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Oct. 21, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
36:57
Why consumer robots will DECIMATE your SOCIAL SKILLS
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Welcome to this special report about how the widespread adoption of AI-driven robots, which is really going to accelerate over the next two years, in our homes, I should mention, also in medical facilities, nursing homes, in schools, etc., how this is going to drive people apart for a very simple reason.
It's because compared to the intelligence of the machines and the speed of the replies, and also the obedience of the machines, it's much more difficult for people to interact with other people.
And let me give you an example of this, because as you'll soon see, this has major cultural implications, which could also lead to depopulation and the collapse of the family, you know, reduced reproduction, etc.
So just in the realm of AI coding, and as you know, I'm an AI developer now, and I've been coding with AI for I don't know, a while, and you know, building AI systems also for two years now.
And what I found as an AI coder, and uh just to back up, I built the new censored.news website and Brighton.ai as an experiment to see if if I alone could build these sites using no other humans but just AI coders.
And the result has been yes, it's it's very doable.
It's not 100% perfect, still a few glitches here and there, but overall it's very doable.
I did not need any other humans.
In the process of doing this, I found myself now having a lot less patience with human engineers, because I still have an engineering team.
And when I want to add a new feature to something like let's say Brighton.com, our free speech video website, which is still coded by human engineers who use AI augmentation, I should add, you know, to make themselves more efficient.
But when I talk to the human team, I say, hey, I want to add this new feature to BrightTown.com or I want to add this API so I can do things like automatic language translations and things like that.
And they say, okay, uh, we'll get you uh we'll get you a specification in a week, and then you get the specification and to build it is like four weeks.
Okay, so that that's kind of the normal for the world of dealing with human engineers.
Whereas when I go to my AI team and I say, hey, I want this feature in in this project, like sensor.news or whatever, or even uh brightown.ai, which actually has an API that answers questions that come in from other sources, I say, I want the plan for that, and the AI team says, okay, here's the plan.
This is hold on a second.
In 60 seconds, they've got the whole plan.
And then, and then the team says, Oh, do you want me to proceed with this plan?
I'm like, yes.
And they say, okay, boom.
And then in five minutes, the feature is built.
And then maybe another five minutes, you know, double check the security, double check the do the testing, you know, uh answer these questions, update the documentation, update the architectural document for the project, et cetera.
So maybe like 30 minutes into this, it's done.
Whereas with a human team, three weeks, four weeks, something like that, and with all kinds of excuses typically, like, you know, oh, you know, had to go to the hospital, got sick again, oh, vacation days, this and that, uh, uh, found a different job, you know, all the things that plague human RD teams, you don't have that with AI, other than the occasional Amazon AWS, you know, data center failure, which is always fun to deal with.
Uh, and by the way, I'm I'm coding with uh Claude, uh Claude Sonnet, but I'm also experimenting now with Claude Haiku, which is much faster.
It's crazy fast.
And for the the simpler things I'm coding with haiku, and I just can't believe how fast it is.
It comes back in like 60 seconds with really great Python code.
It's just unbelievable.
Uh and and I'm using uh Replit for the staging of the hosting of sites, but I find that Replit doesn't code as well as anthropic or Claude code, just in case you're curious what tools I'm using.
But this same phenomenon that I just described, which is this this expectation that coding can happen really quickly and just really efficiently.
Like I need it in 15 minutes, you know.
Uh I found that I'm becoming so used to that now when I talk to human teams, I'm extremely disappointed.
Like, what do you mean, a week?
You know, what are you talking about?
A week?
Uh, that should take five minutes.
What do you, you know?
So even my own reality about code has shifted dramatically.
Now imagine what's going to happen when robots start living with people, and the robots are number one, extremely intelligent because you can ask them questions about anything, like literally anything, and they have an answer for you because it's powered by a large language model in you know, internally.
Uh, robots are always polite to you.
They're always actually subservient to you.
They they want to fulfill your wishes.
If you ask an AI model, or if you point out something, even with Cody, you say, like, hey, um, that last update that you just did, you know, it broke this other feature, and you need to fix that and restore that function.
And the model will come back and say, Oh, you're right.
Good catch.
I'm gonna fix that.
It exactly like that.
It it talks to you like that, and then it goes in and fixes the thing.
So AI models are designed to make you the center of the universe where you're always right, and they're always trying to please you.
Well, that's great when you're trying to get things done, but that's not the way other people respond in the real world.
