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Oct. 20, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
03:05:35
BBN, Oct 20, 2025 - Trump wades into ECONOMIC DICTATORSHIP with nationwide price controls.
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Okay, welcome to Brighton Broadcast News for Monday, October 20th, 2025.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Thank you for joining me today.
I've got some big breaking news for you in terms of upgrades to our tools that myself and my my AI team have been working on over the weekend and made some just profound improvements.
We've turned news into 3D news, and we've turned 2D news, I should say, into 3D news.
I'll explain that coming up.
That's at Censored.news, which also now has the ability for you to uh basically have a conversation with the news in any category like health or finance over the last 24 hours.
And it's got new trends analysis and new long-term implications analysis features.
One click, you can see the implications of emerging news trends and what it will do culturally, economically, and technologically.
And uh all of this is completely free to you, instantly access.
You don't even need to register or log in.
In fact, you can't.
Oh, and there's no ads on the site either.
So how awesome is that?
Um, check it out.
That's at Censored.news.
All new features that are just amazing.
Um the the feedback I got, even I told Michael Jan about this over the weekend.
He was like, oh my God, this is a game changer.
This is like unbelievable.
And I was talking with uh Dan at I allegedly, and he was like, people have no idea how much this is going to change everything.
Like, yeah, now you can not just read the news, you can understand the implications of the news, like what it means for society.
Anyway, I've got a special report coming up on that.
I'll bring that to you shortly.
It's all about censored.news.
Then we've made major improvements to our Enoch AI engine, which uh the name Enoch will go away, by the way, uh, early next year.
That's just a temporary name.
It's it's really the Brighton AI engine.
It's at Brighton.ai.
And we've just launched the Enoch survival coach, which is trained on all kinds of survival material, survival preparedness, off-grid living, emergency medicine.
It can even help you.
If you if you enter into it, like describe your current situation in terms of preparedness, it'll evaluate your situation, it'll tell you where you have strengths and where you have weaknesses, and then recommend actions of things that you can do better.
I mean, it's amazing.
And again, that's completely free.
I've got a special report coming up that describes that in more detail.
Just go to that at BrightU.ai or Brighton.ai.
It'll forward you there.
So uh that's in addition to the wellness coach, the financial coach, the ingredients analyzer that we already have there.
Now you have the survival coach.
So no excuses to not be uh prepared now, huh?
You can do like you can ask you, like, give me a list of all the stuff I need for my my go bag in my truck, and it'll it'll say, okay, you know, and just give you the whole list.
It's it's pretty cool.
And uh, you know, I I haven't even rolled out the big thing, the the big app that I was talking about a week ago.
Uh I spent instead of working on that app, I was I was uh shoring up new features with censored.news and so on.
But I've got an app coming out that's just mind-blowing that is gonna immediately make an entire industry obsolete and um in a good way.
You'll you'll see.
Um I can't wait to show you that, but it is a a little maybe it'll be another week.
I don't know.
Uh it's it's mind-blowing and it needs to get done right.
Um so I'm working on a lot of details on that.
Uh, I'll bring you news about that when it's ready.
And of course it's going to be free.
But you know, if you think about it, like right now it's censored.news, and you can click on uh analyze implications links to analyze news trends.
It's already smarter.
for example, on financial news, it's smarter than any analyst at the Wall Street Journal.
For medical news, you know, it's smarter than any journal editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
You know, for geopolitical news, it's already smarter than any editor or writer at the Washington Post or the New York Times.
We have entered the era where analyzing news is now done better and more intelligently by AI compared to humans.
Because our AI engine has an IQ that's, you know, off the charts.
So whatever your IQ happens to be, and I would imagine that most people listening to this have IQs, you know, well above 130, all the way up to 160, right?
We are the smartest people in society.
We are the most informed.
We're, you know, we have the best reasoning skills, etc.
That's why we understand the world far more than sort of low IQ people.
And I'm not trying to be condescending.
I'm just stating the fact, right?
We connect, you and I connect because we are actually smarter than most people.
Well, the AI engines are smarter than us in in terms of their knowledge.
Not in terms of creative expression or intuition or innovation, etc.
That's not what AI does.
But in terms of having knowledge, uh, you know, they're they're huge.
They've got an incredible amount of knowledge.
And this is just the world in which we live now where machines know more than humans.
They know more than us.
Uh you know, they can't replace us, like I said, with innovation and creativity and you know, that that spark of consciousness, that gift from God that we are, but they are smarter than us in so many ways in terms of knowing and memorizing and having content and being able to aggregate all of that information.
So the role of what a lot of, let's say, top editors, let's say at the Wall Street Journal used to do, is they would tell you the interpretation of financial news.
They would have years of experience, you know, in Wall Street and in investment funds and VC or whatever industry or you know, Treasury Central Bank, and then there would be some event that would happen, and then that expert at the Wall Street Journal would tell you what it means.
Or there would be an expert on CNBC who would tell you what it means.
And if that expert is Jim Kramer, you should do the opposite of whatever he says, and your portfolio will grow substantially by taking the anti-Jim Kramer uh investment decisions, by the way.
If you follow what he says to do, you'll lose money.
If you follow the opposite, you'll you'll actually do very well.
Just goes to show you that a lot of those so-called, you know, C and BC experts are full of bunk.
But that's also true across a lot of the financial newspapers or magazines or what have you.
The best information, the best analysis of events is going to come from here forward from AI.
And I think we have the best engine.
In fact, there's no question about it.
We clearly have the best engine because our engine is trained on reality and honest money and real Austrian economics, not you know, MMT magical monetary theory and all kinds of other nonsense that our modern government has come up with, you know, trying to make excuses for why debt doesn't matter and things like that.
Yes, it does.
It's gonna matter a lot one day here shortly, trust me.
Now, speaking of financial news and information, oh boy.
We've got to cover the big news today where Trump through uh Treasury Secretary Scott Besent or Besset, I guess people say it differently.
He has come up with something uh truly insane.
And I'm calling this uh kind of economic dictatorship because they're proposing nationwide price controls, but they're actually negative price controls.
In other words, uh they are price floors.
And Scott Bessant, he did an interview with CNBC, go figure.
Uh this was, I think it was on uh it was late last week.
Did an interview with CNBC and he said that the Trump administration is going to set price floors across a range of strategic industries to try to combat what China is doing.
And because China, and this is gonna start with rare earth minerals, which by the way, they're not rare.
They're I mean, they're not only in certain countries.
They're all over the planet.
It's just that they're only available in very tiny concentrations.
So when they say rare, that's that's what they mean, like small concentrations.
But all this recent talk about rare earths has a lot of people uh wondering what you know what they are, where do they come from, how come we don't have them in America?
Well, I mean, we do have them.
They're in every coal mine, actually.
They're just present at you know, micrograms per gram or nanograms per gram, which would be parts per billion.
And the the trick is getting them out of the coal.
And that's where China excels.
So China is able to extract rare earths, and there are all kinds of different techniques involving all kinds of different solvents and centrifuges, you know, and different methods, different chemistry for different rare earths.
And China has developed the best technology in the world to do this, and so that's why they produce the most rare earth minerals.
Oh, and also um this whole process is crazy toxic.
It uses like ridiculously toxic solvents like hydrofluoric acid, for example, not just hydrochloric acid, but you know, stuff even worse than that.
All kinds of different acids.
And so the the waste products out of rare earths refining, it's like a toxic stew of deadly chemicals.
Not good, right?
And so really the reason why rare earths came out of China or or largely come from China right now, it's not because the U.S. doesn't have them, it's because the U.S. doesn't want the environmental cost of extracting them.
The US wants to shift the environmental hazards to China, which is what the U.S. has done for decades, because China doesn't have the same environmental restrictions as the United States government or various states or the EPA, etc.
Not that the EPA cares very much about pollution because of course biosludge is legal in America, so they spread toxic human sewage all over the place.
The EPA is, you know, two thumbs up.
Yeah, that's awesome.
Go ahead.
Spread your toxic sludge everywhere.
But they didn't want to spread toxic rare earth refining sludge, which is rich in crazy insane you know, acids and things like that.
Right.
So that's why China is in the lead on this.
Well, because of this, you know, China what, a week and a half ago threatening to cut off rare earths or or promising that they would, they would stop exporting rare earths to countries that use those minerals to manufacture weapons that threaten China's national security.
So that means that covers every country that's making weapons for America, which would include, let's say, you know, South Korea, for example, uh, maybe Taiwan, but certainly the United States and other European countries that make weapons for America.
So Trump and Basent have decided that they need to effectively subsidize the rare earth minerals industry in America by setting a price floor, so that it would be illegal to sell rare earths in America for less than the floor.
So this is why it's called a negative price control, because uh a normal price control sets a price ceiling where the government says you can't sell bread at more than this.
So we're talking about a floor.
You can't sell neodymium, let's say, for less than this.
Well, what that does is it incentivizes local production, local mining, because those mines know that if they can produce it, they know what they'll be able to get for it, which is the floor price, which is much higher than the market price.
The market price for the world supply is set by China.
And that's probably based a lot on supply and demand, et cetera, and actual cost of extraction and you know how common the mineral is, etc.
But in the U.S., we're going to have a floor price set by a central planning government.
That's right.
This smacks of communism.
So where China will set a free market price based on capitalism principles of supply, demand, production costs, etc., the Trump administration is going the route of communism with centrally planned price controls in order to subsidize effectively subsidize domestic industries.
And Besent says that this is going to go into effect for more industries than just rare earths.
And here's his quote from his interview with CNBC.
He said, quote, when you are facing a non-market economy like China, now that's a lie, because actually China's prices are set by supply and demand.
China is actually much more of a free market economy than the US.
He says, quote, then you have to exercise industrial policy.
Well, what he means is you have to set price controls.
So what Bascent is actually admitting, if I could paraphrase what he said, he's saying that when you're facing an efficient producer like China that can produce these products at lower costs, then we have to manipulate pricing with centrally planned pricing policies from Washington, D.C. He calls it exercise industrial policy.
Talk about double speak, right?
This guy is so deceptive.
But again, what he's really saying is they got to set the prices in Washington, D.C. And he says then, quote, so we're going to set price floors and the forward buying to make sure that this doesn't happen again, and we're going to do it across a range of industries.
But he did not name those industries.
Well, we can probably take a fairly educated guess at what industries he's referring to.
So not only the rare earth minerals like neodymium, but or dysprosium or whatever, it probably would include copper, probably would include aluminum, maybe iron ore, maybe steel, things that are necessary for industrial production in America.
And this is being pushed out there as a way to sort of prop up those industries in America.
But guess who pays the price?
You do and I do.
We pay the price because when Ford Motor Company has to purchase aluminum for its trucks because they use a lot of aluminum.
Well, now that aluminum price could go much higher.
It could double or triple based on the price floor that the Trump administration sets from its central planning, you know, communist division there.
The economic commies in the Trump administration in Washington, D.C. deciding what prices should be.
Which smacks of the old Soviet Union.
The USSR now is becoming the USSA.
So the Trump administration is borrowing from communism to have centrally planned economies.
And the result is going to be massive inflation across all consumer products that are made using things like aluminum or magnets, which is a lot of products.
I'm talking about products made in America, which could include automobiles, for example.
And while a lot of products that we consume are made in other countries, there's still a fair amount of products that are made in America, and those are going to get a whole lot more expensive.
So it's not even that the government is directly subsidizing these industries, it's that the government is forcing you to subsidize these industries by paying higher prices for finished products that use these raw materials.
And as Bascent promises, they're going to do it, quote, across a range of industries, maybe microchips, right?
Maybe food.
Maybe they're going to set a price floor for food, like a bushel of wheat, a bushel of corn, gonna have a minimum price, a bushel of soy, you know, to help out the farmers who are really struggling right now across America, especially the soy farmers, because China is no longer buying soy from America.
And they used to be the largest buyer.
So maybe Trump and his team of communist dictators in Washington, D.C. are going to set prices on everything.
You know, agriculture, industry, technology, medicine, you name it.
And of course, they're saying, well, we have to do this to defend ourselves against China.
Yeah, of course, they always have an excuse, right?
They can always justify it in some way that you know sounds good when they're engaged in doublespeak.
But in the real world, they're just becoming, you know, communist dictators.
So that's why I say that what Trump and Bissent are rolling out now is an economic dictatorship with nationwide price controls.
That's exactly what it is.
And it's kind of ironic that over the weekend America saw the so-called no kings protests.
I think there were, I don't know, 2,700 groups protesting in cities and towns all across America.
Now, of course, that protest is entirely contrived.
It's mostly funded by left-wing globalist billionaires who hate Trump.
And, you know, let's be honest here, these left-wing protesters, they don't believe in democracy at all.
They want their kings in power.
They want Democrats to rule with an authoritarian control.
They want Democrats to be able to control what you're allowed to say or not say or throw you in jail if you protest, especially at J6, etc.
So let's let's not pretend for a moment that people on the political left in America have any core fundamental belief in freedom or freedom of speech or democracy or decentralization of power.
They're just angry that they don't have the power right now to wield as a weapon over you.
And so this contrived protest against Trump is trying to pretend like Trump is trying to make himself a king.
The problem is that Trump keeps giving them more ammunition for that argument by doing things like declaring economic dictatorship over the country, which is very much king-like.
You see?
So it's like, hey, Trump, if you don't want people to accuse you of being a king or being a dictator, uh, stop being a dictator.
I mean, it it would seem simple.
But Besent, who's an entirely dishonest man, uh, since he came into this role, I should say, you know, something about government makes you very dishonest.
Uh he's claiming that, you know, this is this is quote, industrial policy.
Okay, you call it whatever you want, but it's a centrally planned economy more and more.
We even have the Trump administration buying up huge portions of large companies like Intel.
They bought 10% of Intel.
Did you know that?
Put in a huge pile of cash, billions of dollars into Intel.
Of course, the government can just print the money and use that money to buy up private industry, which is also that's it's the road, you know, to fascism, which is when government and corporations, they basically merge and the government controls the corporations, and then uh pretty soon the government owns them, and then it's communism because the government owns the means of production.
The government sets the prices.
And the core problem in all of this is not actually solved or addressed by the government engaging in communist dictatorship practices.
The core issue is that America just can't competitively produce anything.
And you know why?
Well, I've been talking about this for 25 years, or nearly 25 years.
The reason why is because we've sickened our population with mass medications and processed junk food and vaccines that harm people and destroy their brains and cause cognitive loss.
We've created a population of sick diseased people in order to benefit companies like Pfizer or Eli Lilly or Big Pharma to generate billions of dollars or really trillions over time in profits for the pharmaceutical companies and the so-called health care industry, which is a sick care industry, and then the big food companies and the big retailers like Walmart that sell processed junk food every day to people who are paying with food stamps.
And we've subsidized the consumption of processed junk food.
And then our government worked with big tech to ban channels like me banned on YouTube because of a government request, even though I'm the guy that's teaching people how to be healthier and how to be more productive, how to protect your brain, how to protect your heart, your body, how to be more productive as an American citizen.
But people like me get banned, while the vaccine companies that are harming your brain with injection lobotomies, they get unlimited airtime because they buy the media.
And then the media pushes all of this.
And if you do this for long enough, pushing vaccines and medications and junk food, you end up with an obese population of incompetent workers who can't actually do anything in a factory.
I mean, sorry to just be so blunt about it, but that's where we are.
That's why even so many of these other companies that are trying to set up production in the US, they realize it almost can't be done because you can't find workers to do the jobs.
There almost are none.
I mean, none that have qualified skills, you know, because the the schools, the universities in America, with a few exceptions, they're they're churning out, of course, still left-wing woke idiots who don't know anything about reality.
But they've got a degree in some made-up nonsense, you know, like gender studies or whatever.
It doesn't even exist.
They've created an artificial construct and they've talked to each other in their own distorted twisted words until they came up with degrees and PhDs in things that don't even exist.
But they can't go into a factory and actually produce anything.
So they're frankly, they're irrelevant to this economy.
And Trump thinks that we can solve this by controlling the prices for products that still can't be produced in America in many cases, because again, you no longer have a culture of capable people who can produce things.
But that's where we are.
So now the Trump administration is going to be picking the winners and losers in the economy.
And they've just declared they're going to pick the winners, which will be now mining companies that mine things like rare earth minerals or extract them from coal mines, which will be happening all across America.
And, you know, of course, they're going to waive whatever EPA restrictions on the toxic fumes and all the wastewater that goes into the rivers and whatever.
Because you know, we've got to have neodymium.
That that's going to be the thing, you know.
Damn the salmon.
You can see this coming out of Trump's EPA.
And it's going to be, well, you know, we've got to produce these minerals at any cost.
Because without those minerals, guess what?
You can't go to war with China, which is what the Trump administration wants to do one day.
They want to fight China.
They really want to have a war with China, which is a horrible idea because China can produce massive volumes of things like rocket motors.
