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Nov. 16, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
03:11:05
Brighteon Broadcast News WEEKEND edition - Nov 15, 2025 - Robert Scott Bell, bio-compatible architec
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All right, welcome to this special weekend edition of Brighteon Broadcast News.
I'm Mike Adams and it is Saturday, November 15th, 2025.
Thank you for joining me today.
I've got a couple of great interviews to play for you this weekend.
I haven't yet decided which one I'm going to play today.
But I did just interview Michael Yan, who's in Japan at the moment, with a lot of commentary about, well, what's happening in the world, what's happening domestically.
And I've never heard Michael Yan as dark as in this particular interview.
So I think I'll save that one for tomorrow because, you know, it's Saturday.
I want you to want you to have a bright and sunshiny day.
So I've got another interview with Alosha, who is a man that is all about sort of bio-compatible architecture and building your own home out of natural materials and interesting things like that.
And it's, you know, you may or may not be interested in building a home, but this guy has a lot of inspiration about how humanity can use space better and live more affordably, more sustainably, and without having a shortage of housing or housing affordability crisis that has struck a lot of Western nations right now.
I also want to give you some updates on various projects.
And I want to thank you to all of you who have purchased with us during our Black Friday sale, which is going on right now at healthrangerstore.com slash Black Friday.
Or you can just go to the website.
But if you want to see the specials, it's healthrangerstore.com slash Black Friday.
And today we're giving away three new gifts.
Depending on how much you might spend with us, you get different gifts.
Or if you spend enough, like $299, I think, then you get all three gifts, which have a very high value, actually.
You're getting a lot of freebies this year.
We put in all kinds of extras and all kinds of discounts.
So thank you for all your support.
We've had a very strong outpouring of support during our Black Friday sale.
And that's going to empower us to continue to fund our projects that bring you all kinds of great tools.
And you can find all of our AI tools, by the way, which are all free at brightion.ai.
And the one I'm working on this weekend is Brighteon Books.
And I believe I'll be able to finish it this weekend and then do some pilot launching next week.
So, oh, I forgot to mention, if you shop with us at healthrangerstore.com, you're also going to be emailed tokens to use BrighteonBooks.com before everybody else.
They're like early bird tokens.
One token equals one book generated for you at no charge.
So just another extra that you get supporting us.
Now, have you heard about virtual cashiers?
Virtual cashiers.
I got to play a video for you that is mind-blowing.
It talks about these restaurants in New York City that have fired the cashiers, the locals.
Instead, they've got virtual cashiers that are in the Philippines who appear on a screen via Zoom.
And it's being said that they make $3.25 an hour, which might be pretty good in the Philippines.
I'm not sure.
But then the restaurants ask for 18% tips.
So let's see.
In Manhattan, Queens, and Jersey City, there are restaurants called Sansan Chicken and Yaso Kitchen and some others that have this virtual cashier thing happening right now.
So I want to play this video for you.
It's less than a minute.
Check this out.
What do I do to order food?
If they have, we have a visual in front of you.
Okay.
Over there?
Yes.
Yes.
And where are you?
Where are you located right now?
Can I ask you?
I think that new sheet.
Here in the Philippines, what do you recommend?
Oh, the offer of the F4.
The F-40.
Okay, do people usually tip you?
Sometimes.
Sometimes.
Yeah.
Oh, not every time.
Uh-huh.
It depends on the passport.
So.
So what do you think about that?
Everybody's got to be asking the question, why do they even need a woman from the Philippines on the screen?
You know, fast forward, probably 90 days is going to be an AI avatar on that screen.
You're going to be just ordering from AI.
I mean, why do you need to talk to a person to place an order when AI is totally capable of doing that right now?
There are other fast food restaurants that have drive-through where they've got, you know, AI avatars that are talking to you through the drive-through.
Now, obviously, this is going to bring up many questions and some concerns.
Number one is the job losses that this kind of trend will obviously indicate.
The human cashiers will no longer be employable in many of these restaurants.
Although in places like Starbucks, where there's quite a lot of physical manipulation of the product that has to take place, where you need a barista, let's say, but you may not need a cashier.
Cashier could be an AI avatar, and it could also be an AI avatar that's even personalized to you.
So it might even know who you are based on your phone, or I don't know, maybe you scan a code or something and knows who you are, and then you get your own personal avatar, and it already knows what you like to eat, things like that.
So that's probably coming.
But then it also brings up the obvious question, are there any humans in the restaurant?
How do you stop people from just walking in and just walking off with everything?
Because that gal from the Philippines can't do anything from Manila, right?
She can't stop it.
So it's going to get interesting.
So, you know, if you talk customer service from India, let's say, was a big thing.
Oh, wait till the cashiers all get turned over to workers in the Philippines or India or somewhere else.
I mean, cost savings, you know, has it gone too far?
Some people would say yes.
Now, some people love this idea.
One person posted on X, good for them for not letting a bunch of pierced freaks who aspire to a career as a barista hold them hostage.
I wonder what job that gender studies degree is going to get them now.
Okay, that's a user's comment.
That's not my comment, just to be clear.
But it begs the question in society, you know, young people need access to jobs in order to learn skills and responsibility and maturity, etc., and to pay for college, things like that.
I mean, when I was in college, I worked at UPS.
I was a loader at the late night shift.
Let me tell you.
I was loading hot trucks.
I mean, it was crazy hot.
Those trucks were like 110 degrees.
I'm sure of it.
And I was in the truck.
These are like trailer trucks, loading boxes.
Very physical job, not easy.
But, you know, you learn things when you do that.
Having jobs, it's important for you.
And, you know, fast food or food service have always provided a lot of economic opportunities for younger people.