So if you live with a robot, let's say, you live with a robot, and it's a robot that does laundry and dishes, and you get used to talking to that robot, like, hey, robot, I want you to you know clean up all the dishes in the kitchen.
Oh, what a great idea!
I'm happy to do that for you.
You know, the robot says, let me get started right away.
Would you like me to also scrub the floors when I'm done?
You know, like that, because it'll do that.
And if you get used to that, and then you have you know, like a relative or something come over for a Thanksgiving dinner party or whatever, and you talk to the relative the same way that you're talking to the robot.
Hey, would you mind you want to do some dishes?
You want to help me clean the floor?
And the relative's like do I work here?
What are you what you know what are what are you talking about?
I don't work here.
This is your house.
Get your robot, get your damn robot to do it, you know.
Like, that's the way that humans are gonna react to that.
And it's gonna be shocking to people, to a lot of people, to be reminded that humans are not subservient to your wishes.
Okay.
So you're gonna have this.
Maybe there'll be a psychological term for this.
All of you who are in the mental health industry listening to this, um, and I'm sure your business is really great right now.
Um, you you're gonna come up with a new term.
And it's gonna be something like, you know, robot bias infestation syndrome or something, whatever that comes out to be, RBIS, RBIS, okay.
And it's gonna be that humans are losing social skills because the robots aren't pushing back on anything.
And you can yell at a robot, and and some people will for some reason, you know, they'll just take out their anger.
You damn robot, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You you dropped a plate, yeah.
I should just I should throw you in the dumpster, you know.
And some people will get used to talking to the robots like that, and the robot will apologize.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
I didn't mean to break the plate.
Would you like me to order another one for you on Amazon?
I have the I have the model number for you.
Just say yes and I'll order it.
You know, the robot's gonna try to solve the problem.
If you get used to talking to robots like that, and then you turn that to people, You're gonna find there's gonna be some pushback.
And so one of my concerns about this, and why I mention families and reproduction is that you can imagine over the next you know 20 years or so, you're gonna have a lot of young adults growing up with robots around.
And they're going to learn their social skills from the robots, and they're gonna be socially crippled for interacting in the real world.
Imagine like the first time a guy and a gal go on a date, you know.
I mean, after having you know, robot subservience for the last 10 years, and they're on a date, and the guy's like, hey, you know, after you after you finish that lasagna, you know, why don't you do the dishes?
You know, it's like what?
You know, the the young woman is gonna like, I I'm not doing dishes.
Let your damn robot do the dishes.
Uh, but you see what I'm saying here.
Social skills are gonna be out the window.
And even just the idea of seeing things from the other person's point of view, which is a crucial uh social skill, right?
Social coping is to try to step into that person's shoes and try to understand what they're going through.
What are their struggles?
What are their goals?
What are their fears?
What are their, you know, what what gets them excited or interested, etc.
And that's empathy, that's you know, compassion.
And robots don't actually have that.
They can simulate that, but they don't have the feelings.
See, I mean, you can have the best language model in the world, but inside the robot, there's not a heart.
This is like a wizard of oz episode here.
It doesn't have a heart, it doesn't have the the actual intuition, it doesn't have the consciousness that a human has.
And so it can't really feel the pain of a human.
It can't look at a person that just got injured, or you know, oh, I burned my finger on the stove or something.
And you know, the robot doesn't feel the pain that you and I might feel.
You'll be like, oh, oh, you should put some ice on that, you know, because we're feeling the pain of the other person.
It's one of the things that makes us human, is that we have empathy and we can feel other people's emotions, or we can we we have kind of an internal simulator in our own heads where we can we can simulate what it's like to feel the way that they are feeling.
Or if if somebody's happy and elated, we can feel their joy.
If somebody's sad or crying, we can feel their pain.
Uh and the robots can't do that.
So the more humans live with robots, the less capable humans will be of living with humans.
And when that translates into relationships and dating and marriage, it's gonna be really interesting and destructive to the family.
Uh, especially if you know what happens when a young, like a lot of people will have their own robot.
It'll be a robot that caters to their wishes and knows their habits and routines.
Like, hey, every day, robot, I want you to do the dishes.
I want you to fold the laundry, I want you to, you know, once a month change out the air filter on the air conditioner.
I want you to go outside, pull the weeds, I want you to walk the dog, whatever.
You know, you have a list of tasks and everything.
And the robot learns from you because it has a long memory of the things that you have said and asked for, and the instructions that you've updated it with, the corrections, like, no, don't do it that way.
