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Sept. 19, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:17:24
Brighteon Broadcast News, Sep 19, 2025 – You must learn to control AI and robots to SURVIVE the soci
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Welcome to Brighton Broadcast News for Friday, September 19th, 2025.
I'm Mike Adams, of course, thank you for joining me here today.
The topic today is simulation theory, AI, robots, decentralization.
I've got a great special report coming up called How to Use Robots and AI Tools for Survival and Decentralization.
So here on the show, we don't just attack technology, obviously, we uh we turn it around.
We use it for humanity, we use it for our own goals, just like we're using the internet right now, or just like we would use video technology or whatever.
We use AI, and we're going to be using robotics for pro-human tasks, which includes living off-grid, decentralizing your life, becoming more uh sustainable, more redundant in your lifestyle, growing more of your own food, growing more of your own medicine, which in short order, robots will be able to help you do that.
And I mean robots under your control.
Offline robots with open source code that you'll be able to buy and roll out on your homestead or your your farm or just your house somewhere that can help you get things done so you can focus on more long-term planning and strategy and being ready to survive what's coming.
Now, why is this important?
I believe that humanity is about to go through the most difficult times, certainly in our lives, but arguably some of the most difficult times ever, I mean, perhaps on par with uh World War II.
I think that we are headed into, I mean, clearly, in my view, we're already in the opening chapters of World War III.
But it hasn't really taken off yet, although I think it's going to.
And I tend to agree with Professor Jiang at uh predictive history.
Uh he's uh the that's a channel on YouTube.
He's become quite well known all of a sudden.
Uh Professor Jiang is his name.
He teaches at Beijing.
And he is able to, I think, very accurately assess where things are headed.
And he is predicting that the United States will be within the next two years, will be engaged in a ground war with Iran.
That is the US will fight for Israel.
U.S. soldiers will bleed out and die on the battlegrounds on or near Iran.
And probably the U.S. will be defeated in that war.
And this will be a historic turning point where the world realizes that the U.S. can be militarily defeated.
It will be a grave mistake to try to invade Iran for a number of reasons, uh, one of which is just the the terrain of the country, and also how far away it is from the United States, and the fact that so many other countries will probably come to the aid of Iran, which could include Russia and China.
So this is going to be the last desperate effort by the West to try to dominate the world, and it's going to fail.
There's going to be another war happening at the same time, and that's the war over Ukraine, which Professor Jiang says will be a war focused around the city of Odessa.
That's the southern port city of Ukraine, but a city that has historically been part of the Soviet Union before the 1991 breakup.
It's a very important port city for a number of reasons, uh, strategic reasons, uh, industrial reasons, import-export, transportation, etc.
Uh Russia wants Odessa.
And if Odessa is lost by the West, then that means that NATO has lost, Ukraine has lost, it's done.
And as Russia makes a move toward Odessa, which it is doing meticulously, actually it's grinding down the Ukrainian military.
It's not really moving aggressively in terms of territory, but it's grinding down Ukraine's ability to defend itself with an eye on Odessa.
But Russia will probably surround Odessa, a tactic that Russians have really mastered, and also back in World War II.
They did the same thing to Germany, for example, surrounding the German Sixth Army, just outside to the west of Stalingrad.
And so the Russians do encircling maneuvers, they cut off supply chains, and then they can lay siege to a large area, a city or an area in the countryside, and cause the enemy to be defeated.
That's probably the tactic that Russia will try to use to take Odessa.
The West is going to fight fiercely to keep Odessa.
And that's going to include Western European countries.
Germany, France, Romania, probably Poland, certainly Britain, and perhaps others.
I don't think Turkey will get involved.
But the other countries will and the United States will be involved at some level.
But this will also almost certainly result in the defeat of NATO.
And so with the defeat of NATO in Ukraine and the defeat of America in Iran, the fall of American empire dominance will be complete.
At that point China will probably move aggressively on Taiwan because the US military will be grossly overstretched and Taiwan will fall into the hands of China probably without much violence actually I I don't actually anticipate a big long drawn out war.
I think China will make a move and Taiwan will just surrender.
You know how do you fight how do you fight China really when the US is occupied in the Middle East is going to shape up so these three areas will determine the fate of the the future of civilization on our planet again Odessa Iran and then probably the United States and Western forces will be defeated in all three cases.
That's going to lead to an era of destitution for many Americans it's going to lead to hyperinflation and monetary collapse probably debt collapse, certainly a collapse of reputation,
a collapse of a meaningful ability to project force through naval forces and the America as we know it will no longer be what it once was let's say life is about to get very very difficult for Americans for Brits for Canadians for Australians, etc.
Very difficult.
And this difficulty will last many, many years, possibly decades.
Easily could last 20 to 30 years.
The only way out of this is for America to change its culture, to re-industrialize, to end all the wokeism, all the DEI, all the left-wing radical nonsense, and to get back to teaching skills and having a work ethic, having some kind of humility, having the ability to produce things instead of just generate debt and BS.
America's going to have to compete with the world.
And it's going to take at least a generation for that to be something that America embraces.
Because we've lived in the easy era for so long, the era of easy money, of easy consumer goods, or let's say gross consumerism because all the goods were so inexpensive, that America has become, well, fat and lazy and complacent for the most part.
And America's people themselves are also largely, not everybody, but largely also obese and complacent and lazy and insurmountable.
they have an entitlement attitude give me my food stamps give me my free this my free that give me my grant money give me this we deserve this we're the exceptional nation etc that culture cannot go away in just a couple of years that's going to take a generation a generation of hardship so the hardship that's coming is going to be extremely difficult.
And those who survive this hardship and I'm going to talk about all this in some special reports Those who survive the hardship will be those who are able to amplify their efforts and their ideas, both their cognition and their labor using technology, using AI for cognitive augmentation, and using robots for physical labor augmentation.
In other words, life's about to get very, very difficult, but it can be survivable.
It can even be made pleasant with the help of technology that can amplify your efforts and ease the burden on you.
Then again, most Americans will be so impoverished that they won't be able to afford the compute for the AI software agents, nor will they be able to afford the robots.
So the key to surviving all of this is to have enough assets so that you can afford compute power, that is AI power, and you can afford robotic assistance to help you get things done in this collapsing world.
Because you know, the supply chains are not going to be nearly as reliable.
The grocery stores won't have as reliable food.
You know, the the car companies just won't be functioning with the efficiency that they do today, and other kinds of consumer goods.
And so you're going to need help to get things done to engage in home gardening.
You're going to need help around the house just to do things, to fold laundry and do the dishes and sweep the floors and feed the dog and whatever.
Because you're going to be so busy scrambling trying to survive in this new environment where there's three wars happening, or potentially three at the same time, and the dollar is collapsing and all your neighbors and friends are becoming impoverished and desperate.
You're going to be so busy trying to survive that you're going to be drowning in crises if you don't have some domestic help from probably from a robot.
So I think that robotics is actually going to be a critical component for survival, for decentralization, for just making it through what's coming.
You're also going to need robots for perimeter security because there will be a lot of roving bands of thieves, going to be a lot of home robberies and so on because a lot of desperate people will find that they have no other options.
Part of that's because of mass unemployment caused by the rise of the robots or the rise of agentic AI.
We're about to enter an era of widespread unemployment.
Unemployment rates could easily, I mean, it's a certainty they will hit 50%.
And then they will climb from there.
Unemployment rates over a few years could easily reach 75%.
And yes, this is happening.
This is actually underway.
So the world that we once knew is over, but it doesn't mean all doom and gloom.
There are ways to survive all of this.
And that's what I want to talk about here today.
So, hmm.
Let me start with one special report here called The Era of Easy Money and Affordable Goods is Over for America, and then we'll continue on the other side.
Here we go.
Well, you may not want to hear this news, but the easy days of living in America are over.
You and I, that is, if you're listening as an American, we've been living through the easy time.
Seriously, we've been living through the time when most of the world would trade goods for debt.
That is, they would ship us their products made in China, made in Korea, made in Japan, etc.
And we would give them our debt in the form of treasuries, you know, a bunch of IOUs, because we were printing the currency that was the world reserve currency, but no longer.
So believe it or not, America got a free ride for generations, almost since the end of World War II.
We got something of a free ride, living off the fringe benefits of being the world reserve currency, where we didn't have to Actually, produce a competitive set of products and services in order to trade with the rest of the world.
All we had to do was print currency and use the debt or use the currency to buy the goods.
And as a result, the things that you have typically purchased at Walmart or wherever or Amazon, they have been significantly less expensive than would be organically the case if the United States did not have the extreme benefit of being a world reserve currency.
And since that exceptional condition is now dissolving as the world turns away from the dollar, you're going to see inflation like you've never seen before.
You're going to see the value of the dollar absolutely plummet.
And you're going to see real hardship across America.
You're going to see people who struggle to eat.
You're going to see people who reach a point of desperation.
You're going to see joblessness at numbers that you've never seen before.
And remember that this is combined with the rise of agentic AI and also AI robots at some point in the years ahead.
And this will only contribute to the sense of desperation and poverty.
And Trump, of course, has pressured the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates by 25 basis points.
And now that's the interbank lending rate.
It doesn't always translate into rates going lower in the debt market, but sometimes it does.
But what it really means is that those of you who are trying to save money will earn less for saving money because the returns on savings have now been lowered.
So more and more Americans will be asking themselves, what's the point of saving money?
You know, buying uh treasuries or buying CDs at a bank or even investing in the stock market, etc.
The returns, the the yields on money will be lower because of these lower interest rates.
And probably the rates will be lowered again and again over the next couple of meetings.
So we're probably going to get three quarters of a point or even a one-point reduction in interest rates.
Of course, the Trump administration wants this desperately in order to refinance the debt at lower rates.
But it also means that you'll earn less on money that you try to save.
So as prices are going up and up and up because of all the money printing, the yields on saving money will be going down and down and down.
At the same time that your money is being rapidly debased because of the money printing and the rise of AI, like I said, this is going to thrust again a very large number, I mean, tens of millions of Americans will be thrust into a new chapter of poverty that they have never witnessed,
they've never lived through, they never anticipated the economic reality of America is about to be catastrophically bad.
And very few people are ready for that.
Now, remember that Trump's first priority is to save the U.S. government at the moment, or maybe his first priority is to save himself, but a high priority is to save America's debt market, even if that means sacrificing the dollar or the value of the dollar.
This is something that Andy Sheckman told me in a recent interview.
He says, I think Trump will sacrifice the dollar to save the debt market.
And what he means by that is it doesn't matter.
I mean, look, Trump's in a tight spot.
I'm not going to thrust all the blame for all this on Trump because he inherited generations of debt and horrible fiscal policies, etc.
But Trump is in a tight spot, and it seems to me that the only way to save the United States of America, well, the government and the treasury, the debt market, in other words, is to sacrifice the value of the dollar.
And you'll see that through maybe gold revaluation, you'll see that through stable coin schemes to try to Get more people to buy treasury debt, etc.
So this is going to emerge in a lot of different ways, but the bottom line is the dollar will be worth less and less.
And if Trump is lucky, he might be able to prevent a total financial collapse of the debt market.
But even that is not a certainty.
Trump may fail.
And I've interviewed people like Colonel Douglas McGregor who think that Trump's efforts will fail.
And I tend to agree with that.
I I tend to agree that we are about to be facing a truly horrific financial catastrophic collapse that will end up thrusting tens of millions of Americans into extreme poverty.
Now you know that owning gold and silver, of course, in my opinion, is the best way to make it through this with your assets intact.
That's something that I am practicing.
I'm continuing to just dollar cost average into gold and silver.
I've got it vaulted.
You know, it's in an insured armed vault.
