All Episodes
Oct. 31, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
01:50:11
Brighteon Broadcast News, Oct 31, 2025 – ENDLESS KNOWLEDGE, robot hype and the new science of BUTT B
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
All right, welcome to Brighteon Broadcast News for Friday, October 31st, 2025.
I guess that means this is Halloween.
I don't know that anybody is paying much attention to Halloween this year because the real world is so scary all the time.
You know, if you want to see ghouls, just look at our senators, you know.
You don't need a special holiday to see the undead.
I mean, gosh, we have Nancy Pelosi, you know.
You want to see reanimated corpses?
We've got Mitch McConnell for that, you know.
Whatever.
No, I'm not even going to say happy Halloween because it's a demonic, satanic holiday.
It's just like, what?
We're going to walk our kids around the neighborhood and let them eat strange candy from strangers who have open coffins in their garages to scare children with images of demons and satanic whatever.
No, that's not a good holiday.
But if you want to see something really scary, just look at the price of groceries.
That's a horror show for you right there.
Or the cost of health insurance, which apparently is going up another like 25% or well, that's on the low end.
For some people, it's going to go up 50 or 60% for next year.
Insurance rates are through the roof.
Food costs are through the roof.
Gasoline and fuel is not that expensive right now.
So that's a bonus, but that could change the moment that we decide to attack Iran yet again.
And if the Strait of Hormuz gets closed, then, well, that's all she wrote for cheap energy.
Yeah, so watch out for that one.
Look, the situation is actually pretty dire.
We're at the last stages of a failed empire, which is the U.S. Empire.
We are witnessing the collapse of the empire's failed currency, which is the dollar.
And no, Trump and Besent aren't going to be able to rescue the dollar.
All they could do, maybe, if they're successful, is delay the total blowout hyperinflationary collapse for a little bit longer.
That's it.
Everybody knows the actual inflation in the real world is not 2.9%.
It's way more than that.
And have you heard of this concept called the K-shaped economy?
You know why it's called K?
Because one group, which is the upper-angled line of the K letter, one group is doing really, really well.
They're going up in assets and they're still spending money.
They're doing great.
It's probably most of you listening are in the upper leg of the K because you're smart.
You've taken precautions.
You've planned ahead.
You're good with finance.
You have good strategy.
You know what's happening in the world.
So you're not surprised by these things, right?
So you're on the upper K.
The lower K is everybody that's getting wiped out.
And also, that's most of Gen Z.
And I actually feel a little bit of pity for Gen Z. Like, none of us felt pity for millennials for some reason because they were so annoying.
But we feel pity for Gen Z because Gen Z barely got out of high school before they got hit by the worst economy in the history of our empire.
Or, well, I should say the worst economic climate.
It's not all Trump's fault, don't get me wrong.
He inherited a mountain of debt and he inherited all these spending programs and all these entitlements and everything that's bankrupting this country.
So Gen Z is so unbelievably screwed that right now they can't get jobs.
They even coming out of college, they can barely get jobs because very few companies are hiring.
They're replacing people with AI automation, as you've seen.
Amazon, you know, earlier in the week began firing 30,000 people.
UPS is letting go 48,000 people this year so far, apparently.
And, you know, Target and a lot of companies are letting people go like crazy.
And even Chipotle, did you see that Chipotle's stock price is, well, it's falling faster than a burrito off the edge of a plate.
It's falling into the dumpster.
I think it's down 30-something percent this year.
And it's not Chipotle's fault.
It's just their CEO just came out and actually told the truth and said, look, you know, our customers, who are a lot of them are younger people in their 20s, they just don't have any money.
They've run out of money.
They're done.
I mean, they can barely pay rent.
They don't have money for $10 burritos now.
So Chipotle is in trouble.
And so are a lot of retailers.
And so are a lot of auto dealers because cars aren't moving very rapidly in terms of sales.
And, you know, look, a lot of things are imploding.
I mean, Amazon, it's not just about automation replacing humans.
It's also about the fact that there's just not as much e-commerce happening anymore like there used to be.
I mean, during the COVID years, Amazon was booming because everybody was sitting at home and just online shopping with their free money on the government debit cards.
You know, what was that called?
The COVID stimulus fund money.
And everybody was just shopping around and spending that.
And so that was really great for Amazon.
It was great for a lot of online retailers, etc.
It was great for restaurants too, locally, once they could open back up.
But there isn't free stimulus money right now, not for the people.
There is always for banks, obviously, but not for the people.
And so people are cutting back like crazy on lots of things.
So when you hear the K-shaped economy, remember that's one line going up, one line going down.
There's not that many people left in the middle anymore.
And in terms of who's going up, it's a small percentage of the overall population.
Most people are going down in terms of their financial situation.
They're not doing well.
Most people are losing whatever life savings they had or losing their jobs or losing actual income in terms of how much it purchases, right?
Even if their salary stays the same, they're losing more and more every month because the cost of groceries keeps rising.
So most people in this economy, I would say about 90%, are losing.
About 10% are actually gaining and doing well.
And that 10%, that's either people who know how to plan, who know finance, like you, or at the elite level, it's just the wealthy bankers that are always bailed out by the government anyway.
And, you know, they never have to face the music for their bad financial decisions.
They always get bailed out.
So gold and silver, after taking a nosedive over the last week or a week and a half or so, gold's back up over $4,000 an ounce now, as I'm recording this.
Silver is about, I think it's close to $49 again.
It'll probably head back up to $50,000 shortly.
Keep an eye on all of that.
Very important to know that as gold and silver are rising, it just means that the value of the dollar is plummeting.
And whoever's left holding dollars is going to be left holding a bag of junk because it's not going to be worth much.
So stick to your plan.
Whatever you're doing right now, that has you in a much better position than most people.
You probably own some gold, you own some silver, you have some stored food, you've worked to reduce your cost of living, you know, you've eliminated frivolous expenditures and things like that.
Whatever you're doing, keep doing that.
It's going to be really important moving ahead.
All right.
Now, a couple of updates from my side.
As you know, we have been moving our studio this week to our new studio building.
It's a completely separate building.
And I was at the studio today and checking things out.
And we were fixing lights and we were fixing screens.
And I mean, we're moving the big desk also.
And we're not ready yet, but it's, you know, we have until next week to get it all ready.
So my crew is working hard most of the day today.
And also Monday, I'm going to start filming again on Tuesday is the current plan.
So the next interview I will have for you will likely be Wednesday of next week.
And it'll be in the new studio, which should be interesting because I'm not sure it's going to be running at 100%.
But as long as, I mean, yeah, as long as the lights work and the camera can record and whatever, you know, I'm okay with that.
We have good audio.
It doesn't have to look perfect, but I will give you a little tour of the whole new studio area next week.
I think you'll really enjoy that.
And one of the things that we plan to do in 2026 is we're going to purchase various robots.
And we've got, this building is about 5,000 square feet, and we're going to be able to do a lot of robot arena testing for many, many different kinds of tasks.
You know, can this robot, can it move dirt?
Can it shovel?
Can it pull weeds?
Can it do laundry?
Can it do dishes?
You know, etc.
Can it pick things up off the floor and put them in a basket?
You would think that that would be a simple task, but it's really kind of complex.
And as these robots become available, we'll purchase them and we'll check them out for you and show you all that on video.
Maybe eventually we'll have a robot sitting at the desk offering color commentary or something.
I don't know.
I'm afraid of what kind of language model these robots might be running.
It's probably going to be some Google pro-pharmaceutical language model.
If I try to have a conversation with it, it's going to say, have you taken your vaccines today?
I'm going to have to get out the sword.
That's it.
Off with your arm.
Droids don't need arms.
We'll see what happens.
Can I call them droids?
Is that okay?
Since, you know, I saw Star Wars as a kid and ever since it hasn't been bots.
It's been droids, which is, of course, short for android, which isn't exactly the right term, but whatever.
Speaking of robots, I've got a special report for you here today because I'm calling BS on this new robot that's just been announced.
It's called NEO, and it's been announced by a company called 1X Tech.
And I think they're full of bunk, actually, because they're positioning this robot as an autonomous robot that can run around your house and do all these tasks.
And I don't think that's true.
And I explain why in my report.
I think it's really misleading marketing, bordering on fraudulent claims, actually.
I will use that term with the qualifier that I think it's bordering on fraudulent marketing.
But we'll see.
In any case, I have not put down a deposit for the Neo robot because I think it's just going to be a paperweight.
It's just going to be a $20,000 disappointing piece of junk because it doesn't look like it does anything autonomously.
or hardly anything.
Certainly doesn't do the dishes.
And frankly, until a robot can do the dishes, I'm not sure.
I don't want to buy it.
Do you?
Do you want a robot that just walks around and tells you stories and things?
No.
We don't need that.
I mean, those of us who could benefit from a robot helper, we need it to do real world tasks.
And it can't be some slow poke thing.
All these videos I see so far of this Neo robot, it's like slow motion.
It's actually kind of creepy slow.
It's like it's plotting along the way.
It's creepily too slow.
It doesn't have a face.