If those are all replaced by robots and then even the college graduates, their skills are replaced by AI, such as computer science degrees, going to be replaced by AI more and more.
It's already happening.
Then the question is, how does Generation Z, how do they ever get skills?
How do they ever get experience if from day one, they can't outperform the automation?
And the only way they could is if they had enough work experience to be smarter than the machines, but they can't get work experience because the machines are better than they are at the entry-level stuff.
So this is going to be a question that society will be facing for a long time to come.
And the impact of AI is only getting stronger.
There's a new survey by CNBC.
And they surveyed their workforce executive council members reportedly.
And they've published a story that says AI is going to impact 89% of jobs next year.
Now, it doesn't say replace them.
It just says it's going to impact 89% of jobs.
And the key points out of the survey are really shocking.
Nearly nine out of 10 senior HR leaders expect AI to reshape jobs in 2026.
One member said, quote, we expect to see more skill-based AI-enabled hiring rather than the traditional degree-based hiring.
Now, that's critical because it means that the college degree doesn't mean anything anymore, really.
It may even be a detriment.
What matters is your skill set, what you can do, and what you can demonstrate that you can do, you know, especially if you're young and looking for a job.
Now, most of my audience is not looking for entry-level jobs, right?
You and I have been around.
We've been in the workforce for decades.
But you may recall when we were young, you know, the college degree really mattered.
That was a proof that you had endured four or more years of, you know, knowledge indoctrination and training and discipline.
And you had passed final exams and whatever.
And that was supposed to make you ready for the workforce, which, of course, it never did.
But, you know, I graduated from college with a multidisciplinary degree.
They got me started in technical writing.
And I did develop writing skills in college.
I had a couple of really great college professors.
One, actually, his name was Dr. Hunt.
And he was a very accomplished writer.
He actually became my advisor, my degree advisor.
So, yeah, I got to thank Dr. Hunt for that.
And he helped me get started in technical writing, which became a great career path for me.
But for young people today, it doesn't matter if you go to college.
It's almost like you should just skip college.
And instead, you should dive.
That is, if you're out of high school, let's say, skip college, start having AI teach you skills.
Just learn at your own rapid pace.
You can learn everything that college was going to teach you in probably one-fourth the time or better just by having AI give you instruction.
You can learn all the basics.
You can learn whatever the liberal arts or chemistry or physics or history or writing or you can learn everything that you would learn.
in college.
You can learn it from AI right now, even from, let's say, just chat GPT.
So, and then if you can demonstrate those skills to an employer, you're going to get hired.
It's the people who have degrees, but no skills.
Like, you can have a degree in liberal arts, but in the interview, the person says, well, tell me how you use AI in your job.
And if you're the candidate that says, I don't use AI, I hate it.
I think it stinks.
And then they're like, you're not hired because we need people that know how to use AI because if you can't use AI, you're going to be 10 times slower than somebody who can.
So, you know, go back home, learn AI for three months and then reapply.
You know, that's what we're going to start hearing more and more.
So it's about the skills, not the degree.
Now, the same survey put up by CNBC also found that there will be many workforce reductions in 2026 due to what they call a general need to cut costs, but not necessarily saying that the workforce cuts are due to AI.
However, workforce numbers are going to have to contract because the economy is contracting and fewer people are making purchases and lots of things like that are happening across the board.
So there will be workforce reductions.
And what do you think that means for the workers that are already there?
It means that the ones that the corporation decides to keep are going to be those who have AI skills.
And the ones that get let go are those who don't know how to use AI.
So even think about this, even when AI isn't replacing people in these companies, if you don't know how to use AI, you're going to get let go.
So that means AI skills are necessary for augmenting human jobs.
Now, another thing that's interesting in the survey is that 78% of the business leaders surveyed said that AI has already made their workforce more innovative.
78%.
So you may have heard of other surveys from many weeks back.
I forgot which business school did a survey.
They said that 96% of AI projects fail.
Well, that actually, the way they asked the question, it was designed to elicit fail responses.
This CNBC survey shows that 78% of the companies are saying that AI has made their workforce more innovative.
Only 17% said that AI has not made a significant impact on their workforce.
So, you know, this is a very different story being painted here, where AI augmentation alongside humans is going to be the model for the next several years in the white-collar workforce space.
And then over time, more and more of the human tasks will be automated.
So more of those human jobs will be replaced.
But hopefully by that time, a lot of those human workers can upgrade their skills and they can take on higher and higher level jobs or decision-making or responsibility within those companies.
So, you know, even when I say that here, all these jobs are going to be taken over by AI.
It doesn't mean that every human doing that job is going to be obsolete.
It means that many of them are going to get kicked upstairs to do something better, something, you know, more important.
Like, you don't need a bunch of humans running around answering customer service emails all day long.
And besides, that's a horrible, boring job anyway.
And, you know, manipulating text is something that AI does very, very well.
So even if you have that job, you're probably wishing that you don't have that job.
You know, like, I hate this job.
Well, that's great news because AI will do it.
And then you are free to do something higher level.
And all you got to do is upgrade your skills.
And you can use AI to do that.
It's practically free to upgrade your skills.
And then you can apply.
And more and more companies are just going to be paying attention to the skill set.
So this is great.
Actually, this unleashes a lot of upward mobility across the workforce.
You don't need a college degree to be incredibly successful these days.
All you need to do is learn and practice and demonstrate skills that demonstrate your value to a company.
You don't need the degree.
Even myself, if I were hiring, and I mean, I don't even run, I don't run hiring in HR in my companies, but if I were, I would not even consider somebody unless they knew how to use AI.
That would be the number one prerequisite.
But if somebody came in an interview and said, hey, I know how to do this.
