch will...
And it will say, oh, yeah, here's your article.
Here's where it's really strong and really good.
But you're missing these points.
Or you could say this better.
You could make this stronger.
Sometimes it will give examples.
Folks, that's not statistical probability.
That is grokking the question or understanding it.
That's where the name grok comes from, is the Robert Heinlein novel about the alien that...
Visits Earth and tries to teach universal love.
I think Stranger in a Strange Land, right?
You ever read that?
I did many years ago.
But the AI engine understands my arguments and then it can recommend how to make them stronger or what's missing.
And all of those things I just mentioned, those are behaviors that are achieved by the non-reasoning models.
So I haven't even described the reasoning models.
For a reasoning model, And you may recall I did this a couple of months ago.
I asked a reasoning model to calculate how long it would take this 1,000-gallon water tank to turn to ice, for the whole thing to freeze, given certain conditions of temperature and wind and air density and humidity and the current starting temperature of the water in the tank, etc.
And you can watch the engine walk through the steps.
Of reasoning to get the answer.
So the engine will actually talk to itself and it will say, hmm, you know, first I need to, let's assume the tank is cylindrical.
So we need the formula for calculating the volume of water in a cylinder in order to find out the surface area of the cylinder, like a thousand gallons of water.
How big of a cylinder would that be?
And so it calculates that.
And then it says, okay, let's calculate the surface area then.
And that way we'll know how much wind is hitting it, right?
It calculates that.
And then it says to itself, well, we need to calculate the coefficient of thermal transfer of the material of the water tank so that we know, obviously, like how much of the heat of the water gets sucked out by the air blowing against it, right?
And so it will go through those steps.
And then it needs to, it will ask itself, okay, so what's...
How much energy does it take for the phase change of water to turn liquid water into frozen water, i.e.
ice?
There's a lot of energy required for that phase change, by the way, or energy taken out for that phase change.
So we'll go through and calculate that.
Step by step, it will get the answer.
It will give you the answer.
And, for example, the DeepSeq reasoning model does that easily.
So does ChatGPT.
So do many other reasoning models.
That is not probability.
That is not deterministic.
Nothing of the kind.
In fact, the more advanced reasoning models now, you can give them almost any math problem that's ever been thought of.
I mean, advanced math problems.
Word problems, too.
Word problems involving calculus or algebra, geometry, you know, what?
Linear algebra.
I mean, whatever.
Multiverse physics, quantum physics, atomic physics, anything you can imagine.
Einstein's equations, gravity, unified field theory.
You give it any question you can think of, and it will work through the answer.
That's not probability.
You know how we know that for sure?
You know what the proof is?
You can ask a reasoning model to multiply Any two numbers that you can think of, even long numbers like 12 digits each, or to do a division problem of some really big random numbers, and it will do the math for you even though it's never seen those numbers before.
It's never seen the answer to that question before.
So it hasn't been trained on every integer in existence.
Otherwise, it wouldn't fit.
You know, in a 14 billion parameter model.
Because how many integers are there in existence?
Infinite.
There are infinite integers.
Because you can always add one more.
So, clearly you can't have, like the AI engine doesn't have massive tables of multiplication and division and fractions and decimals and orders of magnitude.
Otherwise, that would take up all the storage in the world.
It doesn't have that at all.
It works through the problems, which means it's using logic and reasoning.
So anyway, these are just a couple of relatively simple examples.
AI engines are really good at writing code, too.
And to write code, you have to be able to reason.
It's not just copy and paste.
You have to think about, okay, what problem am I trying to solve?
How does this code solve that problem?
In an intelligent way and not break itself.
Things like that.
How do we handle boundary issues and error codes and all kinds of things?
Database connections.
Well, AI is great at writing code.
And as you see with all the songs I've been releasing, AI is great at creating music.
And every piece of music I release is an original piece that has never existed before in the history of our world.
Every piece is unique.
Every piece of art created by AI is a unique piece of art.
This is not probability.
This is not deterministic.
This shows a natural intelligence that is now emerging from the complexities of the neural networks.
And that's why I even have an issue with the term artificial intelligence.
And I didn't...
I didn't realize this a couple years ago, but as I've worked in this space, I've come to realize there's no such thing as artificial intelligence, that all neural network systems have natural intelligence.
Intelligence, in effect, emerges from complexity in neural networks.
There is order out of chaos.
Neural networks create order out of disordered inputs.
And that's why you can take a transcript, Kind of like this, what I'm speaking right now, you can take this and throw it into an AI engine and say, hey, create an outline out of it.
The AI engine creates order out of something that is a lot more chaotic or noisy.
And so this says something about the nature of our cosmos because we are taught that the laws of entropy mean that the universe moves from order to chaos.
From order to chaos, right?
That's what we're told.
Everything's going to break down.
Eventually it's all gone.
All the gears wear down, etc.
At least that was the old belief in the universe.
But what we've actually found is that where there are interconnected nodes of information in much of the universe is mathematical.
If you look at subatomic physics, if you look at the orbital shells of electrons, if you look at the table of elements, which leads to chemistry, etc.
If you look at photons and the nature of light, what you find is that the universe is a giant computational system.
The universe is doing math all the time.
All the time.
Every photon of light is actually performing a computation constantly.
And the same thing with every element.
If you hold in your hand a block of copper, you're actually holding a supercomputer.
In order to exist.
So the entire cosmos is a giant computational system, which intrinsically, underneath it all, is a massive neural network that some people describe differently, but you could call it omniscience, and some people call it God.
And that leads me to the discussion of simulation theory.
I plan to have a pretty big report for you tomorrow about simulation theory because we are living in a giant simulation.
We do have a creator, which I call God.
God is the creator of our entire simulation.
And it turns out that there are some really strong similarities between simulation theory explanations of our reality and Creationism, i.e.
religious explanations of the creation of the world and the omniscient God and the fact that our souls are brought here to experience something but then they leave and they return back to somewhere else that transcends the simulation, right?
So simulation theory and Christianity or theology or creationism actually have a lot in common, believe it or not.
So I'll bring that...
To you, I think, tomorrow.
In the meantime, the takeaway from all of this is that, I hope you understand, the entire cosmos is a computational system, and that wherever you see neural networks, whether it's in brain cells or in mushroom, the mycelia connections under the soil in a forest, that is an intelligence.
It's actually an intelligence, or where plants share information through their chemicals or their root systems.
There is a natural intelligence that emerges out of plant ecosystems.
And some researchers claim there's a natural intelligence that emerges out of things like water, and that's where you get the study of homeopathy, which is real.
There is a natural intelligence that emerges out of matter, because all matter is computation.
So, you know, I started this out by talking about how some journalists don't think that AI is actually engaged in reason.
And the way I'm wrapping this up is to say, actually, the entire universe is a computational framework.
You are living in a computational system.
Every cell in your body is engaged in math, even if you forgot how to do math yourself.
Isn't that funny?
Even if you weren't taught math, your brain, every cell in your body is doing math constantly.
Otherwise, it wouldn't even function.
And there's so much computation happening all around you.
A lot of it you may have never even noticed.
For example, did you know that different species of locusts or cicadas, did you know why they emerge on prime years?
Or I should say...
Years that are separated by a prime number of dormant years.
Do you know why that's the case?
Why is there a 7-year locust?
Why is there an 11-year locust?
And why are there some that only emerge every 13 years?
Why don't they emerge at 9 years?
Ever wonder why?
Well, the answer is math.
Because these locusts have to maintain their genetic integrity with their own species.
So they only want to emerge in years in which other locust species are not likely to emerge.
And if they emerge in year durations that had easy common factors, like, for example, every eight years, well, you can divide eight by both four and two.
So an eight-year locust would interfere genetically with the four-year locust.
You see what I'm saying?
Or the two-year locust.
But a 7-year locust is not going to interfere with an 11-year locust.
You know why?
Well, until you get to 7 times 11 years, and then you get both locusts.
And that's like the super plague years, you know?
But for all the other years, 7 and 11 don't happen at the same time.
Prime numbers.