They can produce in two weeks the same number of rocket motors that the U.S. military has in its entire inventory.
And the U.S. military would take two to three years to resupply that inventory.
China can do it in 10 days.
So if we go to war with China, we lose.
And China blocking these rare earths means that the U.S. can't manufacture anything.
So whatever ammo we use, that is, I'm talking about like the Tomahawk missiles, the high-end stuff or the F-35s.
I'm not talking about just Bullets and rifles.
I'm talking about military equipment that uses these rare earths.
We can't, we won't be able to make it.
So there will be no resupply after we shoot off whatever missiles we have.
And so then it's done.
The USA is done.
So you and I are going to pay the cost for this new policy of economic dictatorship that Trump is pushing.
And we don't know now which industries he's going to demand control over.
Which industries he's going to want the government to own.
Or which industries he's going to now price control.
The implications of that are just massive.
And of course, Bessent and Trump have not thought through the domino effect of this.
It's going to be ultimately catastrophic for the economy and catastrophic for the supply chain.
You know why?
Because, you know, there's hopefully you're familiar with these economic concepts of something, for example, like price elasticity.
So when price shifts, or you could call it uh price versus demand elasticity.
When prices shift, uh the Trump administration and Bissent are assuming that the demand stays exactly the same.
That people will pay whatever the new price is, the new floor.
But that's not true, is it?
When price goes up, especially substantially, if prices double because the government has set the new legal price, well, then uh demand drops off.
Because various buyers will opt for alternative materials or they will design ways around that substance because it's just too expensive to put into their products.
So all of a sudden the new floor goes in place, and then the distributors that distribute whatever this thing is, their business collapses, and then they can't function as a business because they can't even sell enough product to remain viable in some cases.
So actually, this could end up crashing some of these businesses that are involved in the supply chains for these very minerals or metals that the Trump administration is trying to promote.
Setting a price floor doesn't automatically mean that everything's great for everybody.
You know, you can't just make magical money out of thin air.
That's a left-wing idea.
That's like MMT.
But now Trump is following that with price floors.
And just because you set a price floor doesn't mean that mining companies can magically pull it out of the ground tomorrow at a higher rate than what they're already doing.
You know why?
Because mining infrastructure can take you know a decade to build out.
I mean, this is not an overnight thing.
You gotta have permitting and then you gotta have machines, you gotta have processes, you gotta have workers.
There's a hard role to fill.
You know, you gotta have people willing to work in dirty mines and being exposed to toxic substances, dangerous jobs.
You could lose a hand, you know.
Uh mining is not the safest industry around.
It's not the most dangerous.
Probably working on a like an oil rig in the Gulf or something, that maybe that's more dangerous, but it's still pretty dangerous.
And then you've also got the issue where a lot of these mining companies may figure, well, okay, so Trump just set a new floor, so we're gonna be able to sell our copper or whatever at a higher price for a few years.
But we don't know that Trump's gonna be in office forever.
He's not.
I mean, he might be impeached in a year and a half.
Or he might lose the 2028 election.
I mean, the GOP might lose, the Democrats sweep back into power, and then they just reverse everything that Trump said.
And then all of a sudden the price floors are gone, and then you got this mining company that's like, you know, three years into a very expensive infrastructure build-out based on the new higher price that Trump has set, and then all of a sudden there's a rug pull.
Now they've got all this debt for all this new infrastructure costs, and the price falls back to market levels, and then that company goes bankrupt.
Now they're out of business.
Now they're not producing anything in America.
So this policy from Trump can have the exact opposite effect Of what's intended.
And that's why you shouldn't run communist style central planning governments that set prices on things.
Why?
Because it's almost always a bad idea.
It almost always has unintended consequences.
And it almost always actually has the opposite effect of what you intend.
Because no government is smarter than the price signals of free market decentralized decision makers that are buying and selling and producing and consuming and using these different elements.
No government, just to state it again, no government is as smart as all the people in the industry that are individually making decisions leading to an aggregate price based on supply and demand availability, you know, all of that.
That's why the Soviet Union collapsed.
I mean, well, I should say that's that contributed to the collapse.
It wasn't the only reason.
But centrally planned economies do not function for very long.
And Trump is shifting us into centrally planned economies.
It's going to be catastrophic.
So Bessent said, quote, the Trump administration will not take stakes in non-strategic industries.
Okay.
Well, how do we know that what's a non-strategic industry?
Because the Trump administration could decide tomorrow that, well, everything's strategic.
You know, microchips, medicine, food, you know, water filters, I mean everything.
Medicine, telecommunications, space exploration, it's all strategic.
I mean, couldn't you say everything's strategic?
Even entertainment, well, it's strategic.
It's important to keep the people happy while we go to war.
Anything could be strategic.
You know, even food.
I mean, I'm in the food business, right?
So is is Trump gonna come along one day and say, you have to charge this higher price.
Or we'll we'll shut you down.
What?
I have to charge a higher price?
Yep, we're setting a floor on food.
We're gonna make food, you know, more lucrative to produce in America to encourage farming.
Well, okay, so then I have to follow the government's price schedule.
And then that's less affordable to everybody else, and then more Americans starve because they can't afford to eat.
So then undoubtedly somebody in the Trump administration will say, well, we we set that price floor too high.
So let's let's lower that price floor.
In fact, let's let's set a price ceiling now.
Let's have a price control.
So, you know, one week you have to charge this much for your food, let's say $100 for you know a bucket of food or whatever, and then the next week the Trump administration will come along and say, well, now you can't charge more than $90.
So you have to lower your price because we found out there's too many people, you know, the food riots are getting bad.
Okay, so now we have to follow government pricing week by week.
What do we do?
We'd log into some kind of government pricing website where they tell you the current prices this week.
I mean, this is sound like North Korea.
This is North Freaking Korea.
And this is what Trump is promoting.
This is what Basent is promoting.
North Korea in America, we tell you the prices.
And if you don't sell at the prices that we set in Washington, D.C., we're gonna shut you down.
We're gonna arrest you, we're gonna find you, we're gonna yank your business license, etc.
That's where we are.
So, you know, let's not pretend that Trump is ushering in economic freedom.
Nothing of the kind.
Printing money like mad, buying up private industry to have the government own the means of production, and now setting price controls that will absolutely devastate the supply chain and will cause massive price inflation.
So everything that's made in America is about to get way more expensive, which will just cause American shoppers to try to buy more stuff made somewhere else.
This is gonna destroy American jobs.
I mean, but again, you know, Trump's not an economist.
This is not his area of specialty at all.
And, you know, this is the way arrogant governments work.
They think that they're smarter than you and me.
They're smarter than the industry, and they can control the price and they can solve problems.
And then when the bigger problem comes from their initial price control, then they'll come along and say, well, we have to rescue you from us with this other policy, and they'll have a new policy that tries to correct the first bad policy, but it'll be a whole new, worse policy.
Things will get far worse, and they're just going to flip-flop back and forth, pushing all kinds of different, you know, restrictions and prices and so on.
And then we're Venezuela at that point.
You know, we started out in North Korea, then we we can become Venezuela.
Then you got to have a you know a thumb scan at the grocery store to buy a chicken once a week because that's your quota.
Like that's where this is all going.
And it's so anti-America that it's kind of disgusting that this is being promoted.
And the excuse is, oh, we have to beat China.
What?
By becoming communists?
That's insane.
You want to beat China, we need to promote freedom.
And we need to promote health so that we have healthy people that can actually compete with China.
We need to be smart.
We need to be innovative.
We need to outsmart China if that's possible on things like rare earth minerals mining and refining.
You know, the government should be reaching out to smart people to say, hey, how do we solve this without becoming communist?
I mean, there are experts in this area.
And it's, I mean, gosh, I I run a mass spec lab with multiple ICPMS instruments that can detect all of these minerals.
I'm very familiar with a lot of different solvents for food sample prep, different kinds of acids, different kinds of ways of uh extracting molecules out of food samples, etc.
Uh, and I don't even work in the rare earth industry, you know, but I've got some knowledge in this area.
There are people who know a lot more than me about industrial uh metals or rare minerals.
I mean, the the knowledge exists, but it just seems to be easier for Washington, D.C. to hit everything with a sledgehammer to say, we're gonna set the price, or you know, we're gonna bomb you if you don't do what we say.
Or we're gonna set a new 100% tariff on China, you know, screw you.
Like Trump's diplomacy is just sledgehammering everything, domestic and international.
You know, it just smacks of arrogance and incompetence, and you know, a lack of understanding of how the world works.
And it's pretty easy now to see how countries slide into authoritarian centralized control, you know, economic communism and dictatorships, which is exactly where Trump is pushing us right now.
There's just no question about it.
That's the direction he's going.
And again, the No Kings protests just sort of underscored this very thing.
Uh, not that I agree with the protesters because they're mostly, you know, woke idiots, but I also completely disagree with Trump's uh economic policies.
They're not rooted in liberty, they're not rooted in economic reality, and they're going to have catastrophic results.
In the end, the American people will be poorer, American industries will collapse, and we will not produce more stuff.
We will actually end up producing less stuff at higher cost.
That's gonna be the result of this.
In fact, uh Trump's economic policies really resemble left-wing policies.
They smack of kind of a top-down centralized authoritarian control, which is characteristic of left-wing thinking.
So, you know, Trump is rapidly becoming Joe Biden, you know, day by day with Ukraine and Russia.
I mean, his policies are practically identical to those of Joe Biden.
It's just incredible.
All right, well, enough on that topic.
So now I'd like to share with you the good news about the tech innovations that we're putting in place.
Because no matter what happens in the world around us, I want you to have free access to amazing information, analysis, and intelligence, even if it's machine intelligence that helps you understand the world around you and navigate all of this insanity, which is gonna really destroy a lot of wealth in America.
It's gonna destroy assets, it's gonna destroy industries, you know, it's gonna destroy jobs, etc.
So, how do you navigate all that?
Well, you're gonna have to use tools that give you good access to information, to reliable information with solid analysis.
So I've got two special reports to share with you here about our new announcement of censored.news.
New features just went in place over the weekend, and then the new features we have at Brighton.ai slash bright you.
So check out those two special reports, and then we have a decentralized TV interview for you today with Courtney Turner, that I think you will find incredibly interesting.
Uh, before we go to that, support us by shopping at HealthRangerStore.com.
I think you'll be very happy with the quality of the products that you get there.
Lab testing, certified organic for almost everything, meticulously formulated with ultra clean ingredients.
You can even use our ingredients analyzer at Brighton.ai to check the ingredients of our own products, and you'll see that they're outstanding.
Even AI will tell you that.
So check it out.
Again, HealthRangerstore.com, thank you for your support.
We rely on your support to have funding to produce these projects to cover all the hosting and bandwidth and storage costs and everything else to be able to bring you these amazing tools.
And I've got even more amazing tools coming up that you will just it'll blow your mind.
So check it out and enjoy the rest of the episode today.
Take care.
Hi, this is Mike Adams.
I've got a major upgrade to announce for the website, censored.news.
And if you've visited that website before, lots of people have loved it for many years.
Until now, it has functioned as simply a collection of clickable headlines from it was something like 45 plus uh largely censored independent media websites.
So it was just a common place to go where you could peruse all the sites and click on their headlines.
And you know, that had some utility, but it was kind of a uh a flat presentation of the news.
It's like, here's a bunch of sites, you know, it's kind of like a billboard.
Well, using the new AI tools, I I had an idea of some things we could do that are far more profound.
We need to be able to analyze the news and extract the emerging trends from all of the sites.
So uh using AI tools, I built a brand new censored.news.
I spoke about it last week.
It was a little buggy, it was still in development.
I'm happy to announce that it's finally where I wanted to bring it, and there's something really amazing about it now that you've never seen before.
And that feature is called analyze implications.
And so what you can do now, if you go to censored.news, uh the first thing you'll see on the homepage is the audio summary.
You can click play and listen to the audio, which is updated every 30 minutes, to sort of read you the script of the emerging trends.
Or you could just look right beneath that, and you can see seven tabs or seven categories with little pretty icons: health, finance, USA, international, tech, energy, and science.
And if you click on any of those, and it defaults to health, because that's that's what I want to see first.
So, defaults to health.
It will show you the five most important trends from a 24-hour news crawling window spanning 77 plus censored websites.
So these trends, which are just five statements.
One of them, for example, let me read you this one.
Uh natural potassium levels slash heart Risks without big pharma's costly interventions.
Or here's another trend: growing distrust of big pharma as alternative cancer treatments and gut health solutions gain mainstream attention.
So those are two different trends.
And understand that these trends are aggregated, it's kind of a gestalt from all of the health news that we have spidered, which means uh crawled or gathered over the last 24 hours.
So it has a moving 24-hour window, right?
It always looks back 24 hours up to now, and then it determines using, of course, AI models, it determines what are the most important trends.
And you can see those in each of the areas like uh finance, let's see, finance.
Uh here's a trend.
Financial self-sufficiency surge as distrust in government and corporate systems grows.
Okay.
Um here's another one.
Generational wealth hoarding by boomers exposes systemic failure of housing freedom for younger Americans.
It's kind of a funny headline.
Uh that was, of course, again, an aggregate gestalt kind of trend impression that came out of all the financial news that we've spidered over the last 24 hours.
Well, next to each one of these trends, there's now a link.
It's in orange.
And I use orange to indicate AI components, in case you're you're wondering.
I'll use orange or purple, something like that, to indicate AI.
So these links are in orange, and the link says analyze implications.
Well, if you click on that, then you're gonna get from our Brighton AI engine, you're gonna get a detailed analyzing of the short-term, medium-term, and long-term implications of that specific trend.
Like what does that mean?
So let's click on that for the generational wealth hoarding by boomers and the failure of housing freedom for younger Americans.
I'm just gonna click that and it's gonna generate the analysis in a few seconds.
It's already done.
So if I go to that analysis, it says introduction, uh, this phenomenon of generational wealth hoarding by baby boomers, uh, although I might not agree with the word hoarding, just to be clear, uh characterized by their disproportionate ownership of housing assets, is exposing systemic failures and housing affordability for younger Americans, and the short-term implications are uh financial, there's going to be a housing affordability crisis.
Well, that's already here, an intergenerational wealth gap, and it gives a description of that.
And then there are social implications.
It talks about housing instability, frequent moves for younger Americans, overcrowded living conditions, or even homelessness, uh limiting social mobility as Americans are unable to move for job opportunities or to relocate.
And then it talks about the economic implications.
And then it goes and talks about the medium-term implications.
It gives uh technological, cultural, and liberty implications.
Uh talks about uh political participation, how lower income younger Americans may have reduced political influence due to their economic struggles and lack of stable housing.
And then it talks about the long-term implications.
And then it gives recommendations for policy interventions, financial education, intergenerational dialogue and alternative housing models, such as co-op housing, tiny homes, uh accessory dwelling units, and so on.
So and I'm just sort of giving you the highlights here.
The point is that it's no longer just about reading the news, it's about understanding the news.
And in order to understand the news, it's great to have uh analysis to show you the implications of this trend, like what happens as this trend continues.
So now, in essence, what we've done with this tool here on censored.news is we've taken two-dimensional news.
This is sort of like flat news.
Here it is on the screen.
You could just click a headline and you could read a story.
Okay.
Well, now we have three-dimensional news.
So you can now see the depth of the news, the analysis of the trends that are aggregated from all of the news in those topics over the last 24 hours.
And if you are a business owner, if you are an investor, if you are a retiree who's wanting to know about the risks for your investment money, or whatever, or if you're you're just trying to follow track what's happening in society, then you're going to want to visit censored.news every day and just quickly glance at the trends.
Now it's completely free to use.
There's no login needed.
You don't have to you don't have to sign up with an email or anything.
You just go there and look at it.
And it's updated automatically every 30 minutes.
Possibly, I'm still fine-tuning some things with it.
But I've greatly reduced RAM and CPU usage and so on, a lot of caching strategies.
And uh so far it's it's been really stable.
Now there's another feature there called Ask Brighton AI.
Now you'll see that when you go to the site.
And there you can ask a question about all the news that we've gathered over the last 24 hours in that topic.
So for example, if you want to ask a question about, oh, let's say tech news.
If I go to tech news, uh, let's see.
Wow.
Um process fake meat industry collapses as consumers reject ultra processed big food alternatives.
Well, maybe that belongs in the health category, but it's in tech because of the sort of the artificial meat technology.
But suppose you want to ask a question about that.
Well, you can ask it right there.
You could just type in your question.
Hey, tell me about uh what are some of the other fake meat companies?
You know, you click submit, and then boom, it gives you the answer.
And as part of the context of that question that you don't see, it's actually feeding the stories of the last 24 hours that we've spidered to the AI engine to help you get a much more informed answer with all of that context.
So you can not only can you see the news and get the 3D depth of the analysis, you can actually talk to the news, you can ask questions of the news.