It's got two eyeballs and the rest of its face is just one solid covering, which just reminds me of Neo from The Matrix when Agent Smith sealed up his mouth and he could not speak.
Remember that at the interrogation after they arrested him?
And, you know, Neo was asking for his phone call and Agent Smith said, what good is a phone call if you're unable to speak?
And then he seals up his mouth, right?
And then Neo's like, well, that's what this robot looks like to me.
It looks like a creepy robot.
Somebody sealed up its mouth and it moves too slow.
And I don't think it does anything other than walk around.
I don't need something just walking around.
I mean, if you just want something to walk around, just go out to Hobby Lobby and buy a little Halloween scarecrow and like duct tape it to the top of your Roomba and let it roll around.
Oh, look, it's a scarecrow android, you know, whatever.
And it vacuums, you know, vacuum is better than Neo.
So I've got a special report on this Neo robot where I'm calling BS on it.
And by the way, how do they think that this robot is going to handle all the complexities of a person's house when it took Roomba, you know, the robot vacuum company, it took them, what?
How long has it been?
You know, 15 years or something?
Just to have a robot that could vacuum the floor without acting like an idiot.
You remember the original Roomba?
It was a random floor pattern.
It just had a bumper on the front.
And every time it bumped into something, it randomly chose a different direction.
And then it went off in that direction and vacuumed until it hit something else.
It was like a giant game of vacuum pinball on your living room floor.
It was the dumbest thing ever.
And I think it took about 10 years for vacuum robots just to be able to map your floor, which you would think that that would be a pretty basic type of concept, right?
Can you just map the floor?
Can you know where you are?
The original Roombas, they didn't know where they were.
They would get lost.
They would beep and eventually they would talk.
They're like, I'm lost.
Take me back.
And you'd spend more time picking up the Roomba than just picking up the garbage on the floor.
It was just like you're just following the Roomba around.
It's like, oh, the robot's going, and then you're going after the robot.
And I'm afraid that Neo is going to be like that.
Like, you tell Neo, do the dishes, and you've got to follow Neo to the kitchen and pick up all the dishes that it drops.
And, you know, you got to interrupt.
Oh, no, you got to rinse that one.
No, you can't put it in like that.
It won't get clean.
Neo, you know, it's not going to save you time.
It's going to cost you more time for years to come until they nail down some of the behavior logic, which is going to take time.
Years.
I'm not going to be the first person to buy that robot.
I'm going to let the first wave of disappointed consumers return those robots.
And then I'm going to wait another six months to see if the company makes it actually do something useful.
But I have higher hopes for the Tesla robot.
Is that called like Megatron or something?
I don't really, I'm not keeping track of all the robot names because I'm not really interested until they're ready to buy.
You know, I don't care about robot dancing videos because that's all pre-scripted stuff.
I want to know when they're shipping a robot that I can buy and unload it in the new studio and get it out of the crate.
Hey, welcome.
Now, I want you to sweep the floor.
I want you to, you see those boxes over there?
Yeah.
I want you to move them across the room and put them over there.
Let's just start with some simple things.
I want you to pick up the trash that's scattered around the floor for some reason.
Probably from the last robot that we tested here, it didn't do very well.
It's only got one arm left.
So run around, pick up all the garbage.
And then it's going to be the most boring video ever.
You know, because they're going to be slow.
It's going to look like a Frankenstein robot actually just slowly moving along.
You know, this isn't the iRobot movie robot.
This is this is like the early Roomba version of robots.
By the way, I was watching a YouTube video of someone commenting on this new Neo robot, which, as I said, has a spooky, creepy kind of face with no mouth.
And it moves in a creepy fashion.
It's like, it feels like the Halloween robot.
And it was so bizarre to me because this person on YouTube was introducing the video.
He's going to talk about Neo.
And he said, Neo is the first robot that comes to your house and lives with you.
And then he said, get your mind out of the gutter.
And I'm like, what?
My mind was not in the gutter.
What are you even thinking about?
I'm like, then I had to think about what?
Wait a minute.
What is he thinking about?
This does not add up.
Creepy Neo robot.
Are some people thinking dirty thoughts about this robot?
Because that's, it's the, it's, it's how to properly say this.
I know there's a lot of perves in society that are attracted to weird things like vehicles and like bunny rabbits and things, but this is this is the least sexy robot imaginable, I would think.
I mean, it's creepy.
It's a creepy robot.
What possible dirty thoughts could you have about this robot other than, hey, I want you to get your hands dirty and get down there and pull some weeds?
And I, and that's not a euphemism.
mean pull the damn weeds because I want to grow some food in my garden.
The only dirty thought I have about this robot is I want it to move dirt.
I want it to have a wheelbarrow and a shovel.
I want to see if it can do some composting.
So I don't know what other people are thinking about this, but I'm a little bit afraid to find out.
And I just want to remind everybody that these robots have cameras, you know, in their two eyes.
And those cameras are connected to the company's servers and they can record everything.
Okay.
So whatever this dude on YouTube was thinking of doing with his robot talk about the ultimate blackmail material, you know, I bet Mossad would love to roll out a line of robots that live with you and just spy on everybody.
And then they can blackmail you if you happen to be a Supreme Court justice or something or a senator, you know.
Would Lindsey Graham bring a robot home?
Maybe.
I don't want to know.
Maybe he would.
Okay, but that's not where you and I are coming from on these bots.
We want them to do practical things.
And I don't think it's there yet.
So I'm going to play that report for you.
And then I've got another report that I recorded not long ago.
It's actually, I think you'll love the title.
It says, no excuses.
All human knowledge is now available to everyone.
And this report, it might trigger a few people.
It may sound a little judgmental, but the reason I had to record this is because I've been hearing from some people over the last couple of months that this excuse that, well, we didn't know about all kinds of things, like about vaccine dangers.
We didn't know they were dangerous.
Or about, you know, if you eat high fructose corn syrup all day long and drink soda, you might get diabetes.
Oh, we didn't know.
How did you not know?
How did you not know?
Because what I explained in this podcast is that we now live in a time when you have instant access to all human knowledge for free through AI engines.
And you can use our AI engine if you wish at brightion.ai or you can use the mainstream engines that are out there.
A lot of people are using ChatGPT, which of course has a lot of pharmaceutical bias in it, pro-vaccine bias, etc.
Whereas our model is much smarter on all these issues that matter.
But anybody can use any engine for basic questions like what's in the vaccine?
What are the ingredients?
And can we walk through those ingredients?
Like, what's this for?
What is WI-38?
Where does it come from?
Oh, aborted human fetal tissue cells.
Did you know that?
Oh, really?
Where did they get WI-38?
Oh, they murdered an unborn baby that was in the womb of a psychiatric patient mother.
And then they just cloned that like cancer cells ever since.
Yeah, then they put it in the vaccines.
What else would you like to know?
But people have no excuse now for not knowing things because all the answers are at your fingertips for free.
By the way, on vaccines, you can use our new website, vaccineforensics.com.
Just type that in at the address bar of your browser, your favorite browser.
I like to use the Brave browser, Brave.com.
And again, just go to vaccineforensics.com and then you can start asking it anything about vaccine ingredients and it's going to blow your mind.
It will blow your mind.
Ask it about MRC5.
What is MRC5?
Huh.
Where does it come from?
I wonder.
Isn't it funny that people will almost fanatically read ingredients of food that they buy at the grocery store?
So careful with what they eat, but then they won't read any ingredients at all about something they inject.
It's like, you know, you know, the injection is a lot more important than whatever you eat.
Because, you know, when you eat something, it doesn't go right into your tissue.
You know, there's a shot, there's a chance that you might not absorb it or you might be able to poop it out eventually or whatever.
But you inject something, you should really know what's in that.
But people don't know.
They don't ask.
So my point in this report is that if anybody says to me from now on, oh, I didn't know.
I didn't know.
I'm like, well, you should know.
You have a responsibility to know.
How on earth can you not know?
Because anything you want to know, all you have to do is ask.
Do you not know there's an internet?
Are you living somewhere that you have no electricity?
Okay, well, that would be awesome, actually.
But if you're doing that, you have to have a lot of knowledge to be able to survive there anyway.
But everybody listening to this, obviously you have access to the internet.
How can people not know things that are really important to their lives, their health, their financial security, their privacy, etc., their freedom, their futures?
How do people not know things at this moment in time?
I even heard recently from people when, you know, RFK Jr.
was talking about Tylenol and everything.
I heard from people, I didn't know Tylenol could cause liver damage.
Really?
How did you not know that?
Have you been taking it?
How did you not know?
People just take stuff without knowing?
Ah, okay.
Wow.
I don't know.
Am I being judgmental?
Well, you know, so be it, but I don't take mystery pills.
You know what I mean?
I don't take mystery injections either.
Yeah, I don't do mystery street drugs, but apparently a lot of people just, whatever they recommend, you know, we just take it.
Okay, good luck.
But today you have no excuse.
You can go to any engine, any AI engine or even a search engine and just say, is Tylenol safe?
Or can Tylenol cause damage?