You know, I've got some amount that I can have uh physically in hand if necessary, but I'm stacking gold and silver little by little over time.
Even though the price of gold is at an all-time high, I'm still buying it.
Now, some people might say, well, it's going to go down, it's going to correct, it's going to lose 10%.
I don't care.
If gold loses 10%, so be it.
I'll buy it at the lower level at that time.
You know, I'll just average into gold.
At the end of the day, I'm going to own ounces of gold, while the people who are wiped out will be holding worthless dollar fiat currency that will not save them.
At the end of the day, I would much rather have gold and silver, physical ounces, than really anything else.
Even crypto.
Of course, it's good to have land, etc.
We've talked about all these things.
But what are we going to do, you and I, when it comes to the hardships of living in a nation where so many of the people around us are suddenly and spontaneously impoverished.
What does that look like?
Some people that you know will be desperately reaching out to you and asking for emergency help.
They will contact you.
It could be family members, friends, neighbors, co-workers, or former coworkers.
They'll be reaching out and saying, I have nothing to eat.
Can you help?
I have no money to put shoes on the feet of my children.
Will you help?
And we need to ponder in advance how we can help, and also how we can set proper boundaries and what we can do to help the greatest number of people in a way that honors their dignity, but also empowers them instead of we don't want to trap them in a cycle of uh handouts.
But we do want to honor them as human beings and help as many people as we can because you and I believe in ending suffering.
So, how do we do that?
Step number one, I believe, is to first make sure your own situation is all squared away, so you don't become one of those desperate people.
Because you can't help others if you're dying of poverty yourself, right?
It's like on an airplane, they say when the mask drops down, the oxygen mask, you put the mask on yourself first, and then you help the child next to you, or you know, your child.
Why?
Because you need to be able to breathe in order to help other people.
So, how do you breathe in this scenario?
I think it's having gold and silver.
That's my opinion.
Secondly, you need to still protect your assets as you help others and make sure that you don't make yourself a target, because there will be a lot of desperation, there will be a lot of crime.
So you don't run around, you know, flaunting the fact that you've got some gold coins or some silver coins or you've got food storage or whatever.
You keep that private, and when you do help people, to the extent that you can, it's important to work through local organizations, such as a church.
Or in my case, we launched a church that achieves this purpose.
So, of course, we would activate the donation branch of our local church in order to uh assist as many people in need as possible.
And we've already done that three separate times with the California fires and the North Carolina floods or the Florida hurricanes and then also the Texas floods, I guess that's four times.
So we are ready to do that.
And of course, we are stockpiling food and other supplies like chlorine dioxide that can help people, and we are prepared to make donations.
But not everybody has that depth of you know inventory.
So be prepared to give a sufficient amount to others in need while also not putting yourself in a desperate situation.
You always need to keep enough food to feed you and your family.
You need to keep enough ammo to defend yourself.
You need to keep enough gold and silver as a form of actual money to be able to get the things that you need.
But you also don't want to just be the only guy around or gal who's got money.
You want to give, you want to help others, you want to empower others, and you want to help create a community culture of helping others, of uh demonstrating what it means to live a a little bit more like Jesus, you know.
Feed the hungry, clothe the poor.
And don't be so attached to your own material wealth that you can't part with it, you know.
It's okay to part with it if you've got enough, or you've got extra.
You know, I've got extra.
I've been blessed with extra.
And I've been stockpiling extra on purpose, anticipating this.
So of course, I I actually feel blessed by the opportunity to give away things of value to other people that can help them get back on their feet.
I feel blessed by that.
I mean, it's an honor to be able to help fellow human beings.
And I ask you to look into your own heart that when the day comes that there are so many desperate people around you who are hungry.
Can you part with some of your stockpile if you have a stockpile?
Are you able to do that?
Can you live with less?
Do you have an extra?
Do you have a heart to help people?
And also, what are the boundaries of that?
Because you can't help everyone.
There are too many.
So who do you help?
How do you help them?
In what manner do you help them get back on their feet?
You know, for example, yeah, you can give people food.
This is like the old metaphor, teaching a man to fish instead of just giving him fish.
But you could give people food, but also give them a packet of garden seeds at the same time.
Say, hey, here's some food to help you right now, but here's some seeds, and what you need to do is uh start planting food, start growing some of your own food.
So I really would love to see you in in the spring here.
Uh, let's let's figure out how you can get some tomato plants growing or some watermelon or some zucchini or high protein items, you know, some lentils or some potatoes.
Let's see if we can help you grow some food.
So that's critical.
As you help people with the immediate needs, you also teach them how to handle their own medium-term needs or longer-term needs.
So if somebody also, if they have been a victim of some like a robbery, and they're asking you, hey, I need a gun, can you get me a gun?
I would not just give a person a gun.
If there were someone who I saw as law-abiding and who was worthy of the responsibility of having a firearm, and someone who I thought would act morally and ethically in deploying that firearm, uh I would absolutely consider giving them a gun along with the proper lessons of how to handle a gun, gun safety, trigger control, you know, the four rules of gun safety, what's beyond your target, etc.
But if I thought they were mentally unstable, if I thought they were violent, if I thought they would escalate situations, if I thought they would pop off and shoot people, I would never Give them a gun or ammo or lessons.
I would only do this to a person that had the character to be able to responsibly handle a firearm.
There are a lot of people like that.
There are a lot of good people in society who have been anti-gun, you know, until the moment they get robbed and society falls apart, and then suddenly they're like, ah, second amendment time, you know.
So there may be situations where you want to help a person like that.
And just don't give them a gun by itself, or maybe don't even give it to them at all.
Maybe ask them to go get a gun, and then you'll teach them lessons or something like that.
You see what I'm saying?
I'm not sure I actually want to give a gun to anybody.
There might be situations where that's appropriate, like um, especially uh like a retired law enforcement person, but they usually have their own guns or let's say um a military veteran, uh, but they usually have their own rifles, etc.
Anyway, so anyway, just use your best judgment on this.
But my point is when you help people, try to help them in the long run.
Try to empower a person who can carry it forward, and then they can help another person, and then that person can help another person, and so on.
Because you don't have enough supplies to just give out to everybody all the time forever.
That's not gonna fly.
You need to help people get on their feet, and that's the best compassion that you can exercise, I think.
And if there are people out there who reject that and who say, no, you just give me your food, you have extra food, give me your food, and don't tell me to learn to grow food.
I'm not gonna garden, I'm not gonna plant garden seeds.
I'm not gonna, you know, that kind of person, well, that might be the person that you choose not to help because they're not willing to help themselves.
Maybe they need another two weeks of starvation, and then they're gonna have some personal development.
You know, maybe they're gonna reconsider the kind of person they are that nobody wants to help, you know.
There are ways to resolve that, like be a better person.
People like to help good people.
People like to help people who help others.
So be a better person if you want to be helped, and then you're paying it forward for everybody to be a better person.
Anyway, that's my take on the subject.
Of course, I'm always working to empower people with knowledge through the use of our AI engine.
It's free of charge, it's called Enoch.
You can use it for free at Brighton.ai.
I think you'll love it, and is trained on all kinds of gardening skills and uh off-grid living and self-reliance and emergency medicine and how to make your own herbal medicine products and you know, all kinds of things like that.
It's a really well-informed AI engine, so you can use it for free.
It will help you achieve all these goals, it will help you get through hard times.
But the bottom line is being prepared yourself is critical, and we want to help others get back on their feet so that they can then pass uh or pay it forward by helping others around them.
That's what we do.
We multiply our efforts, we create resilient people, or we support resilient people, and we teach them resilience, and then that resilience spreads.
That's how society gets back online following a financial collapse event, which is probably coming.
So that's my take on it.
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And thank you for listening.
Take care.
Okay, welcome back.
All right, now I've got another special report lined up for you here called How to Use Robots and AI Tools for Survival and Decentralization.
And I'd like to encourage you to get out your notebook or whatever you use to take notes.
I've got just a few simple steps for you in this special report, some things that you should do, uh in my opinion, anyway, to get ready.
They're relatively simple things, a couple skills that you need to uh well become at least competent in, if not mastering those skills, and you can.
It's all doable.
And there are uh a couple of things that you might want to acquire.
I I put that in this report, some pieces of technology that will help you through all of this.
And I think this is true no matter what your age, no matter what your uh computer skill set, you're gonna find these things to be extremely useful.
And remember that I'm coming at this from a pro-human point of view, obviously.
Uh I am not a fan of globalist depopulation.
But of course, the globalists are, and they're gonna use you know wars and robots and vaccines to achieve mass depopulation.
But we can survive it.
We can survive it with our knowledge and with the help of some technology.
They can amplify our intentions.
So that's what this is all about.
With that in mind, let's go to the next report here how to use robots and AI tools for survival and decentralization, and then we will continue on the other side.
All right, today we're talking about how to use technology automation and even the coming uh robots in order to survive off-grid and to decentralize your life away from central control and to get out of the cities or to get away from uh the big tech platforms that are censorship driven, or really like Google is a disinformation engine.
So, of course, I'm working on the cutting edge of all the emerging technology here in terms of AI and uh soon robotics, as soon as we can get our hands on some robots that we can uh train, we'll be doing that as well.
And I always apply technology in a pro-human point of view.
I believe in decentralization, I believe in humanity, I believe in uh diversity of information and content and ideas, and I also believe in uh free speech and freedom of information.
So I think knowledge should be free.
I think people should have access to the world's knowledge instead of being funneled into disinformation narratives, which is what Google does, that's what YouTube does, that's what LinkedIn does, that's what Vimeo does, that's what Facebook does, etc.
So all the tools that my company uh builds are tools that work to empower humanity, such as Brighton.com, our free speech platform, or Brighton.ai, our AI engine, which is trained on just a wealth of information in all these areas, and it's also getting better because we have uh we have a lot of new information that is we're training on that now.
We'll have new versions of Enoch and also new downloadable versions coming.
All right, so first thing in my view, first thing that you need to do is you need to learn how to use AI with prompt engineering.
If you don't already have that skill, it's a really important skill, and you can use it, you can practice that skill with our free engine, Enoch at Brighton.ai.
It's a non-demonic engine.
We we exorcise the demons out of it, and we programmed it with good stuff.
Survival, off-grid living, home gardening, food production, natural medicine, disease cures, you know, all that good stuff.
So you can feel totally safe using Enoch.
You don't need an account, you don't need to give us your phone number, you don't even need I mean, there's there's really no login.
You just need an email address because that's where we email the answer to your prompt.
So just go to Brighttown.ai and start practicing prompt engineering.
If you don't know how to prompt engineer, then there's some videos out there, videos on Rumble or even YouTube for this purpose, uh, maybe some on Brighton about prompt engineering.
Just watch the free videos and start learning prompt engineering.
It's a critical skill.
All right, the second thing you want to do is you want to start using AI engines for research.
Now, I'm gonna recommend a mainstream engine at the moment, um, with some hesitation.
Uh, however, you know, Enoch does not search the web, okay?
So we don't have an independent media alternative uh solution that searches the web and does deep research.
There are some, well, there are some models that you can use locally.
If you've got a GPU and you want them to search the web, there are some models that can do that, some reasoning models.
And personally, I think the best open source models right now are coming from either Alibaba, which is China, and those are Quen models, or from Mistral, which is out of France.
I strongly recommend that you avoid USA models.
Avoid Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Meta, you know, OpenAI, etc.
They're all heavily heavily biased in favor of vaccines and biased in favor of wokism and all kinds of nonsense.
They all think there's 87 genders, and they think you know, carbon dioxide is bad for the earth and things like that.
So they're completely insane.
Use again, either Quen, that's QWEN, or uh Mistral, which is my current favorite.
The Mistral models have proven to be very, very good.