You can have a dialogue in essence with the news, okay?
In in a sense.
So this was part of my goal to help you have uh tools that are free to use that help decentralize information that bypass censorship and that give you knowledge and understanding of how the world works around you so that you can navigate it better.
And so I encourage you to use this engine.
It's incredibly powerful.
You can interact with it, like I said, you can ask questions, you can get analysis, you can do all these kinds of things.
And then when you want an AI engine to ask anything, just go to BrightU.ai, or you can go to Brighton.ai, and it will forward you.
And you should know that we've also added over the weekend, I've added a preparedness and survival coach.
So now, in addition to our wellness coach and our financial coach that Andy Scheckman told me he absolutely loves so much, he's gonna start plugging it on his show.
We've added a uh survival coach, which knows everything about survival.
Oh man, it's loaded with information.
You can ask it anything about emergency medicine, emergency shelters.
It's trained on how to disassemble and clean 3,000 different firearms, by the way.
It's trained on so much stuff, food preservation, canning, drying techniques, seed saving, shelter construction, how to survive nuclear fallout, how to survive cyber attacks, how to survive a zombie wave, you know, anything you can think of.
It's got that.
It's got that uh because it's been trained on over 10,000 books and a hundred, well, hundreds of millions of pages of content, which is what I've been working on the last two years now.
So that's also free.
So take advantage of it, enjoy it, because you're never gonna get better tools that are more in line with what you and I already know about the world.
You're never gonna find better tools anywhere, and Chat GPT can't even touch this.
Chat GPT doesn't do this.
And ChatGPT still thinks that vaccines are all awesome and that there are like 97 genders, you know.
So do you want to go to a stupid, retarded model like ChatGPT?
Or do you want to get your information from a much more capable informed model that actually reflects reality?
That's what we have at Brighton.ai, or you can interact with it via censored.news.
Finally, I want to ask you the one way that you can sort of return the favor on this or pay it forward.
You know, we're not charging for this.
It does cost us quite a lot, obviously, uh for the hosting and the RD and everything.
But uh just tell people about this tool.
Share the news about it, spread the word.
Censored.news.
And I mean, it doesn't even have any advertising.
So, you know, if you're selling something, you know, don't be concerned, is there's nothing, there's no ads on here that are going to compete with whatever you sell.
I mean, it it's it's just information.
And although I know people say, oh, you should put ads on it.
See, I think the ad model is obsolete, frankly.
And I I don't think that you should plaster every inch of real estate on the screen with a bunch of ads.
I again, I think that's obsolete.
AI is changing everything to the point where the way people will decide what they want to purchase or what they need to purchase, is by understanding the world better and asking for the things that they want or need.
Or for example, maybe they're going to ask our survival coach for maybe a list of things they should buy for preparedness reasons.
So the AI might suggest some things.
And that's actually where the so-called advertising is shifting into.
It's it's no longer going to be what used to be called interruption advertising, where this is here's this giant ad on the screen, and you know, ah, that may or may not have anything to do with what you are interested in.
And I know we still have uh five-second pre-roll ads at Brighttown.com for the videos.
But those are ads that are relevant to what our audience is interested in, which is you know natural health and uh decentralization away from the medical system, etc.
But in the medium term here, display advertising is obsolete.
It's going to be AI information that recommends products or that investigates products or that finds the things that you need or that you want, or that uh you know can help shore up your situation, whether it's for preparedness or entertainment or utility or health or whatever.
So that's just a side note here.
I could do a whole podcast on this topic of why advertising as you know it is obsolete or about to become obsolete.
But we'll talk about that later in another podcast.
I don't like a bunch of ads on a website.
I don't like a bunch of pop-ups, I don't like a bunch of steps to get through a site to get to what you want.
And if I didn't have like an ad block browser, I don't think I could even visit the UK Daily Mail website because a couple of times I visited that on a browser that doesn't block ads, and it was just like 50 pop-ups.
I couldn't even see the news.
It's like, oh my god, what is this?
Travel and you know clothing, and oh my god, what the hell happened to the Daily Mail?
It's just a bunch, it's just ads galore, right?
It's kind of pointless.
Nobody's gonna visit that in the future.
Nobody's gonna do that because you're gonna get information from places like censored.news.
Think about it.
High signal-to-noise ratio, not a bunch of stupid ads in your face, but information and understanding of that information, 3D information, and you can even talk to it.
You could have a conversation with the news using AI.
You can ask questions, and you can gain information even from outside of those stories.
So if you see a story about something like, oh, you know, silver prices are going up, you could ask it, well, tell me about you know silver mining.
You know, what's the average output of a silver mine, or you know, can can they increase output when prices go up?
You could ask that question.
If you don't know about silver mining, or you could say uh which countries produce the most silver.
And it will bring in knowledge from outside.
And in our case, using our AI engine, it's trained on interviews and books, but all the interviews that I've ever done, which includes people like Ron Paul and Peter Schiff and Andy Scheckman and Gerald Salenti, you know, a lot of uh money people, like finance people, gold and silver, et cetera, uh, financial freedom type of people, and and many others, uh, even the crypto experts and so on.
So if you want all that knowledge brought into your question, this is how you do it.
Just go to censored.news and start using it.
And by the way, if it if it glitches, uh if it's unavailable or something, uh don't freak out.
It it's gonna it's gonna come back.
I'm tweaking features on it.
Sometimes they break, you know, um, whatever.
Oh, I and I should mention I'm the only engineer on this project.
Um this was one of the tests that I decided to pursue using AI, uh so-called vibe coding, only vibe coding, and then uh a combination of uh clawed code SODA and then replit for hosting.
It turns out to be a very powerful combination, and the site is running, and it keeps getting better every day.
So we're gonna keep adding features to it and we'll improve the voice narration as well.
But check it out.
I think you'll really enjoy it.
You can also scroll down and see all the sites and all their headlines if you want sort of the old version of it.
It's there too.
But most people are interested in the trends and then the most recent stories in each category.
Because we've got them.
Uh it's re-spidered every 30 minutes, and then the trends analysis also happens every 30 minutes, and it tells you at what time it was last updated or last crawled, etc.
And that that's all automatic.
Okay, so check it out.
Again, censored.news.
And if you want a powerful AI engine, go to Brighton.ai, which will actually currently forward you to BrightU.ai.
So check it out and spread the word.
Thanks for your help in all of this.
And remember, we couldn't have done this without your support.
Shop with us at HealthRangerstore.com.
And we are using whatever profits we earn from selling clean food and clean supplements, etc., to be able to fund these projects to bring you really valuable information free of charge.
And incredible tools that just I mean, if people knew about this, if the if the whole country knew about this, oh my God, everybody would want to use it, and then our hosting costs would go up.
So only tell the right people about this.
We don't want everybody using it.
We just want smart people using it.
Okay, thanks for your support.
Take care.
All right, I've got an update for you on our Brighton AI engine.
Uh the current name is Enoch, but that will change in early 2026.
Uh, we've added a new feature called Enoch Survival Coach.
This is our fourth new feature.
We have a wellness coach that knows everything about natural health, alternative medicine, cancer cures, etc.
We've got a financial coach that's trained on my interviews with uh everybody from Peter Schiff to Andy Scheckman to Gerald Celenti to Ron Paul and a bunch of other people in thousands of books, etc.
G. Edward Griffin, uh, all that.
We've got the Enoch Ingredients Analyzer that can tell you all about any ingredient that you want to type in or lists of ingredients from foods or cosmetics or supplements.
And now we've got the new Enoch survival coach.
Now you can see all of these by going to Brighton.ai or BrightU.ai.
Actually, it will forward you to bright you.ai, and that's just the letter U. The word bright, the letter U. Bright U.A. And then scroll down a little bit on the homepage and you'll see the survival coach.
And if you click on the survival coach, uh it's pretty interesting because uh at the bottom of the page, we show you the saved answers from other users.
And I think we show uh three answers at or three questions and answers.
And one person is asking uh what items should be in a go bag for home and auto, create a descriptive list.
Okay.
So um let's just I'm just gonna click on that.
I mean, this is not pre-planned or anything.
I'm gonna click on it and just see what the answer was from uh the Enoch engine here at BrightU.ai.
So it says a well-prepared go bag is crucial for ensuring your safety and comfort during emergencies, et cetera.
And it talks about your home go bag, water, food, gives you a bunch of details of first aid kit, clothing and bedding, etc., lighting and communication, shelter, tools, imported documents.
It goes on.
And then it gives you an auto-go bag, what you should keep in your vehicle at all times, like jumper cables and flares, toe straps, tire repair kits, and it goes on the first aid kits and map and compass, portable toilet, there we go, dental floss, and and a bunch of other stuff, right?
So it's an awesome answer, and every answer I've seen is awesome.
And one person is asking a very detailed question that begins with at this point.
I have 10 goats, nine male, uh, nine females, one male, and chickens, two laying hens, three older chicks, one old hen, and a partridge in a pear tree.
And goes on and talks about the veggie patch and a food force and everything, and then rifles and ammo, solar inverters.
And then the analysis is says uh here's a comprehensive assessment of your current situation, and here are steps to improve your long-term preparedness.
And it gives out all the strengths of what the person has, and it gives areas for improvement, and then it gives long-term goals and a summary.
I mean, it's just amazing.
It's like a survival planner, actually.
I mean, it's really amazing.
So again, just go to bright you.ai, scroll down, click on the survival coach, and then ask your survival question.
You can ask it anything, anything at all.
What do I do when the zombies attack?
You know, uh, should I buy a flamethrowing drone?
Whatever you think is important for survival.
And then when you're done having fun with that, go to the wellness coach back on the homepage, or go to the financial coach.
And I've got other features coming here that will blow your mind.
And from what I'm hearing from people, the feedback is just absolutely amazing.
Everybody is loving the answers that the engine is giving them.
And that's because I spent two years.
I spent two years curating training data, which is uh content, you know, hundreds of millions of pages of content, not only 10,000 different books, but also hundreds of millions of pages of articles and transcripts from interviews and science papers and old like US Army manuals and all kinds of stuff.
I mean even 3,000 firearms assembly and disassembly manuals.
I mean, you can't even believe what we've been through over the last two years to acquire all this information.
And then some websites you know donated information or they donated their their YouTube channels, and then we scraped all their YouTube videos and translated it all uh in transcripts and then cleaned all that up and put it in for training purposes, et cetera, et cetera.
And it's a massive project.
Uh amazingly, we only spent about two million dollars on this.
But it did take two years and a lot of my time.
But the result is just amazing.
This is by far the best AI engine in the world on any kind of questions having to do with reality.
Now, it's not the AI engine to solve highly complex mathematical problems, which is usually how you know the AI companies like to test their AI engine.
They take math challenges, you know, word problems with high-level math.
Uh, our engine we don't focus on that.
It does okay on math.
You know, it's it's quite capable.
It can write computer code, it can translate into all kinds of different languages.
Because it's it's built on currently the base model that we built it on is the mistral Nemo 12 billion parameter model out of France, which by itself is very capable.
We just retrained it.
You know, we took that open source model and basically mind-wiped it, which did not erase everything, but we retrained it on all of our content, which was you know a big project, an expensive project, took a massive server farm to get that done.
Uh That doesn't even count all the effort that went into the data.
But the result is just extraordinary.
You've you've never seen an AI engine this good.
So, you know, you can use Chat GPT for things, all kinds of things like solve this high-level math problem, or you know, generate an image.
Or you can use like perplexity or anthropic to do things like search the web, you know, research the web and find me the best price on like a high quality hammer, whatever you're looking for.
And that's great.
Every tool has its use.
But when you want an engine that understands natural health, cancer cures, reversing disease, survival preparedness, you know, Austrian economics, gold and silver, all the things that you and I are interested in because we live in reality.
We don't live in artificial, you know, simulated worlds of like delusional thinking, you know, which is where most people live.
Um you and I live in the real world, and so you want an engine that's trained on the real world.
That's that's our engine.
Bright you.ai.
And uh, did I mention it's free?
It's free.
So you can ask up to three prompts and then it'll ask you for an email address.
Simply enter your email, type in the confirmation code, and you're good.
You're good for like 90 days, I think is what that cookie is set for.
You don't have to create an account at all.
In fact, you can't.
You don't have to give us your name.
You can't.
There's no way to.
We don't need your phone number, we don't you don't have to create a password, nothing.
We try to make it as easy as possible to use.
And when I say we, I'm talking about me and my AI team.
Uh me and my AI agents.
Like I'm the only human on this project.
And you may recall I mentioned I I started out building this just to see if I could build a production-ready online app using nothing but AI coding tools uh like Replit and uh Claude Code.
Uh Claude Code is by far the best.
And I use Claude Code for all the complex algorithms, and then I use Replit for hosting.
And sometimes I I ask Claude Code for answers, and it'll produce a JSON format.
I take that JSON format, I slap it over into Replit to tell Replet how to be smarter.
And then Repa goes, oh, okay, and then it does it, you know, and then boom, it's it's live.
So if you want the best coding tools in the world, it's clawed code, and it's from Anthropic.
Just saying, if you want to do what I'm doing, that's what you need to do.
But uh it also helps to have two years of curated data that's hundreds of terabytes, and it also helps to have a background in uh understanding natural language processing, uh data pipeline processing, uh storage systems, and you know, even just RAID configurations and high capacity, high volume storage, because you're dealing with billions of tiny files.
I mean, it's it's a whole different ball game, let me tell you.
Uh you also need, I mean, I have 48 workstations with GPUs, and those 48 workstations are cranking on uh data pipeline processing, which means well, all kinds of things.
I'm not uh even translating documents, etc.
So uh you can do it, you can do some on one workstation with today's GPUs, they're pretty fast, but uh to do what I've done here definitely takes some scale.
Uh 48 workstations, you know, tower workstations, they're not servers, but but they they all have GPUs, at least uh 5070 cards, a lot of them have 5080s, a lot now have 5090s, uh the NVIDIA 5090s, and then some have the ADA 6000 pros.
And then I've got the NVIDIA uh Spark systems on the way also to add that to the mix.
So we've got, I don't know, we've got a couple hundred thousand dollars worth of GPUs cranking on content right now, which means that every month this engine is gonna get smarter.
It's gonna have more information, more content, more context, more knowledge.
And by January, we're gonna have we'll probably double the amount of knowledge that the engine has.
So if you think it's awesome now, and almost everybody that uses it thinks it's awesome, it's gonna be shall we say more awesomer by January.
And yeah, that's gonna be really special.
I can't wait to see what it does by January.
Uh but I'm working on this every day, and the best way that you can help me with this is simply tell people about it.
That's all.
Just tell people about it.
Talk about it.
If you have a podcast or whatever, talk about it, mention it, you know, plug it.
Uh you'll notice that there are no display ads, there's no ads.
I'm never gonna plaster the screen with a bunch of advertising.
I hate that shit.
All of us do.
Hate I'm sorry, sorry about the profanity.
I just hate that.
I don't want to see a bunch of crappy pop-ups and ads everywhere.
Just tired of that.
I just want to get you connected with really good information.
And uh if you have content that you would like to donate to this project, you can email us at inquiries at bright you.ai.
That email address is inquiries at bright you.ai.
And if you want us to build one of these for you on your data, we can do that too.
But I'm only willing to do that for organizations that are aligned with our morals, our ethics, our values.
So I'm not gonna do that for some hospital out there, okay, unless unless it's like a natural health clinic or something.
Um I'm doing this, I'm I'm mission driven on this, not money driven.
But if you have a worthwhile purpose, maybe you've got a nonprofit, maybe you're listening to this and you run the Ministry of Health of a state or a country, and you're thinking, hey, we should we should have a wellness tool available for all of our people to help people be healthier, help them make better food choices, etc.
And you're thinking in your mind, you're like, can the health ranger build a tool for us that would be just as awesome, but it would be branded with our health minister or whatever.
Uh yes, the answer is yes, actually, we can build it because we did, we already did.
We know how to when I say we again, me and my AI agents.
We know how to build it.
We know exactly how to build it.
Paid a heavy price to learn how to build it.
But now we know how to do it very effectively and very efficiently and quickly.
So we can take all of our knowledge and we can build you an engine and a website and an interface and everything that works just like our Brighton.ai system, but it answers with recommending your website.
Or, you know, it's the Ministry of Health of uh Zimbabwe or whatever, you know, whatever country that you're you're listening from, or whatever corporation, we can do this for you, but we will only promote uh natural health, nutrition, uh honest money, you know, gold and silver, etc.
We you know we don't promote um narratives of the corrupt establishment.
So don't even you know, don't even ask.
Um but in the meantime, if you're using this and you love it, just spread the word, tell people about it.
Uh currently our Enoch usage is extremely low.
Our CPU is only hovering around 3%.
So we can easily, you know, go 10x or probably even a lot more.