And I mean, ask it to our engine, Brighteon.ai.
It's going to say, yeah, it can actually kill you by destroying your liver because it's known to cause liver toxicity, especially when combined with alcohol.
And there's a protection against that.
And the protection is, of course, licorice root herb containing glycerisin.
If you don't want to destroy your liver and for some reason you want to take Tylenol, which doesn't even work in my experience, that's not even something I keep around.
I've never known Tylenol to do anything other than damage the liver.
But if you want to take Tylenol, you need to take licorice root.
So now you have the knowledge, right?
Now you know.
So anything that you have a question about, like, is it okay to eat this?
Whatever this is, you should ask our AI engine.
Or even better, like, suppose you're going out to eat with friends and you know you're going to go out to eat at a, I don't know, like a Mexican restaurant and you're going to have some hard shell tacos and you know that those corn tortillas are fried in the cheapest oil possible.
The cheapest soybean, canola, corn oil, the lowest grade, lowest price oil that's probably been deep fried for 72 hours straight, right?
You know that that's what you're going to eat.
You can just ask the engine, hey, what can I take to protect me from that?
Because it's like, I'm going to go to a Mexico restaurant, I'm going to eat the most toxic tostadas imaginable, but I can't get out of it because, you know, it's my friends or whatever.
What can I take?
And it'll tell you, you know, vitamin E, you know, Azazanth and vitamin C, eat a bunch of fruit, have a fruit salad, you know, eat some lettuce, have some greens, have some cabbage, whatever.
All these things that can protect you, you can still eat the toxic tostada as long as you do these protections up front.
You're going to be okay.
The people who are the most damaged from the toxic tostadas, those are people that on an empty stomach, they're eating toxic things and drinking, you know, high fructose corn syrup, soda pop, and they're not having fruit, vegetables, nutrition, superfoods, any of that garbage.
Those are the ones that are going to get hit the most.
And those are the people who never seem to take an interest in what they're eating or swallowing or injecting or anything else.
And why?
Why is that?
How?
I mean, I ask this genuinely: who would want to go through this world not knowing things?
Does that make me weird to want to know what I'm eating?
I hope not.
I think that's a normal idea, but it seems alien to a lot of our consumers these days.
They're just like, whatever, you know.
Okay.
And you know, the same thing goes for what you're drinking.
Obviously, you want clean water, but also what you're breathing.
And, you know, breathing, I wish people understood the miracle of hemoglobin and how your lungs work and how the molecule hemoglobin is a transformer molecule that in one configuration,
it's highly, highly attracted to O2 or oxygen, so that when you inhale the oxygen in the air, which is only like 19% of the atmosphere, it, you know, it's attracted to your hemoglobin like a magnet.
And then the hemoglobin goes to your cells.
It delivers the oxygen and then it reconfigures itself to where it's now a magnet for carbon dioxide.
So then the CO2 leaps out of your cells onto the hemoglobin to hitch a ride back to your lungs where you exhale and then the hemoglobin can't wait to get rid of the CO2 and then you're breathing out CO2.
And all of this is happening, obviously, you know, at the molecular level, billions of times every minute in your body to deliver oxygen and get rid of carbon dioxide waste all over your body.
It's a miracle.
It's a miracle.
But then you've got some people that are like, let's just light some tobacco on fire and inhale that and see what happens.
Not good.
You know, over the long haul, obviously, you know, maybe a little bit here and there doesn't kill you.
But some people want to smoke all kinds of crazy things, including recreational drugs.
And they destroy their, well, sometimes they destroy their lungs.
Sometimes they destroy other systems, their heart, etc.
And then they can end up on some pretty freaky, kind of creepy, new, advanced technology that I'd like to introduce to you today called the butt-breathing technology.
And this is not a joke.
There is now butt-breathing technology, also known as interal ventilation, which I can't make this up.
If there were ever a Halloween medical story, this is it.
So there have already been clinical trials.
Apparently, 27 healthy adult males endured rectal administration of a substance called perfluorodecalin, which can carry oxygen at very high levels.
It can be hyperoxygenated.
And so this perfluorodecalin was circulated through their rectums.
What's the plural of rectum?
Is it recti?
Circulated through their recti.
And they were, apparently they were fine, but they did show mild gastrointestinal symptoms such as discomfort.
Yeah, I can only imagine why.
Like, who signs up for the butt-breathing clinical trial?
Huh?
I know some of you are like, hey, I know somebody who butt breathes all the time, but it's only one way.
And that's not exactly breathing.
It's more like snoring.
Can they get paid for medical experiments?
I'm pretty sure they're running a chemistry lab in their anus or something.
But no, there are no financial rewards for that.
That's just called flatulence.
But in this experiment, the idea is that people who have destroyed their lungs and who just can't get the oxygenation that they need from their lungs because either their hemoglobin is not working or their lungs are all shot from too much smoking or what have you, they can breathe through their butt.
And the idea would be that this hyperoxygenated liquid, perfluorodecalin, is circulated through the butt and then they can absorb oxygen because the rectal area is very close to the bloodstream.
I don't know how far I want to take this, but some people have done like coffee enemas.
You've heard of coffee enemas.
And that gets the caffeine like really rapidly absorbed into the bloodstream, right?
You've heard of that.
Maybe some of you have done it.
Yeah, I have not done that.
I'm never going to do that.
But some people have done coffee enemas.
I guess it's part of like a liver cleanse or something.
And sure enough, boom, right into the bloodstream.
So if someone has trouble breathing, they can apparently, you can be a butt breather.
And there are questions in my mind.
I'm not trying to take this podcast into the gutter or anything.
But sooner or later, don't you have to use your butt for something else?
I mean, do you hold your breath while you poo?
How does that work?
Do you hyperventilate with your butt to super saturate your oxygen so that you can hold your breath longer?
And then you pull out the butt breather and then you hit the toilet really fast and hope and pray that you can hold your breath for however long that takes.
And then when you're done, you put the butt breather back in and like, oh, that's close.
Oh my goodness.
Whew.
Almost passed out.
I don't know.
I think it's easier, maybe just don't destroy your lungs.
If you end up on a butt breather because you couldn't stop smoking, you've made some bad decisions somewhere along the way is all I'm saying.
You might want to recalibrate the use of your organs before you end up on a butt breather.
But what really concerned me about this study is that it said, and this is out of Science Tokyo.
I told you the Japanese are good engineers, didn't I?
They made the butt breather.
This is out of Tokyo.
And you can find this online.
It's called Ventilating the Rectum to Support Respiration.
Researchers at the Tokyo Medical and Dental University, what's this got to do with dental?
Demonstrate the benefits of providing oxygen through the lining of the intestine in experimental models of respiratory failure.
And what they're saying is that this might be especially useful during respiratory pandemics.
So you know how during COVID, when you went to the hospital and then they fraudulently diagnose you with COVID, and what do they do?
They put you on a ventilator immediately because then they could kill you with a ventilator and then they could collect up to $500,000 in government incentives for a COVID death in the hospital.
So they were killing patients for mine.
And so they would say, oh, you got to have a ventilator.
And then they knock you out, shove a ventilator down your throat.
And from that point on, they can kill you pretty easily because you're unconscious.
Well, now it's even worse.
Now you show up at the hospital with a sniffle or something.
Oh, butt breather for you.
You know, they knock you unconscious, shove a butt breather up your rectum to say, oh, this is the new technology.
Yeah, last year we used to shove it down your trachea.
You know, this year we shove it up your rectum.
And maybe in the next pandemic, the Bill Gates special will have a tube on each end.
No matter what you do, you are, you know, you're a prisoner of the system.
So if you don't want to end up on a butt breather in the next pandemic, I strongly advise you to learn about nutrition.
Learn about ivermectin, you know, as an emergency drug is based on soil microbes, by the way.
Learn about even maybe chlorine dioxide.
Learn about zinc.
Learn about quercetin.
You know, anything to avoid the butt breather is what I'm saying.
Be healthy in your life.
Make good choices.
And if you need a motivation, think about the Institute of Science Tokyo butt breather experiment.
You don't want to end up there.
And I know it's easy to make jokes and to tease the researchers.
But I'm sure they have some good comebacks to that.
Oh, yeah, they hate us because they ate us.
Yeah.
Something like that.
But this is a real technology, folks.
And it just shows you that when you become a victim of the medical system, there is no dignity.
There is no dignity.
And just because I think you don't believe me, I'm going to show you this image from the study.
Okay, here it is.
All right, to my editor, go ahead and show the image and kind of zoom in.
Notice there's a giant vat of oxygenated liquid with a mouse, a rat, and a pig with their asses in the vat, and they're wearing masks.
Okay?
They're wearing a mask.
It's a pig demic pandemic.
The pig has a snout mask.
The rat has a nose mask.
And so does the mouse.
And their butts are hanging in the liquid, which is called the interal ventilation via anus, otherwise known as the EVA.
And for some reason, they use like a X for the anus.
What?
And then they say that, then they show the O2 PFC enema where this liquid is going into the human butt, the patient in the hospital bed.
Like, are you sharing oxygenation liquid with the pig?