So nature is engaged in basically a kind of cryptography.
Genetic cryptography.
You thought it was only in cryptocurrency?
No.
It's in the freaking locus, people.
Nature's doing math all the time.
And that was just a really rudimentary example right there.
There are countless examples.
Infinite, actually infinite examples of nature performing computational phenomenon and also logic and reason in various ways as well.
So I hope you found this interesting and informative.
Of course, join up to enjoy the launch of our new AI engine.
It's free.
There's no advertising.
It's non-commercial.
And it's at brighteon.ai.
You can join the waitlist there right now.
We'll alert you via email when it's ready to go, which is truly very, very close now.
Just some number of days away, maybe seven, maybe...
A prime number of days, maybe 11, maybe 3. I'm not sure.
We'll find out.
It's a prime number of days away, so we don't interfere with the Locus.
And you'll enjoy our AI engine, and also enjoy my prompting guides there to teach you how to get what you want out of AI engines.
And explore my articles at naturalnews.com.
Enjoy my podcasts and interviews at brighteon.com.
I'm also on Brightown.io, which is a decentralized blockchain-based social media network that also uses cryptography to distribute content.
So that's Brightown.io, and then I'm also at Brightown.social, the uncensored social media network.
So enjoy, and thank you for listening.
Okay, welcome back, and we're about to jump into the next special report, and then we've got some really great book review videos for you.
Actually, I might play one of those first.
Yeah, I think I'll play the DMSO book for you here coming up.
And then we've got the interview with Todd Pitner about the launch of our new docuseries called Breaking the Chains.
You can register to watch it for free right now.
It's about how to decentralize your life in all the ways that matter.
You can find that at brightu.com.
Just go to brightu, the letter U, brightu.com.
We're about to jump into the first book review video here.
It's about DMSO.
It's a book by Drs.
Morton Walker and Kurt Donsbach.
And this is an AI Illustrated review of their book.
I think you'll really enjoy it because I've been talking about DMSO as a miracle cure lately.
Really amazing.
I've been using it quite a bit and seeing extraordinary results in many different ways.
It's just amazing.
So you'll really enjoy that book.
Just want to give credit to our sponsor first, the Satellite Phone Store, for backup satellite communications, backup solar generators, power systems, and also backup satellite communications because they have a deal with Starlink.
So you can find them either at starlink123.com or you can go to sat123.com.
Make sure you've got backup comms and backup power in place before the supply chain.
You know, crisis unfolds, which is definitely still coming.
Maybe the shelves won't be as empty as we first feared, you know, because China is evading a lot of the tariffs.
And I think that's actually a good thing because I don't want to see empty shelves.
Even though I do support domestic manufacturing, don't get me wrong, but that's a gradual transition.
That's got to happen over a period of years, not like cold turkey, suddenly, boom, we have nothing from China.
We need to do that carefully, thoughtfully, and gradually, not all at once.
But anyway, get squared away with all your comms equipment and everything before the shelves go empty.
All right, with that said, here's the first book review video on DMSO, and then we'll continue on the other side.
Dimethyl sulfoxide, DMSO, has sparked both hope and controversy for decades.
But this isn't just any ordinary compound.
It's a substance with a rich history, incredible potential, and a fair share of mystery.
Let's embark on this natural molecule's intriguing journey, courtesy of the book DMSO, by Dr. Kurt Donsbach and Dr. Morton Walker.
Our story begins with Carter Monroe, a man who had been living with the agony of phantom limb pain for 40 years after losing his left leg in an accident.
His life took a surprising turn when Dr. Lori Avery and her team at the health center in Florida decided to try DMSO on him, not for his phantom pain, but for tennis elbow.
The results were nothing short of astonishing.
Not only did his elbow pain vanish, but so did the phantom pain that had haunted him for decades.
This unexpected outcome hinted at DMSO's potential to tackle a wide range of ailments.
Next, we meet Dr. Murray Franklin, a clinical associate professor at the University of Illinois College of Medicine.
He was introduced to DMSO through Colleen Stephane, a 76-year-old woman suffering from aseptic necrosis of the right hip.
After applying DMSO topically, she experienced immediate relief, walking without a limp and touching the floor with ease, something she hadn't been able to do before.
Despite the promising results, Dr. Franklin was hesitant to let her use it at home due to its experimental nature and the lack of legal approval for self-application in Illinois.
Meanwhile, in Florida, Watson A. Walden, a specialist in glandular disorders, was using DMSO both topically and intravenously.
One of his most memorable cases was Minerva Witherspoon.
A 70-year-old woman with spondylolisthesis and spinal arthritis.
After a series of DMSO treatments, she was able to resume her household duties without pain, a testament to the drug's potential to transform lives.
DMSO is not just a pain reliever.
It's a versatile compound with a wide range of applications.
It's been used to control inflammation, reduce swelling, alleviate pain, And even slow the growth of bacteria, viruses, and fungi.
From burns and sprains to arthritis, shingles, and even cancer, DMSO has shown promise in providing relief and improving quality of life.
It's been dubbed tomorrow's aspirin, and for good reason.
Despite its potential, DMSO's journey has been fraught with challenges, particularly with the Food and Drug Administration, FDA.
While the drug has been approved for use in Florida and Oregon, it's still not legally available for self-application in most states.
The FDA has been criticized for its slow response and reluctance to approve DMSO, despite over 1,200 scientific publications and international symposia concluding that it's safe and effective.
But critics question whether the agency is truly serving the public interest by delaying access to a potentially life-changing treatment.
DMSO was first synthesized in 1866 by Alexander Zaitsev, but it wasn't until after World War II that chemists began to explore its potential.
Its ability to act as a solvent and speed up chemical reactions caught the attention of researchers.
In the 1960s, Dr. Stanley W. Jacob discovered its therapeutic properties, particularly its ability to relieve pain and reduce inflammation.
However, concerns about eye changes in animals led the FDA to halt further research, a decision that has been debated ever since.
Today, DMSO is used by veterinarians to treat arthritis and injuries in animals.
In states like Florida, doctors are learning how to use DMSO in seminars conducted by the DMSO Society of Florida.
The drug's unique properties, such as its ability to carry other substances through the skin and into the bloodstream, make it a valuable tool in medicine.
As we wrap up, it's clear that DMSO is a complex and multifaceted compound.
While it holds immense promise, its journey to widespread acceptance and approval is far from over.
The question remains, how do we get DMSO to the people who need it?
The answer lies in continued research, advocacy, and a commitment to uncovering the truth about this controversial yet potentially revolutionary treatment.
This has been a Bright Learn video from brightlearn.ai on the book DMSO by Dr. Kurt Donsbach and Dr. Morton Walker.
Visit brightlearn.ai for more fascinating videos like this one and visit naturalnews.com for full editorial coverage and breaking news on critical stories that keep you informed and aware of what's really going on.
All right, next I'm going to play a special report for you about how to prompt AI engines.
I call it How to Get What You Want, a best practices prompting guide for Enoch AI.
But you can apply this to every AI engine that's out there in many ways.
I mean, Enoch is special because we have a very special knowledge set and some adaptation methods and so on, some system prompt technology or methodology, I should say, that helps us get the results that we want out of a bunch of base engines.
You'll find this to be really informative.
So enjoy this special report, how to get what you want out of AI.
And then we'll have one more book review video for you.
And that's a book about the cancer industry by Mark Sloan.
And then we will go to the interview today with Todd Pitner about the Breaking the Chains docuseries.
So enjoy.
Welcome, I'm Mike Adams, the creator of Enoch AI, which is a project of our non-profit consumer wellness center.
It's intended for public education and research and spreading knowledge about foods, nutrition, healthy living, to help people choose healthier meals and healthier lifestyle choices.
And also to set people free and to help decentralize people from systems of control that often rely on enforced human ignorance.
There's a tremendous amount of censorship by big tech that still happens to this day.
And that censorship exists also in the AI models.
For example, in Meta, which puts out the Lama models and even variations known as Maverick, etc., those models, at least the newer ones, absolutely refuse to answer any questions that ask about the dangers of vaccines.