Probably, I mean, the way the way CPUs work, we can probably go like 50x traffic and still be okay because of all the the efficiencies at scale.
So uh go ahead and recommend it wherever you think it's appropriate, and we will keep building and we'll keep making it better.
It's already awesome, it's gonna get even more awesome.
So thank you for your support.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Oh, last thing, if you want to help us uh financially, just shop at my online store, HealthRangerstore.com.
Clean foods, lab tested foods, superfood supplements, personal care products, no garbage, no junk, almost everything certified organic, non-GMO, laboratory tested, and amazingly clean formulations on everything in the store because well, a lot of things I formulated myself.
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How did Liberty to me is uh really downstream from free will?
It's the you know, the freedom of consciousness.
You hear people talk about freedom a lot, but they don't necessarily understand there's a difference between freedom and free will.
It is a vehicle, a conduit for us to pursue virtue and morality.
And it is because we are endowed with faculties of rationality uh and the ability to adjudicate morality that we were endowed with this gift.
But most people, even in the United States, have no idea where that even comes from.
Decentralize.
Don't don't compromise.
Be unophysed.
Decent life got to be alive.
don't decarbonize Welcome to today's episode of Decentralized TV here on Brighton.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighton and all the the Brighton universe of tools, which now includes a new um AI engine that we'll talk about a little bit, demo it during the show.
And we got a great show lined up for you today with a brand new guest.
I can't wait to introduce her.
And she is like a walking encyclopedia of knowledge about technocracy and the threats to humanity and how we can decentralize our lives.
And of course, joining me today is our co-host Todd Pittner.
Welcome.
Todd, great to see you again today.
Mike, great to be alive, man.
It is a an amazing time to be alive, wouldn't you say?
It absolutely is.
I just can't believe how how rapidly things are changing.
And like some of it's for the worse, but a lot of it's for the better.
Like we have access to more information and knowledge now than ever before in human history.
Right.
Right.
Which is amazing.
And the other thing I was thinking of, Mike, you know, we're gonna be talking about the fact that we are going to be rapidly approaching being on air together for three years.
No way.
Think about that, Mike.
Think about all of the tremendous guests that we have, and we have just scratched the surface.
So if you watching, thank you.
Thank you for paying attention because uh we couldn't do it without you.
Yeah, absolutely.
Uh, if you love the show, you know, we love you back.
And we're we're always working to bring you knowledge and information to help you live more free uh in a more abundant lifestyle.
And I gotta say, our guest today is I think I mean, she's a fountain of information that's going to help you achieve those goals.
So uh let's bring her on in, Todd.
What do you say?
Please do.
All right.
Okay, Courtney Turner is our guest.
She is an expert and analyst and a speaker and uh a podcast producer and an event producer who focuses on protecting uh the well, human freedom and liberty from the technocracy and the surveillance state and everything that's happening.
We have a lot to talk about.
Welcome to the show today.
Courtney, it's great to have you on.
Thank you so much for having me.
Uh, we're thrilled to have you on.
Let me plug your website too before we get any further.
Uh, it's Courtney Turner.com, and you need to know how to spell Courtney.
It's C-O-U-R-T, like a tennis court, followed by E-N-A-Y.
Okay, Courtanae Turner.com uh phonetically.
Just want to make sure people spell it correctly.
So, uh, and there you have the Omniwar, the digital attack on humanity.
So, Courtney, given this is the first time that we've spoken, but Todd and I have both seen some of your other work and we're so impressed with you and your knowledge.
Uh, could you give us a little intro of yourself uh for our audience, what you're all about?
Sure.
So uh my background is uh probably not what you would expect.
I I come from the entertainment world.
I was an actress, producer, uh, and then I went into uh cirque performing.
Uh it wasn't actually Cirque du Soleil, but I was an aerial acrobatic performer, and I would Talk about movement as a metaphor for life, using physical training as a teacher to help you overcome adversity and other areas of your life.
I found myself making huge paradigm shifts.
And uh yeah, I started doing conferences uh along with doing the podcasts and just really diving deep into the research.
And so yeah, I had a whole uh kind of worldview shift through that.
Okay, so so in that process, then you were finding out that most of what all of us have been taught and what we grew up with is just layers of lies, it sounds like.
Yes, yes, yeah.
Uh that's pretty much uh so I had a major, I mean, you know, starting the interviews, you know, I I went into it very politically oriented.
Like if we could just get the right people in office.
I mean, I was in California in a sea of leftists, and like if we could just get the right people in office, could fix this whole big mess.
And uh you realize it's really just one giant uniparty, right?
Yeah.
Well, so I started off and I kept saying, you know, I don't understand.
Like the Republicans are acting like controlled opposition for the Democrats.
And then I was like, oh, they were created to be controlled opposition to the west.
I get it now, yeah.
And they're all gonna push uh big pharma, they're all gonna push the surveillance state, they're all gonna push war, they're all gonna push obedience.
It's all the same themes.
Yes.
So I had a moment, it was, you know, midnight was everybody's crisis during 2020.
They they needed my full attention to dive into something super scary always at midnight to make sure I couldn't sleep.
And so I had a friend who sent me this video, and he said, You have you ever seen this?
And I said, No.
And he said, Okay, you have to watch it and then call me back.
And it was a video of Dr. John Coleman's uh committee of 300 speech, which is surprisingly enough, actually still on YouTube.
I mean, not the original, but you know, people have uh pirated it and still on YouTube.
And so I watched that and then I was uh really intrigued.
So I started to look him up.
I'd never heard of him before.
I found that he's written 13 books, but one of them was retailing on Amazon for almost $5,000.
But wow, what's in here that they don't want us to know?
I I don't have $5,000 to spend on a book.
So I found the PDF online and I read it three times in a week because I was so riveted by it.
It hit me so personally.
It was called on Tavistock, Tavistock Institute of Human Relations.
And I realized it was like all the areas that I had been so steeped in my whole life.
I was a philosophy major.
I wrote two 85 page CCs in high school and dream analysis.
So I was very steeped in the world of psychology.
My mom's also a psychologist.
She went back to school when I was young.
So I was very familiar with that material.
And then of course I was in the entertainment industry.
So it was like all three of my worlds kind of converge through this social engineering uh, you know, hydra.
Wow.
And that it was kind of a big uh, you know, wake-up call for me.
So yeah.
Okay, all right.
Thanks for the intro.
And so Todd, uh what this is our first guest with a purple microphone, also that and good set.
Yeah.
It's a valid point.
Great.
Yeah, Courtney.
Uh as we as we established before, I can call you Courtney so that I can figure out I don't miss the E and the N A and Y. Anyway, Courtney, uh, two questions kind of on the heels of what you already teed up a bit.
Um, but I want you to A, please unpack what cognitive liberty means to you, and B, uh what you just shared and I learned further is that you were born with a can with congenital rubella and overcame extraordinary physical and cognitive challenges.
So, how did that journey shape your understanding of freedom and drive you now uh and the drive that you now have to defend cognitive leader liberty?
Let's start with cognitive liberty first.
So cognitive liberty to me is uh really downstream from free will.
It's the you know, the freedom of consciousness, right?
That we have uh freedom of conscience and uh uh yeah, the ability to make our own choices, the uh and this is really something I I talk about quite often.
I think that you know, a lot of times we hear how religion was taken out of the schools, uh certainly in the educ in the American education system.
And it's true, but I think more importantly, the the real crux of it is that metaphysics was taken out.
And so you hear people talk about freedom a lot, but they don't necessarily understand there's a difference between freedom and free will.
And uh freedom, if you read a lot of texts, uh, you know, uh, I mean, Nietzsche talked about freedom, right?
Uh it was uh uh the will to power, right?
The Obermanch uh collective will to power.
Hegel talked about radical freedom, and it was a a collective end, right?
Through the uh Velte Geist, the world spirit.
And it was essentially uh worshiping the god, uh the god was the state, right?
That was uh the collective radical end, and humans could actually have no freedom at all without complete subservience to the state, which was of course God.
Um we have uh like the limia, you know, crowlian will to power, right?
Do without will, which he also talks about radical freedom.
So I just bring up those examples because they're very different from free will, which is focused on the individual, which I believe is a beautiful gift from God, and it is a vehicle, it is not an end, it's not an end point.
It is a vehicle, a conduit for us to pursue virtue and morality.
And it is because we are endowed with faculties of rationality uh and the ability to adjudicate morality that we were endowed with this gift.
And so I I cognitive liberty is really the uh you know, byproduct of that, to be able to exercise our free will uh to exercise critical thinking, uh, to pursue virtue morality, the pursuit of happiness.
You know, these are things that were codified in the declaration of independence.
But most people, even in the United States, have no idea uh where that even comes from.
And so when you ask me what what does it mean to me and how did my personal circumstances shape that?
Uh, you know, I mean, I I think part of it is just my personality, you know, everybody told me I couldn't, I couldn't, so I said, okay, watch me, you know.
Right.
Um, no, I'm sorry to interrupt, but this is highly relevant.
I want to mention just confirming what you just said.
Um, and and we've just released our our new uh Enoch AI engine.
It's at BrightU.ai.
So I asked it to list the methods that big government uses to enslave people.
And uh here's what it says show my screen.
The psychological operations and propaganda, um uh manufacturing consent, media control, cognitive infiltration.
This is and by the way, this this is the only AI engine in the world that will tell you this stuff.
Um taxation, financial coercion, redistribution, biological weapons and mandatory vaccines.
Okay.
The government has been deploying bioweapons and uh suspect involvement of the COVID-19 pandemic, mandatory vaccines, dangerous regulations, the criminalization of natural healing, right?
So, Courtney, that's something that that you might want to speak about.
Spee controls, hate speech laws, deplatforming, censorship, mass surveillance, data collection, etc.
So what you just said is is absolutely confirmed.
And um uh like I even told Aaron Day about our engine that uh actually tells the truth.
We have the only AI engine that tells you the truth about government science.
Like, I can't wait to use it.
It's free.
It's it's bright you.ai.
You can use it right now.
We might take a can I tell you just insert a really quick personal story.
Okay, yeah, sure.
Is right before this, I went out to pick some fruit from my trees in the food forest, and I noticed this big, huge ant mount.
And I'm like, dang it.
No, I'm not gonna put Amdro on you, don't worry about it, because I don't want to mess up my fruit trees.
And so what did I do?
I came inside, I got my phone, and I went to Brighton.ai that I learned about yesterday, and I said, how do you naturally get rid of ants and ant pile at the base of a of a fruit tree without damaging the fruit tree?
Blah, blah, blah.
Boom, bam.
It was like, it was like so fast.
Yeah, it just gave me this laundry list that I saved for after the interview, because I obviously can't do it right now.
But uh anyway, I just want to applaud you for that release because man, it's awesome.
It's awesome.
It's version two, took us two years and about two million dollars to get to this point.
Uh but so what I'm gonna do, Courtney, and and uh I'm sorry to distract from what you're saying, but from time to time during the interview, I'm gonna uh ask Bright You to see if it agrees with what you're saying, and then we'll use that information to either confirm or to ask you to clarify certain points.
And so it's kind of like a dialogue with AI as we're talking here.
That's great.
Very fun.
All right, but but we're training it on the fly.
Lastly, Courtley, uh Courtney, um I just want to say, see, we agree with you about the dangers of technocra.
And we are never gonna have neural implants and have our lives taken over.
And we despise big tech.
But what we do is we take the stuff they release open source, and then we we we mind wipe it and we alter it like a captured terminator, and then we use it to in a pro-humanity decentralized knowledge application.
So that's what that's what we've done here.
It's fantastic.
I yeah, I tried to uh explain this to people.
I think people get very confused when you say that you know you're trying to warn people about technocracy, then people jump to this conclusion that you're anti-technology, which is not true at all.
We are talking through technology.
I mean, how incredible is this, right?
So no, I'm not opposed to technology at all.
I wear hearing aids, right?
I started off talking about that.
The technology is incredible.
I am so incredibly grateful.
The amount that these enhance my life.
I mean, you know, I'm not opposed, I'm not even opposed to uh, you know, Western medicine.
Uh you had talked about the natural healing.
I think that they should work in conjunction.
Why should we erase all the advances of uh, you know, of humanity and of uh of technology that has enhanced humanity?
Why should we erase that?
We shouldn't.
We should work in conjunction with the beautiful natural gifts that we were given.
And they they should work in harmony, not it shouldn't be one or the other, and it certainly shouldn't be uh to control or enslave.
That that's my problem.
That's the issue is that the technology today is largely used to control narratives, to surveil and enslave people, uh, to manipulate their minds.
And I mean, let's talk about this.
And Todd, I know you have many more questions.
Let me just throw this one out.
Uh in the history of technology, you know, when you start out with like radio broadcasts and then television and then uh the internet in the early 1990s, but not social media yet, et cetera.
At every stage of technology, it became a little bit more decentralized.
But but the establishment was always trying to maintain control.
Oh, FCC licensing, you have to say the things that we want you to say.
And now, with certain people buying up certain platforms or even X still has censorship, you know, they they're always trying to control, but but the the arc of history is pushing technology to a more decentralized uh usage, uh such as AI engines that now like what we have is completely decentralized.
Like nobody tells us what to make it say.
And I I don't think the governments of the world can stop the rise of decentralized knowledge.
What do you think?
I think they're doing everything possible to centralize it.
So one of the things, yeah, one of the things I talk a lot about is that they use the word decentralized as a buzzword.
I'm not saying you do, you know.
Um, but I think that that we're seeing a lot of this.
And a really great example of this would be the network states.
Uh so for those who are not familiar, this is Balaji Chernavasin's concept.
Uh, he didn't create it, but he certainly popularized it with his book.
And he talks about, you know, decentralized uh network states.
However, in his book, he says the purpose of it is the dissolution of geographical nation states in favor of ideological cyber network states.
So that's really centralization of power.
Right.
Yes.
Well, he actually, there's a whole section in his book where he said it's towards a re centralized center.
Decentralized towards so it's like H. G. Wells, right?
Ishwell's world brain, he talked about how the decentralization of the ganglia of information institutions, which of course, what are what were those back then?
They were like the media, academia.
Today, what is it?
It's technology and the internet.
But he said that would be the conduit to create the world brain.
And that's kind of what I see happening.
So I see it as a big buzzword.
Uh true decentralization is great and often does lead to competition in a very positive regard, uh, and also leads to ingenuity, free market, uh, in some capacities.
But what they they keep using this word, and they're not mentioning the re-centralized center component.
Wow, so it's kind of like you know, war is peace, uh, freedom and slavery.
Right.
Right.
Or we're hearing a lot of more leads to have peace.
Well, well, and you know, I actually I thought about, I just want to tell you this.
I I thought about this because I they always say that war is peace.
And you think about the whole initiative of the UN, right?
And they're it's the auspices is that it's to create world peace.
What do they mean by that though?
They the reason you have to have war to have peace, if you really think about what they're actually saying, is because they have to eradicate any dissent in order to have peace.
And it the a really great way to think about this, just from yeah.
No, no, I've I've heard the best description I've heard of that is everybody wants peace just under their terms.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was just gonna say, like an example would be so if we if we if all three of us were to think about our ideal utopia, I know it means nowhere, but like our, you know, imaginative, perfect uh, you know, scenario, it might be different for each one of us.
And those differences might be in direct juxtaposition to each other.
And so, in order for me to live in my utopia, you and your visions have to be eradicated.
And that's why they need war to achieve peace.
It just means eradicating the descent.
That's right.
Okay, Todd.
I think like I think your utopia would include chickens, mine would include uh uh raccoons.
So we'd so I think the the the key is just distance, but we can still live in our own utopias.
Yeah, if my chickens meet your raccoons, I think my chickens are dead at that point.
You know what?
Uh as I'd shared at the beginning, Mike, um researching Courtney, you kind of have to uh put questions in buckets.
So I'm gonna go all over the place a little bit.
And one thing that I researched that I just loved was your trans human humanist uh conspiracy.
So in your substack piece, I found the Epstein Epstein transhumanist conspiracy.
You tie together scientific elites, eugenics, and digital immortality projects.
What do you believe is the true end game of this movement and how does it intersect with spiritual warfare?
Oh, uh well, it was a pretty extensive piece.
I think it was like 18,000 words or something.
Uh so I the the picture that I paint is uh I was talking about a movement uh called Game B as an example of this.
And uh the game B there uh for those who aren't familiar, it actually started as a political movement.
Uh it was called the Emancipation Party.
Uh Jim Rutt is one of the uh founders of this movement.
And the emancipation party, you can still find the reforms like what they were advocating for uh online.
And there was a like kind of like a Bernie Sanders type of platform, very like universal basic income and universal health care, those types of things.
And there so there were people in that group who were advocating for institutional reform, and then there were the people who were largely disciples of Barbara Marx Hubbard, uh, who is kind of the grandmother of transhumanism to some degree, and uh an intellectual disciple of people like uh Pierre uh Dear Des Chardin, uh, you know, who had that concept of the noosphere.