I know advanced prompting.
I know how to format answers in JSON format.
I know how to parse information.
And let me show you some of the prompts that I've written before.
It whips out a sheep.
Boom.
Here's like the top five prompts that I use for research and for generating PowerPoint programs and for carrying out, I don't know, like insightful analysis of trends or this and that.
And they show me that on a piece of paper, that's impressive.
It's like, wow, you actually, you really do know what you're doing with this.
So, hey, there's a computer right there.
Show me.
Show me what kind of prompts that you use on a regular basis.
And then I'll let them show me on the computer.
If they can do that, that's a big deal.
So if you know anybody in that generation, like typically Gen Z right now, who's looking for a job and wants to get hired just like that, share this recording with them because that's going to get them in to lots and lots of companies, just being the person who knows how to apply AI to the tasks and the goals of what that company is trying to achieve.
And the tools are changing constantly.
So you got to be up on all of this every week.
There's something new that comes out that could improve your job.
All right.
We're going to come back to a special report on AI also.
But to take a departure from that topic for a moment, did you enjoy my interview with Elon Sudberg from Alchemist Labs?
Did you enjoy that interview?
I had a lot of positive feedback about that interview.
People really loved it.
And if you haven't seen that interview, I published it yesterday.
You may want to see it because it's a behind the scenes look at the food and supplements industry and the science testing that takes place for everything, from heavy metals and botanical identity testing, as well as microbiology, like listeria, E. coli, et cetera, plus glyphosate.
And you're going to get a really fascinating look behind the scenes also at some of the scams and fraud that has plagued certain sectors of the industry because of some bad faith operators that are out there and also some problems that Amazon has had, etc.
So You're going to love the interview if you're into clean foods and if you take nutritional supplements and if you purchase foods from us or anybody, you're going to want to see that interview.
So don't miss it.
It's again, we published it yesterday.
I think, did we, was it yesterday?
I think it was yesterday.
Yeah, it was yesterday.
So check it out.
I think you'll really enjoy it.
Now, I want to remind you that on Monday, we're going to be publishing an interview with Aaron Abke and James Benefico.
And they are the duo that creates the podcast called The Jesus Way.
And they discuss the Jesus diet.
And so I joined them.
They actually interviewed me for their documentary series coming up about nutrition.
And I got to say, it was the best conversation I've ever had with anybody interviewing me about health and nutrition.
It's going to be amazing.
And then I interviewed them also on the same day about the Jesus diet, as they call it, and what it means.
And also the philosophy of the Nazarenes, which is one of the religious groups, well, the religious group out of which Yeshua emerged.
You know, if you look at the historical records, etc.
And that group, like, for example, they did not believe in animal sacrifice at all, and they did not consume animal flesh.
So they were vegetarians.
But there's a philosophical reason why they focused on eating plants and herbs and so on that has some very interesting tie-ins to consciousness and to medicinal herbs.
And we talk about all kinds of God's food versus shadow food, which is the modern food that's stripped of nutrition and so on.
So it's a really great conversation.
I'm going to air that again on Monday.
I mean, I'll air it for the first time on Monday.
And you'll want to stay tuned for that.
I think you'll really enjoy it.
And whether you are religious or not, whether you're a Christian or not, even if you're Islamic, if you're Buddhist, still, you're going to love this interview because it's not about, it's not pushing a religion.
It's talking about clean foods and higher states of consciousness that are augmented by nutrition.
So it's a really cool conversation.
I can't wait to bring you that.
And then on Tuesday of next week, I've got an interview, a decentralized TV interview with a man named Marchin, and he's Polish, and he's a PhD fusion reactor scientist who became a farmer in Missouri.
And he decided to go to build blueprints for 50 key machines that are necessary for the rise of human civilization.
Machines that you would use on a farm, like a tractor and a skid steer, etc.
And then he open sourced all the blueprints and has released those.
And his website is opensourceecology.org, I think it is.
And so he believes in open sourcing farm equipment to enable decentralization of agricultural competence so that anywhere in the world, people can download his blueprints and using very basic materials, they can make their own simple machines that can amplify their efforts for food production and home construction and off-grid living anywhere in the world using almost any materials.
So wow, that is a really cool conversation.
And that's going to be coming at you on Tuesday.
So stay tuned for that.
And then finally, I was interviewed by Robert Scott Bell also.
Well, I should say I was on his show earlier in the week.
And since I have so far neglected to air that show, I plan on airing it with this broadcast today, assuming my editor can find that.
I think he's got it.
And I got to say, the overall vibe of my conversation with Robert Scott Bell was extremely positive because also we had Dr. Brian Hooker in the studio at the same time.
So the three of us were hanging out and having a great time, just a great time.
I'm really trying to keep it positive for you today.
Again, I want you to have a great Saturday because tomorrow Michael Jan is going to bum you out.
I'm telling you.
Yeah, it's more of a dark conversation tomorrow.
So we'll do that on Sunday after you pray at church so that you're going to need angelic protection for the economic news that's coming tomorrow.
But today we're going to keep it lighthearted and fun and interesting.
So anyway, a double interviews here for you today.
But first, I've got a special report about how to use AI in a very positive way in your life.
And I call this report, how to use AI to shape your own attention.
And so, you know, understand, I'm fully aware that AI is a technology that is absolutely being weaponized by the establishment and that AI is going to be used to enslave people and to censor people and to trick people and to, you know, to push false narratives that the government wants to push, all kinds of things like that.
But I'm focused on using AI for positive things, such as self-improvement, decentralization, sharing human knowledge.
That's why we're about to launch BrighteonBooks.com.
That's why our AI engines are all free.
You can check them out at brighteon.ai.
I think you'll really enjoy them.