With the pig butt in the butt bath?
Is this science comedy hour?
Oh my God.
O2 perfluorocarbon, PFC.
Yeah.
Folks, take care of your lungs.
Take care of your lungs.
You do not want to share hyper-oxygenated anus liquid with a pig, a rat, and a mouse.
Let me tell you.
One of the authors of this paper, Ryo Okabe, said, quote, we use experimental models of respiratory failure in mice, pigs, and rats to try out two methods, delivering oxygen into the rectum in gas form.
That does not sound comfortable.
And infusing an oxygen-rich liquid via the same route.
So if you stumble upon a research team at the Institute of Science, Tokyo, and they are trying to shove something in a pig's rectum.
Just trust that it's science, okay?
It's the science.
Just saying, oh, dear God, what did the pig think?
Probably not that this is science.
What are you doing?
What are you doing to those animals, for God's sake?
Trust us.
It's the science.
Okay.
All right.
Okay, enough.
I feel sorry for these guys, actually.
They're trying to do something useful for humanity, but no doubt they're going to be the butt of many jokes.
Sad to say.
Okay.
All right.
So that's your Halloween story.
But it's all true.
There's your Halloween science episode right there.
I'm going to play the two special reports for you here coming up next, but I just want to say be safe, everybody.
The world's all weirded out and everything right now.
So, probably if you have kids or grandkids, yeah, I wouldn't let them eat strangers candy, you know, walking around at night, wandering around in a mask with no peripheral vision while cars are driving up and down the neighborhood roads.
You know, how did we survive?
You know, how did any of us make it this far?
Because when we were kids, you know, we would canvass multiple neighborhoods.
We thought we were getting ahead, you know, but we weren't.
But there was, you know, it was a high trust society back then.
Nobody would poison you on purpose.
Whereas today, it's like you can't trust a creepy neighbor down the road.
It's like, that guy's never come outside.
You know, you're going to take your kids to that house and like just eat whatever he throws in your bucket.
Come on.
No.
All right.
Be safe.
And thank you for supporting us, by the way.
We couldn't do all of the fun stuff that we do.
And we couldn't roll out the AI engine.
You know, we couldn't do the vaccine forensics.com website.
We couldn't have the new studio.
We couldn't maybe eventually buy robots, if there's ever any of them that work.
We couldn't do any of this without your support.
And I'm dedicated to bringing you lots and lots of free access to really important information that can make a huge difference in your life.
Look, as much as I joke around, because I like to keep life interesting, I joke around.
I get it.
I know.
But I have a very serious mission because I have great compassion for humanity, compassion for all forms of life, people, animals, plants, you name it.
I'm here to help defend life.
And one of the ways I do that is by making all this information available to help uplift people, to help educate people.
And I couldn't do it without your support.
So thank you for supporting us at healthrangerstore.com.
And there, you know, if you want to take care of your health, that's the place to do it.
We've got all the superfoods and supplements and storable foods and, you know, really clean personal care products, everything, amazing formulations, everything for your body, for your home, for your shower, your bathroom, your laundry, whatever, your kitchen.
You can get it all.
HealthRangerStore.com.
And every purchase helps support us so that we can continue with our mission to bring you amazing information.
So thank you for your support.
All right.
Enjoy these two special reports.
And then I'll be back with you sometime soon, maybe over the weekend.
I don't know.
It depends on what happens.
But certainly Monday, if not sooner, I won't have an interview for you probably on Monday, but I will have an episode.
And then we'll launch the new studio next week and I'll give you a tour.
It'll be all kinds of fun.
So enjoy the rest of the show and have a great weekend.
Well, sorry about the profanity, but today I am publicly calling bullshit on the new Neo robot from a company called 1X Tech.
Now, they just publicly announced the robot along with promotional videos that I believe are incredibly misleading.
I'll get to that.
And apparently on their website, you can pre-purchase the robot or sign up to purchase it for $20,000.
Or you can sign up to get a robot and pay $500 a month or something like that for some period of time.
Sort of a lease to own the robot.
And the way the robot is presented in promotional videos and in text and in interviews is that this robot will autonomously do all the chores in your home.
It will do the dishes.
It will fold laundry.
It will walk the dog.
It will sweep the floors.
You know, it will water the plants.
It will do all these things all by itself.
And it's even said that you can just leave your home, you know, go to work for the day, have the robot do all your chores, and then when you come back home, everything's done.
And that it will just keep doing that every day without you having to, you know, train it or control it.
That the robot does this by itself.
However, in reality, even the promotional video, which is a highly controlled, sterile environment that does not in any way reflect the typical person's home, you know, because people's homes have dogs and children and cats and clutter and stuff in the way and weird stairwells and, you know, whatever.
Marbles on the floor, you know.
But even in the sterile testing environment that they show, it indicates that almost everything the robot is doing is through teleoperation.
What it means is there's a human remotely controlling the robot, a human worker for the company.
And this human worker is wearing motion sensors and VR goggles and is controlling the robot as a giant mechanical puppet.
So the things they're showing you, for the most part, there are a couple of exceptions, they are not autonomous behavior at all.
It's just a human controlling the robot.
So number one, are you going to pay $20,000 for a robot-shaped puppet that some remote person has to embody and connect to so they can see through the robot eyes and they can manipulate the robot's hands in order to do your laundry?
In other words, let me put it this way.
Do you want some India tech worker to be looking through your robot while they're rifling through your laundry with all your underwear and pantyhose and whatever else you've got in your laundry?
Do you want some Indian tech bro who can also record everything to be walking around your house, looking through your robot's eyes, maybe encountering you half naked on the toilet?
Oh, sorry.
Walking around your bedroom, walking around your super secret closet with your gun safe and all your battle rifles and everything.
You know, you get the idea or you see your gold laying around, your jewelry, whatever.
If you've got that.
Is that what you want in a robot?
No, no, nobody wants that.
Nobody wants that.
And it looks to me like the marketing material on this robot is incredibly misleading and possibly fraudulent.
And when I say possibly fraudulent, of course, that decision is up to, you know, prosecutors, et cetera.
But I'm reminded of a company called Nikola Motors.
And Nikola Motors committed actual fraud.
They claimed to build an EV truck, a highway truck.
And in their promotional videos, they seemed to show a truck, you know, a big 18-wheeler rig that they claimed was powered by batteries.
They claimed that this was under its own power, cruising down the highway.
You know, this is a big part of the promotional video to raise money from investors and to get interest from, you know, the media and all kinds of people.
And it later turned out that that truck was just coasting down a very long hill.
And the highway they chose for it was chosen because it has something like a 3% decline or something like that, or maybe it's 2%.
Just enough of a decline stretching many, many miles that a truck could coast down the hill.
And so it was towed to the top of the hill and then it was pushed to start coasting.
So the CEO of that company, the founder, I think his name was Milton, he was criminally charged with securities fraud and some other charges.
And he was convicted and he was sent to prison for four years.
Why?
Because he faked it.
He faked it.
He made all these claims about their technology that were not real.
So, of course, when I'm looking at the Neo robot, I'm reminded of this because I'm seeing journalists talk about the Neo robot based on the marketing materials they've seen or the promotional videos.
And they talk about the robot as if it is an autonomous robot that walks around your house all on its own and does the dishes and does your laundry, etc.
And it doesn't do that.
It doesn't do that as of this moment.
And this is early November 2025.
Now, maybe it will do that in 2027, possibly.
I mean, it's got the hardware, but it doesn't have currently, it doesn't have the capability, the software, the training, the behavior models in order to do what they are showing it doing.
And that's what the Nikola company did.
They showed the truck, claimed it was self-powered, but it wasn't.
It was coasting.
Well, the 1X Tech company is showing this robot and implying that it's autonomous when it's not autonomous.
It's actually remotely controlled.
And apparently, you have to schedule with a remote tech to have a preset time where they then embody your robot and then they control it to complete the task that you need completed.
And like that's super creepy.
Number one, if I buy a robot that I think is autonomous, I shouldn't have to schedule for some remote person, probably from another country, to be able to connect to it and to see through its eyes and to control it to do the task.
You know, that's wrong on every level.
That's not how the robot is presented.
That's not how it's marketed.
I'm not paying $20,000 for a puppet.
And the other creepy thing about this is that when it's connected, that means another human somewhere who probably has access to your home address because that's probably right there on your account.
They know your name, your home address.
They are walking around your home doing tasks like laundry.
So they're rifling through your laundry.
They're doing your dishes.
They're vacuuming the carpet in your bedroom.
Maybe you want them to make the bed, you know?
So they are walking around your house and there's a human being watching all of that.
And if that human being happens to be someone who's not trustworthy, they could have a side hustle of selling the names and addresses of homes where they saw a lot of valuable loot.
They sell it off to some robbery group in the U.S. that runs around and robs the houses that had the best loot.
And if you think that can't happen, you know, you don't have much of an imagination because that kind of thing happens all the time.
Just not with robots, but with other people that come to your home, like, you know, HVAC worker or landscape workers or whatever.