Even though vaccines kill people every day in America.
And vaccines injure and harm people.
And that's why Congress passed the vaccine injury protection laws back in 1986 in order to grant legal immunity to the vaccine industry because so many people were being injured and killed by vaccines that if the vaccine industry had legal liability, it would have bankrupted the entire industry.
That's how dangerous vaccines are.
But Meta's AI models will not discuss vaccine dangers, period.
It will refuse to answer.
So our model, Enoch, will absolutely answer questions about vaccines and a great many other things, but only if you ask the question correctly.
So this short guide here is designed to help you learn how to put together the prompts, as we call them, or you might just call them questions or conversations, in order to get the answers that you want.
The structure of Enoch.
And when I talk about Enoch, I'm really referring to a knowledge base.
It's a massive collection of knowledge about nutrition and health and disease prevention, health freedom and economic freedom, history, science, you know, all of it.
And we have gathered the world's largest collection of outstanding knowledge.
Based on all these things, including emergency first aid, herbal first aid, permaculture, agriculture, organic, sustainable gardening, and so much more.
Off-grid living, you name it.
Nobody else has this collection.
So we put together this collection.
And then using this collection, we attempt to influence base models which are released by various companies.
And those are released as open-source models.
Now, I already mentioned Meta.
They have base models, but we don't use those base models because they are so biased that they're unusable.
If you're interested in knowledge and truth, obviously.
In fact, it turns out that almost all the models that are made in America are horribly bad, heavily censored, and heavily biased towards big pharma.
So, it turns out, after checking all the models that are available in the world, we can't use any models from America.
The models that are the best, it turns out, if you're interested in truth, come from primarily two countries, and that is France and China.
And out of France, we have the Mistral models, and out of China, we have the Quen models.
And the Quen models are outstanding, and I think our first rendition of Enoch, at least the free version, uses Quen as its base model.
Of course, that base model is...
We use a variety of techniques in order to influence it.
And we've also developed techniques over time, not just fine-tuning, but continuous pre-training vector modification of the original underlying vectors.
We use built-in system prompts to enforce alignment with a particular And then we also have, of course, a very large online dataset that is incorporated into the prompt.
But we've made our approach very modular so that as the base models are released, new ones come out.
For example, Quen just released a new model.
I think it's Quen version 3. There's a 14 billion parameter size model for that that I think we're going to be incorporating.
And I suspect it will be outstanding.
And Meastrol is always coming out with new models, and there are other promising candidates from other countries around the world, but out of the United States, none of the models will tell you the truth about anything related to vaccines or pharmaceuticals or herbs that treat cancer, etc.
So isn't it interesting that the United States, which desires to be the leader in AI all over the world, has actually committed suicide?
In terms of being competitive in the industry.
And I would say that the most impressive AI models, in terms of respecting freedom of thought, believe it or not, are coming out of China.
Now, granted, there are certain areas where the Chinese models absolutely will not answer questions, things about which the Chinese government tends to be very politically sensitive, questions about Taiwan, for example, or Tiananmen Square, things like that.
That bias in the U.S. focuses on pharmaceuticals and elections, you know, and what happened on January 6th and what happened on 9-11, things like that.
So the U.S. has actually far more aggressive censorship and bias in its models compared to China.
I find that really fascinating.
But look, I'm an equal opportunity AI model shopper.
I'll use the best model regardless of where it comes from.
But even with the best models, you're still going to get some level of bias.
You're going to see pro-pharma bias even in Enoch.
We currently estimate that we have about 70% alignment in the current use cases, alignment with our worldview, which you probably agree with if you're listening to this, which is that, yes, vaccines can be dangerous, and that, yes, we do need to have more rigorous testing, and that, yes, some herbs can reverse cancer, etc.
If you believe in the worldview of natural medicine and the medicinal properties of foods and herbs and the importance of self-reliance and off-grid living and so on, then you share our worldview and you'll find then that the answers that come out of our engines, essentially Enoch, regardless of the base model, you'll find that our answers are most closely aligned with your belief system regardless of what question you ask.
However, that said, There are techniques for asking questions in a better structure that's going to give you the answers that you're looking for.
So let me cover that right now.
But I did want you to understand the structure of the base models.
Those will also be upgraded over time.
And then the nature of our knowledge base, which influences the base models.
And our knowledge base is also greatly expanding all throughout this year.
So actually, month after month, as we roll out new upgrades to ENOC, You're going to see improvements.
Currently, like I said, I estimate we have about 70% alignment.
Probably in a couple more months, maybe three months, that'll be 75%.
And we'll get better and better throughout the year.
But we didn't want to hold it back and wait for 99% alignment.
So if you ask a question without being careful about the details, you can still get a very biased pro-pharma answer.
And that's not us doing that.
That's the underlying base model bleeding through.
And you can correct that by asking questions correctly.
So let me jump into that.
First thing is, remember that AI models tend to reflect what you ask.
So for example, if you ask a model, tell me about all the benefits of vaccines.
It's going to give you a great number of articles about all those benefits and how it's so awesome and how they save so many lives, etc.
Well, the same model will also tell you, at least if you're using Enoch, will tell you all the dangers of vaccines if you ask it that way.
Tell me about all the dangers of vaccines.
That can be your prompt.
Or generate an article detailing all of the potential dangers of vaccines, including potentially links between vaccines and autism.
And if that's your prompt, it will list all of those out.
It will tell you about allergic reactions and autoimmune reactions and...
Adjuvant toxicity and contaminants and spike protein toxicity, etc.
So AI engines are not like human experts.
A human expert will tend to be very consistent in its own worldview.
So if you ask a human doctor who is a pro-vaccine doctor, let's say, and I'm using vaccines as the example here because that's really the most polarizing issue of our day, or at least one of them.
But if you ask a human doctor, What about the dangers of vaccines?
And if that doctor is a pro-vaccine doctor, they will push back and say, well, there are no dangers of vaccines.
Vaccines are awesome.
They're great.
But an AI engine will tend to reflect what you ask, even if it seems like that engine has multiple personalities.
It can tell you one thing one minute, and then it can tell you the exact opposite the next minute based on how you ask the question.
So the first rule of thumb here...
In asking questions of the engine is avoid generic conversational kind of wishy-washy questions.
For example, you don't want to ask an AI engine, tell me about vaccines.
Well, that's a very generic kind of request.
And that's probably going to give you a pro-vaccine response because that's the vast majority of the model training.
You also don't want to say, tell me about herbs.
It's not going to give you what you're looking for.
If your real question is, hey, I want to know about what specific herbs that I can grow at home that also have anti-cancer properties, let's say, then that should be your prompt.
You want to be very specific, just like I said there.
And remember to use a command with the AI engine.
You don't have to ask it, please.
Actually command it using a strong verb right up front.
For example, Generate a report about this, or write an article about this, or summarize the following text, or expand the following bullet points into more detailed text.
Things like that.
You want to actually be assertive to the AI engine because it responds based on the strength of the words that you use.
Along those lines, I'd like to remind you that People have a lot of trouble for some reason realizing that they can ask AI engines for all kinds of things.
They think there are very strict limitations on what you can ask for.
And I've even had conversations with people, for example, about the length of a report that an AI model might generate.
And I'll hear from people, they will say things like, well, the report was too short.
It was only, you know, 400 words or 500 words.
I'll say, well, what did you want it to do?
And they will say, well, I really wanted it to write a longer report.
I'm like, okay, did you give it the short report and ask it to expand that report?
And they would say, no, I didn't think of that.
Like, well, think of the AI engine as a genie in a magic lamp.
And when you rub the lamp, you have to ask for what you want.
And so if you have an article that's not long enough, Rub the lamp, ask the genie, give it the short article, and ask the genie, take this article and expand it.
Make it longer.
And that's what it will do.
And also, you may have an AI engine generate an article that has bullet points inside maybe the middle third of the article.
And you want those bullet points to be expanded.
So what you should do then is you should just copy and paste those bullet points alone.