VaccineForensics.com also, which is a vaccine research engine powered by our AI engine.
It's really great.
So you can use AI to make your life better by helping to shape the kinds of things that you are ingesting.
You know, the things that you are focused on.
So instead of allowing some other third party or some news network or some institution to control the knowledge that comes to you, you can use AI and lots of things like AI news analysis like we have at Censored.news or our new book generator.
You can generate the books that you want to read.
Just like right now using AI, you can generate the music that you want to hear.
Oh, and I'm working on a song that I hope to release maybe, maybe tomorrow, maybe Monday.
It's called, the song is called What It Means to Be Human.
And it's a very pro-human song, although I'm using an AI engine to perform the vocals.
But of course, I wrote all the lyrics myself, and it's very powerful.
I've played some verses for a couple of people so far.
They were almost moved to tears by this song.
So I'm hoping to have that for you.
It's just another example of how we can use this technology where we control it.
And it can improve our lives.
And it helps free us from centralized control or from narratives that are pushed on us by others.
So AI is a choice.
You know, it's a choice of do you want to just passively sit back and let AI control you?
Because if you do, the establishment's going to be happy to enslave you under an AI technocracy dictatorship.
Or do you want to use AI to upgrade your game, to enhance your skills and knowledge, to set yourself free, to decentralize from the grid and promote your own personal liberty and sovereignty, et cetera?
Well, guess what?
You can use AI like that too.
That's absolutely your choice.
The passive default is to do nothing and just get steamrolled by the establishment.
But the active choice is to use AI in the way that I describe in this special report coming up here that can enhance your life.
All right, before we get to that report, quickly, take advantage of our sale.
This is our once a year.
The deepest discounts that we're ever going to have from this point forward are available right now at healthrangerstore.com slash Black Friday.
And there you're going to see all the specials.
You're going to see the free gifts that, and we are shipping out right now out of our Texas warehouse.
You know, we're shipping like crazy because we've had a very strong outpouring of support for us.
And thank you so much if you've already, if you've placed orders, and feel free to place another order if you want another round of free gifts.
You know, there's no limit to the number of orders you can place and get the free gifts over and over again.
And the gifts are different each day.
So today's gifts are different from Friday's.
And then tomorrow and Sunday, it's another different set of free gifts that you get.
It's like three tiers, depending on how much you spend.
You get gift number one or you get two or three, or you get all three.
I mean, actually, you get all three if you spend at the higher tier.
That's all explained on the landing page.
So this is a time to stock up and get the most gifts ever.
And some of those gifts, by the way, are going to make really great Christmas presents for the people you know.
So technically by shopping with us right now, you can probably tackle a lot of your Christmas shopping task list right now.
That is, if you have friends and family members who appreciate really great, you know, superfoods or nutrition or various personal care products and things like that that are ultra clean, they're going to love these as gifts.
So you can get yourself the cleanest food ever and you can take care of your Christmas shopping list all at the same time right now.
HealthRangerStore.com.
Thank you for your support.
All right, here we go.
We're going to jump into the special report called How to Use AI to Shape Your Own Attention, followed by one or maybe two interviews.
My interview with Robert Scott Bell and then my interview with Alosha, who has the bio-compatible like natural harmony buildings and construction techniques and the design of spaces that are biocompatible.
Really interesting interview.
So enjoy the rest of the show and I'll have another episode for you tomorrow.
We're going to call it the, I don't know, the Dr. Doom Sunday or something.
It's a darker episode tomorrow, but I will be bringing you that with Michael Jan.
So check back tomorrow as well.
Enjoy the rest of the show.
One of the most important and fundamental principles that you need to understand to be able to make it through this rise of AI and this rise of AI generated content and all the changes that are coming to the book industry and the movie industry because of AI content.
The key thing to understand is that if you assert control over the content that you ingest, then AI can be your ally.
It can be your best friend.
You can automate agents to go out and find the things that you are interested in and the things that you need to learn and things that can enhance your life, your skills, your viability to an employer or whatever the case may be.
Things that are fulfilling to you.
Whereas if you leave things on their default settings, you know, in an operating system or a web browser or whatever, if you leave things on default, you're going to be fed a bunch of lies and propaganda and bogus false information.
You're going to be manipulated and controlled.
So think about this.
It's already this way in certain aspects, but AI is going to amplify this effect.
But right now, for example, if you have a new computer and you launch a web browser and you're going to find out, well, that web browser has as its default Google as the search engine.
Well, Google's not a search engine.
Google is a disinformation engine.
It's an anti-knowledge system that's designed to hide key knowledge from humanity.
That's my assessment of it.
And so if you use the default, you're never going to know things like vaccines are dangerous or you're never going to know the history about false flags.
You're never going to know the truth about 9-11, et cetera, et cetera.
You're never going to know that there are natural cures for cancer.
Many of them, many of them.
But if you change your search engine, or more importantly, if you go outside of a search engine and you use, for example, our free AI model at brighteon.ai, well, now you're going to be able to ask it about cancer cures and you're going to get good information that's been hidden from you by Google.
Or you're going to be able to ask for the truth about vaccines.
How toxic are aluminum adjuvants, for example.
You're going to get the truth.
So it's up to you to control the content that you ingest.
And I call that managing your attention tokens.
So your brain is a neural network and you have a certain amount of attention every day.
And I use the term tokens to describe units of attention because tokens are units of meaning in AI systems.
But you only have so many attention tokens each day.
And it's really not that many.
You can only ingest a certain amount of information that's fairly limited on any given day because you have other things you have to do as well.
You have to eat, you have to poop, you have to sleep, you have to shower maybe occasionally.
You know, you've got to do other things and you might have a job.