There's all kinds of workers out there that have ties to gangs, to robbery gangs, or drug cartels, or what have you.
If they see something interesting, they get paid a reward for mentioning your home and your address and what was found there.
There's a whole ecosystem for this kind of information.
In case you don't know that, all the home robberies that happen out there are not just accidents.
They're not random in many cases.
They're planned because somebody saw something valuable at that house.
So we have privacy concerns and then we have marketing claims concerns.
And I believe that once people start receiving these robots, unless there are huge improvements, people are going to be screaming mad about the fact that the robot doesn't do what the ads claimed they could do.
That it's not really autonomous with many of the tasks.
Like possibly it can do things like answer the door.
It can walk to the door or it can pick up something like a piece of clothing from the floor and it can move it and drop it off somewhere else.
I mean, very, very basic, simple tasks.
But doing dishes or putting away groceries in the refrigerator, these are highly complex tasks.
And my assessment, as an AI developer and someone who builds AI systems, I don't think that the 1X tech company, I very much doubt that they have already developed the technology to handle all of the complexities of home tasks and all of the edge cases.
You know, what do you do when there are pets around or children?
What do you do with weird shadows that can deceive the cameras?
You know, how does the robot know to not step on the cat?
How does the robot make sure that it doesn't move in a way that causes an elderly person to stumble and fall?
You know, I mean, there are unlimited edge cases like that that you could possibly imagine as well.
I am confident that these have not been worked out yet.
In fact, I think it's going to be many years before they are worked out.
I think we're far from autonomous robots that do all of these household tasks and chores on their own.
Now, I'm also reminded of a company that was run by a woman named Elizabeth Holmes.
And I forgot the name of the company, but she was also criminally prosecuted.
And I believe she's been convicted to prison.
She founded a company that claimed to have made a miniature blood test device that you would keep at your home and you'd put in a drop of blood or something like a drop of blood.
And it would run, I don't know, hundreds of different tests right there in the machine because all these tests were miniaturized to test everything.
You know, blood markers, maybe cholesterol and all kinds of other things.
And it would be your at-home health diagnostics, you know, super machine.
And this woman, I think because she was a woman, she was celebrated across the business media like nobody other than Steve Jobs.
She was celebrated as, you know, a multi-billionaire.
The valuation of her company just skyrocketed.
She got former White House officials involved on her board.
I think, I don't know, I think maybe even Bill Clinton, maybe Donald Rumsfeld, I forgot all the names, but high-level people, I mean, really high-level government officials were on the board of her company.
And it turned out, at least according to the prosecutors, and she was found guilty of, I believe, various forms of fraud.
They never had the machine that would really work like that.
And when members of the press would come visit them and try to use the machine, they would provide a drop of blood.
And then Elizabeth Holmes and her staff would surreptitiously run the blood to the lab in the back where they had regular equipment that would run blood tests.
And then they would feed that into the machine.
And then they would pretend that the machine did the blood test.
Well, it was all fraud, right?
And investors lost billions of dollars when the fraud became apparent that the machine couldn't do what she said it was going to do.
So that's another case there.
And again, I'm not accusing the 1X tech company of outright fraud.
In my opinion, what they're doing looks like misrepresentation to me.
So I might call it, I'm suspicious of it being fraud adjacent, let's say.
At the moment, it sort of rhymes with Elizabeth Holmes and the Nicola Motors.
But we'll see.
You know, once they start delivering these robots, these robots had better do the freaking laundry, or I think this company is going to be in real trouble with potentially government prosecutors or, you know, securities fraud investigators because they've raised a lot of money and they have promoted their robots doing things and implying things that I do not believe are real.
And unless, I mean, maybe their plan is, well, we'll improve the software by the time the robot ships.
Well, that's a very risky gambit, you know.
Maybe you can pull that off.
Maybe you can't.
But you're on the hook.
I mean, you've got how many, probably tens of thousands of people ordering this robot now and putting down money, right?
So that's huge.
Once you start taking money from customers, now you activate all kinds of other laws involving commerce and interstate commerce regulations and then the FTC and the feds, etc.
You start taking money from people.
I mean, look, you can run around and claim you have the best robot all day long and film all the videos you want all day long as long as you're not selling it and taking money from investors and customers.
But the minute you start taking money for your robot, that thing had better work.
And that's where I'm not sure that it's going to work at all.
I think you're going to have a wave of refunds.
I think you're going to have a wave of bad press unless they can pull a rabbit out of their hat.
Yeah, I said hat, and they can just magically bring in the perfect, you know, behavioral model, whatever that happens to be.
And then on day one, out of the box, the robot's like, yeah, I can do your laundry.
Let me show you.
And it just starts folding your laundry and gathering it up and putting it in the laundry machine and it does it really well.
Well, okay.
That would be great.
I hope to see that.
If it does that, I'll buy one.
I mean, I'll test it publicly and we'll talk about it.
If it succeeds, that's awesome.
I'm just highly skeptical that that's going to happen.
Highly skeptical.
And, you know, thinking about the videos, the promotional videos, I have not seen this robot bend over.
I've only seen it squat down.
So can it bend forward like a forward fold at the waist?
Can it bend forward?
I don't recall seeing that.
Maybe it can, but that doesn't ring a bell.
If it can't bend forward, it's going to have trouble with laundry, you know, or dishes for that matter, or lots of things.
So the jury is still out.
I guess we'll have to wait and see.
In the meantime, check out our AI engine, which is just world-class.
Everybody's loving it.
It's free to use.
It's at brightyou.ai or brighteon.ai.
And it's an amazing engine based on two years of curated data that I gathered personally.
Well, me and my staff, I should add.
I mean, I did have help.
But I'm the one who made the final decisions on the data set.
And that's what trained the model.
And we were able to really just make an incredible model that eliminates nearly all of the big pharma bias.
And it has really good answers, really good content.
So check it out again.
Brighteon.ai or brightu.ai.
It's the same website.
So thanks for listening.
I'm Mike Adams here, The HealthRangernaturalNews.com and also Brighteon.com.
Take care.
So I just re-watched one of my favorite all-time movies, The Big Short.
And in this podcast, I'm going to relate something really important about The Big Short to our modern world where so-called adults do not feel they are responsible for their own behavior, their own decisions, or their own outcomes.
So this is not a podcast about the housing market or the subprime collapse, even though that is the subject of the movie The Big Short.
By the way, did you know that The Big Short was produced by Brad Pitt?
Yeah, and it's truly one of my favorite all-time movies because I think no movie is edited better than The Big Short.
The editing is an extraordinary part of the storytelling of the entire film.
And what I love about the edits is how it brings in the ambiance of the era, the moods of people involved, the despair when people realize the entire financial system is breaking and so on.
And one of the editing techniques that's really amazing is that it cuts off people right in the middle of saying a word.
It cuts it off and then immediately cuts to something else, creating a feeling of discongruency, which is, of course, one of the themes of the film.
If you get a chance to watch The Big Short again, which I strongly recommend, I want you to pay attention to the editing because it's absolutely brilliant.
Worth watching for that reason alone.
But the other big theme that we find interwoven throughout that film is the fact that so many people lost so much money, and yet the bankers were bailed out by the government, or many of them were.
Not Bear Stearns, obviously, but Bank of America, JP Morgan, etc.
They were bailed out, and no one was held accountable for something that was probably the financial crime of the century, at least up until that time, 2008.
No one was held accountable.
No one was expected to act like an adult.
The government bailed out the bankers, but did not criminally prosecute anyone except one low-level guy in one financial institution.
But the high-level people were allowed to get away scot-free, even though they destroyed pensions, they destroyed investment funds, savings.
They destroyed about $5 trillion of wealth that had existed in America.
And a lot of that wealth was owned by the people.
It was their retirement funds.
It was their savings.
And that was utterly obliterated.
The people didn't get bailed out, but the bankers did.
As always.
It's always that way.
And there's even a scene in the film where one of the key characters, the character's name is Mark Baum.
And he is expertly played by Steve Carell.
Steve Carell, who is, I mean, just comic genius in many of his films and his work.
But in this case, it wasn't comedy.
It was tragedy.
And he just did an extraordinary job.
Just very convincing.
Again, absolutely worth watching.
His character was the star of the movie, as far as I'm concerned.
But there's one point where he's asking this banker guy, well, kind of like a private investment fund guy who works in cahoots with a major investment bank, a guy who expressed tremendous arrogance.
And the Mark Baum character was asking him, you know, how is it that you can have these CDOs, collateralized debt obligations that are chopped up and then incorporated into other CDOs, creating CDOs squared and, you know, synthetic CDOs, tranches of bad loans repackaged to make them look like they're AAA rated, etc.
How can you do this?
And the investment banker guy on the other side of the table says, well, I assume no risk for the products that I package and sell to the investors.
I assume no risk, but I get paid big bucks.
And the Mark Baum character says to him, he stands up and says something like, you are an unbelievable piece of shit.
Because you see that the Mark Baum character is the adult in the room.
He's the adult in the movie.
And he has something that we might call, you know, values, integrity.
He thinks about the bigger picture, not just about himself.