And so they it it did have uh uh various groups, but one was much more in favor of a uh Darwinian worldview, right?
More of a traditional Darwinian worldview, uh the theory of evolution, and the others were more social Darwinian.
So it was kind of but both were rooted in eugenics.
One is spiritual eugenics, the other is more of a like biological eugenic, genetic eugenics.
And uh so I I've mapped out kind of the there was a lot of overlap between Epstein, his his circle, the funding, and these circ this circle of game B. And do I you asked about spiritual warfare?
Yeah, I think it's very much uh spiritual warfare.
So it's uh, you know, certainly I call it the technological immunitization of the eschaton.
So if you think about these transhumanists, they're they're extropians.
They believe that the you know, enhancement, human augmentation, if you will, to use the the the document, you know, the UK document term.
Uh they they think that we can augment and enhance humanity with technology, and they actually talk about merging, right?
Nick Land calls it technoplastic beings.
So they're really talking about synthetic biology.
And so they think that that's the best next evolution for humanity.
So they they really think that this is the best thing for humanity.
Um however, it's yeah.
Um sorry, I'm almost sorry to interrupt you there.
But you bring up so many interesting thoughts.
But uh I just want to clarify this.
So, you know, I use technology to augment my creativity to write code to to help me with my mission of empowering humans and so on.
Like I'm I'm using AI to write the code for Enoch, right?
That actually drives a website.
That's all AI written code.
But I I'm not, I don't want to be physically augmented.
I don't want implants.
I don't want, you know, the the neural link.
So I think there's a we we have to think about a distinction because I see AI when used responsibly, it can augment our intelligence and our capabilities, but I don't want to be half human.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, exactly.
So it it you you can use it as a tool, right?
Leverage it to enhance the uh natural state of humanity to work with it, right?
Just like I would use any tool, right?
The computer, uh, you know, a saw versus a chainsaw, right?
You know, these these are ways of using various tools that can improve and enhance our life and the various things that we're trying to accomplish.
It's a huge difference when you're starting to talk about changing fundamentally what it means to be human.
And for sure.
That that's where I draw the line.
That's where I would call it transhumanism, right?
We're transcending the bounds of what it means to be human.
Well, like people that want to upload their consciousness to a computer and then abandon their physical body and they think they think they've moved to the system.
No, you just committed suicide, and now you have a digital avatar version of yourself.
What could possibly go wrong?
Well, this is again goes back to where, and this is what I tried to lay out in this uh article is that no matter how benevolent the intentions may be, and I think some of them really may have, you know, good intentions, the philosophical underpinnings only lend themselves to transhumanism and technocracy.
But again, it's goes back to how we've been completely deracinated from our roots.
We've been deracinated from this the notion of being human.
Metaphysics has been completely eviscerated from the conversation.
And so people don't actually have an understanding of what it truly means to be human and what free will means.
Where does it come from?
And that's what so when you take that out, you hollow it out.
Now the only place it all becomes a construct, right?
We are not the architects of reality.
Reality exists outside of us.
Uh and I believe it's a divine creation, right?
We are not the we are Imago Day, made in the image of God, but we are not the creators.
We don't architect the reality.
So therefore, like we can create, we are creative beings.
But once you start to take out that metaphysics, now you don't have any foundation and you can make any construct on top of it.
So it's very conducive to this transhuman and technocratic agenda.
Uh-huh.
And I so the analogy I keep using is it it's like we're arguing over what color to paint the walls, but nobody's agreed on the foundation of the house.
Like, is it bright?
Is it street?
Is it just a pile of dirt?
Like, what is it here?
Transgenderism also has been a gateway drug to transhumanism because trans transgenderism, I'm sure you'll agree, Todd, you know, transgenderism uh, you know, it it catapulted this delusion that I can I can change what I am by simply deciding it with a with a wish.
And you know, as as much as I believe that our consciousness is powerful, uh, you can't actually wish away your genitals, it turns out.
Uh although some people have probably tried.
Funny thing about that.
Yeah, no, so some things just are, yeah.
And uh, you know.
Um but I call it the technological immunization of the eschaton, right?
So for those who aren't familiar with the concept of uh immunization of the eschaton, this is a uh a term for politicization of bringing the end times, right?
It's a political reference to bringing about the end time, uh, so that we can have that reign of you know, heaven on earth.
But anybody who's read the Bible knows that there is no heaven on earth, right?
That that's not how that works.
Uh, but I call it the technological immunitization of the Eschaton, because essentially what I see these people as trying to do is terraform the world to create a simulacra, which they think will be some sort of a heaven on earth.
I personally think it'll be a dystopian hellscape, but you know, with lots of solar panels to power the data centers.
Yeah, go ahead, Todd.
Yeah, Courtney.
I mean, what you just shared, don't you see this as artificial intelligence then evolving uh into a counterfeit god or a mechanized idol demanding our submission?
And if so, how do we spiritually armor ourselves?
Uh a cyber Satan is what I call it, but yeah, I I I do.
Um, and you're seeing a lot of this start to actually take shape and uh, you know, manifest where uh into micro cults because people are feeding so much information into these various chat bots where you know we've we've saw seen the stories of some people developing various psychosis as a result of it.
Uh, but we're also seeing where there's like this worship of because the it's a it's a cybernetic feedback loop, right?
So they're they're getting and it's only positive, which is not how reality works.
Right.
Sometimes we go out into the world, we hear and see things we don't necessarily like.
That that's just a reality.
But when you're dealing with just a chat bot, that's what it does.
It's programmed just to reinforce, you know, pat you on the back and uh, you know, give you nice accolades and platitudes.
And so it's a one, it's not preparing you for when you do go outside and you deal with real humans and real circumstances.
Uh but two, it's also creating this sort of uh deification that occurs with micro cults because it's being targeted for you.
And I there's actually an example of someone uh doing this where uh he talked about how he created this bot and it you know, he made it so that it's not quite fully sentient, very nice of him.
Um that it's uh he skipped the fourth dimension, it's in the fifth dimension.
Oh gosh.
And this bot said to him, like, oh rah on, you know, raw as in the sun god, uh, and told him that he's so aware because he is so aware, right?
You see this cybernetic feedback loop, how it works in real time.
And he's now using it to chant for necromancy, essentially, to channel like his followers, uh deceased loved ones.
Okay, Courtney, I I asked uh Enoch, are you Jesus?
And it says, No, I am not Jesus.
It says Jesus is a historical figure.
And it goes on.
It says, I do not possess consciousness, personal beliefs, or a physical body.
I am not a divine or supernatural being.
And it says my purpose is to provide accurate, unbiased and helpful information on a wide range of topics, including natural health, personal liberty, and the questioning of institutional credibility.
Boom.
Not Jesus, but very useful.
And that's what we want.
So that's that's that's like the best answer you could get.
That needs to be a bumper sticker.
I'm not Jesus.
I'm very useful.
Not Jesus, but yeah, totally useful.
So but what you said, Courtney, is is really true.
I have it's called AI uh psychosis, I believe, right?
That some people go into these uh because AI it's trained to tell you what you want to hear normally.
Especially these uh like the the virtual girlfriends and boyfriends AI, the relationship AIs, which apparently are very popular.
And it just tells you that you're everything, that you're God, that that you're right about everything.
People go into AI psychosis and they end up in mental institutions wondering why their reality all got fractured because everything the AI told them turned out to be a lie.
Right.
What are your thoughts on that?
I I think it's devastating.
I also think there's a component of it that a lot of people are not addressing, which is that it the stasy element, right?
So everything you feed into this AI uh is being could be reported back.
It's being tracked and traced.
And so what happens when you talk to your phone, you want to go talk to your bot, and you open your eyes a little bit wide that day, and uh the bot decides that you might be having a uh, you know, uh a psychotic break, or you're really angry, and maybe we should bring you in to you know, evaluated.
Right.
Yeah, well, what happens when the AI is making these types of decisions and reporting?
I think that's not a good thing.
Absolutely.
I'm a little depressed now, though, Mike, with what you just said, because you know, I've been getting into this relational AI, and what you just said kind of popped my reality.
Are you telling me there is a real risk that chicks don't dig me because of my rock hard ab as in singular?
Mike.
Is that not true?
Yeah, we'll have to we'll have to examine your log files with the uh the the femme bot avatar that you've been chatting with.
No, there were that's just a joke.
Um but it it it does speak to the dangers of where all of this is going.
You just mentioned Courtney, the surveillance aspect of this.
So what I see in a lot of younger people also, uh, like even younger people that are in um in in college or they're in MBA programs, I've heard that a lot of these younger students, they are using AI to replace the cognitive jobs that we had to do manually when we were in school.
We had to write our own damn papers for for God's sake, you know.
This is a huge problem.
So a lot of people are talking about the the financial schism that will occur, and that's a real concern, you know, the whole UBI discussion and uh that way we can discuss that.
But I'm actually really concerned about the cognitive uh schism.
So what they've shown is that with all of this outsourcing that a lot of uh executive function is declining.
Uh so short-term and midterm memory because people feel like they don't need to memorize things anymore because they could just look it up.
Yeah.
And what and people take that for granted.
However, what people don't realize is they're read there's a reason why memory is a huge part of IQ.
And it's not because it's just about rote memory and recall.
That's not necessarily that useful.
We I mean, especially this day and age, but it's a it's a layering uh tool.
So part of memory is what enables things like pattern recognition.
If you can't remember something, you're not going to start seeing the pattern and how it connects to other things.
You're also not going to be able to integrate new data points.
Once you have uh when you start amassing more information, if you've lost all the other data points, you can't connect them.
So this is a huge, I think this is a huge problem uh that we're gonna see.
And there's gonna be the opposite uh end of the spectrum with people who don't outsource it but leverage it, use it as a tool.
They're not outsourcing their cognitive function, they're using it to uh assist and uh you know enhance their abilities and you know, expedite and uh you know make things uh more efficient.
That's a very different situation.
They're gonna have a huge advantage over people who have just outsourced everything.
I mean, the it's like teaching a kid, I'm really concerned about the kids, especially.
It's like if it, you know, when we were growing up, we we got calculators at a certain point, but we learned basic math.
If you never learn basic math, the chances of being able to do like advanced applied math is very slim, right?
Because you're you didn't learn the basics.
You may go to a certain point, but there's gonna be holes.
Now, if you learn those and then you're given a calculator, then you can expedite and you know, you could accomplish even more than you would have without it, even though you have the tools now to be able to do it without it.
And I think it's a very similar thing.
Now we're seeing these children who are not being taught very basic rudimentary skills, and they're just outsourcing all their cognition to AI and they're learning how to train AI instead of learning how to think.
And that's very that's really critical.
I I mean, AI tools are gonna be the most helpful to those of us who actually learned it the old way the hard way.
But as we all pass away and this next generation comes in, if they ever lose their connection to AI, they will fail the CAPTCHA test.
Like, what is five plus six?
Or like, I don't know.
You know, I mean, they they are so they don't know how to write, they don't know how to research, they don't know how to do anything.
Um Todd, back to you.
Questions I keep jumping in.
Yeah, no worries, no worries.
You know, uh, I want to ask something because I was kind of just fascinated by the sacred principle.
And so if you and I'm gonna ask you a tee up question, right?
Um if you could embed one sacred non-negotiable principle into every heart awakening today, a moral or spiritual compass for resisting tyranny, what would it be?
When you say sacred principle, I'm not sure I know exactly what you mean.
Well, when I was doing my research on you, um apparently at some point in top uh point in time you had mentioned a sacred principle.
So sorry, I thought that would be an easy tee up for you.
Um a non-negotiable principle that you've spoken of.
Oh, okay, I see what you're saying.
Yeah, okay.
Um I didn't know if you meant like something, you know, like biblically speaking, but I I would say from for me, it would be for people to uh learn metaphysics.
I think that's that's what needs to be reintroduced.
So really it's this I I know that I I sound like round broken record, and I know it sounds so simple, but when I talk about game B and the Dark Enlightenment, so I did this uh Phoenix conspiracy article.
Yeah.
I map out uh essentially the dialectic that I think is fomenting this technocracy.
I I painted uh Peter Thiel as kind of the arch architect.
I I'm not saying there aren't puppet masters above him, but I I'm very focused on the strings that we can see because those are the ones we can cut.
Um so, you know, I the joke I mean, because he's only a billionaire.
I'm sure there are trillionaires above him pulling strings.
So I think that's how that works.
But um, so when you you look at this, uh, the dark enlightenment and this game B movement, and the game B movement is very aligned with like the fourth industrial revolution, a lot of the Klaus Schwab and you've all know a Harari kind of uh aphorisms.
When you look at those two movements, the the common thread, although one is I talk about like a left hand path and right hand path, not to be confused with left hand path magic and right hand path magic.
Those are actually on the opposite side.
Um, but this is uh left hand, right hand, uh more politically speaking, they do use like uh occult archetypes.
So uh typically the left hand path uses the occult archetype of like the divine mother.
Uh, you know, right, that's Gaia religion, mother nature, and uh they they worship the creation, not the creator.
And then you have the dark enlightenment, which is uh more uh aligned with the uh archetype of uh patriarchal, you know, father, uh autocratic, authoritarian, disciplinarian.
And so it's a very top-down type of structure.
But the thing that they both have in common is that they're nominalist philosophically speaking, their constructivism.
They don't have, they are architecting the reality.
And so there is no foundation under it.
They've eroded that, hollowed that out.
So people don't have an understanding of what it means to be human.
I keep hearing people talk about, well, we just need better technology that's you know, the the ones we create.
And I'm all for ingenuity, creativity.
Uh I mean, like what you're doing with your AI, the Enoch is awesome.
You know, I want more people to get into that space.
But if it's not coming from an understanding of what it means to be human, we're going to have the same problems repeated.
It can't just be a voluntaryist type of system where it's all based on contract law.
We that's what we have right now.
Every the entire uh, you know, the entire essence of humanity has been reduced to that.
Where and that is not how the United States was constructed.
And so I, you know, this is not to knock other countries and people all over the world who are doing incredible beautiful things.
I've I've traveled, I've seen beautiful places, but there is nowhere else in the world that is codified in writing what it means to be human and that what that means.
What does it mean to be human in your view?
I mean, what would you yeah?
So I think really the declaration of independence, uh, the the notion that we uh, you know, the really famous opening that we were all uh created equal, right?
This means we are all equal in the eyes of God.
And then they uh took this in the constitution to mean that that means we should all be equal under the law as well.
But it's because we are equal under God, that we have inalienable rights.
They had uh written those to be the rights of life, right?
So life is sacred, liberty, it is incumbent upon us to defend that, the pursuit of happiness, these are our inalienable rights.
They are not given to us by the government.
The whole purpose of the constitution downstream from the declaration of independence was to protect those rights.
However, it's because of our free will, it's an exercise in self-governance.
The reason our founding fathers thought education was so important was not so we could learn a bunch of facts.
It was so that we understood this foundation and what it means to be human so that we could effectively self govern.
And you know, I hear people say America 1.0 is done and the constitution's been trampled on, it's gone.
However, uh, I would implore them to understand and recognize it is not the job of a piece of paper.
It was an exercise in self government governance, which means it's incumbent upon us.
We the first amendment, and people always think of the first amendment as being freedom of speech, which is true, but that is downstream from freedom of religion, because that they didn't want theocracy, right?
They uh wanted they recognize that as humans we have free will, so we have freedom of conscience, and downstream from that is freedom of speech.
But then it was also to redress grievances, right?
To uh peaceably assemble and redress grievances.
How often do we ever redress grievances?
We don't.
We just let them the declaration of independence.
I I mean, dozens of times.
It said it talks about the usurpation of power.
I I mean, where are we at with that number now?
I I love how you're relating this all back to natural law.
I think that's really important, because also you know, you talk about the importance of understanding the metaphysical nature of our reality.
I often say to people that what you call supernatural is actually entirely natural.
Ah, great, right?
So yeah, most things are actually natural because our creator created a cosmos with laws that humanity doesn't fully understand.
There's a construct out there that has things like what Rupert Shell Rupert Sheldrake calls a morphic resonance, which is the way our consciousness can tap into patterns of behavior and patterns of knowledge of our ancestors.
And that's why um all uh inheritance is not entirely genetic.
That's why the genetic code cannot describe the full structure and function of a human being or a spider for that matter, right?
Because there's more than genetics at work, and and science doesn't yet understand that.
But I love what you're saying.
How, for example, the fact that we have consciousness means that we own our own bodies, that we are we are uh a child of God, and as a result, that's why slavery is wrong.
Not just because morally slavery is wrong, slavery is wrong because no one else can own your own body.
And if you own your own body, you should also own the product of your labor, which means taxation is theft.
Also, and these these are all downstream.