You might have other obligations, you know, like I got to clean out the chicken house and collect eggs and feed the dogs and whatever.
So you only have a certain amount of attention tokens each day.
Who controls those attention tokens right now in your life?
Who controls the attention tokens for your consciousness?
If you are one of those people, and I've known families like this, who used to have cable TV turned on all the time in their house, the TV was always on in the background.
It was just like it was like another character in the house.
It's crazy.
If you were there having a conversation, the TV was on.
If you were there enjoying a meal, the TV was on, right?
TV is just on constantly.
Well, who controls what comes across the TV?
Well, obviously the network broadcasters.
And especially somebody that tunes it to something like CNN, you're just going to get lies and propaganda the whole time.
Now, granted, you could change the channel, but all the channels are controlled by the same roughly five media companies.
So you're not really changing the channel.
You're just getting a different version of the same agenda.
And you don't control that content.
And that's also a characteristic of broadcast technology, which is a one-to-many content transmission technology.
One broadcaster broadcasts their content to many, many people.
And that's true when it comes to radio or book publishing.
You know, one author broadcasts the same book to many, many people or, you know, movies or what have you, right?
It's one to many.
Well, what AI dramatically changes, especially with all those different types of content, is that now you can customize what you choose to ingest in terms of content.
And if you do choose to customize that content, now you are asserting control over it.
And we're already starting to see the development of AI agents that are like news crawler type of agents.
We've launched a site called censored.news that functions on much of this principle.
It crawls news sites.
It gives you trends that are emerging trends in each of eight different categories from food and health and tech and science, et cetera, and finance.
And then you can choose what you want to ingest off of that.
That's up to you to decide.
You get to pick what you want to bring in to your consciousness.
You can listen to the podcast if you want to, or you can skip it.
You know, all kinds of options.
You can analyze different trends if you want to, but it's up to you.
So now we're talking about customized personal news.
And as these AI agents become more advanced, you'll be able to tell an agent, hey, I'm interested in, I don't know, food preservation, or I'm interested in cold fusion, or I'm interested in like spacecraft or whatever, you know, exploring other planets.
And it will go out and find all the different kinds of news that fit that format.
And you can even tell it, I only want sources from alternative media.
I don't trust the mainstream media.
I don't trust CNN, New York Times, Washington Post, CIA, RAG, all that stuff.
You can tell it to go get the information from the sources or the kind of sources that you prefer.
And it will go get all that information.
Okay.
It'll gather it back.
It'll bring it to you.
And then you can tell it, and this is coming up.
You're going to see this.
You can tell it, well, here's the format that I want that information in.
I want it as a podcast.
I want it as an article.
I want it as a book.
I want it as a PDF executive summary.
I want it as a debate.
You know, two people debating about the subject.
I want it as a movie.
I want it as a graphic novel.
I want it as a TV show.
I want it as a sitcom.
The sky's the limit.
I want it as a mini documentary.
I want it to be eight minutes in length.
So create a documentary of all the things that you went out and gathered and then give it to me in eight minutes.
Okay, boom, it can do that.
It's going to do that.
This is what you're going to see with AI agents and then choosing how you spend your attention tokens.
Your attention is the most valuable thing in your life, actually.
I mean, fundamentally, your attention determines everything else.
You give attention to the wrong things and your life gets worse.
For example, you know, watching TV with interruption advertising, which is practically obsolete at this point.
You don't need any more interruption advertising.
What do you need?
You need knowledge.
You need skills.
You need inspiration.
I mean, I don't know.
You tell me, what do you need?
But you can describe it to the AI agent and it will go out and find that for you and it will give it to you in the format that you want.
That's the future of content ingestion.
And for those of you who are in marketing and advertising, that is also why there is no future in interruption advertising.
There's no future in it.
There's no future in banner ads.
Even though today you see a lot of banner ads, and even we have banner ads on our website, but I know that's going away.
And there are some sites that are just nothing but ads.
It seems like the last time I visited the UK Daily Mail website, I couldn't even find the article because there were so many ads covering the whole freaking page and popping up and expanding.
I'm like, oh my God, is there an article under all this?
I couldn't even find it.
So that's all going to be obsolete.
You know why?
Because humans aren't going to go to the UK Daily Mail website.
You're not going to go to natural news yourself.
You're going to have your AI agent do it.
Your agent is going to pull down the news that you need.
And then news publishers, if they're smart, as we are, are going to create indexes that are much easier for AI agents to follow.
So you're going to see these changes on naturalnews.com.
More and more websites will begin to morph into sites that are built for AI crawlers more than human eyeballs.
And again, that's going to be the smart players who do that.
Human eyeballs will become fewer and fewer, and AI crawlers will become more and more prominent as agents scour the internet.
And you're going to have open source crawlers also, of course, that will go out and get the information that you want.
So you don't have to use, you know, Perplexity or you don't have to use Anthropic.
You don't have to use whatever the Google version is going to be of this.
You can go out and get an alternative version.
And that's true in everything.
Just like right now, you can use an Android phone.
That's a Google operating system that spies on you.
Or you can use a de-googled phone like abovephone.com, right?
You have a de-googled phone, doesn't spy on you.
Oh, I should mention, if you go to abovephone.com slash Brighteon, they now ship Brighteon edition phones that have our AI model pre-installed on the phone locally.
Like you can run our AI on the freaking phone with no internet.
You can run it in airplane mode.
How cool is that?
It runs on the phone.
Unbelievable.
That's abovephone.com slash Brighteon.
And see, that's what you're going to have to do.
You're going to have to choose the alternative tool for everything.
Choose the alternative browser.
Choose the alternative search.
Choose the alternative news index.