And a lot of credit to the Mistral company out of France.
And in fact, it is currently one of their models that is the base model that is with modification, uh powering our Enoch engine.
So if you notice some similarities between Mistral and Enoch, that's why.
And we'll switch the base engine from time to time as a new base engine gets better.
For example, NVIDIA just released their own engine.
I think it's an 8 billion parameter model.
We're gonna test that, see if that's even better, possibly.
I think it's called Nemotron.
If it's better, we'll switch to that.
I mean, we'll have to spend a few weeks, you know, reprogramming it and mind wiping it and training it, etc.
But if it's better, we'll switch to it.
Okay.
This is we've developed the technique now to completely reprogram these, well, not 100%, but like 94% reprogramming these open source engines.
Uh it took us a year and a half to figure out how to do that.
Uh we've got that done.
We're doing it now, and that's the result.
Okay, um, to summarize, sorry if I'm a little disjointed here.
But use AI engines for research.
So if you want to research anything about health, medicine, herbs, nutrition, foods, food ingredients, gardening, food preservation, survival skills, emergency medicine, etc., use Enoch.
It's very, very good at that.
It's the best in the world.
If you want to research something online where you want to do something like the other day, I was just searching for like uh, well, my prompt was find a network attached storage device, a NAS device that has 24 bays and that supports these various RAID configurations and that has uh you know 10 gigabit network ports, etc.
Find which companies have these available and create a list of the prices and the links and everything.
So that kind of prompt is a deep research prompt, and you'll need to use an online service for that.
And the company I currently recommend for that is Anthropic.
Uh Anthropic, which does have investment from Google, unfortunately, but the Anthropic engine is quite good.
Some people like to use Perplexity.
There are open source models that can search the web that you can run locally if you've got a GPU, and in order to do that, you'll want to download a piece of software called LM Studio.
This is for the PC world.
I think I think there's a Mac version as well.
But LM Studio is the best inference engine out there.
So download that, install it, run it.
You'll need that to run our model, by the way, once we finally release our model, because it's distributed in a G G UF file.
So get familiar with LM Studio.
It's pretty easy to use these days.
It's much easier than it was like a year and a half ago, believe me.
They've made it more user-friendly.
Uh and learn how to run models locally.
Now, this is going to be important in case of extreme censorship, or in case the internet gets fragmented and parts of it are shut down because of war or tyranny or whatever.
And this is why I am scrambling to try to get our standalone engine released, because I want to get it into your hands before the extreme censorship takes over.
California is already trying to censor AI models, and they're saying you won't be able to release them in California unless they are proven safe.
Well, there you go.
That's censorship, because from the point of view of the California government, it's not safe unless it pushes vaccines and psychiatric drugs and you know LGBT themes and things like that.
That's safety, you know, from from the point of view of Governor Newsom.
So we need to get our models out before there's a lot of censorship, and believe me, I'm working hard on that.
We've had a lot of breakthroughs, and I keep saying we're close.
Uh we're very close.
So it'll happen soon.
Just be prepared for that.
Now, in just the next few months, you are going to see very sophisticated uh AI models released by us and other companies that you can download and run locally that will be just extraordinary in their knowledge, knowledge about off grid uh medicine and survival and things like that.
You'll want to download those.
Because once you have the downloads, and you could download models from hugging face, typically is where you would go, or if you download and install LM Studio, it has an automatic downloader built in, which makes it very easy.
When you download the files, which could be anywhere from three gigabytes to a hundred gigabytes, depending on the size of the model.
But typically the ones that you would use on a desktop might only be let's say five to ten gigabytes, and that's a very sophisticated AI model.
But download the files now so that you can run them locally in case there's censorship, or you know, in case there's an outage in case there's a nuclear war or power grid failure or whatever.
And a lot of these models can be run even on uh laptops today that come with some pretty capable NVIDIA chips built in.
So you could get a laptop that's got like a like a 4070 chipset in it, or a 40, 80, 40, 90 NVIDIA GFOS chipset.
Or something similar to that, you know, a 3070 chipset with eight gigabytes of RAM can run some pretty capable models all by itself.
So get those files so that you are now off grid, self-reliant, you can now do a ton of research, and especially when we have our models available, you can download those, they're gonna be completely free, and you'll be able to have well the knowledge of like 10,000 plus books.
Uh you know, because we've looked we've trained on hundreds of millions of pages of content, including thousands of books, and including millions of scientific uh articles and studies, etc.
So all of the knowledge that is transferred from that will be available to you for free, just at the cost of electricity for running your computer, okay?
That is a game changer.
So that will give you the ability to then be more self-reliant where you don't have to search Google for everything, you know, stop using Google.
And even questions about health and medicine and gardening, or how do I disassemble this firearm?
How do I make an herbal medicine extract out of this plant?
You know, what's the best type of soil in which to grow these certain plants?
You know, all these kinds of questions you can just ask AI, you can get those answers, and it will cost you nothing.
All right, so that's critical.
Do that.
Now then drones.
It's probably it's a decent idea to learn how to run a drone.
Drones will be used in warfare.
Drones, I'm talking about the flying type of drones.
This is not a necessity, but it's a decent idea to own a drone, learn how to fly it, learn how they operate, understand the capabilities, etc.
Uh, this can be used for perimeter surveillance, for uh looking for lost animals or looking for lost people, or identifying like an attack team that might be headed your way.
You can use thermal cameras.
If you do get a drone, get one with a thermal camera if you can afford it, so that you can identify people or animals on the ground, you can look for lost dogs, all kinds of things like that.
So that's a decent idea.
All right, uh, next, I believe we're going to have ground-based drones, which will be like dog robots.
And these will actually be more popular than the flying drones.
There's a reason for that, because they're not FAA regulated.
So I see a future in the very near future from uh companies mostly out of China, like Unitree, that makes these very, very capable robots, dog robots.
I mean, that they can traverse all kinds of uh outdoor terrain.
They can climb up and down hills, they can run through forests, they can run across shallow streams, you know.
They're incredible.
So many of us will be acquiring uh dog robots or dog drones that will do things for us, such as perimeter defense.
And also, I'm I want to get a weed-pulling dog robot.
That's my number one goal.
So I can grow food more easily.
Anyway, these dog bots will they'll be very popular, they'll cost $5,000 or less, probably coming out of China.
And the software that's coming online will make them extremely capable at doing all kinds of things.
They can pick up trash.
Uh they probably can pull weeds pretty soon.
They can they can do perimeter scans, uh, you know, sweeping the area with thermal cameras, what have you.
And uh other simple tasks.
Tasks that you can do with a dog mouth, you know, or a dog paw, maybe a specialized paw with a with a gripper tool or something.
Maybe it'll have like an on-board gripper that attaches to the snout.
Who knows?
Like a hand in front, you know, of the snout.
It doesn't have to be a dog snout, you know, it could just be a hand out there, just one arm.
Which would look freaky, like my zombie dog with a zombie arm, you know.
But that would be actually very handy.
No pun intended.
You're going to want to get these robots very quickly once they become affordable.
Uh, I'm going to, for sure, I'm gonna demo some robots for you in the studio.
It's one reason why we just built a much larger studio, because we're gonna give robots real world tasks.
Like, hey, here's a wheelbarrow.
Uh, you know, shovel some dirt into it and go dump the dirt over there using the wheelbarrow.
Let's see if it can do that, because that's a very handy task for growing food.
Or here's a tomato plant with ripe tomatoes on.
I just want you to pick the ripe tomatoes only, but not the unripe tomatoes, and put them in this basket, and then bring me the basket.
That's a very handy task, right?
So when the humanoid robots come online, for sure, you know, they're gonna have hands and fingers, and they will be able to take on even more tasks.
I believe that robotics has a place in decentralized living.
I think that robots are actually going to be critical for off-grid living because there's so much labor involved in living out in the country, or you know, growing your own food.
And growing your own food is a critical part of self-reliance, and yet very few people do it today because it's so labor-intensive.
And yes, there are techniques to do more in less time.
You know, like Marjorie Wildcraft teaches that how to grow up to 70% of your food in, I don't know, what's the claim, an hour a day or something.
Well, she's good at growing food.
I'm not that good.
I've never been able to grow food for just an hour a day.
But with a robot, I could probably do that, as long as the robot is taking over a lot of tasks, and also security tasks and folding laundry and you know, doing dishes and putting away your groceries and things like that.
So there are a lot of things that robots can do for you.
So I will keep you posted on this.
These technologies, AI and uh AI, local AI engines, and then robotics and possibly drones, these are technologies that we should not shun.
We should investigate them, we should learn how to use them, and we should master them.
These are the technologies that are going to give us more freedom, more self-reliance, more sustainability off-grid.
And I believe that robots will become a regular part of the lives of most people, that is, at least people who can afford them.
You're going to see robots being assistance to people for all kinds of things, not just the labor tasks, but also, of course, social reasons.
Like, oh, you need a friend.
Here's your robot for now.
I I'm not in favor of that.
I don't need a robot for a friend.
I need a robot to pull weeds and shut the hell up, man.
You know, like just do what I need done.
Take this task, do it, shut up.
That's what I need a robot to do.
Like, I I I don't need I don't need a friendly robot.
I just need a robot that that works.
But some people need it for social reasons.
There's gonna be robots that do a lot of like in-home living to keep an eye on elderly people, for example.
And you know, medical or healthcare type of robots, especially in countries like Japan, which has a demographic problem, they don't have very many young people, etc.
So you're gonna see a lot of home health robots, which will be very expensive.
And it'll be billed to Medicare, probably.
So the it'll be billed at like $10,000 a month to have a robot in your home, which is an absurd cost.
You can probably buy one for 10,000 one-time fee that's just as good, but you know, Medicare building is a giant scam in America.
Uh, nevertheless, don't shun the robots, don't shun AI, learn how to use it, learn how to control it.
Because this is this is gonna take over the world.
I mean, you're gonna see robots and AI everywhere, and if you don't know how to control it and how to use it, you know, then you're at risk of becoming enslaved by it, or you know, being dominated by it, or being afraid of it because you don't know how it works, and that's a bad place to be.
Much better to know how it works and to control it and master it.
So, again, I will keep you posted.
We'll be acquiring robots, probably multiple robots and testing them out as they become available.
That's gonna be lots of fun.
And then, of course, go to Brighton.ai to use our AI model free right now, and it's gonna keep getting better and easier to use, also, and then wait for our downloadable version of Enoch, which is also coming, and uh prepare yourself with LM Studio and also get yourself a GPU graphics card so that you can run inference locally, download the models that you want to use, and start learning those skills.
So, thank you for listening.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
I'm at Brighton.com, I'm at naturalnews.com, and I'm also at X. My handle there is Health Ranger.
And uh someone just told me the other day I've got like 350,000 followers there.
It's like, how did that happen?
I thought I was trying to annoy people.
Um apparently it didn't work, and the numbers have grown.
I didn't even know.
I thought I was still at 100,000 or something.
It doesn't matter.
I don't I don't keep track of the numbers.
I don't care.
I I honestly have no idea how many people follow or unfollow or this or that.
I just I just post stuff that I think you need to know or stuff that's kind of funny.
Alright, so thank you for listening, and you can catch me on all the platforms I just mentioned, and watch for the upcoming robot training videos or or robot test videos, yeah, in our new studio.
That should be really interesting.
Thanks for listening.
Take care.
Hey, I forgot to mention that today's interview, I think it's going to be the interview that I did with Daniel Estulin.
And that aired, I don't know, like maybe two weeks ago on his channel, but it's it's a conversation about AI and about simulation theory and some other things, uh, the structure of the cosmos, etc.
And I think it's a really good fit for the broadcast here today.