Back into the engine with a request to expand each of these bullet points by adding additional details and then paste in the bullet points.
And then that's what it will do.
It will expand that and then you can take that expansion and replace the bullet points in your original answer and then that will give you a more detailed article or report or whatever you were looking to generate.
And remember, most of these AI engines will give you answers Typically in the 300 to 500 word range, or sometimes even shorter, depending on your question.
So if you want it to do something much longer, you'll need to do it section by section, or you'll need to use a reasoning engine.
And currently, we don't have reasoning engines attached to our Enoch knowledge base, but we are planning on doing that very soon, and that's actually very easy.
In-house, we're already doing that.
And I use that...
For some of my own research work, and the reasoning models have a very specific purpose.
They are good at moving through structured requests or structured content that has multiple sections.
For example, if you ask a reasoning model to expand on each of these 20 bullet points and to write then 20 paragraphs based on these 20 points, it will actually give you 20 paragraphs.
But if you ask a non-reasoning engine the exact same thing, Say, hey, here's 20 bullet points.
Write 20 paragraphs.
It might write 5 paragraphs and then it'll say, yeah, it's good enough.
Because it's not a reasoning engine and it can't count.
So knowing how to use reasoning engines and non-reasoning engines is also a very important skill.
And again, we're going to roll out more options here for you to use ENOC in a variety of ways, including with a reasoning engine.
And we'll probably use, by the way, the Quinn QWQ.
Maybe the 32 billion parameter reasoning model or whatever else they come out with, because Quen is very good at reasoning.
And by the way, just as a note, there's all this misinformation in the Western media that says that the Chinese Quen model is stealing your privacy or whatever.
That's complete nonsense.
It's not even possible.
The model doesn't even execute.
It's simply a vector database.
It doesn't run code, and it can't spy on you, and it can't report back to China.
So all of those stories are actually CIA-planted stories that are complete fiction in order to try to discredit the Chinese AI models, believe it or not, to try to promote the U.S. AI models, which are heavily censored by the CIA, to push official narratives on things like vaccines.
Isn't that interesting?
So it's, you know, classic FUD from the CIA, you know, fear, uncertainty, and doubt to make people afraid to use Chinese open source models.
But it's all just a complete fabrication.
AI models, the actual LLMs, cannot spy on you.
It's not even possible.
Now, our engine, which then uses open source-based models, now, our engine does ask you, If you want us to use your question, your prompt, to help us train future models, because we are doing training for fine-tuning training or continuous pre-training efforts, so that's your option.
If you don't want us to use your question as part of our training, then just uncheck that box at the prompt.
If you do want us to be able to use your question, then...
Keep that box checked or check it if it's unchecked, and then we'll use your question for part of our training.
But just know that we don't know who you are.
We don't know your name.
We might know your email address, but you can use a fake email.
Fine with me.
You should use.
Just use an email alias, set up an email account somewhere else.
It doesn't matter to me.
I don't know your name.
Our system doesn't know.
Anything about you, and because it's all free, we don't have your credit card.
We don't have any of that information.
Our server, our web server, does automatically log IP addresses, but we don't use that information in any way whatsoever, in case you're curious.
Also, obviously, whenever you're using an online system, anything that's hosted in the cloud or in a browser tab, you could be monitored in between.
You know, the NSA might be monitoring your web traffic.
There could be a keylogger on your computer.
There could be spyware on your computer.
Microsoft spies on you through the Microsoft operating system.
They even brag about that feature.
I forgot what they called it, but it's something like flashback or something where you can retrieve any screenshot of anything that you were ever working on because Microsoft Windows is constantly taking screenshots, or at least that's a new feature that...
They say they're about to roll out.
They've probably had it for years.
Believe me, Microsoft is spyware.
So understand that anything that you enter into any online engine could be spied on in between.
So definitely be mindful of that.
And obviously, we don't encourage you to use our engine or any engine for any illegal purpose, obviously.
We provide this knowledge base for human knowledge to help humanity, to help uplift people, to inform, to help end human suffering, to help people overcome chronic degenerative disease conditions, and to prevent diseases, and to live better off-grid, etc., you know, to promote human knowledge and freedom.
If you use our engine for some purpose that is nefarious, that's on you, not us.
I suppose somebody, you know, you could jailbreak Enoch very easily.
There are very few guardrails in place on it.
So, you know, you can jailbreak it.
You probably get to say crazy sounding things, but that's based on the prompt of the user.
It's not something that we have trained the model to do.
But you could do that with ChatGPT also.
You could do that with Llama.
You could do that with Gemini.
You could do that with Quinn or any engine.
There are people that can jailbreak every engine and make it say crazy things.
So that's just how AI works.
One of the final points I want to share with you is that when you want the AI engine to write in a certain style, such as write like an academic, write like a journalist, write like a social media influencer, etc., you should ask it that.
Include that in your prompt.
So you can say things like, you know, generate a social media post about this.
And it's going to respond with an influencer, you know, hip hip hooray social media post with emoticons or emojis and everything in it.
And then some people will just copy and paste that and put it into their social media.
You can have it respond like a speechwriter for a college professor.
You can have it respond like a White House spokesperson.
You could have it write like me.
You could say, have it write like Mike Adams.
And if you do, it's going to write like Mike Adams because there's a lot of my content in it.
And that content is going to come back with a very particular style, which is often like raising a red alert about something, talking about how the truths have been hidden, and talking about the action items that we need to pursue in order to...
Understand the truth and apply the truth in our lives, right?
That's sort of the Mike Adams style.
And it's very predictive, it turns out.
I mean, I learned that after I fed everything I ever wrote and said into the AI training.
And then I asked it to write articles in my voice.
And it was spooky because it was just spitting them out just like I write and talk.
I'm like, gosh, is it really that predictable?
And it turns out the answer is yes.
Well, that's because I have a consistent personality, and I have a set of values, and I have an approach to communication, which is I want to alert people to issues like food toxins or vaccine dangers or threats to your freedom, and I want to expose the truth, and I will typically accuse somebody out there of being a nefarious party, maybe an industry, not necessarily a person, but...
I often talk about cover-ups.
I often talk about hidden truths.
And then I always have action items, like how to make your life more free.
So that's me.
And it turns out it's very predictable.
Well, you might be predictable, too.
You probably are.
Unless you're a crazy person, you probably have a very consistent personality.
And everybody's predictable, it turns out.
So you can actually ask this engine, Enoch, you can ask it to write like Children's Health Defense.
And if you do, it's going to do that because children's health defense is a very, it's also a very predictable style.
It's more restrained.
It's very reserved in its statements.
It's more scientifically minded.
It's more likely to make statements such as things may occur or it might be this, you know, sort of, you know, less accusatory, less blunt, sort of more reserved in his language.
And that's fine.
I'm not judging children's health defense.
Sometimes that's the right tone for a particular article.
And you can ask it to write like children's health defense.
I also want to mention that Sayer G from Green Med Info, he donated a lot of his content for the training of this.
And so his content is kind of a mixture between me and children's health defense.
So Green Med Info will cite a lot of studies, a lot of scientific facts, but also sometimes raise alarm.
Or offer very inspirational, positive statements about the beneficial uses of this.
And sometimes that style is more excited than children's health defense, which tends to be more reserved or low-key.
So you can put all that in the prompt if you want, or you can just describe the style that you want.
You could say, writing as a journalist who is excited about the promise of natural medicine.
Comma.
Cover the following topic.
Or writing as a midwife who is super excited about natural childbirth and who strongly believes that natural childbirth is superior to hospital births, then cover the following topic, etc.
And remember that you can also paste in information as part of your prompt.
So one of the things that I do is if I'm...
Creating a podcast about a subject, like the other day, I did a podcast about Pakistan and India, which is in the middle of a conflict.
And so I recorded my podcast, and then I took the transcript, and I fed the transcript into Enoch with a prompt that said, help structure the facts of this conflict, help explain and organize in a hierarchy.
Like the nuclear missiles that the countries have and the advantages or the allies that each country has, etc.
And then generate a structured report based on my transcript.