Choose the alternatives that are more aligned with your interests and your point of view.
The things that you want to learn, the things that you know are going to make you a better human, make you more capable of surviving, more capable of thriving, more capable of earning money or launching a new business that's successful, more capable of protecting your health, etc., etc.
So what you are seeing from us today right now, as we launch brightu.ai, that's our current AI engine website, or sensor.news, like I mentioned before, that's just the beginning.
It's just the beginning of where this is going.
I'm only getting started, folks.
And, you know, I'm getting good at vibe coding.
I now know how to make the vibe coding engines do what I want.
And there's a learning curve there.
But I figured it out quite effectively.
And now I don't even need an R D team to build and launch new projects.
So now there's no limits.
Okay.
The number of projects that I just have in my own head that I want to build and launch is over 20 right now.
And as vibe coding gets faster and more effective, you're going to be able to use tools more effectively to build whatever ideas that you can imagine and describe.
You will have to describe them.
And you're going to be describing them in the prompting.
And in order to prompt effectively, you have to know what the heck you want.
And in order to know what you want, you got to think clearly in your own head first.
And that's why people who say AI makes you stupid, they're not using it correctly.
AI makes you smart because it forces you to rethink what you want and how you're going to achieve it.
Or I've said this before.
If you're using AI and you're getting dumbed down, you're using it wrong.
If you're using AI and you feel freaking smart, you feel like, oh my God, I'm the best human that I've ever been with this, then you're using it correctly.
You will have more clarity of thought.
You will learn faster.
You will have bigger and better ideas.
You will have more success with your ideas because you will be able to identify risks in advance.
You'll be able to identify strategies for success more quickly.
You'll be able to be a better person with AI if you're using it correctly.
But that all comes down to the topic of this podcast, which is controlling your attention tokens.
What are you paying attention to?
Like right now, you're paying attention to this podcast.
You've made a decision that the time you've invested in listening to these words is worth it for your own advancement.
Now, I agree with you.
That's a good investment.
Hopefully you're learning really amazing things right now, things that are going to spur ideas in your head, things that are going to help you to be a better person, have more success in whatever way you define it.
But that's a choice that you have actively made.
So you're already in this process.
You're doing this naturally right now.
And you're probably the kind of person who can never turn that off.
You're not going to go back to just turn on CNN and whatever.
That's not you.
You're the kind of person that's going to use the best technologies or information, the best sources that are truthful, that are honest, that align with your values in order to bring you the information that's going to help your life get better.
And on my side, my obligation and my mission is to continue to make sure that your choice to spend your attention tokens listening to this podcast, that your choice is rewarding and worth it.
So you spend five minutes with me, you're going to get more than five minutes of value out of the knowledge.
And as long as I can keep doing that, then we got a great thing going together, you and I, you know?
And I am dedicated to that.
And I'm going to keep bringing you new tools and new realizations and tips and techniques for how to be the best person that you can be in whatever way, whatever that means to you.
And we're going to use the tools available today in order to achieve that, whatever they may happen to be.
And we're going to pursue a life of integrity with high moral values and a life that is pro-human.
And we're going to value life and we're going to value honesty.
You know, this is important to me and I think it's important to you.
That I've often said that only low IQ people have to make money by ripping off others.
But high IQ people can earn money by giving to others.
If you give to others and you help solve problems and you contribute to the world, you will experience financial rewards as a result.
But you got to be informed.
So that's what this is all about.
So let me give you my tools and then I'll wrap this up.
Go to censored.news to stay up to date on the news.
And the site's been pretty stable lately.
It's only glitched a couple of times.
I've figured out some really good techniques to keep it online.
And then go to brighteon.ai, which will forward you to brightu.ai.
And because that's not going to be the permanent place.
It's going to be at brighteon.ai, ultimately.
But that's the site where you'll be able to use our AI engine for free.
And then we've launched vaccineforensics.com, which is our AI engine with a special focus on vaccine research and documenting vaccine dangers, harms, side effects, ingredients, science studies that show those things and much more.
So that's all at vaccineforensics.com.
And then watch for more amazing stuff.
You can follow me at brighteon.com.
And I'm going to be launching some new things.
I've already kind of teased this publicly, but I'm launching a new site where you can instantly generate an entire book completely free and download it on any subject.
Any subject.
So you want a book about, I don't know, the Norse gods or something?
Hey, great.
You want a book about archaeology?
You want a book about snorkeling?
I don't know, whatever.
You want a book, a do-it-yourself book about home plumbing?
Yeah, you got it.
Any book that you want can be instantly generated and instantly downloaded.
Well, okay, not exactly instantly, but it takes a couple of minutes.
Okay.
So it's going to generate the book and then it's going to email you when it's done.
And you're going to love it.
You're going to love it.
Oh, and if you don't love it, just go back to the website and ask for a different book.
Just say, oh, I want this book, but I want it to cover this and this and this.
And don't forget this and that.
And then regenerate.
Okay, boom.
A few minutes later, it arrives in your email inbox and it's free.
Did I mention it's free?
This is totally free.
So that, yeah, and that's just the beginning.
That's just the beginning.
Okay, with the power of compute, there's nothing we can't do in the digital realm.
So get ready.
It's going to be interesting.
Follow all my websites and my podcasts, etc.
Your life will get better as a result, and you will be more free and you will have more choices about what you want to ingest using your attention tokens.
Your life will get better.
You will love it.
So thank you for tuning in.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, the founder of all the Brighteon platforms, and now an AI developer of tools for humanity.
So thanks for listening.
Take care.
the robert scott bell show all right Welcome, people of Planet Earth.
We are live from the Brighteon set and studios.
Thanks to the Health Ranger, Mike Adams.