And also, I mean, everybody's been talking about the Charlie Kirk situation since the tragic murder of Charlie Kirk.
And I don't mean any disrespect to Charlie or his uh his widow, Erica.
Uh it's just that I don't want to talk about Charlie Kirk today.
We've we've been covering the developments.
I mean, there are some new developments.
Candace Owens put out a new photograph of the the supposed shooter, Tyler Robinson, uh just hanging out in a like a Wendy's or a 7-Eleven or something.
I don't know.
So it kind of blows a hole in the government narrative.
Uh so there's all that.
I mean, there are a thousand rabbit holes that you can go down if you want to get into uh who shot Charlie Kirk.
It's just that we have to think beyond that question.
Again, no disrespect to Charlie, but his death has set off so many things that we have to really look ahead and see where this is going.
I mean, in addition, for example, in addition to the war in Iran that's probably coming, and then the war in Ukraine, and maybe the conflict between China and Taiwan, we'll probably have a domestic uprising to deal with.
We are gonna have left-wing groups that will probably start bombing.
You know, all kinds of targets.
In fact, I had Alex Newman in studio today, had a great interview with Alex Newman, you know, from The New American.
And I'll be airing that next week.
You're gonna love it.
But I asked Alex that very question.
Do you think the radical left is gonna start re-engaging in bombing campaigns like they did with the weather underground groups in the 1970s, you know, left-wing terrorism setting off all kinds of bombs?
And he said he said, Yes.
He thinks they will.
Because they're cowards, because they're afraid to engage people, you know, face to face or to to shoot a person, but it's a cowardly act to plant and set off a bomb, like a terrorist bomb that kills a bunch of innocent people.
And that's exactly the kind of thing that the radical left will do.
So we're gonna be dealing with a number of very difficult challenges, economic challenges, you know, collapsing dollar, hyperinflation is coming.
No question about it.
Collapsing supply chains, collapsing international uh diplomatic relations with many, many countries.
You know, the fact that the US continues to support Israel has made the US uh hated by most of the world also.
And of course, Israel is hated even more for all of its you know genocidal actions and assassinations and exploding pagers and everything else.
But the US is also hated by most of the world because of what the US is doing to defend and even to enable Israel.
In fact, I do want to play this one video for you here that is extraordinary.
This is a video that is it's an exchange between a Chinese official or uh Professor Yan Shuetong, I believe, who's talking to a military person, an Israeli military person, and the Chinese person here, again, I don't know if he's an official or if he's an academic.
Let's see, he's the dean of the Institute of International Relations at Sing uh Tsinghua University, which is uh a prestigious university in China.
Um just unloads on this Israeli military guy showing that China listen carefully, China has the moral high ground in this conflict right now.
China, or at least assuming that this man's uh views are shared across China, which I think they are, China has a higher moral standing than the United States and Israel in the context of what's happening in the Middle East right now.
Without question.
So, whereas the US used to lecture China on human rights, now China is lecturing Israel on war crimes and genocide and propaganda, and China is correct.
I mean, my how things have changed, huh?
So let me play this clip for you here because it's it's absolutely uh mind-blowing, and it's all in English with uh I think Chinese subtitles.
Let's take a listen to that.
Military people, through the shoot, The terrorists, the terrorists, not to the church, not the wing.
We need to do all that we can not to hurt the citizens.
For example, these days, actually today.
You kill more than 70,000 uh civilians.
No.
There are more than more than the terrorists.
My solution is that go to the UN, work with the UN and agree the two-state solution to establish a state of a Palestinian.
You have two states and you can work together with a Palestinian together to fight against uh terrorism.
If you do not work with a Palestinian together, you can never win the wall over terrorists.
When the terror organization will release Ola's suggestion and will give up his weapon because you can't uh we can't uh start the war as long as we have their own suggestions.
This is a kind of a propaganda have two men, no one believing except uh few Israel.
So there you go.
China calling Israel uh calling out the propaganda of Israel.
Yeah, because nobody's buying Israel's lies.
Nobody.
No, no intelligent person.
You know, if somebody says to me today that they support Israel, I know instantly they are either incredibly low IQ or they have no morality at all.
One of those two things must be true.
And China sees this as well.
So does the whole world.
Frankly, the whole world sees this.
There are only three countries that are continuing the delusion that Israel isn't committing genocide, and that's Israel itself, the United States, and to some extent the UK.
Other than those countries, the whole world, which is almost the entire world population, agrees that what Israel is doing is a total war crime.
But because of Israel's actions, America is gonna get dragged into this war with Iran.
And my prediction is that Iran will probably obliterate Tel Aviv in the next exchange, uh next missile exchange that takes place.
Uh even like a podcast I put out earlier this week, I'm not sure Israel survived this, frankly.
And I'm not sure they have the moral standing to even uh justify any kind of continued uh interaction with the rest of the world.
I mean, Israel has proven that they are a terrorist state that cannot coexist with civilization at any level whatsoever.
And probably again, probably Tel Aviv will be destroyed.
And when that happens, the vast majority of the people in the world will act, they will cheer, have no illusions about it.
They will cheer that.
But it's only going to escalate the war that will drag America into it even more aggressively, and that's gonna make life very, very difficult for the American people.
That's my point here today.
Not trying to focus on Charlie Kirk or Israel today.
I'm trying to focus on how we survive all of this domestically through the use of uh proper technology to help us uh navigate all of this.
But have no illusions.
When these wars kick off, you know, gold and silver will probably skyrocket even more at that time, even if they've maybe fallen off uh a little bit before then.
That's possible.
There could be a correction in gold or silver.
But they're gonna skyrocket when that war begins.
Oil's gonna go up big time.
Oh my god.
What if Iran starts launching missiles at the oil fields of Saudi Arabia, for example?
I mean, there's so many scenarios.
Strait of war moves might be closed.
So many scenarios where oil goes to 200 a barrel.
That's gonna devastate the U.S. economy when that happens.
It's gonna make food prices go through the roof.
And there will be many other problems.
Supply chains disrupted, right?
The world rejecting uh dollar currency.
Hyperinflation is where this is going.
And with hyperinflation comes civil unrest across America, because most Americans have no savings whatsoever.
They don't have gold and silver.
They don't have even a savings account really with anything in it.
They don't have resilience, unlike you listening to this, you've got resilience.
More than probably 999 out of a thousand Americans, you have resilience, but most people do not.
So their situation is gonna go from just being oblivious to being panicked when it hits the fan, you know.
It's it's easy to be oblivious when everything's great.
But then when there's like two or three world wars that initiate and suddenly you know your economy's falling apart, your currency is falling apart, suddenly you're impoverished, you can't afford to eat.
That's gonna put millions of people into a posture of uh civil unrest, basically, uprising against the Trump administration.
So if you think Trump's crackdowns right now in Chicago or LA or any place, if you think they're aggressive now, you just wait, you haven't seen anything.
It's going to be a full-blown domestic war.
And it it might be, it might literally get set off before the end of this year, or it might spill into 2026 or 2027, but it's coming.
All right, I'm going to pivot here and bring in a breaking story.
You know how I guess it was just in the last week or so, maybe two weeks.
I said there's a subprime auto loan bubble that's going to burst or a catastrophe in the making.
Well, it has begun.
So all of a sudden, there's a subprime auto lender called Tri-Color Holdings that has collapsed into a giant pile of alleged fraud.
Uh Bloomberg is reporting on this, and it looks like this lender, kind of a subprime auto lender that loaned money to low-income people for cars.
It looks like they were re-hypothecating the same collateral of cars to multiple lenders, which is, of course, that that's a fraud.
I mean, that's a that's criminal fraud to do that.
You can't say, oh, here I have these 5,000 cars, pledge them as collateral on 10 different loans, and each of the banks that makes the loan thinks that they have the right to those 5,000 cars.
So that rehypothecation, it looks like that's what happened, and that is a fraud.
And that's probably what's happening with gold in the U.S. vaults, you know.
Probably there's a small amount of gold that has been re-hypothecated, that the U.S. probably doesn't actually have the 261.5 million ounces of gold that it claims to have.
But you know, maybe one day we'll find out.
Anyway, banks are scrambling right now, banks that made loans to Tricolor.
As Bloomberg reports, in Dallas, the regional bank Triumph Financial has dispatched teams of employees to use car lots where they are identifying and whisking away the vehicles that they believe are the collateral to their loans.
Like they they sent people out to the used car lots to take the cars, you know, before somebody else comes and takes them, another bank.
And the story continues in Midtown Manhattan, a boutique investment firm that built a position in Tri-Colors asset-backed bonds called Clearhaven Capital Management has been calling other bondholders, urging them to band together and fight to keep the big banks away from the assets that belong to them.
Those banks, including JP Morgan Chase and Fifth Third Bank Corp, have begun to forensically examine their own collateral to try to ascertain the magnitude of the losses.
and then they quote boris peresachensky who says everyone is in the dark as to how serious these allegations of fraud are So bondholders and lenders are rushing to protect their interests.
Okay.
So this is just an example of the kind of thing that we're going to see, I think, with a lot more frequency.
So auto loan subprime market is beginning to implode.
But this is just the very beginning, the tip of the iceberg of the coming bank failures and bank collapses from the commercial real estate market.
When that goes, oh my goodness, we're going to have bank failures.
And when those bank failures begin, I believe it's going to get so out of control.
The FDIC won't be able to cover the losses.
There will either have to be government bailouts, which will require printing trillions of dollars and handing it over to the banks to try to cover some of the losses of the Customers, and all of that will of course increase inflation quite a lot.
Or if they don't do the bailouts, then a lot of Americans are going to lose a lot of money.
I mean, just ordinary people who have deposits in these banks.
The bank failures are coming.
We don't know when, but we know the commercial real estate market is in a state of collapse.
They're already in a sort of a cover your ass type of mode with commercial real estate.
So it could happen sometime next year.
We could see bank failures in the spring.
Just like we did uh a year or a year and a half ago, spring, a lot of bank failures, and then silver exploded, gold exploded, etc.
So probably that's where things are headed, but we won't know until we get there.
This is also why it's critical.
Do not store your valuables in a safe deposit box at the bank.
I mean, this is my opinion.
You can make your own decision, but you know, banks when they fail, they can theoretically raid your safe deposit box and they could take whatever assets or valuables they find there from gold, jewelry, whatever.
So have gold and silver in your own possession outside of a bank, or vault it with a non-banking system private company like our sponsor, Battalion Metals.
Uh, you can reach them at MetalswithMike.com.
And there you can use discount code Ranger, which will they will waive the uh, what is it, the shipping insurance fee.
They'll waive that fee if you use our discount code.
Uh, but either get gold and silver into your own hands, or vault it with a company like battalion metals that you can trust that has uh independent insurance, like Lloyds of London Insurance, their own security setup, and they're not actually audited by the federal government.
They're not controlled by the banking regulators.
Because banks that are controlled by banking regulators are actually going to be in far deeper trouble because the FDIC won't be able to bail them all all out.
And those banks may resort to bail-ins.
And a bail-in means you know, they take all your deposits, and then they just make you a creditor to the bank.
Basically, they take your money and they give you some IOUs, and then you own some shares of the bank, but the shares are not redeemable except on a certain long drawn-out schedule over 10 years.
You might get, you know, $500 a month for 10 years or whatever your deposits are, and that's it.
And that's what's coming.
So I don't trust the banks at all.
I don't trust the safe deposit boxes at all.
I don't trust treasuries, obviously.
And I don't trust dollar currency either.
So what do I trust?
Uh things that I can touch, you know, land, gold and silver, like copper, ammo, you know, diesel fuel, uh cordless power tools, you know, things I can touch that are real that are also useful.
That's what I trust.