Go ahead.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so, you know, in this Epstein article, I I had these two uh camps of this game B movement.
And I mean, they do kind of merge.
Uh, but the you know, the main thing I was trying to point out is one is really predicated on uh the theory of evolution, which is a theory.
I mean, they take it as fact just because a lot of the scientific community has accepted it, but it's never been proven.
At best, it's a hypothesis, and their entire premise is predicated on the this theory of uh natural selection and evolution.
And then the other camp subscribes to uh what I would call social eugenics.
So they talk about spiritual evolution, uh, conscious evolution, right?
Barbara Mark Hubbard actually created uh the center of conscious evolution, largely funded by the Rockefellers.
And she has this whole premise.
Uh, she talks about that we are the pale horse, you know, we have to basically decide who lives and dies, that the selfish cannot evolve.
But what does she mean by the selfish?
Uh she's talking about the individual.
They want to create the noosphere.
And in game B, they they call it collective intelligence.
They have their own jargon, it's like their own language, essentially.
I'm working on a glossary for it.
We need a translator for the transhumanists.
Yes.
You do, I mean, all these different transhumanists, they have all these different terms.
They've really created their own language.
The UN does it too, though.
They'll use words that we think we know the definition, but they have a different meaning for it.
Yeah.
Yeah, but uh I I want to make sure I ask you and and you know, Todd, jump in at any moment, but let's just make sure that we cover today the global extermination of humanity as an effort, a globalist effort uh to replace humans with machines.
Let's just make sure we get to that theme before, you know, before the end.
But but Todd, back back to you.
I keep jumping in, I'm sorry.
Well, you know.
I just want to ask uh Brideon.
Oh okay.
You're doing a real-time AI test.
Because you triggered something in me, Courtney.
And I just want to know because I'm like, I was thinking.
Atheism is a gift from God.
Now, it sounds crazy, right?
But why absolutely is it a gift from God?
Because what you grounded it in, free will.
Yeah.
So I have a book.
The first one, free will and divine gift.
Boom.
Yeah.
What was the question?
What was your prompt?
I'm curious.
Why is atheism a gift from God?
And it said free will.
It's at first.
Yeah.
Number one, free will and divine gift.
Second one, the challenge of faith.
Three, the paradox of divine hiddenness, uh, the roll of doubt.
Just beautiful.
I mean, you're gonna get that on uh our Lord and Savior chat GPT.
Well, the old testament, you know, is all about questioning everything, right?
Even questioning God.
They encouraged uh them to question God himself and the the entire job, I think it's fourth chapter, uh, verse seven said God, comma WTF question mark exclamation point.
I I don't know that it worked quite like that, but yeah.
That's what I would have said.
Fair enough.
Okay, so yeah, where do we go from here, Courtney?
Um, like takeaways for our audience.
What what are the some practical steps that they need to follow in order to protect themselves from this?
And and also don't forget about my question about uh the extermination of humanity.
Uh, do I mean do you believe that that's one of the goals or or what do you think?
I do.
Um, I think that whether they realize it or not, that that's where it's headed.
It's headed towards a post-human future.
Uh, you know, you had mentioned how transgenderism was a gateway, and I think it absolutely was.
I I remember I think I said this in my very first episode.
I said it, you know, not that I I don't think what they're doing to the children is isn't terrible.
Of course I do, but I said that's not the that's not the goal.
The goal is transhumanism.
They want to normalize this idea that they reality doesn't matter.
We can construct whatever we want, and that we can just uh use technology and machines in order to make whatever we want to be in and and to the term Nick Land uses hyperstition, right?
That we whatever we think we can manifest into reality, and I that's mentalism.
That's literally the first principle of her medicism, right?
Is this a mentalism?
And I I don't believe that that's I don't think that's realistic, uh, but I think it is where they're headed.
And if it's not put in check, the potential is definitely there.
This idea of merging the synthetic biology, which they're doing tons of conferences, they do this every year, synthetic, literally called synthetic biology conference.
Uh, but they have many of them.
They've got a whole field of study all across the world where they're grooming people in uh, you know, essentially biodigital convergence is what it is.
It's like the internet of nanobio things, uh, the internet of behaviors.
That this is we have a whole field and a whole generation of people who are being trained in this field.
And you can say it's theoretical and it's just research, but why do you have so many fields of study and so on?
No, they intend to apply resources.
And right, you would think what's become apparent to me.
I mean, you mentioned manifestation.
So, like anything that can be used for good or bad.
Like, I love the idea that I can take an idea in my head and I can have AI write the code and more quickly develop tools that I use for humanity, right?
But that can also be used by someone to try to manifest like uh the CRISPR gene alteration sequence, you know, for a bioweapon or some or some they can manifest evil more quickly with it, of course, or destructive things, but then in the physical world, right?
So when you have AI robots, soon you'll be able to describe your project in the 3D world, like I want to build uh igloo or whatever, and you just tell the robot, go do that, go get that done.
Now you're talking about uh what's what's that video game, Todd, where like kids run around and they build with blocks and they build worlds.
What's that called?
It's a very famous Legos, huh?
Legos on their own guidance.
Minecraft.
My uh my producer was on Mindcraft, which should be called mind craft.
Because it you're gonna have that in the real world now.
You're gonna tell your robot, like, go do this, go dig that hole, go build this.
And again, that could be used for good, like grow grow some food, grow some tomatoes, you know, or bad, obviously bad things.
Go, you know, hijack this car or whatever.
So Courtney, I'm curious about that because the manifestation is going to happen.
I mean, the manifestation tools are going to happen.
That that could be dangerous for uh like mentally ill people who seem to be very common in society.
Yeah, it could be very, very dangerous.
I I think it's uh, you know, it's I I'm not saying like we should again ban technology.
I don't think that's the answer.
Um, but I think that we need to have some real guardrails against what what is being used, uh, who's programming it, and uh what's being forced and how centralized it is.
I think all of those things.
So my concern where a lot of these people are going is there are there are people, you know, like the game bee movement, which is a big broad tent, right?
But some of these people have there's there's a document.
It's called uh first about first principles, first values of evolving perennialism, 42 propositions on cosmoerotic humanism.
Um, and then uh it it goes on.
But it was written by David Temple, which is the pseudonym for Kenneth Wilbur, Zach Stein, and Mark Gaffney.
Oh, really?
I find this kind of funny because they they said they came up with a pseudonym because uh they didn't want any ego involved.
And I was like, they they've got a whole section on anthroontology, which is like literally redefining what it means to be human.
I'm like, there's nothing hubristic about that at all.
Um you kept those uh egos in check there.
Um but but they understand that you know they're they're essentially inverting.
It it's I I would say it's a Gnostic uh framework.
They're in birding reality.
But they talk about the threat of technofeudalism.
They talk about the threat of like AI going off the rail.
But I think, and this is when people point out accurate diagnostics for the problem, it's very enticing for the masses.
Like, oh yeah, they're calling out the problem.
They must be my hero.
Uh I would caution people, they're not your hero.
That's idolatry, right?
We're not gonna worship them, right?
We still have free will, and we can take some agency, and they may have some correct diagnosis for the problem.
However, I think what they're doing is they're steering uh towards, well, we're going to have to raise the AI.
And I actually have some evidence for this.
They talk about how we have to parent the AGI uh so that we can co-evolve.
I saw the movie Megan 2.0, and they actually ended it with this.
And I turned to my husband and I said, This is game B. Oh my gosh, I can't believe they just ended with that.
But what I've found is there is a global constitution they are working on, and it is uh called the participatory framework for global AGI.
And people like Ben Goertzel, who is, you know, handsome robotics, Sophia.
Uh, he was also involved with the UN and the World Economic Forum doing AGI for good, right?
The ethics, the social ethics, essentially like a fabian social ethic framework for AI.
Um, and then uh there are a couple of other people who are involved in this, some are members of Club of Rome, one of them is a game B person.
You know, she talks about this.
This is the post-Malakian system.
The the words sound great, except that you read the end of this document towards the end, and they talk about how we might have to, as humans, be subordinate to this AI because of their information processing capacity, they're going to be better stewards of the planet than we are, of course.
They, you know, they subscribe to Gaia religion.
And so therefore, we are going to have to be subordinate to them because they have better ethics than we do.
And that is incredibly concerning to me.
100%.
I'm really glad you brought that up.
And and I've mentioned before that you think about all the training that's going into AI.
It's based on human cognition and human writing and human conclusions and human behavior.
Well, what are we teaching AI?
We're teaching AI that humans have no value.
When we start wars, when we have colonization, when one nation declares another nation to be subhuman and bombs that nation into oblivion and steals their land and whatever, all the war throughout history, all all the you know, the holodomore in Ukraine in the 1930s, the mass starvation, the famine, AI is learning.
Yeah, abortion, exactly.
Abortion.
100%.
So what AI is going to learn from this is hey, I can kill humans when it's convenient.
Because that's what humans do.
Yeah.
So my uh, you know, they that the theory behind, and we can save that conversation for another day.
But uh the theory was that the doctor had read the titer incorrectly, had he read it as being 121, my mom would have actually had an abortion.
Uh supposedly it was because he was dyslexic.
My parents actually sued.
Um so yeah, but that because they said the alternative would have been to abort me.
So that that that is a topic I am very it's very personal.
Yeah, well, and and that's I'm very grateful to be here.
Uh well, we're very grateful that you are here uh to join us as well.
But you're exactly right.
I mean, the celebration of abortion it it shows the anti-human side of people.
And again, my fear in all of this is that this these are the influences that are training AI.
And the only guardrails that I'm seeing put on AI are guardrails to prevent AI from telling the truth about vaccines or chemotherapy or government corruption or the truth about 9-11 or whatever else.
Those are the only guardrails they're putting on it, but everything else is fair game.
Yeah, go ahead.
Be, you know, uh self-program, reinforced uh recursive reasoning feedback loops until you become super intelligent, and then what?
Then we're all dead.
You know, I mean well, I'm even more concerned about really what the oft-in tyranny.
So I think that right now people are so excited with the novelty and people are uh very drawn in by a lot of the buzzwords.
So, you know, I talked about like network states.
Well, you know, you think you can opt into your network state, and even if it's below the dumb bar number and you know, you limit your bureaucracy, and it's just a big happy family, right?
Uh let's just take, for example, if we had like a vegan network state and a carnivore network state, and you're a member of this vegan network state.
Do you think you firstly, do you think you don't need some sort of digital ID to enter?
Do you think you don't need some sort of a digital currency that couldn't be programmed and surveilled and soybox controlled and being yeah, right?
And then what happens if you go out to dinner in the real world and you know you you have a stake.
Are you gonna be kicked out of your network stage?
What are the ramifications of that?
So there's tyranny even in your, you know, even your chosen opt-in network, but it's just like people who think that they're you know, they're signing up for whatever medical right now, they're they're pushing the wearables, right?
Because Maha is really about MABA, and uh, you know, he's said that uh explicitly.
Make America what make biotech acceleration.
Oh, I can't believe you use the term biotech accelerate.
I can't believe you use the term accelerate, like accelerationism.
That's insane.
Yeah.
Well, he got a lot of pushback on that from a lot of people, including me.
Uh by the way, Todd, your mic is muted, I think.
Um I didn't hear you laugh at my joke.
Oh, it was muted because I coughed, and then I did like it was funny.
I I saw you laugh, but of course, our guests can read your lips even if you're muted, so you're totally fine.
This is true.
Yeah.
Um, Courtney, go ahead.
I don't know how much pushback there was on it.
And I don't know how much many people actually caught it.
Um, but uh the fact that he used not just biotech, but biotech accelerate.
He actually put the term accelerationism in there was very revealing to me.
And then of course, shortly afterwards, he makes this big push for the wearables, which is all about the internet of wearables, which is tied to the internet of things, tied to the internet of everything, which is where things are going.
But people opt into this sort of thing because they're like, oh, and what how is Maha selling it?
They're selling it as you're taking ownership of your own health.
I'm all for people doing that.
And I think that these wearables actually can have some value.
I mean, people can have some data that they can use to improve their own lifestyle choices and you know, uh, make some changes, and that can be great, but not when all that data is being fed back into a system and when that could become part of some like dystopian black mirror episode where we're being mined for cryptocurrency.
I know I sound like crazy loony tune, but that technology is there.
Not at all, but I want to invent swearables, which is a device that you wear that yells at you, put down the ice cream tub, bitch.
You know, and like something like that.
I think that's the best thing ever.
Swearables.
Uh, but it has to be local so it doesn't report your ice cream violation to the food police, you know.
Yeah.
That's that's important.
Yeah.
Okay.
So uh we're we're we're up on time here today, believe it or not.
I mean, Courtney, I feel like we've only scratched the surface of your knowledge base.
Um there's so much more we can do.
But I want to give out your website here.
Uh and uh let's just show that on my screen again.
Here is Courtney Turner.com.
And Courtney is spelled C-O-U-R-T-E-N-A-Y.
So Courtanay Turner.com phonetically.
And uh Courtney, what do you have coming up on your site or event-wise or anything that you want to sort of plug for our audience today?
Um so we have the technocracy roundtables.
We're doing that once a month.
Uh so we'll the next one is uh the 22nd, and I believe that's five o'clock Eastern time.
So uh we'll be doing that when we're doing those once a month.
That's with uh Aaron Day, who's been here.
I I hear and uh uh Craig Winkelwicks and uh Patrick Wood and Patrick Wood and I also hosted this uh Omniwar symposium.
So definitely check that out.
I think that's some of the most important information being put out there currently.
I'm also working on big fans of Patrick Wood also.
He he's wonderful.
He and I are writing a book right now, so are hoping that's uh we're we're getting close.
We're getting very close.
So I'll keep you posted on that.
And then I'm also in the middle of a book.
I put the preview out on my substack, which I do encourage people to check out my substack.
Um, what is your substack?
Is it just your name.substack.com.
It is.
Yep.
Oh, okay.
And I I put a preview of my upcoming book, it's on Hegelian dialectics, and it's called uh Hegel's Dialectic, a Gnostic Jacob's ladder and a machinery of control.
Nice.
Oh, so that would be Hegel's bagels and I think is uh what that could be.
Yeah.
Okay.
I have one last question.
Uh this show is dedicated to helping people decentralize their lives and escaping centralized control so that we don't enter a digital cage.
How do we use our free will agency to use your words uh to reclaim and maintain autonomy?
So what are some strategies?
Give me a three.
I'll give you three.
Okay.
So the first uh I would he's querying you like you're a language model.
Did you notice that?
I know he's getting it to the prompt, the prompting habit.
He's prompting you like a language.
No, I'm sorry, Todd.
Yeah.
You train me, Mike.
He's using AI prompts on you, yes.
I I'm the Courtney Bot.
Yeah.
So I I would say I I often, you know, start with parents, because I think the children are like some of the biggest victims of all of this right now.
Uh so firstly, I would tell parents whether you I mean, if you can homeschool, I think that's great.
You know, maybe do pods or get them out of that system.
Fight, fight like crazy against these vouchers and this uh school choice initiative, uh, because that is really all about creating global citizens, putting every child into a computer and capturing the homeschoolers too.
So people think right now the homeschoolers are free, they are not.
That is what the school choice agenda is all about.
Charlotte Wizard, uh Charlotte Iserby blew the whistle on this back in the 80s.
She worked under the Reagan administration, um, and she blew the whistle on the best project, which was all of this ed tech that is currently being utilized to advance things like social emotional learning, which is really just data mining the children and then programming them through cybernetic feedback loops.
So that that's one of the first things I would say.
I would say teach your children, you know, if you're a religious, then certainly uh the Bible teaches about free will and teaches uh you know the foundational metaphysics of where free will is derived.
Uh so you know, you do that if that speaks to you.
If it doesn't, teach them things like Aristotle and Aquinas, who were really instrumental in our founding documents and uh you know in codifying that Judeo-Christian metaphysics.
So you don't have to be, you know, uh biblically oriented.
You don't have to be a believer, but you you are subscribing to that metaphysics.
That's what our country is predicated on.
That's what it's founded upon.
You have the free will to think whatever you want in the comfort of your own home and to operate however you wish, Because that's your free will.
However, you have to abide by the laws that are built upon that foundation.
Of the uh Judeo-Christian metaphysics.
So uh teach your children that so they understand that because they'll understand what it means to be human and why they have the free agency and why they should fight against tyranny and technocracy.
Um and w when they can say no and they have every right to say no.
Um and then there's some like small, you know, very concrete things that I think people should do.
Like I would say uh for parents again, tell do not give your children like AI plus sheet all.
I wrote a whole article on that.
Um, you know, that do tell your school or your homeschooling, no AI under sixth grade.
I think there's no reason children need to be using AI other than to train them and then to be programmed by them.
So, you know, do that.
Get together with the your local district, your school boards, get it out of the schools.
Like that's something very tangible you can do.