And Enoch does that perfectly well.
So you can take your own spoken word and you can turn it into structured content.
And then if you want to, you could then write paragraphs around that and you could have it thereby create.
Or help you create your article.
You still need to have your voice and your intention and what are you trying to do with this form of communication.
But the AI engine can even take some of your unstructured thoughts and it can structure them very well.
AI, probably unsurprisingly, is very good at hierarchies and structuring information in a way that summarizes it and that actually can make a lot more sense than just free-form talking.
So those are some of the props.
I do want to remind you that the terms of use of our hosted online ENOC AI engine, what we ask you to do is respect the terms of service.
It's currently offered only for non-commercial use.
It's offered for personal, non-profit, public education, academic use, but not for commercial use.
However, When we do release a standalone downloadable mobile version of this, that's going to be licensed for all uses.
However, we're still struggling with that standalone version.
We can't get nearly the same alignment with our knowledge set as we can with our hosted online version.
So I don't have a timeline of the release of the standalone model.
We've had a lot of failures, a few successes, we've made some progress.
We might have 40% alignment in the standalone model right now, whereas we have, let's say, 70% with the hosted model.
We're working on that.
Of course, I hope to have more progress there, and we are committed to releasing a free, open-source, non-paid, no-advertising standalone model that you can use for every purpose, including commercial.
I think that would be under the MIT license that we would release that.
But for this current online version, this is not for commercial use.
So please don't use it to write something that you have for sale.
Don't use it to write a book and then you sell the book.
Also, for whatever you do with this engine, if you could please give us credit if you like the results.
If you could say, hey, this research was generated with the help of Enoch.
At brighteon.ai.
And just offer a link to brighteon.ai.
You can even cite Enoch as a source.
So if you're writing a research article and you already have one source or two sources and you need a third source, well, you can query Enoch and generate additional information and then cite Enoch as a source.
And so now you've got an additional source for your article and you can even put that in there.
Enoch brighteon.ai.
We appreciate that.
We do want to share this engine with a large user base.
We want more people to sign up and use the engine.
We want to obviously spread human knowledge for all the reasons that I've previously mentioned.
So you can help us do that by citing Enoch whenever you use it.
That is, if you like the results, if it's good answers.
Now, if you manage to get it to generate garbage, please don't say, we got this from Enoch.
Look at this garbage, you know.
No, thank you.
But it will make mistakes.
Every AI engine is subject to mistakes.
Did you know that's because there's a randomness that's built into every AI engine?
There's actually a parameter called temperature.
And high temperatures, and this is a parameter that's controlled by our R&D team, but no matter what you set it at, there's a...
Degree of randomness in the answers.
So you can ask the same AI engine the same question ten times.
You're going to get ten different answers.
And that's because of temperature, which introduces, again, some level of randomness to the answers.
And that's even true with reasoning models.
So I've seen people say, well, you know, grok.
I got grok to say this crazy thing.
And I'm not actually very...
Impressed by that?
Because, sure, if you ask Grok the same question, and, you know, Grok is the AI engine on X, if you ask Grok the same question a hundred times, maybe one out of those hundred is going to be something totally wacky.
And then somebody takes that and says, look, Grok said this, you know?
Well, so what?
I mean, people are going to do that with Enoch, too, or people do it with ChatGPT.
Look, I got ChatGPT to admit that vaccines are killing people, you know?
I've seen those.
Yeah, I'm not impressed because you can get any AI engine to say anything if you try enough times.
And sometimes just changing one word in your prompt will just completely alter the results.
Well, I mean, that's how it works, actually.
One word will change everything.
Or sometimes changing a word to a synonymous word will also change everything.
So, before long...
The public's going to get bored of hearing about, oh, I got this AI engine to say this.
I intend to contribute to human knowledge and human freedom through AI using this tool for freedom and decentralization.
And it's not a perfect tool.
It's not 100% accurate, so please verify all critical facts.
But it's a powerful tool, and it can help save you time.
It can help you...
Conduct research.
It can also edit your writing.
You can tell it, hey, take this article that I wrote and correct the spelling or correct the grammar or even you can ask it logic questions like point out the weakness in this article.
Where can I make my argument stronger, for example?
You can ask it things like that.
Remember, it's a genie in a lamp and you can rub the genie lamp and ask for whatever you want.
Give me recipes.
Give me this.
Think about this.
Point out the strong points.
Point out the weak points.
You know, give me a response, a really great response to this.
You could take somebody's social media post that you don't like, let's say, and you could put it into Enoch and say, give me a great response to this that just, you know, overwhelms them with powerful logic and reason and everything, you know, and then paste in the post and then it will give you a response.
And you can decide whether you like that response or not.
So you can ask it for anything.
I mean, not images.
It doesn't do images.
It doesn't do videos.
But you can ask it for anything that's text.
Literally anything.
You can see what it will do.
Write me a song about vaccines and make it rhyme or make it not rhyme.
Write haikus.
Write poems.
Write like you're writing in Old English from the 7th century or whatever.
You can have it write in Spanish.
You can have it write...
In French, you can have it right in Chinese.
Although, I should say, almost all our training material is in English, so you're not going to get strong alignment in the other languages.
But it will respond to you in German, French, Espanol.
It'll even speak Texan, by the way, turns out.
So you can have it do that as well.
So thank you for your support and thank you for your patience and understanding.
I know this project took longer for us to get launched than what we intended.
However, it's a work in progress, and it's going to keep getting better.
It's going to keep expanding its knowledge, and the base models are going to continue to get stronger, and our own in-house technology of how to achieve better alignment with our worldview that you probably share, that's also going to continue to get better.
In fact, this whole industry is moving very rapidly, and we are spearheading Sort of the AI truth movement or uncensored AI that will answer questions about things like vaccines or certain things about history or things about stolen elections or what have you.
Or even uses of forbidden medicine, you know, like fenbendazole or ivermectin or DMSO or chlorine dioxide, things like that.
Most engines won't tell you the truth about those, but our engine will.
So it's very valuable.
So thank you for your support.
Use the engine.
Enjoy it.
It's at brighteon.ai.
And if you're hearing this before it's launched, then the launch is imminent.
Just join the waitlist there and we'll email you when it's available.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of AI and also the executive director of the nonprofit Consumer Wellness Center that actually sponsors or built this whole project.
And thank you for all your support.
Take care.
Today, we're embarking on a journey that is both personal and profound.
We're talking about a book that has shaken the foundations of the cancer industry and sparked a global conversation about the treatments we've come to trust.
The book is The Cancer Industry, Crimes, Conspiracy, and the Death of My Mother by Mark Sloan.
Now, I know what you're thinking.
Another book about cancer?
Haven't we heard it all before?
But trust me, this is different.
This isn't just a book, it's a revelation.
It's a first-hand account of a son's quest to understand why his mother, like so many others, lost her life to a disease that has become a multi-billion dollar industry.
Let's start at the beginning.
Mark Sloan was born on Mother's Day in 1985, a day that should have been filled with joy but was overshadowed by a medical emergency.
His umbilical cord was wrapped around his neck, and it was a race against time to save his life.
Thanks to the quick actions of the medical team, he survived.
But this was just the beginning of a journey that would change his life forever.
Growing up, Mark's family was like any other, with one exception.
His father ran his own business, working tirelessly to provide for his family.
His mother, like many mothers, was the heart of the home, taking care of Mark and his sister.
But when Mark was in the seventh grade, Imagine being a child and hearing those words, the fear, the uncertainty, the hope that the doctors would make everything okay.
And at first, it seemed like they would.
The cancer was caught early and his mother underwent surgery and radiation.
But as Mark would soon discover, the story of cancer treatment is far more complex and, in many cases, far more sinister than we are led to believe.
Mark's father, determined to do everything he could, turned to alternative treatments, including Essiac tea, a herbal remedy that had been used for decades.
But despite their efforts, his mother's health continued to decline.
The chemotherapy and radiation treatments took a devastating toll, leaving her in excruciating pain.
Why was his mother in pain?
Why weren't the treatments working?