And we got Brian Hooker in studio as well.
We're here in Austin for the Children's Health Defense third annual conference.
Again, thanks to Brian Hooker for getting me plugged in.
I just wonder when people invite me or don't.
I mean, Mike lets me come back.
That's the weirdest thing.
Mike's a courageous guy.
The journey we've been on now for decades, Mike.
It's just so cool to be able to say, hey, I'm coming to town.
Come on in.
Let's do this show live from the set.
You're welcome here anytime, Robert.
I tell you why, you're in town.
You can take the commander's chair, rock your show, just like you're doing right now.
Dude, and the fact that you had been trying to get a hold of Brian Hooker and get him in studio, and we had this opportunity like never before.
We're all here.
And Brian happened, the moment opened for you, Brian, to happen to be here with us.
Absolutely.
Well, if I would have known about, you know, this wonderful enclave before, I knew you were here, but it never really dawned on me.
I was, I was actually up with John and Polly Tommy at their land about three weeks ago.
I should have come by.
I mean, now you're going to be like, you know, I'm your best friend.
Hey, Mike, I'm in town.
Yeah.
So you're welcome here anytime, both of you.
It is so cool to be hanging out with you guys anytime.
And I, you know, I've got so many questions that I'll be asking you guys while we have time together.
And I know Brian Hooker's got a limited timeframe because you've got to head back into the into town for the event, but we're going to utilize every bit of information we can get from him, squeeze it out.
And if not, then it's later on the show, as well as with Mike.
Mike was just appearing with Alex Jones talking about AI.
So we will cover that as well in the next couple hours together.
And I'm just, I'm looking at what's happening that is unprecedented.
You know, starting my show in 1999 and Mike came along not too long after he was already doing stuff, but we were like, dude, this guy's awesome.
And then we would do Health Ranger Reports, if you remember on my show back in the radio days.
And to see what Mike has done here with this studio set, much less all of the other things, because you guys can get the Brideon.
We have connections and links to the Brighteon store as well.
And I'm looking in here.
I'm like, I'm going to eat well this weekend, Mike.
You don't know.
I'm going out with a handful of Brideon store, delicious organic.
Oh, yeah.
What people don't know is that we have multiple racks of all of our products free for guests to take.
And we actively encourage it.
So, you know, if you flew out here, make sure your carry-on has some goods in it before you head back.
I will be breaking the fast very well today, later today.
And Brian, let's talk a little bit about, as we're opening up with you, the movement, the Maha movement.
You know, it's not perfect.
And I know that you and I both have talked about this.
And I know Mike knows this too.
We're not relying on Secretary Kennedy at the head of HHS to do for us that which we should have always been doing for ourselves.
But to have an ally that knows a lot of the things that we know is not something to take for granted either.
There's a window.
I don't know how long it's open, but I'm with you.
Let's fight and push every with every ounce energy we have to succeed in ways that we thought I thought maybe impossible in this lifetime.
Yeah, this is a time for action and it's a time for more action, perhaps more action than ever before.
And I know everybody is working overtime.
It's really easy to get overtaxed.
A lot of people that follow us, they have special needs kids too.
So they're tied up with that.
But Secretary Kennedy is relying on us to do to continue to do the work and to continue to put pressure on HHS regarding the things that need to get done.
I mean, vaccine court needs to be, in my opinion, abolished.
And they're looking at that.
They're looking at at least ways that they can alleviate the pain of vaccine court, as me being as a 16-year vaccine court survivor.
But we need to keep the pressure up.
Not only are we relying upon Secretary Kennedy, but he's relying upon us to continue to do what we're doing.
Well, I find it interesting because the foundation of children's health defense is something that has sued the HHS since he's become head of it.
And I'm thinking, did they hate Robert F. Kennedy?
No.
In fact, I'm thinking Kennedy's going, bring it on.
It's going to help me do my job for what I need to do.
I need some outside pressure.
Absolutely.
No, no.
And if you think that's the last one, think again.
I'm sure that there are more that are queued up on the way.
But no, in order for him to do his job effectively when he's answering to President Trump, we are the populist movement.
We are the grassroots, not the astroturf.
And so we need to continue to keep pressure on the HHS in general.
And we need to call out names.
I mean, I was impressed.
I sat in a Senate hearing and I started to describe some of the things around the CVC whistleblower.
And Senator Ron Johnson looked at me and he said, no, name names, Brian.
Please name names.
And so we need to continue to call out the bad guys.
We need to make sure that justice is brought.
And we need to make sure that these things never happen again.
It's not a four-year odyssey.
It's like foreverland.
Brian, the setup of what we call healthcare in America, I've recognized it for the disaster that it is when I was chronically ill for the first 24 years of my life.
And yet so many Americans, even as they're waking up to that horrible reality of if you go into a hospital, you're just as likely, maybe more likely to die for something you didn't come in for.
And I'm just wondering, you know, as we look forward to making some major changes here that I don't even think at the centralized HHS with Kennedy there is they're able and willing to make yet.
And that is to bring other forms of medicine into America once again as a mainstay, you know, herbalism, homeopathy, naturopathy, rather than being relegated as the red-headed stepchild children, so to speak, of a time long since past.
How do we, let's say, make that impact, realizing that the entirety of the control mechanisms are all designed to support allopathic medicine, pharmaceutical medicine, even as they try to tweak it and go, let's do some nutrition in medical school.
Is it enough?
It's not, I don't think it's even close to enough.
No, no, it's not close to enough.
We need to raise up our own paradigms and those paradigms need to be heard.
You know, we can't, we, we cannot walk in fear anymore and we cannot simply fold our hands and say, oh, they're not really that bad.
Trust me, they are.
Okay.