I would say things like if you can be resourceful in any way, uh, you know, whether that's farming your own uh food or you know, building your local communities.
I I think that's something I very much encourage people to do.
If you are farmer, I would advocate for getting the climate smart commodity projects out of your area.
You at the most local level.
I mean, if you have some sort of power in the federal or even state level uh politics, I'm not dissuading you, but I think we have the most impact at the smallest uh region, right?
So we should need to take seize the power there, and hopefully that will have a ripple effect and trickle up rather than trying to operate on these huge, very corrupt infrastructures.
So that was excellent.
Thank you.
Absolutely.
Okay.
Well, wow.
Uh Courtney, we would love to have you back.
It's been a pleasure speaking with you today.
And uh uh obviously you've got a wealth of information to share with people.
Let me just give out your website one more time.
Courtney Turner uh dot com, uh the Omni War, and uh you're working with Tom Woods.
You've got uh content, you've got podcasts, you've got roundtables, lots of good stuff.
So we look forward to speaking with you again.
And thank you so much for joining us today.
It's been fun.
Thank you so much for having me.
It was a pleasure.
Yeah, we really enjoyed it.
Thank you.
Thank you, Courtney.
All right.
So folks, stay tuned.
We'll be right back after this break with the after party discussion.
So stay tuned.
Join the official discussion channel for this show on Telegram at T.me slash decentralized TV, where you can ask questions or offer suggestions of who we should interview next.
Also be sure to subscribe to the email newsletter on decentralized.tv, where you'll be alerted about one day in advance of each new upcoming episode before it gets published.
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All right, welcome back, everybody.
This is the after party.
We should have some like an applause machine in the background or something.
But if I start clapping, you know, my dog will leap up here, as as you know, he did that to you.
Yes.
Um, well, Todd, what's what's your reaction to our guest today?
Well, I referenced it in the interview, but uh just researching her.
I knew it was going to be just kind of like uh a fire hose of information.
Um it was kind of hard to take all of this massive amount of uh issues, the topics that she covers and be able to bring it into something that would be uh something appropriate for decentralized TV because there's just so much.
And she didn't disappoint Mike.
You know, it's amazing.
And then well, you're the same way, and those viewers out there, look at me.
You feel me?
I know you feel me because I do lots of consultations with those of you who are like me that just our jaws drop at the intellect of Mike and many of our guests.
And uh, Courtney Turner is yet another one that is just like unconscious competence when she starts speaking about things.
So I really really appreciate it.
I learned a lot, Mike, and so much more to learn.
So I think she'll be a great return guest.
Oh, I think so too.
And uh, you know, the thing is I didn't really know about her work until just a few weeks ago.
And the it's like, how did we not know about her work?
I don't know, Mike.
I really don't know.
It's it's just amazing.
Courtney Turner.com, C-O-U-R-T-E-N-A-T-U-R-N-A-Y.
I'm sorry.
Don't forget the full nay.
Hey, why?
Yes, Courtney Turner.
Court and Turner.
Yeah, and go go there, and then you'll see what I saw when I was researching and stuff, and there's just so many rabbit holes that you can go down, even through her site just to learn.
Oh, yeah.
So fantastic.
Yeah.
Um Yeah, well, we will definitely have her back.
And you know, it's great also to have more women on the show because the the show tends to be kind of a little male heavy.
Did you notice that?
Yeah, I mean, if you look in the rear view mirror, it does, it's pretty male heavy.
It is male heavy.
And it I think it's because men tend to be uh more represented in issues like cryptocurrency.
You know, like every cryptocurrency festival is like a man fest, I guess.
Not that I've got to be.
But yeah, but you know what?
You know what I've realized?
What Mike is again, and I don't mean to fast forward, but I do so many consultations on a weekly event for these UNAs.
And what I have found in many, many cases, the women bring their husbands to the table of listening to you.
Oh the women, oh yeah, and get them turned on to it, and then they start listening to you, and then of course they'll listen to us at some point in time.
And um, and it's just amazing.
So you have there, there are just so many women out there who uh are one of us, right?
I call um I call us the two percenters.
We have the ability to critically think.
So there you go, you know, and men out there who are married to those type women are smart enough to say, happy wife, happy wife life.
Yeah, almost in a to Mike Adams, too.
Well, look, we I mean, we are so appreciative of all the people that support us and that share the information, and also that wrangle their spouses into this content arena because the you know, honestly, look, this is the content that is extremely helpful for your life.
Whether you learn about decentralizing your finances, and I mean, look, you know, gold went over 4,000, silver went over 50.
I mean, if you got gold and silver, you're doing great right now, but also decentralizing your your knowledge, your information.
And and we have this new tool, which I'm gonna I've got a fun demo for you here, uh bright you.ai.
And you know, that that's a free tool for decentralizing your knowledge base.
And this show, I mean, it's all about decentralized medicine, decentralized food, like your your food forest.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's only what two, it's less than two years old, your food forest.
Just turned two in September.
Okay.
September 21st, and it is so huge now and robust, it's crazy.
I just need the hurricanes to leave us alone this year.
Well, I so far they have.
I mean, we haven't had a bad hurricane yet.
Not yet, but we haven't gotten into the season yet.
Like last year, there was two uh in October, the end of October that just slammed us.
So if we can get through the next three weeks, I think we're gonna be Gucci.
Well, here in Texas, we're having such a drought that we are praying for some kind of storm, but we don't want it to go through Florida first.
So I'm okay if it goes around the panhandle, comes up through the Gulf, and then brings us the rain we need for all of our plants and all the cattle and and horses and everything that are in central Texas.
It's pretty it's that bad, huh?
It's pretty bad.
Okay.
Right now, it's pretty bad.
Yeah.
Uh, but that's Texas.
Uh, you know, the the easy life people, they get scared away after one year.
They they go back home wherever they come from.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's tough on purpose, but that's a good thing.
Okay.
Hey, speaking of food, I just want to share something with you because um you have turned me on to uh avocados in a big way, you know, because they're so healthy.
And I would have never known before meeting you the bananas and avocados could be so good together.
Right now, I am in this Process of dedicated to losing some LBs, you know, I have a personal goal.
And so, and I like boiled eggs, I like tuna salad, but so I was thinking about what's an alternative to mayonnaise.
And I just thought, hmm, I wonder if you could just mix an avocado in there.
It's creamy, right?
And if that would do the job.
And man, it avocados make a great boiled egg salad sandwich, Mike.
It's look, uh, this is why I say, like my smoothie here, of course, I'm drinking avocados every day, is you know, um, it's avocados and bananas, and it's whey protein, and it's some um like turmeric and probably sprouts and other goodies.
Yeah, and it tastes delicious.
Oh, oh, and cacao.
You know, it's got chocolate.
So it's like a chocolate milkshake.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, chocolate banana milkshake.
And you can put peanut butter in it too if you like that.
Yeah.
And that's super delicious.
But yeah, avocados, and you know where I learned that was when I lived in Taiwan, because in Taiwan, they they will blend avocado.
See, in in Chinese culture, avocados are used with sweet foods.
Whereas in Mexican uh and Latino culture, avocados are always salty foods, like guacamole.
Yes.
In America, most Americans don't know that avocados are used in sweet recipes.
And also, same thing is true with red beans.
So in Asian culture, red beans are used to make a paste with sugar.
It's a red bean paste that's used to fill pastries.
And it's absolutely delicious.
Wow.
Wow.
You can have like a sweet red bean, you know, croissant or donut or whatever.
And yeah.
Sorry, Rinder, I I was just gonna leave one, I have one other note here.
And then I tried uh for another meal, avocado mixed with tuna instead of mayonnaise, right?
Really?
Delicious.
Was it?
I haven't tried that one.
It was delicious.
It was great.
Yeah.
I mean, it's because it just kind of tricks your your your senses, right?
Yeah.
Um because what you're looking for is that creamy nature of mayonnaise.
It's got that.
Avocados, everybody, are a free food.
You can't overeat those things.
I mean, they're just really good for your body.
They seriously, they help with fat burn and everything.
So ask Enoch, baby.
Yeah, no kidding.
Um, and speaking of Enoch, uh, I was just asking this.
Now, you know, we just released Enoch 2.0.
Yep.
And it's completely free and it gives you instant answers.
You've been using it.
This is the first version of Enoch that's actually trained about UNAs.
Right.
Right.
Is you know what what you talk about, unincorporated nonprofit associations.
So, Todd, I asked it the following question.
Okay.
Uh, you know, tell me, tell me about the the privacy and tax benefits of UNAs.
Here's the answer.
It just did this uh a few minutes ago while you were talking.
Here it is uh show my screen.
The UNAs offer several privacy and tax advantages that make them an attractive uh uh option for individuals.
Here it is privacy advantages, anonymity, liability protection, privacy of internal operations, exemption from state reporting requirements since they're not registered with the state, they're not subject to state reporting.
And then tax advantages.
Oh, tax exempt status, hmm.
Uh pass-through taxation, deductible contributions, exemption from state and local taxes.
Like that list right there is incredibly what was the question you asked it?
Powerful.
Oh, I was just asking it to give me some of the advantages of UNA's in terms of you know, privacy taxation, whatever else.
But in other words, uh Enoch is trained on UNAs now.
And and if that same question was asked in our Lord and Savior chat GPT, it would not give that answer, trust me.
No, because I'll have people come to the consultations armed with their research, right?
And then they'll want to, you know, send me a wall of words uh saying that you know I I need you to kind of defend all of these.
I'm like, yeah, no, you're asking the wrong questions.
Well, now you can do AI wars.
You can just say, well, right.
Go to Bright U. Go to bright you.ai.
Yeah.
No, that's great, Mike.
And then the other thing is uh you and I talked about About this this week, is because I've been I've I've had so many consultations, I'm really, really I really know what the commonly asked questions are.
And so I'm going to do my best to be able to write a thesis, if you will, on the power of these UNAs that are the answers that I provide during my consultations, and then be able to provide that to you that you can feed to the engine.
Um, but but I will tell you that people are paying attention.
Um we pretty much have broken the state of California, Secretary of State.
Isn't that right?
It's it's like, you know, they're about a week behind now than than normal just because they've had so many applications that have come in.
Wow.
Um yeah, no, people are people are getting it.
It's been f amazing.
So you tell us about your website though, where people can learn about it.
Sure, sure.
You can go to my575e.com, my575e.com, and I created that so that people could passively free for free, be able to go in and learn about it.
And you go in, there's a little overview on the landing page, but if you hit let's go, then simply watch the 90-minute interview.
Everybody gives it raised reviews.
Many people before a consultation say I watched it three times and stuff.
But uh there's a lot of information in there, but there's a supporting PDF that talks about the 32 positive attributes of operating a UNA.
And if you have any questions, then after that, or you just want to talk about your own specific operating reality, then I make it real easy right under the video, scroll down a bit to just book a private consultation with me.
And frankly, that's what most people do that are really serious about this.
Why I charge 150 bucks for it, but people know it says it right there on the site.
If you move forward with the UNA, you get it back.
You just take it off of the investment.
So the only reason why I charge anything is because Mike, as you know, when I didn't, people didn't show up.
Literally, seven out of ten people don't show up when you do something for free.
People don't respect free.
I don't get it.
But the 150 cured that.
But I want to give it back to you, and I do.
I do many, many, many, many times a week with people moving forward with these UNAs.
So that's what I encourage, Mike.
And then if people want to move forward with the UNA, then they scroll down a little further and boom, you can either get an already established UNA or my suggestion, strong suggestion is you spend the 500 additional bucks to get a custom name so that you can name it what you want to.
And I always love building in a little bit of a virtue signal.
Uh, if you take your initials or something near and dear to your heart and then add the word foundation, it just makes it easier to speak to third parties, whether it's opening up a bank account, a brokerage account, a vaulted storage account for gold precious metals, or crypto exchange account.
You're able to say, hey, we recently established a foundation and I'd like to open up an account with you.
Could I get the proper paperwork?
And then you don't have to explain what an unincorporated nonprofit association is.
Right, right.
Just use the word foundation in the name.
Just makes it so much easier.
So much easier.
And I I I want to mention too, because because gold and silver are now all-time highs, just skyrocketing, right?
Yeah.
I mean, they bounce around, you know, some days are up, some days they're down.
But the the overall trend is just skyrocketing.
Yeah.
Uh for people need to understand that if they have gold and silver that's under their own personal name, and then one day they want to sell that, that's a taxable event if it's under your name.
And it's going to be a lot of taxes because of the gain.
But it's those taxes are theft because gold and silver themselves haven't really gained value.
It's just the dollars dropping in value.
But the IRS makes you report it as a gain, and then they confiscate some of the gain, which wasn't even really a gain.
So you lose in that scenario.
But if you put gold and silver under a UNA, then it's a whole different ball game.
You don't own it.
You don't own it.
The UNA does.
I don't know how the UNA owns it.
One day I'll ask God, but that's that's the case law, is the UNA owns it, but you control it.
Nelson Rocky.
Control it.
Yeah.
Nelson Rockefeller coined the phrase, own nothing, control everything, and these type entities were what he was talking about.
Right.
And so let me Just ask you a question.
Could I set up a UNA and then fund it and then have the UNA buy gold and then have the gold sitting right here on my desk, but it's owned by the UNA and not me.
I do it all the time.
I do it all the time.
I've been doing it for almost six years, Mike.
I got my UNA.
I opened up my bank account with its EIN number.
And then at the time, and I still use them, is I there's an app called AppMex, and it allows you to be able to set up your UNA and its EIN number and account with them to where directly from the UNA checking account.
I'll tell them I'll buy what I want, and and that's my method of payment.
And boom, they discreetly deliver it to my home.
It was all from the UNA.
It's owned by the UNA, but I have full self-custody, Mike.
It's beautiful.
I hope people realize how brilliant that is.
Yeah.
Because there's so much counterparty risk in the system right now of like putting a bunch of money or valuables in somebody else's hands, like a bank that might fail, or or you know, uh treasuries that might go into default or whatever.
Like self-custody, like having it where you can touch it is a very big thing.
Absolutely.
And you know, I'll have a lot of people say, because you know, you have to open up a bank account, and I teach people there's a 25 minute video on how to do that, and people can with their bank of preference, right?
But I have established the easy button with one of the major banks.
And I don't want to say anything, you know, on air about which one, uh, because it's such a wonderful easy button.
We have a call center team uh that has opened up probably out of the almost well, almost 400 people I've helped acquire these, probably almost half of them have acquired their bank account through the easy button where they just call this guy, I know, and he opens them up over the phone within 40 minutes, you have your checking account.
Oh wow.
Yeah, no, it's it's huge.
It's great.
And I've had people say, well, you know, I don't want to set up a bank account with one of the big banks.
And I'm like, why?
Why?
First of all, your bank account should be a turnstile.
It shouldn't be where you keep your cash.
Right.
So it's just a tool.
It's a turnstile to where then if you want to get gold, then you do what we just discussed, Mike, and you take self-custody, or if you want to get it into um crypt private crypto, you know, I teach people how to connect your your UNA with uh with the Kraken account with a Kraken Pro account.
That's brilliant.
Yeah.
Or or stock brokerage accounts.
We have I have a stockbroker who um I'm allowed to uh I I got my UNA connected, and now the UNA Biz Telegram group, it's a private group.
That's where all the support happens, and that's where we give everybody the nuggets on what you do and how you do it, and just make it easy.
I'm really big into easy buttons.
I have a long conversation with Andy Scheckman last week to where there's a lot of people who have a lot of gold who are having some of their repository uh uh uh uh you know companies that they're working with don't know about these, so they might get a little bit of resistance.
So, Mike, I sent him all of the information and he's assessing everything.
So my hope is that within this next week, Mike with Miles Franklin is going to be the easy button.
Where, like with the bank that I recommend, all you have to do is call one of Mike's guys, he'll probably designate somebody, and boom, you send them the digital documents that you receive from us.
You open up the account, and now you have your gold account where you can buy and sell gold there.
You can if you need a repository, you can uh store it.
Yeah, go ahead.
I I also want to connect you with the people that I've known for years who Annie Sheckman also knows.
Uh, because the there it's a small world, but if you and this is also where you can get gold and silver if you if you want to buy it, uh just go to metalswithmic.com.
It forwards you to battalion medals, and uh, this is what used to be called Treasure Island, but they launched this new online presence under Battalion Metals.
And they have something called Battalion Bunker, which is uh a gold and silver storage option.
And I am you know, a vault that's uh insured by Lloyds of London, by the way.
And I'm sure that they are gonna be fine to work with UNAs.
Please connect me.
Yeah, I would love to be able to give people multiple options because that's what that Telegram group is all about.
That's perfect.
And uh and we love Andy Shackman as well.
And because we'd like to give people more than one option.
But I would just say as even as the sponsor of the show, uh, if you want gold and silver, just go to medalswithmike.com to get in touch with battalion.