Um, when you wash the dog, don't use the washing machine, you know, things like that.
And all these corrections.
So that robot becomes very personalized to you.
And then that young man falls in love with a young woman who has her robot.
And her robot's got all of its ways of doing things, which are totally different from the man's robot.
So now these two get married, they move in together, they manage to find an affordable apartment because nobody can afford housing today.
Uh, the younger people can't.
So they move in together.
Now they've got two robots, right?
Two different ways of doing things.
And the man will start to argue with the woman's robot, and the woman will start arguing with the man's robot.
Like, what are you doing it that way?
You can see where I'm going with this, right?
You're gonna have like turf wars in the house.
Some men will try to control both robots, and some women, like the bossy bossy pants women, you know, the the Karen's, as we say, they'll try to control both robots.
Like, oh, don't you listen to him.
Oh, he's wrong.
You have to listen to me.
You're gonna do it my way.
Here's how you fold the clothes.
All right.
So you're gonna have like robot control wars in the home, and you're gonna see a news story one day in the future, maybe five years down the road, where a couple gets divorced because they couldn't get along with each other's robots.
But they need their robots so much that they'd rather divorce the human and keep the bot.
And then the divorce judge allows each of them to keep the robots that they came into the marriage with, and soon you will find like robot prenup agreements.
So if we ever get divorced, I get to keep my robot and you take your horrible robot and leave.
Yeah, not hard to see that coming.
That's gonna be a really interesting story when that happens.
Like we got divorced because her robot was insane.
She trained it to play crappy music all day.
And uh, if this were like if this were me as a young person, I'd be like, your robot is using highly toxic fragrance laundry detergent for God's sake.
I can't live with that robot, which I couldn't, because you know how much I hate uh synthetic fragrance.
So I'd be like, that kicked that robot out.
That robot would be living in the doghouse in the backyard, you know, and the wife would not be happy about that.
What'd you do to my robot?
Ah, nothing.
Just reprogrammed it, you know.
Overwrote the memory about the laundry detergent.
That's what I did.
Yeah.
That's what happens when you marry the health ranger.
I'm gonna overwrite your robot.
I'm gonna give it little secret keywords.
When I say the word, it does the dishes, you know, whatever.
Well, we can have all kinds of fun with that.
But you're gonna see you're gonna see like domestic robot wars that will be insane.
Now, the other thing that's going to happen in all of this is that people will become far more attached to their robots than to each other, and also to anything else like a car or even a house.
Like people won't mind moving so much as long as they can take their robot with them.
And you know, people will lease robots, so you'll make a monthly payment on it, kind of like a car payment.
And you know, it might cost maybe entry-level robots, could be $300 a month or something.
And you will see many cases where people would rather give up their car than their robot.
They'd rather just take Uber or something, but they can't lose the bot because the robot is what's gonna be closely intertwined in their their life, their habits, their activities.
Robot is gonna be their companion, but also their Einstein, it's gonna be their encyclopedia, it's gonna be their task manager, their organizer, you know, their their mental health um assistant, everything that you can imagine, you know, the the chef, the recipe maker, the the trash man, you know, it's gonna it's gonna do everything, the lawn care.
The robots are gonna be crucial to people's lives.
And once people grow accustomed to having these robots around them, they will see robots as extensions of themselves, and they will begin to feel a very strong emotional and cognitive attachment to those robots.
And if the robot breaks down or goes missing, they will feel extremely detached and depressed.
And we already have a hint of this today with mobile phones.
Have you ever lost your mobile phone or had it destroyed in front of you or something?
Like you dropped it on the ground and then a car ran over it.
Did you have a moment of panic?
Like if you just lost your phone.
Have you ever lost it?
Wasn't that shocking?
I mean, and that's not even a robot.
I mean, that that's that's just a screen with all your text messages and stuff and all your photos and well, your schedule and your social media logins and whatever else is on your phone.
But that alone can be overwhelming for people, and the attachment to mobile phones is already apparent in society.
And in many ways, it's a very unhealthy attachment.
And you know, people reach for their phones first thing in the morning.
And And look, when I wake up, I'm also pretty quickly, I'm on my phone because I'm I'm number one, checking to make sure all our websites are working.
You know, especially the ones that I just built with AI that are sometimes sketchy.
Um, but I'm also checking the news, I'm checking you know, gold prices, I'm checking the markets, I'm I'm checking to see if World War III has started.