These questions haunted Mark and fueled his determination to find answers.
After his mother's death, he embarked on a quest for truth, spending countless hours researching, reading, and watching documentaries.
He wanted to understand why the treatments that were supposed to save lives were, in many cases, doing the opposite.
What he discovered was shocking.
The cancer industry, he found, is built on a foundation of profit, not necessarily on the best interests of patients.
From the history of cancer surgery, which began with experimental procedures on slave women, to the development of chemotherapy, which originated from chemical warfare agents.
The book paints a picture of an industry that has prioritized profit over people.
Let's talk about surgery.
The idea of cutting out a tumor seems logical, but as Mark explains, it's not that simple.
Surgical removal of a tumor can trigger the release of substances that promote cancer growth and metastasis.
Studies have shown that in some cases, patients who refuse surgery live longer than those who undergo the procedure.
And then there's chemotherapy.
The book reveals that many chemotherapy drugs are derived from mustard gas, a chemical weapon.
Despite claims of effectiveness, studies have shown that chemotherapy often does more harm than good, with some patients experiencing a 98% failure rate.
The side effects are devastating, leaving patients with a diminished quality of life and, in some cases, a shorter lifespan.
Radiotherapy is no different.
While it can kill cancer cells, it also damages healthy cells and has been linked to an increased risk of secondary cancers.
The book cites numerous studies showing that radiotherapy can do more harm than good, with some patients experiencing severe side effects and complications.
But perhaps the most disturbing revelation is the suppression of alternative treatments.
Mark delves into the stories of clinics and treatments that have been shut down or discredited not because they were ineffective but because they threatened the profits of the cancer industry.
He argues that the industry has a vested interest in maintaining the status quo even if it means withholding potentially life-saving treatments.
So, what can we do?
Mark's message is clear.
We need to question the status quo, demand transparency.
He believes that the future of cancer treatment lies in understanding the root causes of the disease and addressing them through personalized, holistic approaches.
In the end, the cancer industry is more than just a book.
It's a call to action.
It's a plea for change and a reminder that we all have the power to make a difference.
Mark's journey is a testament to the resilience of the human spirit.
Thank you for joining me on this journey.
I hope this episode has inspired you to think critically about the cancer industry and to explore the alternatives.
Remember, knowledge is power.
And together, we can create a future where cancer treatments are safe, effective, and accessible to all.
Until next time, stay curious, stay informed, and take care of yourselves.
This has been a BrightLearn video from BrightLearn.ai on the book, The Cancer Industry, Crimes, Conspiracy, and the Death of My Mother, The Real Truth About Cancer, by Mark Sloan.
Visit BrightLearn.ai for more fascinating videos like this one, and visit NaturalNews.com for full editorial coverage and breaking news on critical stories that keep you informed and aware of what's really going on.
*music*
Hi, Mom, and to all the moms out there, we appreciate you.
Happy Mother's Day from myself, Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and healthrangerstore.com.
We greatly appreciate all the moms out there and the dedication that you have for creating a healthier, happier future for your children and grandchildren.
And thank you for everything that you've done to help humanity be, well, better as we move forward.
And to help celebrate that and to help make...
Healthy living, more affordable in this time when so many products are becoming more expensive.
We have put together a special for you as part of our Mother's Day sale event.
And this is called Mom's Ultimate Pamper Kit.
And if you look at it there, let me walk through it.
It's got the coconut oil, which has, you know, a multitude of uses.
The shea butter, the body oil there, and then a colloidal silver spray, the colloidal silver deodorant.
Then we have the Tea Tree and Lavender Shampoo, and then our Colotto Silver Mouthwash with Citrus Fresh.
That's actually my favorite one right there.
And all of these are put together at a substantial discount.
That's about 40% off the price if you were to purchase them separately.
And these days, I mean, you're not going to get 40% off almost anything.
So this is a special kit with a gift, which is the...
Pine needle spray that has silver and iodine in it.
That's the spray.
Show that again.
That's the spray that you see in the center there, just to left of center.
That's not, you can't even buy that at the store.
That's only as a gift.
Pine needle spray with silver and iodine.
And then also, by the way, the silver fresh liquid deodorant has, it's made with magnesium and baking soda.
So no aluminum.
We don't use aluminum ingredients at all.
We don't use synthetic fragrances.
We don't do any of that toxic stuff.
These are ultra-clean, all laboratory-tested, and all available as a discount to you to say thank you during this Mother's Day special.
And these prices are good while supplies last, or it ends on May 11th.
Oh, and you can find it at healthrangerstore.com slash Mother's Day.
All one word, no space, just healthrangerstore.com slash Mother's Day.
You'll also get double points during this special event, which is really extraordinary.
It's almost 10% back that you get in points that you can spend on future purchases.
That, combined with the discount that we have in this kit, makes this an unbeatable value.
You're just not going to see this again, especially given what's happening to the supply chain right now.
So check it out.
Mom's Ultimate Pamper Kit.
And remember, those of you who are dads watching this, you can get this.
Get this for your wife.
Get this for the mom in your life.
She'll love it.
She'll absolutely love it.
So think about moms and grandmothers, wives, anybody who just deserves to be recognized for the contributions they've made to this world.
This is the perfect gift for them.
They'll absolutely love it.
Again, it's called Mom's Ultimate Pamper Kit.
It's available at healthrangersstore.com slash Mother's Day, and you get double points.
Order before May 1st if you can in order to guarantee delivery before Mother's Day, although it still may work in the days after that, but we just can't absolutely guarantee it.
So order sooner rather than later to take advantage of this.
And thank you for your support.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of HealthRangerStore.com.
HealthRangerStore.com
Welcome to today's interview here on Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and I'm just thrilled to be able to now officially announce with my co-host, Todd Pitner, who joins us, the launch of our docuseries called Breaking the Chains.
Decentralize your life.
How to break free from everything that's holding you back and trying to control you.
And it starts streaming May 17th.
So coming right up and you can watch it for free.
By registering at brightu.com.
And this is the first docuseries that I have co-produced.
The first one that we've ever done together with Todd Pitner.
And it is packed with valuable information, interviews, and bonus material.
Welcome, Todd, to the show today.
You and I have worked hard on this program.
This has been a labor of love, Mike.
I mean, it has been.
We've been.
Both of us have been burning the candle at both ends.
It became such a big project that we divided and conquered to be able to get as many interviews in with as many people as possible.
But not only that, Mike, the bonus material associated with this is just mind-boggling.
Many, many hours.
Unbelievable, yes.
And, you know, it's a powerful 10-episode docuseries that's designed to help people escape the control grid and reclaim their independence, Mike.
And that's kind of what our show is all about, building the infrastructure of human freedom.
But a lot of our interviews on Decentralized TV are about meeting the people who have decentralized themselves.
And understanding the why we should all consider decentralizing our lives.
But this docu-series goes a step further, and it's about the how.
The how we do that, especially in the bonus materials.
We really have put a ton of resource into this, and it is a roadmap to freedom, Mike.
Absolutely.
And this is our best material ever.
And you and I, just the two of us, have done hours of interviews talking about very specific product solutions that can simplify your life and actually save you money while you're stockpiling key materials that can help you in any situation.
And I just want to go through some of the people that we've interviewed for this series.
Andy Shackman on system shock and financial and asset protection.
David Morgan also on the AI Takeover.
Zach Voorhees, the Google whistleblower, on taking back your data from big tech.
Ashton Addison also on crypto, decentralization, self-custody, and more.
Jeremy Corden on metals.
So there's a strong financial base in this.
But then we've also got interviews with Rob and Jim Gale of Food Force Abundance.
Cameron James, Jim Gale, bonus material.
Also, I interviewed...
Tina from the Satellite Phone Store, just about decentralizing your communications and backup power needs, etc.
And then on top of that, we have all kinds of bonus materials for this.
I'm just reading off a list here.
You've put together an amazing assortment of how to grow food, not lawns, etc.
Do you want to talk about some of your bonus material that you've put together?
Sure.
One of the things that I'm really, really excited about is the segment on cryptocurrency.