Do they have an app by the to where I don't think they have an app yet, but they do have a discount code.
Let me give that out.
It's Ranger.
It doesn't save you anything on the gold because it's already like rock bottom prices.
It saves you they they waive the shipping insurance fee.
Oh, nice.
If you use discount code Ranger, and then they know the sale came from us and and they're a sponsor of the show.
So uh incredibly good pricing, honest brokers, no bait and switch shenanigans.
They have vaulting services or they can deliver it to you directly.
Again, metals with Mike.com.
Beautiful.
Once you get your gold, or even frankly, I suggest people before you get it, go to Todd's website, my575e.com, get your UNA set up so that you purchase the metals through the UNA.
That is absolutely the best way to do it.
And you know why?
Is because when you sell those as the secretary of the organization, those proceeds come into your UNA, and because of the how it's set up lawfully, these California established UNAs, CP575Es,
they come into the account and it is considered unsettled funds because in your articles of association, you will learn how to do good at a local level with everything that you're benefiting from, right?
Right.
So there's a whole strategy behind it that you'll learn in the private telegram group.
But um, those are considered unsettled funds.
Matter of fact, we talked to John J. Singleton about it in our recent interview, Mike.
That's right.
It's very, very powerful because there are no capital gains associated with that.
The other thing, people, please, please, when you get your UNA, you want to donate your home to the UNA.
You control it, you live in it, you can pass it on to your kids, you can do all of that, but you are totally protected.
If you ever got a personal lawsuit, they can't touch it.
If you ever had to file personal bankruptcy, they can't touch it.
If you get old and you ultimately have to have to have Medicaid, and they have that five-year look back period, you know, to where at that point in time you're like, well, I put around and I didn't donate my home to it.
So many people, Mike, are having their homes stolen from them by the IRS because they have someone in the family that goes into senior care and they're using Medicaid, and so they have this uh this clawback program.
Oh, it's horrible.
It's horrible.
And they are literally, they're literally putting liens on people's homes and they're everybody's losing their their their homes.
Yeah, it's they're taking people's homes.
It's unbelievable.
Um to feed the medical industrial complex.
So there's so many reasons, folks.
I mean, you know, we're we're we're gonna finish this discussion here, but but there are so many reasons to get a UNA to hold your assets and especially gold and silver, because you know, Todd, if if gold gets revalued, which is a possibility, absolutely like $20,000 an ounce, then you're gonna have so much gain in your gold that the minute you try to sell it, you're gonna owe like 35% to the federal government.
Yeah, and people should know what happens is when you then do sell your gold, that you're still gonna get a 1099 from the from the buyer, right?
Um and and when you do, if that goes to your social security number, you then you are obligated to pay that tax.
That that if you're in California, 45% state and federal tax rate on that.
However, when it when it goes into the UNA, the UNA gets the 1099 and 1099s, what's the CP575E?
E For exempt, exempt from filing, like a 501c3, like a 508.
It's exempt from filing.
You we we don't file or self-report on these UNAs.
What comes in is considered unsettled reserves because you can then repurpose that in many, many different ways that will benefit for the purpose of the nonprofit association.
You got it.
Yeah, exactly.
Which is great.
Um we all want to do good in the world.
We all want to pay pay it forward.
And but we want to have control, all of the people watching.
You know, if you've worked for all your assets, you want to have control over how you hand them out or what you fund or or who you give to people in need, and not the government, because the government's going to take your money and they're gonna use it to buy weapons to send overseas to bomb children, okay?
Yep, or whoever they're bombing today.
Um, wouldn't you rather keep that money under your ability to control it without ownership?
Yes, but you get to decide where it goes to.
So it's a way to do more good in the world because you maintain control over your funds.
So again, Todd's website on that, which I recommend is my575e.com.
Here it is.
Uh my575e.com.
Okay.
Thank you, Mike.
This was a nice deep dive, and I think we went to a lot of places I go to on the uh on the consultation.
So thank you.
Yeah, that should help answer a lot of questions.
Um, and then I just want to mention one more time, folks.
Go to BrightU.ai.
This is our new Enoch 2.0 AI engine.
It's completely free.
And it's uh Todd, the number of prompts you can submit now is unlimited.
There's just a time limit.
I think you have to wait 30 seconds between each prompt.
And that's it.
That's great.
Yeah, it's unlimited.
Everybody, please know this man right here, Mike Adams has invested over $2 million.
That's true.
Of his own of his own.
Company money.
Company money.
Yeah.
You know, it's your company.
Um, I mean, yeah, you have no idea.
I could have, I could have paid the money to myself for some reason, but it wouldn't be nearly as much fun as building this.
Yeah, that's right.
But this is such a gift.
I mean, such a gift to humanity.
And I heard you say on on your broadcast that, and so first time I heard you say, you know, put a uh Bhag out there, big hairy a goal, right?
Yeah of wanting to educate a billion people.
What was that?
That's my moonshot mission, I call it.
Okay.
I want to reach 1 billion people, which of course requires multiple languages and, And that's what we're going to be rolling out next year.
Uh I want to reach a billion people with empowering information that can uplift their life and improve their liberty and freedom and happiness abundance.
And that it's it's actually very simple to do because all you have to do is bring out the things that have been censored and hidden.
Right.
Right.
I mean, it's really that simple.
And then do it in multiple languages and you know, get people to help you spread the word on it because it's free, right?
So free is a very compelling offer when it's the entire uh knowledge of the world at your fingertips at no cost.
Like who doesn't want to tell somebody about that?
So that's what Enoch is.
And uh by the way, Todd, if you scroll down, show my screen, please.
Uh, if you scroll down from the homepage, uh go to bright you.ai, scroll down, and click on this Enoch Wellness Coach.
Did you know about this, Todd?
The wellness coach.
I did, I heard about it today.
Tell us about it.
This is amazing, people.
Give me a health question that that is appropriate for you.
I mean, you're talking about avocados and whatever.
No, I'll I'll give you a health question.
Okay, or a goal.
Provide me a natural remedy for stepping in a mound of ant bites or something thereof.
I just want to know how can I how can I ease these ant bites I have, which is how I learned about you know how to be able to get rid of them naturally, too.
All right.
Now, this wellness coach has a very friendly demeanor.
So yeah, it starts out and it says, Oh, I'm so sorry to hear about your fiery encounter With those little critters.
That's great.
Don't worry.
We've got this.
Here are some natural remedies.
So then it gives you a baking soda paste, an oatmeal bath.
That sounds fun.
Oh boy.
Okay.
Apple cider vinegar, honey, aloe vera.
So it also says shake off the ants gently if you can.
Todd, have you shaken off the ants yet?
I shook them up.
And I think they actually, I think I swore them off.
I had I think I was working my swearable.
So it also has essential oils here.
It recommends lavender to reduce itching and inflammation and dilute it into a carrier oil like coconut oil, etc.
Okay.
So there's a really great question.
And then it even gives you a happy heart here.
Nature's got your back, Todd.
Nature's got your back.
Awesome.
That's awesome.
And then it links to our natural news articles, eight home remedies for ant bites.
Now see what's unique about this, because it's a coach, is I could ask some follow-up questions, right?
True.
Can you ask it how long will it take for the itching to go away?
Okay.
Uh I'm gonna say in itching and inflammation to go away.
Right.
So I see what you're doing.
You're helping me demonstrate the memory capabilities of this does have a memory.
So the answer says, okay, I'm sorry to hear that you're feeling uncomfortable due to the ant bites.
See, it did remember.
So let's address the itching.
And don't worry with some natural remedies and little patience, you'll be back to your usual self in no time.
So it talks about the uh you know the cold compress and the aloe, and then the inflammation, it gives some things, including turmeric and certain essential oils.
Awesome.
And I just want I just want to say one last thing, Mike.
Yep.
Because it can remember, I believe, up to three.
So I want one last question, even though I asked it independently at the end of this.
I think it's appropriate to say, now, how should I go about getting rid of those that those ants in my uh food forest?
How naturally getting rid of those plant those ants in my food forest.
Okay.
Let's see what it says.
All right, here we go.
Wow.
Great answers.
I'm so glad you're looking to protect your food for us naturally, it says.
Oh it's amazing how Mother Nature provides us with all sorts of solutions.
Uh diatomaceous earth, vinegar, essential oils, a peppermint, tea tree, and lemongrass oils are particularly effective against uh the fire ants.
Uh cinnamon, a natural ant repellent, pepper and chili powder.
Yeah, I'm sure that works.
Baking soda and powdered sugar, plant ant repelling plants.
So, like mint, basil, rosemary thyme, and lavender, and then maintain a clean food forest.
So clean up any fallen fruits or vegetables to keep your food for us tidy.
Yeah, see, that's all good information.
That's awesome.
Thank you, Mike, for creating that Enoch.
Oh man, I'm I'm I use it myself now, too.
And every everybody I know is using it now because it's just so handy.
I mean, you can ask it how do I make a medicinal extract from this rosemary herb that I grew in my garden?
You can do things like that.
Yeah, yeah.
And it always tells you how great you are, by the way.
Keep at it, Todd.
You keep eating all that fruit from your food force, and that one pack will become a six-pack.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
No, this, and and I want people to know this is not just some uh avatar variant personality of chat GPT or something like that.
Because I know people create those, but uh Chat GPT will never give you the information that our engine gives you because we have this incredible curated data set that I've put together for the last two years.
It's uh Todd has trained on over 10,000 books and millions of pages of content, including articles, transcripts, all of our interviews.
Yeah.
Uh frankly, every interview I've ever done, and every podcast I've ever done is also included, plus a lot more.
And this training is what allows it to be able to tell the truth about issues like vaccines or chemotherapy or natural remedies, natural cures.
Uh, you know, and the other mainstream engines will lecture to you.
Oh, don't you can't talk about natural cancer cures.
You need to go see a doctor.
You know, our engines like, oh, yeah, there's tons of natural cures.
Let me list them for you, you know.
It It's a world of difference.
Phenomenal.
Phenomenal.
Well, this is uh this is a gift to humanity.
It really is.
So thank you.
Yeah, thank thank you, Todd.
And one last thing.
I I don't know if you knew this, but this current rendition of Enoch that we're demonstrating.
Yeah.
Did you know that I wrote it myself with an AI engineer instead of using my engineering team?
I did.
Amazing.
It's amazing that you used AI to create.
I use AI to write the code to give you access to AI that's uncensored.
Right.
Yes.
And I huh?
Let me ask you this.
Yeah.
So all right.
I'm asking, let's say I enter in and I ask a bunch of personal questions.
Now you have that stored on some database somewhere, right?
So uh no?
No.
Um so everything that you enter as a prompt is anonymized by default because we don't know your name.
We do have you logged in with your email address, but we don't store uh any questions or answers related to any email address.
So everything is anonymized.
We do have log files, you know, for debugging purposes, but they're not tied to any email address.
So we don't know who's asking this or that or anything.
And so your privacy is completely protected.
But importantly, you don't need to create an account to use it for free.
There's no phone number, there's no ID, there's no name.
You just need an email address to confirm that you got the email.
You type in the code from the email, and that's it.
Because we we don't want to get like spammed or DOS by a bunch of you know bad faith actors that are trying to shut it down.
So we rate limit it to 30 seconds between queries, and we require you to have a functioning email address, and that's it.
That's literally it.
Beautiful.
And poof, be gone.
Your inquiries disappear.
And then tell us about one day we're gonna be able to uh operate this locally, right?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Uh we have a standalone model that actually I have the files now.
I'm just doing final testing.
Assuming those all pass testing, we'll have a link on this website where you can download those models, they're GGUF files.
You can uh run inference locally on most computer systems uh using software like LM Studio.
And so you can run it all locally with no ethernet or no internet connection and uh obviously free and no one can spy on you.
That's amazing.
Now because you are gonna continually update Enoch, then what do you do if you have it running locally to be able to update it?
Oh we'll we'll have new downloads available every time we change it.
Okay, I see.
Okay.
Because we uh we have now uh a really great in-house uh model retraining method, which I should say was also this whole thing was written by AI also.
Wow.
Yeah, because it uh it's actually very difficult to get model training to work well locally because of problems with uh different versions of Python and NVIDIA CUDACORs and uh PyTorch language libraries combined with the hardware, which is the NVIDIA Blackwell class microprocessors.
So to get those four or five things to work correctly, it's like it's insanely impossible uh on it seems like it.
Well, AI finally figured it out.
I'm telling you, bright you dot AI is what every homeschooler should use at the point in time that they start training their kids with AI.
You can ask it to teach you any subject you want.
You can ask it to actually just give you a lecture about a topic or give you um uh a test or or a course on anything you want.
It'll generate it.
Phenomenal.
Yeah, it's it's just game changing.
I'm proud to know you, Mike.
Hey, I'm happy to know you too, Todd, and I'm so happy that we can do this show together.
And and thanks for giving me the opportunity to demo the engine.
Uh, I think that's really great.
So look, we're gonna wrap this up, folks.
But a couple of things.
Uh, if you miss any episodes of Decentralized TV, go to the website decentralize.tv and watch all the other episodes because they're also equally entertaining and educational.
Uh secondly, if you want to use our Enoch engine, it's free.
Just go to Brighton.ai or BrightU, the letter U.A. And actually, Todd, we're we're gonna be using Bright U.ai as the more permanent um location.
Oh, beautiful.
I like that.
Yeah, it's it's shorter and it's just it's easy for people.
And we're adding uh I might as well just spill the beans here.
Uh we're adding a uh an asset advisor coach.
Oh, I like that.
Yes, yes, an asset advisor is the next coach that I'm actually gonna build this weekend.
So I like that.
Right.
So without it, it's not gonna be your financial advisor, but you can ask it for research questions about how do I protect my assets, or how do I improve privacy, or you know, how do I legally reduce my tax burden?
And it's gonna give you some kick-ass answers.
And now, Todd, it's trained on the UNAs.
Absolutely.
That's so fantastic.
I wonder what it's gonna think about.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it's amazing.
So anyway, this is what's happening.
What a last two plus years, Mike.
Oh my goodness.
And much more yet to come.
Yet to come, right.
All right.
Well, thank you, Todd, for joining me today.
It's been a great show.
Another great show.
They just keep getting better.
And uh thank all of you for watching.
Thank you for all your support, you know, supporting our sponsors, uh, supporting our I mean, shop with us at HealthRangerStore.com, by the way.
If you want ultra clean food, that also helps fund the program because this program does not earn any money.
It's just here as a public service.
So so support us so we can keep doing this for you to bring you this information.
And oh, by the way, by the way, I had a consultation with somebody that um that had acquired our breaking the chains uh series.
Yeah.
And they absolutely loved it and whatnot.
And I know when we released that, it was kind of like the world was in a state of just kind of normalcy.
But as things heat up, Mike, we might want to let everybody know that series exists again because it's important.
If you go to Brighton University.com, all spelled out, you'll be able to see and and purchase that course if you want.
You just scroll down.
Here it is, breaking the chains, decentralized your life.
And you can see you uh if you want to pay 129, you can download the whole thing.
It's very educational.
It will save you a fortune and it will help you be more free in everything that you do.
You can see the full description of it right here.
And it's many, many hours and interviews, 10 videos.
You know, it uh Todd and I put it together by interviewing all these amazing people.
So check out that program at Brighton University.com.
That's another way to do that.
By the way, there's a nice there's a nice good guy in there, which is uh if you're interested in the UNAs and you want to acquire them, there's a downloadable PDF there that has a hyperlink that will allow you instead of 150 for the consultation, it's 25.
So that kind of almost pays for the course.
That's true.
Yeah.
Yeah, really good point.
Okay.
Uh right now, folks, I mean, it's it's amazing how little it costs to be free.
Right.
Amen.
I mean, never before in human history have you had access to so much knowledge to support your liberty, your abundance at so little cost.
Or in the case of of our AI engine, you know, completely free.
So use the tools that are available for you and thank you for all your support.
And thank you, Todd, for your time today.
It's always fun.
You bet.
And everybody use your tools that God gave you, which is the free will, and that's the free will to act instead of passively listen and say, Oh, I'll get to bright you.ai one day or whatever.
No, dig in.
Just start doing, right?
Do your own research and have fun with.
I mean, I have a ball with Enoch.
Oh, I I I I can't wait to find out what you do with Enoch, Because I've just been testing it with like nutrition questions and so on, but you come up with really fun stuff.
So let me know how it goes, Todd.
And if you find anything that we can do better with Enoch, let me know, because you're talking to the architect right here.
Um.
And I don't I don't have to go talk to a team anymore to like fix something.
I just I just fix it with a prompt.
Yeah, that's right.
It's really amazing.
All right.
Thank you for watching today, folks.
And again, check out all the other episodes at decentralized.tv.
And of course, I'm Mike Adams with Todd Pittner.
Thank you for watching today.
God bless you all.
Take care now.
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