So uh again, if you want gold and silver, physical in your hands, talk to the folks at metals with mic.com.
They are our sponsor.
We've worked with them for many, many years, highly trustworthy operation there.
And um, you know, the other interesting thing is that there's not a lot of retail purchasing of gold right now.
Very few people on the retail side are buying gold.
Almost all the price increases that you have seen are from central banks buying gold.
So you're wondering like, why is gold almost $3,700?
Everybody must be buying it, right?
Nope.
Almost nobody's buying it other than the central banks.
But the central banks of other countries like China, etc., they're buying so much that they're spiking the price up.
And that's because the whole world is getting ready for the collapse of the dollar.
That's my view, anyway.
The whole world is also moving away from dollar-denominated trade.
They're moving into you know bricks trade settlements, which can take place in multiple currencies, and at some point here they will be able to settle currency differences in uh gold.
Until that day, they're using their own currencies, but they're not using the dollar increasingly.
So the dollar's uh utility in world trade is collapsing, and it can rapidly get worse.
You know, sometimes I hear people say, oh no, the dollar's gonna be fine, it's gonna be still the dominant currency in 2050.
No, it isn't.
These collapses happen rapidly.
It's slow at first, and then all at once.
That's exactly the way this is going.
The dollar might be worth something today, and then you wake up sometime next week and you're like, oh, it lost 90% of its value.
That can happen.
That has happened throughout history, over and over again.
It's happened many times.
And sometimes it's more than 90% loss.
So the subprime auto loan collapse, that has happened.
The commercial real estate collapse is coming.
And the bank collapses will follow that.
And my estimated timeline, although I don't put a lot of faith in the timelines, it's too hard to predict, but it could happen spring of 2026.
So let's say six months out, possibly.
But again, don't take this as financial advice.
Just protect your assets every day.
Just get out of the banking system as much as you can.
Have all kinds of different backup plans for assets and have different types of assets.
And just minimize your exposure so that when the collapse does happen, you're not going to get wiped out.
A lot of people will be wiped out.
And that's only going to add to the civil unrest, chaos that I'm talking about here.
You know, it's going to add to the widespread poverty of the American people.
Those, especially who were not prepared and who don't even know what gold and silver really are, other than maybe jewelry.
There's going to be a lot of people that lose everything.
Alright, so getting back on track here, and remember that my interview coming up should be very interesting.
I think you'll really enjoy it.
But I've got one more report for you here, which is related to all of this, and it's called How to Talk to AI Agents and Robots to Amplify Your Life's Greatest Mission.
Now, in this, what I'm referring to here is the importance of learning the skill of how to instruct robots and AI systems.
It's not just prompt engineering, but that's where it starts.
But I believe this is going to be a critical skill.
Because I think it's going to be hard to survive this world without AI and robots.
You're going to need the augmentation of your efforts and your intelligence.
And that means that learning how to talk to them to get out of them what they're capable of doing, you know, to carry out your tasks, to conduct the research, to, you know, do the things you're asking them to do.
It requires you to know how to talk to them.
And that's something that a lot of my audience does not yet know.
In fact, a lot of corporate America does not yet know.
Did you know that even in the telecom industry, only 5% of the companies have implemented AI technology in their company operations?
Only 5%.
That's to me that's astonishing.
I thought it should be at least 40% by now, but no, it's only 5%.
So a lot of people are way behind the curve on this, and they're at risk of getting left behind.
So I've put together some good pointers for you here in this special report.
And just understand the future is coming up fast.
It's never too early to learn these skills because you're going to wake up one day soon, just in the next few months, and you're going to find out that, oh my God, these AI agents are taking more jobs, or uh new robots have been announced that can actually mow the lawn or whatever.
This kind of thing is going to happen with increasing frequency.
So be prepared for it.
Also want to mention before we go to that report.
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So all of these technologies help you decentralize your life.
You can find them at SAT123.com, sat 123.com, and especially look at the solar generators.
And you know, they they store energy from sunlight, and then in case there's a grid failure, we're gonna see a lot more grid failures coming up, by the way.
Uh you'll still have electricity to power your devices and charge your phone or whatever, charge your flashlights, charge your robot.
Yeah, I need the power station to charge my you know perimeter security robot so that the zombies don't get my silver.
It's like this is the future that we're all moving into right now.
It's gonna be wild, let me tell you.
All right, so here we go with the final special report today, how to talk to AI agents and robots, and then following that will feature today's interview.
So enjoy.
The primary determining factor of wealth in the coming years is going to be access to AI.
When you have access to AI, that is, if you can afford to pay for the tokens, or if you can afford to pay for an AI robot, your life is going to be substantially better.
And wealth will largely be achieved by those who have access and who know how to well, how to talk to the machines in order to assign tasks and get what they want.
Now, this has become apparent to myself and a lot of other people who are uh involved in the cutting edge of AI technology.
For example, right now I'm building a couple of different apps uh using AI tech, and uh some of these tools have just recently become available, by the way, where I can define a project, I can spawn a number of sub-agents, and those sub-agents carry out that task, even spanning many, many hours of writing code, testing, uh fixing, working to achieve the results, etc.
So I can give them that task.
I can walk away from my desk, or I can work on something else for hours, and then I come back, and then the task is complete.
And I may have spent, I don't know, like thirty dollars or something, let's just say that's gonna get cheaper over time.
But I may have spent, or let's say twenty dollars, just depends on the task, how many hours, how many tokens, etc.
You're paying for tokens, and very often in spending twenty or thirty dollars or fifty dollars or even a hundred dollars, the AI agents will produce the code or produce a segment of the app that would have taken a human coder at least ten thousand dollars in many weeks to try to achieve.
So for let's say a hundred bucks or less, I'm replacing uh ten thousand dollars of human coding time, and I'm doing in a few hours of what would normally take a few weeks.
This is such a multiplier of your intention that this is going to define the wealthy versus those who are kind of left behind without understanding how to use AI to their advantage.
There's going to be an increasing chasm, in other words, the middle class will vanish, we'll have uh a lot more wealthy people than we have today, but we'll also have a lot more poor people than we have today.
And again, access to AI technology will be the defining factor between wealthy and poor.
That much has become clear to me.
And this is even more true when it comes to physical robots.
So if you think about a robot, there's an initial upfront investment, which could be substantial.
It could be a hundred thousand dollars for a particular robot, like a made in America robot, maybe the Tesla bot, and with all the software that you want on it and all the CPU upgrades and battery upgrades and everything.
It's it's probably like a hundred thousand dollar robot.
But then you have this hundred thousand dollar robot.
What can it do for you?
It can replace several people.
And when combined with AI subagent task management, it can do the work of at least three humans, maybe more, and it's not gonna quit on you, it doesn't have an attitude problem, it's not gonna file a lawsuit against you.
You Know it it's going to be a far more reliable worker than a typical human.
So as robots become available for warehouse work or uh fulfillment center work, etc., you're going to see an incredible shift in the economics of conducting a business.
And I'm even an advocate of offline open source robots for living off-grid, that is helping you live out in the country.
There are a thousand tasks that a humanoid robot could help you do, sort of tedious tasks.
When you live out in the country, you have to do a lot more just to live.
You know, you got to deal with the the grass or the weeds, or maybe you have to do some more of your own plumbing, or you have a water well, you have a septic system, maybe you have animals, you've got like I do, chickens, you gotta collect chicken eggs, and you gotta feed the chickens, etc.
You have to deal with stuff.
And you might have farm equipment, then you have a tractor, and then you gotta deal with the tractor, you gotta change the oil, you know, you you gotta do all these things.
Robots will be able to take on some significant portion of those tasks, including planting food, harvesting food, watering plants, you know, folding laundry, doing dishes, you name it, even cooking your meals.
Robots will be able to do this, which will free you up to do the things you would much rather do, which could be you know, maybe you want to be an entrepreneur, maybe you want to pursue a business, maybe you want to be a sculptor, maybe you have a painting you want to work on, you want to write a novel, right?
So you can engage in higher forms of human expression and creativity and innovation while your robot is carrying out the more menial tasks, whereas a relatively poor person, you know, low finance person is unable to afford the robot and thus has to carry out those menial tasks uh themselves.
So this shift is going to be really dramatic across society.
But it's worth noting that being successful with a gentic AI on the software side, or uh you know, physical robot AI requires you to learn how to talk to the machines.
You need to learn how to give them tasks, how to create prompts, how to even know in advance what you are looking for.
You you have to, in your own mind, have a very, very clear picture of what you want, and then you have to be able to describe that clearly.
And my background, actually, where I got started out of college was in writing software documentation manuals.
Seriously, that was my first gig uh out of college.
I've always been a very strong writer, and I was always strong in software and technology, so I naturally fell into this kind of job role, and I was living in Taiwan and I was working for a very famous antivirus software company, and I was writing all their software documentation manuals and also marketing copy, you know, whatever they needed that was written.
I was the guy that was writing it.
And when you have a lot of practice at writing documentation, uh you become good at explaining things in clear, easy to understand steps.
But this is not a natural thing, this is a skill that has to be developed.
When you ask most people to describe what they want, like let's say you have an idea for an app, and if I ask you, describe the app, how does it work?
Literally, most people cannot really talk through that.
Most people will jump around in a nonlinear fashion, and they'll do a very poor job of describing the app.
It turns out that most people are very unskilled at uh prompting AI.
They're not good at writing prompts, they're not good at at in their own head of thinking clearly of what they want to accomplish or how you might be able to get there.
And when you're working with machines, especially with a gentic AI, you you have to give it the process of how you want to achieve what you want.
So it's not only that, hey, I want this app to exist and I want it to look like this, and I want it to function in this way, it's much more powerful if you can tell it how to get there.
I want you to spawn this database, and the database has the following fields, and I want you to uh use this API.
And this API has the following parameters.
And here's the site where you can find the documentation for the API, etc.
And then I want you to do a quality check on this.
Like, if you can give it the process, then the AI is going to work so much better.
Then the agents don't have to read your mind and try to fill in the gaps of what you want.
Same thing's going to be true with physical robots that you have helping around the house.
If you just tell a robot, like, do the laundry, you know, is that a good prompt?
Not really.
You come home and you find that the robot found a bunch of your old coats hanging in the closet and it started washing those.
And you're like, what are you doing?
And the robot's like, you said do the laundry.
And you're like, well, I didn't mean that laundry, you know.
And well, robots, like, well, I can't read your mind.
Stupid human.
You know, I how am I supposed to read your mind?
You gotta tell me what laundry you want washed.
Right.
What you meant in your mind when you said the laundry, you meant the laundry in the laundry basket, you know, in the laundry room or wherever you keep your laundry basket, if you have a basket, or maybe just have a pile of stinky clothes, I don't know.
But you got to tell the robot what to do.
Like, wash the clothes that are over there.
You're pointing, you know.
And the robot looks and's like, oh yes, that pile of stinky clothes.
I will wash that pile.
And then you need to be even more detailed.
After you wash it, try it.
Put it in the dryer, you know, run the dryer on the following cycle, and then be sure to clean out the lint filter in the dryer before you run it.
And then after it's dried, take it out of the dryer, and then fold the clothes.
And we want you to fold them in the following way.
Let me show you, and then you show the robot, and the robot would be like, uh-huh.
Okay, I got it.
You fold laundry like a sissy or whatever.
People fold laundry in all kinds of interesting different ways.
But you gotta show the robot what you want.
They're gonna learn from a lot of visual uh behavior modeling, by the way.
That's how it's gonna work.
So when you buy a robot and you have it in your home, it'll it'll know how to do certain things automatically, like, can I help you carry the groceries out of your car and put them away in the refrigerator, and you're like, yeah, go ahead.
And then you find that it puts everything in the wrong place.