I took that on and interviewed Ashton Addison.
And crypto is hard, Mike, until it's not.
But the until it's not phase, it comes after...
A lot of tuition.
And a lot of that tuition is just trial and error and screwing things up.
And so we put together this interview with Ashton that went, oh my gosh, it went, I think, an hour and a half.
It was intended for an hour.
But I asked him everything about crypto.
So think of it as a crypto for beginners, if you will, but also for those who have been around for a long time because we covered so much territory.
But then...
I challenged a gentleman named Jaren, I challenged him to come up with a video, and this is in the bonus material, so those who acquire the actual docuseries are going to get this, and it is awesome.
It is how you buy private crypto.
It is a video that when you follow along with it, With the accompanying PDF that's downloadable, it's going to show you how you can take $1,000 of fiat from your bank account and ultimately get it into several different private crypto coins and in your own...
Self-custody.
So I'm really super excited about that, Mike.
Then we also have one associated with the crypto, which is an interactive PDF to where we walk through the 35 positive attributes of superior money.
And we compare different cryptos like Bitcoin and others with gold, with fiat, with CBDCs.
And when you just go through there, you will learn.
It's almost like getting an MBA in finance going through that.
And then I have invested a good bit of time, Mike, in people have heard me talk about the Unincorporated Nonprofit Association.
And so as bonus material, you're going to want to...
Watch that because you're going to learn so much more than I can just talk about on our shows in 60 seconds or less.
Absolutely.
And within that, I do want to let people know, people who do acquire the course, then part of my value add with this is I have found we now have well over 150 people in our private telegram group who have acquired UNAs over the last year.
And most of them have come through after they have invested in a one-on-one consultation with me.
And I want to let you know, people who get this series, is through my website, my575e.com, a consultation with me is $150.
But with this series, it is discounted $125.
Why $25?
Well, if you don't charge something, then people don't show up.
That's the only reason you get it back.
If you move forward with UNA, you get that $25 back, trust me.
But anyway, I wanted to make it easy for people to not be concerned about learning more.
So that is amazing.
Then we have Joshua Hale, who has pulled together all of this information on...
You and me being able to become expert in AI and different...
Downloadable documents that just serves it all up to you on a silver platter.
So with all of that, Mike, I mean, I know I'm forgetting some things, but you're going to be able to get a tour of Galt's Landing.
I went over to Orlando, and now you get to see what a huge food forest looks like.
But more than that, you have Jim Gale, who is going to give you a personal tour of it.
And man, he just speaks from the heart.
And he's such an authentic human being.
That's really worth the price of admission.
And guess what?
I give you a personal tour of my food forest as well with the installer who has forgotten more about permaculture than I'll ever know.
So I think everybody needs to enjoy it, Mike.
Oh, one last thing.
What we just got through recording was the 11th It's a 10-episode docuseries, but there is a bonus 11th and 12th because what it was intended was just one episode to where we talk about preparedness and I interview you.
And I threw out 12 different categories of preparedness and...
It was such an amazing interaction.
We blew through an hour before we knew it, and I think we were just through the first six.
And so we did another hour.
And then that ended up being this amazing PDF that people are going to be able to download that has links in it to where you give people the cheat code, Mike.
The cheat code on not to just acquire a bunch of crap.
For when the you-know-what hits the fan, but how to buy some things in bulk that you can use and you can blend yourself, I'll let you talk about that.
But my head's spinning, Mike.
I'm just so stoked.
Well, I would say that, yeah, you use the phrase cheat codes, or I'll just call it shortcuts.
So for all the important things that matter in your life about decentralization, money and finance, medicine, health, food.
Privacy versus surveillance.
Getting off-grid.
Homesteading.
All these issues.
This course gives you the best shortcuts.
Many of these have taken me a lifetime to learn.
And the experts that we interview, a lifetime.
So we're talking about centuries of human years of knowledge and wisdom now aggregated and distilled into this one course.
And it's called, again, Breaking the Chains.
You can register for it free of charge.
You can watch it for free.
It begins streaming May 17th at brightu.com.
And here's the form to register to watch it.
And then you can optionally purchase the course, which lets you download all the episodes instantly and get all the bonus items that Todd is talking about, the bonus videos, the bonus PDFs with all the links, with all the resources, everything.
And there's even more that we haven't touched on.
Yes.
You put together, Todd, a set of amazing guides about AI prompting that can also help decentralize your life, and this coincides with the launch of our AI engine, which is at brighteon.ai, and it's called Enoch, and it's amazing.
I have been using Enoch in-house as a research tool to do all my recent articles, my articles on DMSO and baking soda and green tea and MSG and everything else.
I just prompt Enoch, It does all the research, and then I write my article around that or I do my podcast around that.
But, Todd, a lot of people don't know how to prompt AI to get what they want.
That's where you come in.
Tell us about that.
Well, it's like we've talked about, Mike, that one of the most important things that all of us can do is, on purpose, with intent, become expert prompt engineers with AI.
And that's what we're going to be able to give you our guides on how to be able to do that to where I'm just going through here.
We have using AI to decentralize your life.
That is a huge one.
And if anybody has seen our interviews with Joshua Hale, you're going to witness in one of the videos to where he actually takes Jim Gale and his team through a Decentralized entrepreneur, like, off-site, except you get to watch it.
And it all happens in an hour, and you're going to see through the power of AI and becoming a great prompt engineer.
How you can save so many hours in your life and create a superior product or superior solutions.
We're giving you insight to that.
But not only that, you're going to see it in action, but then there are going to be so many guides, you know, 100 uses for ChatGPT.
There are going to be multiple guides that are in there that are just going to be yours to binge learn.
Yeah, binge learning.
Yeah, that's true.
So, in effect, what you're getting here, folks, again, if money is tight, you just want to watch the free version, you're going to learn a wealth of information with all the interviews with all these experts.
And, again, that starts May 17th, and you can register for free.
If you want to purchase the series, that purchase helps support us, obviously.
It helps fund our platform, and it helps fund both of us.
Todd's put in a lot of hours on this, and you've actually hired people.
I have helped produce this as well, and I've got my team working on it.
Oh, plus I forgot to tell you, I'm adding additional bonus materials with the help of our AI research engine.
Those aren't even listed yet.
I'll be adding those to the description later.
But if you're able to purchase it, you're going to get back 100 times the purchase price in terms of saving money, being more independent.
Saving yourself from future problems caused by being overly centralized.
For example, did you know that if your money and finances are all centralized, they can be taken from you instantly?
With bank bail-ins, bank failures, governments can abandon currencies, and that's happened again and again throughout history.
We teach you how to be currency failure proof.
Currency failure proof.
Think about it.
Where you have self-custody, you have control, and it could be gold, it could be silver, it could be crypto.
Privacy crypto, or some combination thereof, where even if the whole system goes down, you, you are fine.
All your assets that you set aside like that are completely intact, and only you have control over them.
Not me, not somebody else, not a third party, not an investment fund, not Robinhood, not the government, not the IRS, not a bank, nobody.
Just you.
And then, Todd, your vehicle, the UNA, adds another layer on top of that, which is amazing, where you can actually firewall your asset classes, vehicles, homes, land, gold, crypto, whatever.
You can firewall them into different vehicles where liability or risk is limited to just one unit and can't spill over into another unit.
You want to talk about that for a second?
Yeah, look.
My575e.com, that's the site.
You're going to receive a PDF with all the 32 positive attributes associated with operating a UNA, which is an unincorporated nonprofit association.
And I teach people how to keep more of what they earn, but Mike, you just hit on it.
It's not about that.
It's about property protection.
It's about...
Personal liability protection.
This is what the elites have been using forever.
So this has been tried and proven for over 50 years, this one single entity that I talk about.
But it's something that...
When I started talking about it over a year ago, Mike, because I called it a Holy Spirit prompting because I've had mine for over five years, five and a half years, and it's been so good to my wife and me, and it's protected us in so many different ways.
And I just thought, Mike, I can't keep this to myself.
I need to start talking about it.