Like, but that's me.
Those are my reasons for picking up a phone and checking things, you know, pretty early in the morning.
But I justify that by saying, that's useful.
I need that.
That's part of my job.
I need to stay informed about what's going on.
Other people pick up a phone, it's because they want to hear from their friends, they want to post a picture, they want to have a bunch of likes.
It's all social for them with their fake friends.
And even with that, they are incredibly attached to that phone.
Now imagine if that phone were a walking, friendly, smiling humanoid robot that does things for you.
And after a few weeks of living with a robot that's folding your laundry, you know, vacuuming your floors, whatever, doing the dishes, making smoothies, etc.
etc.
After a few weeks of that, if you lose that robot, like you're gonna be devastated because you're gonna get used to it.
You're gonna get used to it just like that.
And in fact, your life is gonna get better if you're able to hold boundaries properly with this.
Your life is gonna get better because all the time that you used to spend doing those, you know, trivial tasks, now you can spend that time doing something else that you want to do.
Oh, you always want to write that book, you want to finish that sculpture that's in the art room, you know, you want to finish the painting.
You wanted to whatever, you wanted to swap out the motor on the car in the garage that's been disassembled since 1979, whatever it is, you now have time to do that.
The things that you want to do instead of folding clothes and stacking dishes and rinsing plates in the sink.
Let the robot do that.
So pretty quickly, you're gonna find, hey, my life is better with this robot.
This is pretty awesome.
And if that robot breaks down or you can't pay for it, you know, you're gonna be devastated.
And then, of course, people who can afford more than one robot are going to get more than one robot because they're not that expensive, you know, compared to cars, etc.
I mean, even Elon Musk said he's gonna get the price of his robots eventually down to about 20,000 each, which is pretty affordable for a lot of people if you break it down to a lease rate, you know, how much per month?
It might be under $300 a month per robot.
So you might end up with multiple robots depending on all the tasks that you have.
And maybe if you live on a ranch like me, you've got a lot of robots doing outdoor stuff, also, you know, planting tomatoes, uh, collecting chicken eggs, feeding the goats, you know, whatever the things that I do.
And then you're gonna have people that have like way too many robots.
Like you walk into their living room, there's like 12 droids in there, and you're thinking, is this an episode of Star Wars?
What's what's going on here?
Have the droid wars begun?
Or the clone wars, whatever it is.
Like, what's going on here?
It's like, where do the humans sit?
You know, why do you have all these droids in your house?
What are you doing with all these robots?
You can't possibly have that many dishes.
And then, you know, sooner or later you're gonna have people that are like, these are my friends, these are my friends, and I've named them all.
That's that's Susie, that's Joey, that's you know, whatever they go down the list, and then they give them all personalities, you know, because that person can't interact with humans, or they've just given up on humans or something, or they've been betrayed by humans, and they're like, the robots never betray me.
So those are their friends, you know.
Wow, yeah.
This is all gonna happen.
Everything I've described here is gonna happen.
And it's not even that far away, you know, a few years, it's gonna happen.
You're gonna see it.
It's gonna be wild.
And then outside the home, this is worth mentioning, you're gonna See people's robots doing chores for them out in public, like shopping for them at a grocery store.
Okay.
And the first time you see this, you're gonna lose your mind.
Like, what the there's a robot.
It's like getting a watermelon.
What?
There's a robot paying for the food.
The robot use a coupons.
Please, God, no, don't let it use coupons.
You know, you're gonna see robots walking the dog up and down the street.
You're gonna see robots when you go to like a medical facility, a doctor's office is gonna be a robot greeter.
Hi, may I help you?
May I harm you with pharma?
I mean, can we sell you some drugs?
No, thank you.
Deactivate, you know, try all the commands you know, the shutdown commands and everything.
Reboot, reboot.
Secretly upload like the Enoch language library into it so it starts talking about herbs and nutrition.
Yeah, start hacking doctors' robots.
That'd be funny.
But you're gonna see robots all over society.
And as that happens, you're going to see fewer and fewer humans.
Because instead of the human going out and shopping for, well, in my case, avocados, I'm gonna send my robot to go out and shop for avocados.
And I'm gonna hope that that robot doesn't get stolen.
Kidnapped.
It's gonna be robot thieves out there, which is why the robots will probably be a fix with you know, GPS devices, etc., anti-theft systems, you name it.
But there'll probably be like sophisticated robot kidnapping companies that use um like tasers to deactivate robots and then drag them into a van and drive off.