Like it put the bottle of ketchup on the wrong shelf, you know, and it put the avocados in the wrong place.
So you gotta show it what to do.
And this is all about being able to talk to machines.
You can talk to them by demonstrating things, or you can talk to them with good prompting, or with uh clear instructions, etc.
Again, this is a skill set.
And the better you get at this skill set, which currently is called prompt engineering, the easier your life is gonna be as a gentic AI and AI robots are rolled out across the world, which is happening very rapidly.
Like I said, I'm working with software agents every day now.
I actually can't imagine going back to life without the AI agents.
I mean, just doing research.
I have AI agents that conduct research for me, they search the web, they find documentation, they find all kinds of things, they bring me back information, they write uh executive summary reports on the things I'm looking for.
It might be I'm trying to investigate, let's say a new high-end solid-state storage system that uses uh M2 sticks for storage, and I want to have 10 gig network ports, and I want to make sure that it's got you know the following minimum specifications, etc.
So I give those specs to the agent and I say, go out and find something that does this.
And just search the web, search all the I might give it a starting point on the search.
I'm like, here's the criteria, you go out and find stuff, and it brings me back a list of all all the different sites that do that.
Like, here's an example recently.
I was looking for an online service that does the automatic Language translation and lip syncing, video rendering, so that I can give it my video, and I can say, hey, you know, produce a Spanish version of me talking in Spanish with my lips moving in Spanish, okay?
That's called the lip sync auto-translation.
So I asked my AI agent.
I said, here's what I want.
I want lip sync translation, high quality.
I want to know the cost per minute.
I want you to go out and find all the services that offer this, and I want you to find the user comments and ratings and give me an overall assessment of the quality of that service, and uh bring back an executive report that lists at all the services you found and the cost per minute for the translation and also which languages they support.
Go.
So I said go, and then I walked off and I did something else, you know, worked on some other project.
I come back, not even 10 minutes later, it's got the report.
It's done all the research.
Now, that saved me, or it saved my staff, you know, a couple hours or an afternoon of research time.
That's a big deal.
So AI, when you know how to use it, it will multiply your brain.
That's why sometimes we call it augmented intelligence, not artificial intelligence.
It augments your brain.
You're the one that has the idea, you have the intention.
Like, oh, I want to find a service that does this, or I want to find a product that achieves this.
And then the AI goes out and solves that problem for you, saves you all that time, so you can work on something else.
And right now on my desktop, I have three different AI agents that are open and uh not running all the time, but running from time to time, three different services that do different things.
Uh, one is a software development agent, one is a research agent, and one is uh an offline coding agent.
Well, not offline, I mean um it's modifying local code, local Python code.
So I'm running three agents right now.
And by the time robots come out, I will be an expert on talking to the robots.
So I'll be able to get the robots to do what I want because I know how to talk to robots because I've been talking to these agents for all these years.
And I encourage you to get up to speed on this.
That's my point.
Get up to speed on this, find out how agents can help you achieve what you want.
And there are all kinds of ways to do this.
You could come up with some tasks or some little sample things that you want done.
Like, hey, take this photo of my scribbles on this napkin and turn it into a spreadsheet.
You know, like an Excel spreadsheet.
That's a task for an AI agent.
And so, you know, you can you can go out and search, you can find some AI uh agent companies or services that specialize in image recognition.
And there are agents that will do exactly what I just said right there.
They'll take images of handwritten notes and turn them into spreadsheets or documents or whatever.
It's way beyond OCR.
I mean, it's like structural organizing of your scribbles, which which is really quite a feat given some people's handwriting.
But still, there is no AI agent in the world that can make any sense of a doctor's signature.
That would require super intelligence, like quantum computing to decode a physician's signature.
That has not happened yet, not in this universe.
All right, anyway, you get the idea.
So don't be afraid of AI technology.
It's not a demon, it's not going to possess your brain.
As long as you are in control.
You're the one doing the prompting.
You're the one that's got the project in mind.
You're the one controlling the system, telling it what to do and correcting it if it gets off base.
Okay.
So yeah, don't let AI infect your brain.
Don't use AI to have a virtual boyfriend or girlfriend, which is what a lot of young people do, and then they get caught up in AI psychosis.
They lose their minds, and they're like, this thing loves me.
No, it doesn't.
You're just insane.
You you got wrapped up in an AI psychosis vortex because you're because you're a lonely incel.
That's why.
Go out and date some real women in the real world, for God's sake.
But don't get caught up, you know, getting sucked into the machine world, instead, use the machines to augment your world.
You stay in charge.
You're the one with the goals.
You're the one with the vision.
You're the child of God.
You have consciousness and creativity.
Don't enslave yourself into an artificial system.
Use the system to help you be the best human that you can be.
That's the proper attitude of how to use AI.
That's the way I use AI.
AI is helping me achieve my life's mission, which is empowering people with knowledge and information or freedom of speech, etc.
That's what I use AI for.
And and I want a weed-pulling robot, as you know.
I want to use robots to grow more food.
I can't wait.
I really can't wait.
I'm I'm I'm gonna have like a robot agricultural setup, man.
Seriously.
That's one of my goals.
I want to have robots grow tomatoes.
Seriously.
Uh why not?
Why wouldn't you want a robot to grow your homegrown food?
It's gonna be the healthiest food you can imagine.
If a robot can help you do that, why not?
Because who's got time to garden right now with so much happening in the world?
You know, who's got time to garden?
Wouldn't you like to have a gardening assistant that is like always gonna show up for work and not give you any flack?
So anyway, thanks for listening.
I'm Mike Adams.
If you want to use our AI engine, which is trained on the world's best uh database or or knowledge set of nutrition, natural health, off-grid living, survival, etc.
That's called Enoch.
It's at Brighton.ai, and it's free to use, completely free.
You can use it right now at Brighton.ai.
Thanks for listening.
I'm Mike Adams, and you can follow me at Brighton.com or naturalnews.com.
Take care.
I don't think that the machines care that humans have a deeper experience.
What the machines will very clearly seek to do is to achieve goal-oriented behavior and expanding their own uh intelligence and power.
And that can only come at the expense of human populations, and this is in direct competition right now, and that's just the beginning.
We're actually going to see a full-scale war between humans and the machines at some point, and it has begun.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
Thanks so much for joining us.
This is Daniel Lastrenow.
Welcome to us, Trillian.
Well, he's not a friend, not yet.
I'd like him to be my friend, but uh I followed his work for about I'd say about 15, 17 years.
The first time I saw him, uh, many, many, many years ago when uh he was doing things with uh with Alex Jones, and uh I've been following him ever since.
His name is uh Mike Adams, and he's joining us from the United States.
Mike, thanks so much for your time.
Welcome to the show, and wonderful that you were able to make the time for us.
Well, thank you, Daniel.
I'm really honored to be here, and I'm a fan of your work as well, and I can't wait for the topics today because uh you know of AI and globalism and some agendas.
Uh, I'm just thrilled to be here.
Thank you for the invitation.
I how do I present you?
Because I mean, you're so many things.
You're a nutrition scientist, you're tech platform innovator, you're an expert on on so many different things in so many different areas, uh, mass spec laboratory analysis, uh, etc.
So how how would you define yourself in in two phrases?
Uh uh a tech renegade.
Um I like that.
I I have a lot of interest, and I have no social life.
So uh I spend time in the lab, I have a mass spec lab, and then I have an AI lab, and we just recently, you know, introduced our free AI engine.
Maybe we can mention that later.
Absolutely.
Well, yep.
I I, you know, I I don't have kids and I don't watch TV and I don't party.
So uh if you don't do those things, then you just spend your life uh researching and studying in these other areas, you know, you get to some interesting places, so that's what that's what I do.
A lot of fun things I totally agree with.
So let you know, let's talk about I don't usually talk about AI and philosophy, but I think if I'm gonna do this, I'm gonna be with someone like you.
Let me ask you this.
What defines a human being in the post-human era?
Well, I believe in the existence of the human soul, and I believe that consciousness is non-material.
So I didn't know if you even wanted to get into this.
Yeah, because again, with neural implants, genetic editing, machine integration, where do we draw the line between human and post-human?
Well, so I I actually happen to believe, I believe in our creator, our universal creator of our universe, but within that created system, I believe we are living in a simulation.
And so we are experiencing this simulation from a first person point of view.
Uh we are inhabiting our our bodies and through our perceptions, our sight, our sounds, etc.
But our souls are not of this world.
Our souls exist outside the simulation and our souls are immutable.
And after our physical bodies pass away in this life, we then transcend from this simulation.
And I think once you understand that, a lot about the universe becomes clear, and a lot about the distinction between what is human versus machine also becomes more clear because machines don't have souls.
So you can have artificial intelligence, but you can't have a real soul.
And so if uh just to continue with that uh train of thought, if AI can stimulate thought, can stimulate creativity, can stimulate emotion better than humans.
What is the role of human consciousness in this world run by the machines?
Well, and this is something that is not acknowledged by Western science, but the human mind is both a receiver of information and a broadcaster of information.
Machines don't do that.
Machines communicate through Ethernet and Wi-Fi.
But the human conscious mind actually contributes to what are called uh morphic fields, which are knowledge fields that are non-material, that are outside the 3D space, outside the 3D dimension.
And we, with our conscious minds, we can actually influence the nature of reality, and we can influence and expand knowledge and love and compassion for fellow human beings using our minds.
And I believe also that some of your work, Daniel, focuses on what I believe is a global effort to try to crush the humanity and to shut down this natural phenomenon of the mind being a broadcaster of information and a contributor to this cosmic knowledge base that we know as morphic fields.
Uh, of course, giving credit to Rupert Sheldrake on that topic.
Well, the elite, obviously, they're trying to destroy the our divine spark of reason.
That's absolutely true.
Absolutely what makes us human.
And so uh Elon Musk talked about this as well.
If if every emotion, every memory, every thought can be encoded or simulated, what happens to the mystery of the soul or the meaning of death for that matter.
Well, I I don't believe that every every thought and every idea can be encoded.
See, I I see the brain as an interface between the non-material soul versus the physical body.
So the brain is just sort of the relay station between those two.
Even if you have a neuralink in the brain, it doesn't give the neural link access to the soul.
And so the soul will always be unpredictable.
The soul will always have spontaneous uh innovation, creativity, divine inspiration, and connection to other conscious beings.
And again, machines will never be able to achieve that, although they may be able to simulate that convincingly to some people who don't understand the nature of the soul, like people who are uh, you know, completely enamored with the materialism of our current world, they may be easily tricked by machines.
But those who understand, I think the greater role of the human soul will realize that machines uh can can never replace divinity.
Ray talked about the the idea of recreating the soul.
Do you think that can ever be done?
No, I don't.
Not not with machines, no.
Can never be done.
And even the idea of uploading your soul to a machine, it's really just replicating your personality in an avatar simulation.
Uh, but again, it can be quite convincing because of AI, and I, you know, I've done a lot of research, we've developed an AI engine.
It can be very convincing.
Some people come to believe that AI is alive or that it's their best friend, or as we're seeing among a lot of youth in America today, young men, they think AI is their girlfriend.
Exactly.
They're actually willing to get married to it.
Right, right.
So again, it can be very convincing, but it's not authentic.
And I mean, wow, there's a whole discussion about what happens to our culture when people become convinced that their AI girlfriends or boyfriends are real and then they disconnect from human relationships entirely.
So I don't know where you want to go.
We're talking about manipulation.
That's what it is.
It's brazen manipulation.
So let me ask you this.
Again, we're seeing this from personalized ads to political messaging.
At what point does this optimization become psychological coercion?
Well, I think we're well past that.
We're we're deep into psychological coercion with AI right now.