And although he is tormented throughout the movie about his relationship with Wall Street and the fact that his brother committed suicide because of financial losses and so on, he's tormented by that.
But he also feels a strong moral obligation to do what is right and to expose the crooks and the fraud in the system, which he ultimately is able to do to some extent by socking it to the banks.
But then again, they all just get bailed out by the government anyway.
So nobody was held accountable.
So in this ecosystem of Wall Street and subprime loans and government, Fed, Treasury, etc., in this ecosystem, there are very few people who function as adults.
There are a lot of adult-age children who are unethical, who are uneducated, who have no values, no morals.
They're just in it for themselves.
They're predatory people.
They're narcissists, etc.
They probably have a lot of psychological problems on top of that.
But if you think about it, that's the way so many people function in society today, that nothing is ever their fault.
They're just doing their job or they're just playing their role, but nothing is ever their fault.
And how many times have we all heard this when something goes horribly wrong, a big collapse of a giant corporation or entity like Enron or something, or just the big short, right?
The great financial crisis.
How many times have we heard people say, well, I was just doing my job.
I was just passing along the mortgages like everybody else did.
I didn't do anything different.
Yeah, well, it's because you weren't educating yourself about what you were doing.
You were just passing the buck along.
You were just playing a role.
You were a cog in a machine, but the machine was a fraud machine.
And since you never asked the bigger picture, you never thought about your role in the machine, you participated in the fraud and you made it bigger and you harmed a lot of people through your actions.
You know, in the aggregate, all the people who went along with this, they harmed a lot of people.
And this is what you find at banks are just rubber stamping documents and loans.
Like, this is the way we do it.
You know, just everything just shuffled the paper around, skewed it forward, whatever.
Same thing with PPP loans during COVID.
Same thing with all the grant money that the EPA used to hand out, you know, before Lee Zeldon got in power there at the EPA and he canceled $20 billion of grants.
And no, those grants weren't doing anything for the environment.
It was all just a bunch of fraud.
That's why he canceled them, by the way.
But across the board, in corporations, in government, in nonprofits, and just in life in general, what you find is that very few people are adults.
Very few people take responsibility for their actions.
So that's the context for what I want to say next.
As we see many people now being replaced by automation, they're losing their jobs to AI.
Well, actually, you know what?
Let's back up.
Let's talk about the COVID years.
We saw many, many people taking the vaccines and then lots of people dying.
1.5 million Americans at least died right after taking the vaccines.
I mean, you know, within 60 days.
And we saw millions of Americans maimed and harmed by the vaccines.
And I remember over the last few years, from time to time, I would have people say to me things like, well, we had no way to know that the vaccine was going to be harmful.
You know, when I would, I would respond to, like, why did you take the jab?
Well, we didn't know it was harmful.
Okay, but you had a responsibility to know.
You're an adult, right?
Right?
Do you have access to the internet?
Yes.
Do you know how to use a web browser?
The answer to that is not always yes, by the way.
Some people don't know what a browser is.
They think Google is the internet.
When their browser just opens up, they just type in whatever they want right there into the Google search box.
They don't even know they're using a search engine.
They think that's the internet.
But a lot of people know what a browser is.
And I say to them, you know, you could have typed into the address bar at any time.
You could have typed naturalnews.com.
Not into the search box.
I'm talking about at the top of the browser, the address bar.
Do you know what the address bar is?
And not everybody knows what the address bar is because that's the address of the site you're visiting.
You know, right?
You and I know this, but a lot of people don't know this for whatever reason, which is crazy because they have a responsibility to know what a browser is.
You have a responsibility as a modern adult.
You know, browsers have existed since the early 1990s in terms of growing widespread adoption.
I mean, we're at least 30 years into this.
If you don't know what a browser is at this point, you're not being an adult.
You know, be a better person.
Learn about how the internet works.
But I say to people at any time, you could have typed in naturalnews.com.
You could have accessed articles completely free.
There's no login required.
No membership required.
Nothing blocking you.
You could have read the truth about vaccines at any time.
But you chose not to.
See, you chose not to.
And of course, that never goes over well with people.
Well, I didn't know.
Yeah, but you have a responsibility to know.
You're an adult, right?
Right.
So do you just go through the world like a pinball in a pinball machine, bouncing around with whatever CNN tells you?
Or do you act like an adult and maybe read the ingredients of a food product before you put it in your mouth?
Do you do that?
Do you read the ingredients?
You know, some people do.
Well, if you read the ingredients of a food product, why wouldn't you read the ingredients of something that's in a needle that you're injecting, which is even more intimate than what you're putting in your mouth?
Surely you would check the ingredients of what's in the vaccine.
Nope, never did.
Trusted the science.
Okay.
So then those people were not acting like adults.
So now, fast forward, people are losing their jobs to AI right now.
And I'm starting to hear from people something like, well, we didn't know that our jobs could be replaced by AI.
You know, people who are surprised that they're losing their jobs right now.
And of course, in my mind, I'm like, how did you not know?
How did you not know that?
Because you could have typed in naturalnews.com.
You could have typed in Brighteon.com.
You could have, I mean, gosh, you could have just gone to YouTube and found all kinds of discussion on this very topic spanning the last couple of years.
If you did not know that AI was going to take your job, that's on you.
Because it's been rather obvious.
It's your job as an adult to keep up with the world around you, to keep up with what's happening so that you can adapt.
You have to adapt.
The world is changing rapidly.
And sometimes I even hear from people like, well, I didn't know I was supposed to eat healthy.
Maybe they get diagnosed with diabetes or something.
I didn't know I was supposed to have healthy food.
Really?
You didn't know.
How did you not know?
Did you think that you could eat like a seven-year-old your whole life?
Just like everything's cake and candy, you know, like, really?
Is that what you thought as an adult?
See, you have a responsibility to make decisions like an adult.
No one else is going to do that job for you.
It's up to you.
And this does not win any friends to hold people accountable for their decisions and their behavior.
It does not.
Because everybody wants to be a victim where nothing is their fault.
Everybody, well, I mean, not everybody, not the kind of people that listen to this podcast, obviously, but most mainstream people, they want to just ignore, you know, they don't want to have to do any real thinking.
They don't want to have to do any real work.
They don't want to have to change anything.
And then if something happens that, you know, kicks them in the butt, it's somebody else's fault.
It's not our fault.
We didn't know that we're supposed to eat healthy.
We didn't know that AI was going to take our jobs.
You know, we didn't know.
Well, you should have known.
All right.
Here's another thing about finances and debt.
Sometimes I hear from people that are in desperate financial situations and they have, maybe they even have a good job.
They earn $75,000 a year or something, but somehow they owe a quarter of a million in debt, credit card debt and other personal loans, etc.
And they just have a spending problem.
And at the end of the day, it's always like, it's not my fault.
You know, the credit card charge is too much or the interest rates are too high or this or that.
Yeah, well, you should have known that it's your responsibility to live within your means.
See, that's an adult concept right there.
You need to live within your means.
That is, live on less than you earn, not more.
You know, your expenses should not exceed what you earn.
And if you don't earn enough to support your current lifestyle, you know, your McMansion and your jet skis, you know, and your luxury cars or whatever, downsize.
Downsize.
There's no shame in downsizing.
You know, for God's sake, I still live in a house with one bathroom.
I don't define my success by the size of the house in which I live.
I think nothing of it.
I mean, does it have a toilet and a shower and a kitchen sink and a bed?
Yep.
Okay, we're good.
You know, I mean, does it have enough room in the living room where I can put out a yoga mat and a roller and I can do some body rolling and stretching and stuff?
Okay.
Boom.
We're good.
I don't need, I don't need a 5,000 square foot McMansion.
But some people do.
They feel like that's really important to them.
And so they live beyond their means.
And then one day when it all catches up to them, they become the victim.
I didn't know I was supposed to live on less than I earn.
Yeah.
You should have known.
And so these examples that I'm giving, which I understand that this, this kind of to some people, this feels very brutal or very judgmental.
No, it's not.
It's just cause and effect.
I'm not judging anybody.
Actually, the cosmos is judging you based on cause and effect.
My point is that we all have the power to make choices in our lives.
Choices about what we eat versus what we reject.
We have choices about what we spend versus what we save.
We have choices about whether we learn new job skills.
I've heard people say, well, I didn't know I was supposed to keep learning new skills at my age.
I thought that's what college was for.
And then after that, just going to work a job.
Really?
You didn't know you're supposed to keep learning your whole life?
Are you kidding me?
You didn't know that.
You should have known.
You should have known.
I mean, if you're going to be an adult, these are kind of self-evident things.
You should know that you eat for nutrition, not entertainment.
You should know the only way to get ahead financially is to spend less than what you earn, etc., etc.
You should know that the only way to remain relevant in the economy is to always learn new things, always expand your skills.
Like right now, if I were hiring middle managers, which I'm not, but if I were, I would not hire anybody who was not already very competent in using AI tools.
I would not.
If they came in and I said, so tell me about how you use AI, you know, tell me about some of your sample prompts.
What do you use AI for?