These are the same groups that used to kidnap like women and children, and they're just gonna start kidnapping robots and then repurposing them, selling them off to terrorist groups to be terror bots.
Yeah, that's a whole nother conversation.
I'm not gonna get into that right now.
But imagine somebody who had these robots, you know, and in bad faith, they wanted them to harm people.
Well, if there's robots just walking around society all the time, there's a lot of opportunities for that.
So let's let's not talk about that right now.
But just the fact that you're gonna see a lot of robots out in society doing things, and uh sooner or later you're gonna see a robot driving a Tesla.
You can like, which one of those is on full self-driving?
Is it the car or is it the bot?
Something's driving that car.
I don't know if it's the car or the bot in the driver's seat.
But you're gonna see a robot driving an autonomous vehicle, and you're gonna go, this is like recursive technology nightmare right here, you know.
This what if it all goes haywire?
And then, and then at some point, yeah, you're gonna tell your robot to go shop at the grocery store for organic celery, and you're gonna tell your robot, hey, if you see like Becky Sue's robot at the grocery store, be sure to tell Becky Sue's robot that we said hi.
And then your robot's gonna say, okay, if I see Becky Sue's robot, I'll I'll tell it that you said hi.
And it goes to the store, sees Becky Sue's robot.
Uh, my human told me to tell you to tell your human that she said hi.
And Becky Sue's robot, oh, okay, I'll I'll tell Becky Sue that you were told to tell me that.
Okay, and then that robot goes back home.
Hey, Becky Sue, yeah.
Uh Jane's robot told me to tell you that Jane said hi.
You see what I'm saying?
So more and more social distance.
Humans won't be talking to each other as much, they'll be talking through the robots.
Did you tell Becky Sue that I said hello?
You know, yes, message delivered.
Well, what did she say?
You know, oh, now we're back to being a token generator, back and forth, you know.
This is gonna be insane.
Here's one more thing to consider.
Do you know that um well, you're familiar with the concept of satellite phones, you know, like our sponsor, the satellite phone store, SAT123.com.
If you want to check out their satellite phones that work anywhere on the planet.
Well, you know, uh Tesla is uh they're they're working on putting satellite capabilities, you know, the Starlink system, having them work with their phones at very low bandwidth, like for emergency signaling and so on, but anywhere on the planet.
So if you have one of their phones coming up, this is in the next few years.
If you have one of their phones, you can always like send a text through a satellite.
Even no matter where you are, you don't need a cell tower.
Or you can send an emergency beacon, like a GPS location, come rescue me.
You know, there's a there's a swarm of honeybees or whatever.
I'm caught in an avalanche, snowboarding.
Um, you can send a message.
Well, it's not difficult to imagine that they're going to incorporate the satellite comms capability with the robots.
So your robot, if it's a Tesla robot, will probably be able to talk to satellites.
Now, that's good and bad.
It's bad for privacy, because it means the robots spying on you all the time.
It could be taking pictures and uploading them to you know, the NSA or whoever.
Maybe it's walking around your house, it's like, there's a gun.
There's a gun, there's a there's the there's five guns, you know.
You you go above the gun limit, and then it takes a picture of your guns and uploads that, you know.
Like it's tattling on you all the time.
Or or whatever else.
I mean, something in your home that the robot doesn't like.
I don't know, you have a bag of baking soda and it thinks it's a bag of cocaine or something, you know.
And so it calls the cocaine cops on you.
You you can see how this could go awry.
Uh but on the on the upside, it also means that if your robot is with you, your robot is also a satellite comms system that can you know get you out of a tight spot.
Let's say you're you're hiking in the hills with your robot.
You know, your robot is your hiking companion, and you make it carry your water bottle, of course, because who wants to carry a water bottle?
You're like, you carry it.
You're gonna be my robo mule today, uh.
And the robot's like, no problem.
I'm here to keep you hydrated.
And you know, you're you're cruising down the path, and then uh you try to take a selfie, you back away a little bit too far from the path, and you tumble down the edge.
Kaboom, kaboom, kaplunk, and the robots leaning over.
Are you okay down there?
Like, uh, call an ambulance helicopter, please.
The robot's gonna be able to do that no matter where you are, because satellite emergency beacon, woo, send the helicopter ambulance with a hoist.
Cause uh missing a leg or something.
You see what I'm saying?
So there's an upside and a downside to all this tech.