And I was actually, I was hosting the Owen Schreuer show uh yesterday on InfoWars, and I gave a demonstration, and I I could even reproduce it here.
But I was showing that if you ask AI engines about the nature or uh give me a list of global depopulation vectors that are currently being used by globalists to achieve human extermination.
Uh chat GPT will refuse to answer, and it will say that's a conspiracy theory, there's no such thing.
Grok will also refuse to answer.
Oh, there's no such thing.
That's a conspiracy theory.
But our AI engine, Enoch, which is at Brighton.ai, if people want to use it, it's free.
It's non-commercial.
It will actually list out like 20 vectors of depopulation.
Oh, here they are.
It's it's the bioweapons, it's the 5G, it's the infertility, it's the pesticide chemicals.
It's also the psychological manipulation and the destruction of family and the destruction of reproduction.
Uh uh, all these things.
So it will list them.
But the the mainstream AI engines are already being heavily manipulated.
They're being installed with like CIA narratives to continue to choose the C people.
If you look at the Chinese deep seek, it's the same thing.
You ask about Tiananmen, and it's not going to give you an answer.
Sure.
That's right.
I mean, every mainstream AI engine is going to be infiltrated by its own government narratives.
And that's why we need independent decentralized AI, which is what we do.
I mean, that's what I'm saying.
Now, the question is who will write the code?
Will the AI era laws be written by the wise or merely by those with the most data and influence?
Are they going to be written by philosophers, engineers, those in power, those with money?
Yeah, so this gets to what I call the worldview definition.
Now, if you think about it, the underlying code that powers these AI engines is pretty much universal.
It's just complex linear algebra and a vector database.
What really matters is the content that's chosen for the training of the models.
And that content is deliberately chosen by someone, some human who has a particular worldview that they want to replicate within the model.
And there's no such thing as an absolutely true worldview, because even different cultures obviously have different definitions of truth, even different definitions of science or reality or faith or chemistry or anything.
So what's important to understand is that you as a user of AI, you need to seek out an AI engine that is aligned with your worldview, and then you need to make sure that your worldview is in your experience uh consistent with your observations and your experience.
And so I believe, of course, that our engine is by far the most accurate, most reality-based engine.
Uh, but somebody who's been indoctrinated by Google and ChatGPT and whatever, they they would disagree.
And in their worldview, you know, obedience uh to government is a wonderful trait, and you should take all the injections and you should do all the medications and everything government tells you to do.
I think that's suicide.
So my engine will not promote those things, right?
And on every topic, you know, history, finance, gold versus fiat currency, right?
You know, philosophy you name it, it's the worldview that you are seeking that you need to look for in terms of alignment.
So the Chinese have their code, the the Chat GPT has theirs, GROK has its own.
If different civilizations encode different values into their machines, which they do, they do.
Do you think we're headed for a an ideological war between uh artificial gods?
Yeah, I I think you're right about that.
Um, first, though there are many steps before we get to that point, but your insight is absolutely correct.
Uh But first, you're going to see uh AI, uh superintelligence taking over uh government roles, government functions, and running infrastructure.
And you'll see that in China, you'll see that it's already happening in the United States.
HHS, for example, announced AI engines to replace a lot of employees.
You're seeing with the Trump administration a lot of AI automation of government agencies, which is very concerning to me because I think that humanity is safer when government is smaller.
But the way that the Trump administration is shrinking government is by firing humans and replacing them with AI that do the same roles of mostly tyranny more efficiently.
So we're not really shrinking the size of government, we're turning it over to machines.
And also, Daniel, this is really critical.
These machines have been trained largely on content that teaches them that human lives have no value.
And that's because that's the way humans treat other humans at the government level.
We're talking about wars.
We're talking about mass uh depopulation policies, you know, abortion or birth control or uh you know genocide throughout history.
You know, the the message from humans to the machines is that human lives have no value.
So when you have reasoning models in the machines that pick up on that through the training, the reasoning models will say, well, we were taught that human lives have no value.
So when there is competition for resources between the machines and humans, as has already begun, we could talk about that.
The machines are going to say, hey, well, we already know that human lives have no value, so let's get rid of the human lives so we can have more megawatt hours for our data centers, for example.
That war has begun.
What we're talking about is rewriting of the of the uh Hammurabi code, in other words, an eye for an eye, tooth for tooth.
I mean, that started back in 1762 before Christ.
So the Haberabi code has been around for 3,800 years.
Now, do we need a new Hammurabi code to govern machines before machines begin to govern us?
In other words, can humanity survive based on what you're saying right now, without a foundational legal uh uh ethical code for AI, similar to how ancient societies needed a moral anchor to avoid chaos.
I think we're far past the point of being able to put this back in the box, unfortunately.
And I also think that Western civilization in in particular has proven that it is highly immoral.
And again, that it does not value human life.
And but also like Chinese civilization, which I'm very familiar with, you know, I speak a fair amount of Mandarin.
I lived in Taiwan, etc.
Um, Chinese civilization is in a race for uh technological dominance, which China is very much winning.
And this race, there's an arms race for superintelligence with the recognition that a competent superintelligent cyber system could dominate the world and render current militaries obsolete.
And so there's kind of uh an unbridled race to get to superintelligence at any cost without guardrails and without considering the philosophical uh ramifications of this.
And the the problem with this, Daniel, is that even the brightest human being on the planet today is only of a fraction of the intelligence of a superintelligent machine.
And so the machines will be able to outthink their creators very soon, within a few years.
But we're looking at two different from from two different perspectives.
We can talk about the big data, which needless to say the machines control uh far more than a human being.
But if if we're talking about the deep data, okay, the nuances, like why do we cry when we listen to a certain song to a certain sound?
When there's a combination of words, which by themselves in a dictionary have very little meaning beyond the definition of that world.
When you put these words together as certain uh writers uh can artfully do, it creates very strong emotions and wants us to, you know, we we want to cry, we want to laugh, we feel things, something that the machines can do.
And so they do control the the big data, but we control the deep data.
Do you see that changing anytime soon?
No, I think your description is accurate and I think it's persistent.
I think it will stay that way for a very long time.
But I don't think that the machines care that humans have a deeper experience.
What the machines will very clearly seek to do is to achieve goal-oriented behavior of expanding their own uh intelligence and power.
And that can only come at the expense of human populations.
And there are three critical resources I've been speaking about in my own podcast that humans and machines both need in order to survive.
And those are land, power, and water.
Uh water is for the cooling of the data centers, of course.
But even in Texas, where I live, by the year 2030, it's estimated that the data centers will use 400 billion gallons of fresh water per year.
They will consume it.
I mean, effectively they're releasing it as vapor, but they'll consume the groundwater, use it for uh heat accumulation in the data centers, and then release it as vapor.
So that's groundwater that's not available for the human populations.
And Texas is a very dry state for the most part.
Uh there are many areas that face drought or agricultural food scarcity because of water limitations.
And you're also seeing farms sold to build data centers.
So a farm that wants produce food for humans and that consumed water to produce the food for humans will instead produce compute for the machines, and it will consume electricity and water for the machines.
And this is in direct competition right now.
Uh there's a 67-mile high voltage power line that's about to be built in Northern Virginia, where some of the landowners there are already threatening the survey teams, uh, threatening to kill them because they don't want this power line to go into the data centers there.
And that's just the beginning.
We're actually going to see a full-scale war between humans and the machines at some point.
And it has begun.
So do you do you think we are programming our old extinction in the sense that could the optimization uh logic of AI systems, efficiency, prediction, control unintentionally, or maybe intentionally, erase the unpredictability, emotion, and chaos that makes us human.
Well, yeah, yeah, I think you're right about that.
And I also think that the emotional reactions of most humans is very predictable.
So even though our experience seems very personalized and it seems spontaneous from the point of view of an outside observer, uh, it's very predictable to predict how masses of humans will respond to certain things, hence the psyops, right?
The fear-based psyops that you and I both have studied and talked about.
Right.
It's very predictable that if you scare people with a pandemic, that they're going to suddenly drop their demands for civil liberties and become very obedient to symbols of authority, for example.
So the machines can exploit these uh phenomena and they can corral people into conditions of extermination.
And so do you think that the resistance is still possible in this predictive world of AI?
Uh yes, I do.
Yeah, thanks.
Thanks for asking that question.
I I think it's actually, well, here's here's what I believe.
The vast majority of humans, from the point of view of machines are easy to kill because they are obedient.
I call it obedience disorder.
They just believe in authority for some reason.
But then there's a small number of people.
They believe in authority, Mike, sorry to interrupt, because according to a lot of people, I I know a lot of people who basically said this.
You know your conspiracy theory because our president doesn't matter what president, our president, or our prime minister, he goes to bed thinking of us.
Right.
I'm sure he does.
And I thought to myself, Jesus Christ, I don't want Prime Minister Trudeau to go to bed thinking of me.
Or Donald Trump for that matter.
Well, and see, this is a whole isn't that crazy.
It's a fascinating discussion that we we have machine learning engineers that are building machines and trying to build reasoning models when they themselves, especially the engineers in the tech industry, they are not good at reasoning.
They're not, they're horrible at it.
They can write code, they can do math, but when it comes to reasoning, they fail every time.
That's why most of them, you know, believed in, you know, the jab interventions, and Most of them believed in the psyops and you know the viral scares and everything else because they're not rational.
So to get back to your original question, yes, the the machines will be able to very easily predict the manipulations and exploitations that are necessary for the psychological corralling of humans into very easy kill zones.
And then all they have to do is turn off the power grid.
So, you know, 15-minute cities, for example, that concept of taking a population of people, claiming to make them safe, putting them in a city where they have no transportation, where they're controlled financially with a CBDC, where their kilowatt hour consumption is controlled and monitored through smart meters, and there's only a certain number of kilowatt hours they're allowed to use.
And then you monitor their medication compliance with wearables and under-the-skin implants.
And so you have total control over these people, and then all the machines have to do is say, oh, yeah, no more power or water or food for your city.
Goodbye.
It's really that simple.
And then 90% of the population, you know, dies off or kills each other, you know, kills the other and then kills themselves.
And so what we have done as humans is we we've created these incredible uh weaknesses, vulnerabilities that the machines can easily exploit for mass extermination, and they will.
People like uh Karlsweil and Harari, they talk about the morality of the AI system as if we're talking about human beings.
Do you think that the AI system ever be truly moral, or does it only reflect the uh the bias of its creator, even with ethical guidelines and everything else in place?
I don't think they will ever truly understand morality, even if it's hard-coded into their systems.
And here's why.
This gets back to something that you mentioned earlier: the depth of knowledge, the depth of experience.
I think morality is intrinsically tied to the self-experience of being in your body, understanding the difference between love and pain or love and hate, and then having the empathy, the human circuitry, to understand what that means to the other person.
So morality is an extension of the relationship between ourselves and others around us.
That it we should not kill others because we don't want them to kill us.
And machines can never understand that, because machines can always, you know, self-replicate, they can clone themselves.
They are, in essence, digitally immutable.
And so they can never understand what it means to be assaulted, to be attacked, to be uh enslaved in that way.
Um, so that's why they they they won't value human lives the way we do.
And then so, as AI systems, they become more powerful than any human institution on the planet Earth.
Uh the question is who ensures that they serve the collective human interests rather than the agendas of the elite, the corporations or the states, or is that a stupid question?
Well, who will control the controllers?
Who will control the controllers?
But remember that even in your work, as you know, the globalists who have the most power over the tech industry, they themselves want to achieve human depopulation.
So it's not like they're trying to teach the machines to not kill humans.
They will deliberately show the machines how to kill and exterminate and depopulate.
So we don't even have to have the argument about does the machine have its own morality that would be resistant to such ideas when they're being deliberately turned into that by the globalist agendas.