And if they said, I don't really use AI except to write bedtime stories, you know, like, well, you're not qualified because that would be like living in the 18th century and not knowing how to use the wheel.
You know, it's like, or how to use horses for transportation.
You have to learn the tools of the day.
Or it would be like living in the early 20th century, or let's say like the 1950s, the mid-century, and not knowing how to use electricity for things like lights or eventually refrigerators and things like that.
If you don't know how to use electricity, you're probably not going to be able to navigate the economic framework of society.
Today, in 2025, if you don't know how to use AI, you are not qualified to get any job, virtually any job.
I mean, there may be exceptions to that.
Like I've said, plumbing or electrical work, HVAC repair, car mechanic, etc.
But for any kind of middle manager job in a company, if you don't know how to use AI, you're not qualified at all.
You're gone.
And yet, I still hear all these excuses from people from time to time.
I didn't know I was supposed to keep learning.
Well, then that's on you.
That's not on society.
Don't blame everybody else for your problem.
That's on you.
You should have known that you have to keep learning.
You should have known you have to eat healthy.
You know, you should have known these things.
If you didn't know them, that's your fault.
But we live in a victimhood society where it's not polite to say such things.
We live in a society where people want to say, no, it's their fault.
It's not my fault.
I shouldn't have to do anything.
The government should take care of me.
Or, you know, the employer should take care of me.
They should pay.
That kind of attitude of complacency and entitlement, that's indicative, by the way, of the fourth turning, final collapse stage of a dying empire.
That's what dying empires look like.
Where, by and large, people aren't saying, hey, we have to work hard, we have to innovate, we have to build, we have to create.
Instead, they're just saying, nothing is my fault.
Everybody else owes me.
Society has to take care of me.
See, that's the difference between phase one versus phase four of a dying empire.
And when you have adults that do not want to take responsibility for their actions, they always make excuses.
But the excuses never really add up.
I hear people say, well, I can't eat healthy because of X. What is X?
You know, fill in the blank.
What do people usually say?
I can't eat healthy because it's too expensive, they say.
It's too expensive.
No, it isn't.
Have you ever priced organic quinoa by the pound?
It's cheap.
It's dirt cheap.
Or lentils.
I mean, what's expensive is processed junk food.
That's expensive.
If you want to eat healthy and you're willing to cook a little bit and you're not ordering Uber Eats every day, actually eating healthy can be very affordable because you're buying raw ingredients and you're cooking your own meals.
And that is not expensive.
Not at all.
In fact, if you find yourself at the grocery store using a lot of coupons, you're actually getting ripped off because the only products for which coupons are available are overpriced processed foods that lack nutrition but are packaged and marketed in clever ways and they're all overpriced.
I don't use coupons ever.
I mean, think about what I buy, right?
Avocados and bananas are, you know, organic stuff.
Are there coupons on organic avocados?
No.
No, because it's not made by General Mills.
And I'm not buying their sugared up, you know, processed junk food cereal products or whatever they sell.
You know, the stuff I buy might be quinoa, might be millet, might be fresh vegetables.
Oh, is there a coupon code on broccoli today?
Nope.
How about kale?
Uh-uh.
No, none of the stuff I buy has coupons because it's not overpriced to begin with.
Sometimes I hear people say, well, I can't learn new skills because I'm too old.
Oh, come on.
Nonsense.
Did you know that the hippocampus, which is in your brain, keeps building new brain cells every day of your life, no matter how old you are?
So you are building new brain cells every single day.
And you know why people lose cognitive function for the most part?
Because they're taking jabs that damage brain cells and they're eating processed junk food and a bunch of seed oils, a bunch of garbage, even pesticides and herbicides that interfere with neurology.
So if you've got brain fog, the first thing you need to do is clean up your diet.
So, you know, take responsibility for your food.
Get healthier on your food.
Stop eating all the processed junk food and restaurant food and Uber Eats deliveries and all that garbage and start nourishing your brain.
And you don't have to, I'm not even saying, you don't have to buy my products.
I'm just saying buy basic ingredients, eat healthy.
Your brain will start to clear up.
The brain fog will begin to be lifted.
And then your brain will start to work better.
And then you'll be able to learn new skills more easily.
And it's never effortless.
Sometimes people have this expectation that, oh, well, I shouldn't have to expend effort.
You know, it's too hard to learn new skills.
It's too hard.
Well, what kind of excuse is that?
What does that even mean?
It's too hard.
Did you think it was going to be magic?
Did you think you're going to wish it into existence?
No, of course it's going to take effort.
The process of learning is the process of exposing your brain to new information repeatedly and then sleeping, having some good sleep so your brain reorganizes it and then you re-expose your brain the next day.
You are training your neurology.
This is the process of learning a new language.
So you hear it, you start to speak it a little bit, your brain starts to reorganize, it starts to remember, and especially if you have healthy fats in your diet instead of a bunch of seed oil crap and canola oil crap, if you have healthy fats, your brain's going to function better.
And then day by day, you can start to learn a new language.
And will it take a couple of years to be good at it?
Yeah, of course it will.
I mean, you think I learned to speak Chinese just overnight like that?
No, not at all.
It took like thousands of rides with taxi cabs on the streets of Taiwan to learn how to pronounce things like street lights, you know, and road names and to talk to cabbies about food and money and a little bit about politics and things like that.
It took thousands of training sessions, which for me was riding in a cab in Taipei, plus having a lot of conversations around society and ordering food, etc.
None of that came easy.
When I first went to Taiwan, I didn't speak a word of Chinese.
I learned it on the streets.
Was it easy?
No, not at all.
Was anything worth learning?
Was it easy?
Was it instant?
Was it magic?
No, but we have this expectation in Western society that everything's instant, you know.
But that's the way children think.
You know, it's a magical pony.
It's a flying unicorn.
Yeah, that's the way children think.
Adults should know that things worth learning take effort and time.
And that's normal.
That's a normal expectation.
And that learning is a lifestyle.
It's not an event.
It's not one weekend crash course.
It's a lifestyle.
You want to learn a new language?
You're going to have to live with that language as part of the way that you listen to content, as part of the way that you begin to think and speak.
If you're not already bilingual, that's the way to become bilingual.
You have to live with that language in your mind.
And you have to not be afraid of looking like an idiot at first.
For example, years ago, when I first started my mass spec laboratory and I brought in a bunch of PhDs, one after another, to train me on everything just from the very beginning.
I remember the very first guy that I brought in, a PhD, to train me how to make external standards of heavy metals like lead and cadmium and mercury.
And I wasn't even familiar with the units at that time.
He was saying, well, it's going to be, you know, micrograms per milliliter.
I'm like, what?
And I felt really stupid.
It's like, no, you got to make this.
You got to make, you know, it's got to be 100 micrograms per milliliter.
There's a bottle.
Do it.
I'm like, you're going to have to walk me through that because I don't know what you're talking about.
And Yeah, you know, you're going to feel stupid at first learning something new, but that's what you have to go through.
And then after a few years of learning and being trained and then developing methods and, you know, publishing science papers and patents and so on, you know, a few years after that, I had PhDs coming to me asking me how to solve these problems with liquid chromatography and mass spec quantitation of things like glyphosate.
So you start out as the student and then you can become the teacher if you spend enough time doing it.
And that's normal.
I mean, it's even so funny looking back.
Very early in the lab, at one point, we were mixing up solvents with some food samples.
And I remember one of the instructors I had hired said, you know, here's the vial.
Okay, you need to vortex that.
And I'm like, what's a vortex?
Where is this vortex?
Turns out that vortexing a sample, well, every lab has a little tiny machine on the workbench.
And what you do is you take a test tube and you just press down into the center of this little, this little machine.
It's got like a rubber gasket there.
And when you press with the test tube, it vibrates in a circular motion to mix the contents of the vial.
So it creates a little tornado vortex inside the vial.
That's called vortexing.
So if you're making external standards or whatever and you just want to mix it up, you don't just shake it.
They don't say, shake it, just shake it, man.
No, they say vortex it.
But I didn't know what vortexing was.
And I thought, like, where is this vortex?
And I'm sure, you know, behind my back, they were probably laughing.
He's like, who is this guy?
He doesn't even know what a vortex is.
Doesn't matter.
I can learn, right?
You can learn.
You can learn anything.
Your brain is a supercomputer.
It's a holographic neural network system.
And of course, your brain and my brain are almost identical.
We are born the same.
We have almost the same genetic code.
We have the same building blocks.
And the things I eat, you can eat too.
Or you can find something that works better for you.
I mean, we all live in the same world here.
We have access to the same information, basically the same foods, the same nutrition, etc.
And we have basically the same brains.
So each one of us can choose to do whatever we want to do with our brains, with our lives, with our time.
And this is the key differentiating factor between adult minds versus child minds.
The child at any age, even age 50 or whatever, the child will say, well, it's not my fault that I'm unhealthy.
It's not my fault that I'm broke.
It's not my fault that I'm obsolete.
It's not my fault that I can't get a job.
The adult will say, I'm going to make better choices.
I'm going to choose to be healthier.