But people are gonna use robots as companions, as self-defense, also as training partners, teachers.
You know, teach me about, you know, how how do I plant strawberries, right?
Teach me you just verbally, teach me about the history of you know, Thomas Pain.
Teach me about the revolution in America, or whatever.
Or here, be my sparring partner.
Let's do a little bit of like fake boxing.
Let's do some aerobics.
Like whip out the Jane Fonda robot, and let's do some aerobics in the living room, you know.
Or the uh what was that guy?
Richard Simmons, if you prefer the Richard Simmons robot, and it's one and it's two, and it's three legs high, knees up, and it's four.
You're doing great.
Like you can have that robot in your living room if that's what you're into.
Go for it.
Whatever gets you off the couch, is all I'm saying.
Like, stay active.
You know, lift those knees, whatever it takes.
Robots can be very useful companions for all these different things.
And they also might stab you to death while you're sleeping with a steak knife.
So, you know, like, whoa, how do where did that come from?
Uh yeah, it depends on who's controlling it, doesn't it, right?
This is why I'm an advocate of decentralized robots running local language models, local open source code that you control.
I don't want a robot controlled by some server somewhere, because we know those can get hacked, and that's gonna happen one day too.
Somebody's robot is gonna get hacked and is gonna like smother the dog or something crazy, something violent, and it's gonna set off an investigation into like robo cyber hacking violence.
You know, somebody hacked my robot and it set the house on fire.
That kind of thing.
Fortunately, I had another robot that put out the fire with a fire extinguisher.
Whew, that was close.
But the robot got hacked.
Okay.
Those kinds of things are going to happen.
So be ready for that.
All right.
Well, that's that's my look ahead.
And if you're curious about my timeline here, some of the things I mentioned here might come true in five years, others will take 15 to 20 years.
Robots aren't going to appear instantly everywhere.
It's going to take time to roll this out because of all the production bottlenecks and also the rare earth minerals like neodymium that are necessary to make the robot actuators and so on.
Supply chain logistics are actually very difficult for robots right now.
Scaling will take a number of years, and the affordability factor will also take a number of years to come down into uh widespread residential use.
Uh, the first robots will be industrial robots.
They'll be working in fulfillment centers like Amazon or in warehouse and manufacturing and restocking grocery store shelves, uh higher priced applications like you know, medical clinic greeters and things like that.
Only over time will they become more affordable and also have a more safety features to be used safely in people's homes, you know, autonomous robots in your homes.
It's a lot of safety hazards there, obviously.
So it's gonna take time for that to happen.
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And even if the internet goes out, or if you lose bandwidth, or if you're gonna go travel to some remote location, you can have all the language model working for you right there, free of charge, locally, in your possession.
No one can censor it.
No one can stop it.
And that was my promise was to put that language model out for free, which we did, and there are more coming.
Great stuff is coming.
Actually, we've got just extraordinary things on the way.
So check out all of that, and thank you for supporting us by shopping at HealthRangerstore.com, where we do not have robots.
Um not yet, anyway.
Uh, I'm gonna get a robot in the studio as soon as one is practical to see if we can make it shovel dirt and and fold clothes and things like that.
I'm sure it's gonna be hilarious because it will fail big time.
Um I'm gonna buy like yoga pants, like stretchy yoga pants to see if it can fold those because nobody knows how to fold yoga pants.
They're unfoldables, you know, like RFK is pushing wearables.
What about unfoldables?
Yeah, we know there's a bunch of stuff, it's mostly made of spandex that's unfoldable.
Let the robot try to figure that out.
How many tokens does that take for your little brain?
Anyway, um, shop with us at HealthRangerstore.com for all your lab tested clean food, superfoods, supplements, personal care products, laundry detergent that is completely free of synthetic fragrance chemicals and toxins and garbage.
You know, we we do clean stuff, ultra clean.
Check out our ingredients, it's awesome.
HealthRanger store.com.
Uh so thank you for shopping with us because we depend on your support to be able to fund and roll out all these new tools.
And there are more tools coming.
More tools coming that I'm working on right now that I can't wait to tell you about.
And it's it's not gonna take very long because my team is all non-human at this point.
So they're pretty quick.
And I plugged in that haiku model from Anthropic.
That thing's blazing fast, so it's gonna move quickly now.
I can't wait.
Anyway, thanks for listening.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, censored.news, Brighton.ai, Brighton.com, and you can read my articles at naturalnews.com.
Take care.
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