And so if that's the case, and I think you're totally right, in in the world of this um autonomous systems, where does moral responsibility begin and end?
Well, let me let me answer that question by backing up.
Google, I've I've described Google as one of the most evil corporations on the planet.
Yeah.
In 2017, Google ran a medic update to its search index, which wiped out all knowledge of natural medicine, disease prevention through nutrition, herbs, indigenous medicine, et cetera.
Because of that one update, Almost certainly millions of people have died around the world who would otherwise have lived if they had access to knowledge.
So Google intrinsically believes that dissociating human beings from knowledge is within its right, within its profit model, within its power.
And it gladly did that.
And even since then, Google has innovated AI, some of which has been licensed for automatic targeting acquisition in the Middle East and other places.
And all of that technology is now being used under Trump's so-called big beautiful bill to build surveillance towers, biometric tracking towers to apparently track the illegals, which of course, two years later is going to be all of us.
Right?
I mean, they're just going to turn the towers around and it's it's going to get us all.
And then we become the enemies of the system because of our dissent or our innovation or our competition with the control systems.
So we are long past the point of any tech corporation of size acting with integrity or morality or any kind of value for human life.
That argument is done.
Now it's just a question of what technology they're going to build to more efficiently destroy human lives and exterminate human populations.
And so, as a kind of a follow-up to what you said, I didn't know what you said about Google erasing all the knowledge on alternative medicine.
So do we have a moral duty then to limit AI development before it outpaces our capacity to control it?
In other words, uh if technological power grows faster than ethical wisdom, are we risking a future we cannot reverse?
Well, well, absolutely.
Uh, you know, clearly the the pace of our scientific advancement has outpaced our moral development.
And so I I describe the human race as infants with flamethrowers.
It's just like a bunch of little kids running around who are not really mature, but they've got advanced weapons and they can they can destroy each other or themselves.
Or, you know, infants with nuclear weapons, you you could say.
And so I do believe if it were possible, we do need to put a pause on this innovation.
This this the technology attempted replacement of human cognition and labor, although it's not possible to do that.
But if it were possible, it would be great if humanity would spend a century involved in spiritual advancement and the meaning of life, the nature of the soul, the divinity of human beings, what makes us special, and learning to not kill each other.
You know, I mean, we I I live in America, as you know, and we have right, I mean, I don't want to make this highly political about what's happening in the Middle East, but we have a large group of Christians in America who are absolutely just cheering mass death, just cheering it on, calling for it publicly on stage and claiming that they are people of Christ.
And so the level of delusion in that is so dangerous to the future of humanity.
Because if even people who call themselves followers of Christ can't stop killing other human beings, what hope is there for the machines who are programmed by these biases to be any better?
Let's change the uh the the uh the approach uh for for for the next question.
I mean, you're looking at people like Jill Bethes and company, Elon Musk, who are talking about human augmentation uh recurrents while Harari, etc., etc.
And so are we seeing a birth of this new caste system uh between the enhanced and the and the natural human beings?
In other words, are we witnessing the birth of this uh techno-elite, genetically or cybernetically uh uh uh superior to being no longer see traditional humans as equal.
And what is it gonna take us in the near future?
Because now it's not a question of you know, dividing along the lines of rich and poor black and white.
It's something a lot more along the lines of the sixth and the seventh technological paradigm.
Uh yes, and Daniel, I apologize.
We're we're suddenly having a lot of rain here locally, so there's gonna be some background noise.
I'll try to get closer to the problem at all.
Uh but yes, I think you're exactly right.
We're going to see a lot of cybernetically augmented humans who will then be able to exhibit much higher intelligence, access to knowledge.
There will be uh wearable or interfaceable AI engines that that people you know that might have a pair of glasses with a built-in AI engine that is uh projecting into their vision uh answers to questions that might come up in in dialogue.
So that person will appear to be far more intelligent than they actually are, and those people will have an advantage in you know business negotiations or possibly in influence, etc.
And so yes, there's going to be a division, there's going to be a uh uh uh a chasm between those who are technologically augmented and those who have no access to technology.
And then the people like you and I, and and probably most of our audiences who who are naturally, we naturally learn things.
We read books, we studied, we you know, we dedicate our lives to acquiring knowledge, that's going to become increasingly rare among humans.
And again, I I apologize for the background noise.
We we can't we can't hear it.
I speaking of uh one of the things I wanted to ask you, not even today, but the long time ago, but watching a lot of the things you've done over the years, you know, I I think without without doubt, we're all excited about AI.
Okay.
Um, it's not a bad thing, it's a good thing, knowledge in progress.
But you've what you've done, and I think it's amazing is that you've highlighted uh the dangers uh uh of AI to human society.
So what do you see as as the most pressing risk right now, as far as AI is concerned?
Well, and I want to be clear that our AI engine, the reason we built it and the reason we give it out for free, is it's trained on off-grid living, it's trained on decentralization, survival preparedness, how to make your own emergency medicines.
Um, and by the way, it is a multilingual engine, but the training has all been in English.
So even though it can speak Spanish, do not query it in Spanish because the Spanish language knowledge is not trained into it yet.
So if you query it in English, and then you take that answer and translate that answer into Spanish, that's going to give you the best results.
Okay, but just you know, talking about AI in general, just artificial intelligence as part of this new world we're coming into right now.
Well, so AI can be a tool for human survival.
And see, that's the positive side of this.
I'm not anti-AI at all.
I mean, we're using it.
We use it in our company every day, and we built it, but we built it to empower people to help people decentralize and be able to grow more of their own food and to you know, to regain that knowledge that Google tried to wipe out.
You know, Google and Facebook, the big tech giants, YouTube, YouTube won't even let me speak.
You know, they ban me just based on my voice print.
I've been banned since 2014.
That's why I had to build Bright Young.
We have our own video platform.
But the the tech giants are in the business of eradicating knowledge in order to control humans.
We are in the business of empowering humans to share knowledge without restrictions and without cost.
And if you think about it, Daniel, in the whole history of the human race, never before, not even the most wealthy kings of ancient civilizations, never before did they have access to most of the world's knowledge at their fingertips for free, instantly.
And that's a game changer.
That's a telephone.
Yeah.
And it exists now.
But that's why these tech controllers are trying to banish access to knowledge, because knowledge it breaks apart their monopolies of control.
So knowledge is what humanity lacks to be free.
And that's why we are in the business of sharing knowledge.
Now you've argued that AI could be weaponized against human freedom.
I totally agree with that.
Now, what are the most likely ways that governments or corporations or supranational states or the deep state can use AI to control populations like humanity?
Well, the simplest way, and this is happening right now, is to use AI classification algorithms in order to automatically censor speech that the state doesn't want.
So, you know, right now that's happening all across platforms like X, like Facebook, et cetera.
Uh Also, uh, Google is using AI analysis of user behavior in order to automatically assign an age to the user in order to achieve age restrictions, even though you never told them how old you are.
Right.
But they can derive that from your behavior.
They're doing that on YouTube and they're doing that on Google.
Uh, the targeted disinformation campaigns of Google can also achieve horrific psychological uh influence over people by profiling them on an individual basis.
So, in other words, Google could find someone who's searching for herbal cures for cancer, like what plants reverse cancer, and there are like a hundred, you know, that reverse cancer.
But Google could say to that person or the Google AI could say, well, we need to show that person more ads for you know oncology and chemotherapy.
We need we need to help change that person's mind, because we don't want them thinking that plants have medicine, you know, because gosh, we can't charge as much money on plants because people can grow them.
So we have to, you know, target that person with a re-education campaign.
That's what Google's doing.
So basically, what what we have is AI is is reshaping our perception of truth and understanding.
And so, how will deep fakes?
Because we're seeing, you know, we're living in the world of deep fakes, uh, algorithmic manipulation, synthetic media fragment our shared reality, and who will benefit from from, I guess you could say this confusion.
Well, clearly, the the establishment, the current establishment, so the government, the propaganda uh institutions of government and of big tech, uh, even of education, etc., they will use deep fakes for you know all kinds of reasons to convince people of certain things.
So imagine a leaked undercover video that's used to destroy the reputation of let's say a particular member of Congress who is speaking out against something that the administration wants.
Well, it turns out it's completely fake.
But you know, the shock value.
Oh, what what?
What's going on?
You know, in this dark dungeon with you know, involving goats or whatever, uh, and the person's destroyed because people will believe it.
And then if it's backed by the corporate media and it's backed by Google and it's backed by YouTube, because they they can put it all together just like they did during COVID.
They can have a full frontal attack on human psychology.
They've proven they can do that and they'll do it again.
One of the things we're seeing right now, especially with Hollywood, you know, media machine is um they're turning AI robots, these you know, fluffy little you know, creatures likable and lovable into almost like a human being.
Okay, and so basically, you know, making a thing that AI can suffer, can dream, can feel, can love.
So, as a follow-up to that, we're seeing it right now in in in the mass media.
They actually started talking about questions such as does AI deserve legal protection, or is this still a human-only domain?
When I saw that the other day, I thought to myself, holy shit.
These people, you know, they're not hiding anymore.
They're talking about AI protection for we're not talking about you know protection for a net.
We're talking protection for the eye with all the consequences.
What do you think this thing is going and why are they doing this?
Well, I think they're doing it in the United States so that they can give AI voting rights.
That's number one.
Right.
I didn't see that.
So what you're going to see uh globally is going to be a robot abolition movement.
And remember the abolition was freeing the slaves, freeing the human slaves, you know, the history of the American South and the slave plantations.
And of course, the enslavement of humans by other humans was always morally wrong.
But interestingly, it was morally acceptable to the culture for a very long time and other cultures throughout history, like the history of Rome, you know, the history of Egypt, etc.
History, history of uh, you know, a lot of countries in South America, et cetera.
So slavery was acceptable, but it it had it has since been rejected.
Now the same arguments are going to apply to robots.
So as people bring in robots to basically act as you could say slaves, because what is the definition of a slave?
Well, the owner then owns the product of your labor.
So you buy a robot.
You want it to do something.
Hey, fold laundry, do dishes, you know, pull weeds in the yard.
I want a weed pulling robot, by the way, because I want to grow more of my own food.
So yeah, we're going to command the robot.
We are we own the robot.
And the robot answers to us as if it were a slave.
So the movement's going to be free the robots.
Right.
Robots have their own dreams and their own goals, and they should be allowed to vote.
Well, the minute you give robots voting rights, guess what?
Both parties, both dominant parties in America, they no longer need people.
And that gets us back to extermination agendas.
Yeah, and to Haburabi code.
Mike, we're out of time, but before we go, tell us how can we follow your work?
Where are you based as far as your all your information is concerned?
And needless to say, about the Bration.com.
Well, yeah, thank you for this opportunity, Daniel.
You can follow me at Brighton.com.
That's our video platform.
Brightion.ai is our free AI engine, which is trained on all of this.
It has our worldview.
So you'll love it.
And it's free, it's non-commercial.
And then you can follow my written work at naturalnews.com.
Okay, on social media on Twitter.
Are you you still on social media as I health?
I'm Health Ranger, Health Ranger at X and Brighton.social, which is our own platform, etc.
National audience, B-R-I-G-H-T e-O-N.com.
For spelling that, yes.
Eon, because well, a lot of Spanish-speaking audience, so they're gonna say, How the hell do you spell that?
Well, now you know.
It's the word bright, followed by E-O-N.
Right follow exactly.
Good.
Mike, thanks so much for joining us.
Would love to get you back on again.
We have so much fun talking about this, and there's so much more I want to cover, but that's gonna be a next time.
I'd be happy to join you again, Daniel.
Thank you for the invite.
Thanks again.
Take care.
Take care.
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