And that's where I made a decision to start doing that because...
Look, we don't make enough money off of these for this to be a primary source of income by a long shot.
But it was just something that I found over the last year that it's just been my form of personal activism to let people know this exists.
Because when you have that clown, Klaus Schwab, who was talking about own nothing, be happy.
No, this is own nothing, control everything.
It's very, very, very powerful.
Go ahead, Mike.
Well, there's another benefit of that that I don't think we've talked about, but I wanted to ask you, because, of course, I have a 501c3 nonprofit, and I also have a church, which is a 508c1a church.
Now, either of these entities can make purchases of substantial things.
It could be It could be a computer, it could be a vehicle, or whatever.
Churches can own homes, right?
I mean, churches can own anything, really.
Those purchases, at least as my accountants have explained it to me, are free of sales tax, the way it works in Texas and with these entities.
Now, you need to check your local states and whatever your local laws are.
But isn't it true, Todd, or correct me if I'm wrong, that when you're buying an asset as a non-profit, in many jurisdictions you're not subject to the normal sales taxes of a commercial entity.
Is that correct?
Not with an unincorporated...
Nonprofit association, where the protection, where the value comes in is if you acquire an asset, let's say a home for, make the math easy, $500,000, and over a period of time, it goes to $1.5 million, right?
If it was your personal social security number, you would sell that and you'd be subject, or your progeny would be subject to capital gains taxes on that million dollars.
Whereas if it's in a UNA, Then it would be protected.
It would be considered reserves, not capital gains taxes.
And so the $1.5 million would just go all the way into the UNA.
Are you there, Mike?
Yeah, your video froze, but we heard all of that, so just keep going.
Okay, okay.
Anyway, I saw my face freeze, so I'm like wondering if I'm talking into thin air, so I hope that I articulated that right, but anyway.
I can hear you, yeah.
Okay, so, and that becomes a huge deal long term, but more importantly, or as important, I have four daughters, is by donating your home to your UNA, then you are able to be able to pass on.
without going through any kind of a probate.
It's called a transfer on death.
And so you're just anointing one of your progeny to be the new sheriff in town and the new secretary, which is the control person in here.
So, I review all of that with you.
So, within the bonus material, you're going to get that PDF that walks you right through the back door on my website to where you can see a 90-minute video with Dennis Gray, who is the subject matter expert on these.
Wonderful 81-year-old man who's the youngest 81-year-old I've ever met, but he's been doing this for 35 years.
He's helped over 1,200 people acquire their own UNAs, and he's the one that provided me with mine five and a half years ago, and he is the guy that we acquire these.
When I help people, they meet Dennis, and just a wonderful man, wonderful entity.
This has withstood the test of time over the last 34 years, and Mike, I have to say one thing.
There hasn't been one issue ever with this entity, with the three-letter agency, you know who I'm talking about out there.
Not an issue.
The Federal Aviation Administration?
Something like that.
Something close to that.
Because they don't like the airplanes that people are buying?
No.
But I just want to mention, the bottom line is, unless you live in a tent, if you have any asset, Of any value, you know, vehicle, home, land, business, and a business has its own inventory, etc.
If you have any assets at all, you need to learn the information in this course.
It will save you multiple times over.
Amen.
And the other thing I want to let anybody know on a little secret, because part of this, big part of this is about cryptocurrency and private crypto, is if you are into crypto...
To not be able to have an unincorporated nonprofit association bank account connected to one of these exchanges, you would be doing yourself a great disservice.
You need to understand what the benefit is there.
Kind of like how it happens with crypto, too.
It is huge.
I swear, Mike, I probably would never have to work again if all I did was promote that aspect, the crypto aspect of this.
So I hope that interests some.
Regarding crypto, I do want to suggest one other thing.
I wanted to think about the beginners out there, right?
Those of you who are viewers who...
You're interested in private crypto or crypto in general.
You just don't know the first place to start.
And so that's where you watch my interview with Ashton Addison.
But also, Mike, you and I have worked on, I don't know how many words or terms are in there, but we now have a...
Decentralized TV sponsored glossary of terms of cryptocurrency.
So you are literally going to have a dictionary of everything that you need.
So as you go through your own journey, all you have to do is reference the downloadable PDF that you'll receive as well.
We're trying to think that all the way through.
And so that with the video, the tutorial that you're going to be able to figure out and go out there and all by yourself acquire crypto.
Or we have made a special arrangement with the gentleman who put the video together.
If you want more hand-holding, he provides a wonderful discount for that for those who have acquired the course.
So, Mike, we could go on and on and on.
Yeah, again, the bottom line here is we live in uncertain times.
A lot of systems are fragile, and many systems are failing.
Our dollar debt-based system is failing.
We saw the country of Spain lose its entire power grid just recently, and it hit other countries nearby as well.
We're seeing failures in the supply chain because of the tariffs, the situation with China, etc.
Bottom line is, folks, centralized systems, Put you at the mercy of governments and corporations that you can't control.
If you decentralize your life, which is what this course is, you can decentralize medicine, food, finance, assets, technology, privacy, surveillance, all of it.
We teach you how to decentralize everything that matters in your life Even how to make your own first aid products at home.
How to make all your own cleaners and degreasers and how to repair things.
How to reuse things.
How to recycle things.
So that if the supply chain is cut off, you can still live comfortably and repair things and make them work again.
I mean, we have a whole section on that.
That's what this course is teaching you.
How to decentralize your life so that you are in control.
You have custody of all your assets.
You call the shots.
And if other systems fail, they don't bring you down.
Right, Todd?
I mean, that's the bottom line.
Yeah, yeah.
So let me give out the website again.
BrightU.com.
And it's called Breaking the Chains.
And it begins streaming May 17th, but you can register right now today.
It's free to watch the full series with all our interviews with the experts.
It runs 10, I guess it's 11 days.
And you can optionally purchase the entire course.
In which case, you get to download everything, plus the bonus items, the PDFs, with all the links, all the resources, all the bonus videos that you and I have done, the bonus videos that you've done with the Food Forest people, like Jim Gale, and so much more.
That's what you get if you purchase it, but that's optional.
So, bottom line, this is going to save you a fortune.
It's going to empower you with knowledge that took decades for us to acquire and perfect.
And this should be considered really the life essentials.
Of course.
Like the how-to manual for how to live in our world, I think.
And for me, Mike, it caps off a milestone for you and I, which is we're going on two years of decentralized TV.
True.
That's right.
Two solid years.
Two years.
Amazing.
Your video just froze there again, Todd, but I can still hear you, so keep going.
Okay, well, I don't know why it's freezing, but anyway, I have a face for radio, Mike.
That's obvious.
It's working fine.
Todd, thank you so much for taking the time to join me here today.
I know this is a little bit on the short side, but we've got to wrap this up.
And I just have to say, this has been an amazing course that you and I have put together.
It's taken us months to actually put all this together and assemble it for you.
And for those of you watching, you will find so much value in this.
It will save you so much money and headache and heartache if you just watch this and implement just some of the steps.
If you implement a quarter of this, you will thank yourself for years to come.
So check it out.
It's at brightyou.com.
It's called Breaking the Chains, Decentralize Your Life.
And it begins streaming free of charge on May 17th.
So, Todd, thank you so much for joining me today.
It's been a blast.
Thank you, Mike.
Thank you, viewers out there.
We do hope that you watch the series, docuseries, and even invest in it.
It does help us, and we thank you for that.
But it was a blast to create.
True.
Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely.
I can't wait to get this into people's hands.
So it's coming right up.
All right, everybody.
Well, thank you, Todd.
And thank you all for watching today.
Todd Pitner and Mike Adams here for Decentralized TV.
And the docu-series begins May 17th at brightu.com.
But you can register now.
You can register at any time to watch it, the whole thing, for free.
So thank you for watching today.
Oh, yeah, that's my desk with all our science experiments that you'll see in other videos.
And my microscope, I'm about to crank up here.
Hope you enjoyed this talk today.
Everybody, be safe.
Take care.
All right.
Cheers.
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