I'm going to choose to be better educated.
I'm going to choose to learn things.
I'm going to choose to spend my time wisely and invest in myself and my knowledge in the future.
I'm going to make sure that I canvass the knowledge of what's happening in society so that I'm not surprised by any events that might impact me.
That's what adults do.
And that's why I built censored.news, by the way, because you can go there.
It's a very, it's an awesome website.
You can just instantly, you can see all the top trends happening today across all the main categories.
You can click play, listen to the podcast.
It's auto-generated every hour.
It's an AI podcast of a man and a woman.
Well, an AI man and woman that are talking about today's news.
It's really fun to listen to.
I built that so that you can make sure you stay up to date on everything that's happening in the world.
You don't have to run around seeking all the information.
We spider now 79 websites and we bring out the most important emerging trends and then use those trends to create the podcast.
So all you have to do is just go to censored.news and you will not be surprised by anything happening in the world.
And censored.news also spiders alternative and independent media, not mainstream media.
So you will not be surprised.
You will know things before everybody else.
And finally, you don't have to live my lifestyle.
I'm not saying that you should.
I mean, I don't have children, so I don't have a lot of time obligations for family kind of events.
And I understand that children are very much worthwhile to raise and it takes a tremendous amount of time.
I get that.
But I also see a lot of people wasting their time doing silly things like getting smashed at a New Year's Eve party or, I don't know, focusing on just a bunch of sports, vegging out on a couch, watching Monday night football or whatever.
And, you know, look, it's a free country.
Well, maybe not.
But you have the choice of what to do with your time.
And I'm not trying to judge people for entertainment or whatever, but every hour counts.
Every decision counts.
And if you have a habit of just being a consumer of information that's force-fed to you through the television, rather than being a creator or an innovator or an avid learner of information, well, that's going to have long-term consequences.
Make sure that if you do entertainment type of activities, that you balance that with learning, with creativity, with innovation, you know, some kind of creative process.
Even growing food is very creative.
Taking care of animals can be very creative, by the way.
You know, you're problem solving constantly.
It requires your brain to be active.
Get out of the passive roles of society and get into more active roles wherever you can.
And when you do that, your life is going to get better.
And when you make better decisions about health and food and learning and how you use your time and your finances, and when you understand that dollars are debt, not money, and that only gold and silver are money, when you begin to understand these profound, just hugely important things, your life will get better when you learn how to protect yourself from toxic foods by using supplements.
For example, if you want to go out and eat barbecue, but you don't want to have the toxicity from all the carcinogens that are in the barbecue, you can still go eat barbecue, but you take vitamin C with you.
Or you eat fresh fruit, you eat an orange.
So you have all the orange pulp or strawberries, fresh strawberries that mops up the carcinogens.
So I'm not saying that you have to never eat barbecue.
I eat barbecue sometimes, but I always eat it with these other things like vitamin C or vitamin E or resveratrol, acaxanthin.
Those are some of the supplements that I would take surrounding barbecue.
And I don't even eat it very often, but I don't force myself to not eat anything.
If I do choose to eat something like that that I know may be slightly toxic, I'm going to protect myself with supplementation.
And I'm going to go ahead and enjoy the meal.
See, it's not about suffering.
It's about still enjoying life, but exercising your knowledge so that you're not harmed by these decisions.
The bottom line here is your life can get better.
It can get better in every way.
You can grow your knowledge.
You can improve your health.
No matter where you are, no matter what condition you're in, you can get better.
You can grow your skill set.
You can expand your understanding.
Again, because you were born with an amazing holographic neural network supercomputer.
It's in your head.
All you have to do is stimulate it correctly and it will work for you.
It will work miracles.
And you don't have to pay anybody to use it.
You only just have to power it with clean food, you know, and clean water and stop poisoning it with whatever toxins.
You know, clean up your personal care products.
Clean up your laundry detergent.
You know, clean up your diet.
Your brain will work better.
Now your supercomputer is just kicking ass.
And now learning will be easier and making good decisions will be easier.
Your view of the world, you'll be able to grasp things much more easily.
Your learning rate will accelerate.
You'll be shocked at how much better your life gets when your brain works better.
And there's a very simple way to make your brain work better.
And I've talked about many of them here.
It's nutrition and avoidance of toxins and training and also light therapy.
All of these things matter.
And they're relatively easy to access.
So in today's world, to put an end cap on this, in my mind, there's no excuse.
I mean, nobody can tell me, well, I didn't know that.
Well, you have the entire knowledge of the world at your fingertips unless you don't have access to the internet, which is impossible for any modern person in America.
You have all the world's knowledge at your fingertips.
There is no excuse not to know things, especially important things, like don't eat a bunch of processed junk food.
You know, don't eat cancer-causing nitrite bacon or whatever.
You have a responsibility to know these things.
You have instant access to all of this information.
This isn't the 1750s here where information flowed at the speed of the Pony Express or whatever.
You have instant access to all the knowledge of the world.
Even with our AI engine, you have instant access to every answer to every question that you could possibly think of that might be found in the entirety of human knowledge.
And you can use that for free.
Brighteon.ai, it's free.
So there is no excuse.
And I hope you join me in this.
When you're interacting with other people and somebody gives you some excuse, well, I didn't know.
That's not an excuse.
Maybe in 1972, that was an excuse because you didn't have the internet.
You didn't have AI.
You didn't have the world's knowledge at your fingertips.
Today, that's no excuse ever.
If you say you didn't know, I didn't know what was in the vaccine.
You should have known, dumbass.
You should have read it.
You should have looked it up, right?
I didn't know that these foods would cause diabetes.
You should have known.
Why didn't you look it up?
Why didn't you read the ingredients?
I didn't know that dollars were going to lose so much value and I was going to end up broke in my retirement.
You should have known.
How did you not know that the Fed is printing money and that that's going to devalue your money or your currency, excuse me?
How did you not know that?
Not knowing is not an excuse.
And it may sound harsh, and I know this doesn't make everybody all fuzzy, you know, warm, fuzzy feelings to hear this.
But I think, I hope you agree with me on this.
We have to hold ourselves accountable and others around us accountable.
If you're an adult, I mean, this doesn't apply to a nine-year-old, but if you're an adult, you have a responsibility to know the things that matter.
And if you don't know them, then you need to expand your use of the internet to connect yourself with the knowledge so that you become informed.
It's very simple.
You should have basic knowledge about everything.
I mean, just basic knowledge.
You should have basic familiarity with, you know, economics, with food and nutrition, with debt and money, with science and technology.
You know, you should know a little something about the planet.
You know, what's the atmosphere made of, right?
I mean, you should have basic knowledge about everything.
It's not that difficult.
It doesn't take long to learn the basics of every single thing that is known by humankind today.
It's really not that difficult.
And then in the areas that you find intriguing, you can dig deeper and you can become an expert in certain areas.
Now, nobody can be an expert in everything, but you can be an expert in the areas that you love the most.
And that's what makes us all special.
It's what makes us unique, right?
And then we get to share that knowledge with each other and help each other be better people.
That's how we move civilization forward.
So join me in holding people accountable.
Never accept an excuse of I didn't know.
That's lame.
They should have known.
Okay.
Especially in the age of AI.
That's no longer an excuse.
I didn't know compounding interest would cause me to go into bankruptcy.
How did you not know about compounding interest?
You can go to ChatGPT even, which is free for limited use, or, you know, or our AI engine, whatever.
Just ask it.
How does compounding interest work when it's debt?
Just ask it.
Ask it anything.
So not knowing is not an excuse anymore, ever again.
And that's actually refreshing.
So don't let people try to use that on you.
I didn't know.
Yeah.
Well, that's your fault, dumbass.
Use the internet.
I mean, for real.
For real.
You didn't know.
I didn't know they were going to lie to me about the shot.
Well, that's your fault.
You should have known.
Geez.
I didn't know CNN was an unreliable fake news media source.
Yeah.
You should have known.
Actually, it should have been obvious watching it for two seconds.
You're like, this is fake.
So there you go.
All right.
Join me in holding ourselves and others accountable.
Spread the word that in 2025 and beyond, anybody who says, I didn't know, that's no longer an acceptable excuse.
Everybody has access to everything, period.
To all knowledge.
It's all at your fingertips for free.
End of story.
Everybody should know anything they want to know.
Okay.
I didn't know gasoline would explode when I lit it with a match.
You should have known.
And by the way, you look great with no eyebrows.
That's awesome.
That's a great look for you.
You should go with that.
But thank you for listening.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and you can check my content at naturalnews.com and brighteon.com.
You can use the AI engine that I built.
It's at brighteon.ai, which will take you to brightu.ai.
And you can also use censored.news.
So check it out.
Enjoy, learn, share, uplift others, empower people, but also hold people accountable.
Don't let people pull a fast one on you with lame-ass excuses.
All right.
Thanks for listening.
Take care.
Power up with our organic whey protein powder, a complete protein packed with amino acids, non-GMO, and lab tested for purity.
Stock up now for your survival pantry at at healthrangerstore.com.
Export Selection