Trust me, the industry government megapoly cabal, whatever you want to call it, as bad as you think it is, it's 10 times worse.
And so, you know, it's up to us to be able to call a spade a spade.
It's up to us to say, you know what?
I'm not going to trust allopathic medicine this time.
You know, it's not a pill for a nil.
It is much, much different.
And we need to make that clear at a local level that, you know, we're going to support our naturopath, our chiropractor, our natural provider.
And we're, you know, we're going to vote with our feet with these individuals that have been getting crazy amounts of money for vaccinating, crazy amounts of money for pushing specific medicines, you know, incentivized by their HMOs ad infinitum.
And we just, we cannot put up with it anymore.
We are called to a higher standard.
Mike, perspective, you know, we've talked about this together on and off the air about what we're witnessing and saying how unprecedented it really is.
Yet at the same time, we're not throwing our lot into the centralized bureaucracies to correct the mistakes that they have purposefully made to keep us, what, deceived, enslaved, poisoned, maybe depopulated, et cetera.
But we're also recognizing that there is an opportunity here.
The window is open for a little while.
I don't know how long.
We've seen pendulum swings back and forth.
I'm thinking they might be swinging around and around.
Nobody can predict it exactly.
But how do we see, you know, from your perspective, a way to work this and make it work to whatever degree possible at the same time, recognizing it's up to each of us and what we do that really matters?
Well, first of all, I just want to say it's been a pleasure to get to hang out with you, Brian, today, because to get to know you more in person, and we had this amazing interview conversation earlier, to really get to hear your heart and your passion about what you're pursuing here.
It's really amazing.
And I love the fact, to answer your question, Robert, I love the fact that there are people that think our current system will survive and want to work in that system.
And that's like RFK Jr. or, you know, let's say Dell or others who are, let's reform this system.
Let's see what we can do from the inside.
And that's very important and that's very necessary.
I'm the guy that helps you when the system craters and we go mad max.
And then, you know, you're going to need all this decentralized information.
You're going to need automation to grow your own food.
You're going to need all this knowledge at your fingertips that's uncensored, things like that.
So I think both of these approaches are valuable and necessary because none of us know where this goes from here.
History, the history that we're about to live through has not happened before.
You know, they say history repeats itself, except sometimes there's a first time for new things.
And that's where we are right now with automation.
I think that the concept that nothing ever changes, the black pill, which is out there.
And I have a lot of empathy for people who are in that black pill scenario because they've been through so much.
They've been defeated so many times that they feel like there's no hope, there's no change, opportunity for transformation.
But I always say bring it back to your individual experience as well in the midst of any challenges or all the challenges, in the times that you haven't won, whatever that is defined as, recognize that you've changed through it all, that you can look back in your life.
And Brian Hooker, you certainly can coming up through traditional allopathic thought forms all the way up to the PhD level.
You can look in your mirror and say, I don't even recognize that guy across from me because he believes completely different than 20, 30 years ago.
I mean, that's the point I'm trying to make is that each of us have an opportunity to change and transform.
And that impacts everybody else in turn, one by one.
And we're disempowered when we don't recognize our power to transform and see what happens around us.
Absolutely.
And, you know, looking back and, you know, we can't regret basically where we were at that particular point in time, but I can make this day better than the last day, better than the last day.
And I can make, I can certainly basically make better choices on the knowledge that I'm walking in right now.
I mean, if you look at the foundation of allopathic medicine at its best on a good day, it is extremely, extremely flimsy.
You know, it is, it is, it is, in a word, draconian.
You know, the things that are still being done and how, you know, the technology, you take the technology that's based on vaccination that dates back to the 1700s.
Okay.
Haven't we moved the needle forward since then?
Have we really, are we still really in that same, you know, sort of generous World where we can wave our magic vaccine pixie dust and then make the infectious disease boogeyman go away.
I mean, you know, we're living in this in this sort of scenario and people are dying.
People are dying.
You know, even the powers that be will admit, and this is as much as they'll admit to, is that people die from medicine at a rate, you know, I think it's what the fourth leading cause that they will actually admit to.
I dare say it's much higher than that, but it's the fourth leading cause of death in the United States is allopathic medicine.
Yeah.
Is there another path forward?
Yeah, I've lived it.
I have been in that realm.
I grew up in an allopathic world and was poisoned by medicine, not by doctors who wanted to kill me as far as I know, but those who would have had I not woken up.
And I think being prayerful, being connected to something greater than even big pharma and big government and big media, and that is our spiritual connection.
And I, you know, when I was here last time, I don't know if we got any complaints on it, Mike, but man, I just had such a great time having that conversation with you about the deeper level realities that often can be set aside or pushed aside because of the fear mongering of those who have the apparent control over everything that we see and hear, but they don't have the power that they think they have unless we believe it too.
So there's so much more power that we have.
I'd like to open up your thought on that as well.
All it takes is courage to open the door, step through it and create your own new future, just like you did, just like you did, Brian, just like I did.
We all had a very similar journey.
You know, we all probably grew up believing everything about allopathic medicine and that whole system and pharmaceuticals.
And then we had a transformation.
Well, you know, to the viewer out there, you can have that same kind of transformation at any time.
Right.
You just have to choose to do it.
And don't be afraid of things not being perfect.
Like here we are today in this studio.
Like this studio only opened up Tuesday.
And this is the first time we've ever had three people here.
And we have like seven cameras talking about.
I don't know where to look, Mike.
Exactly.
None of us even know where to look.
But who cares?
You have to just go for it.
You jump in.
You may not know which herbs are going to work or which homeopathic remedies are appropriate.
You start somewhere and then you expand.
You may not understand what all the ingredients are in vaccines.
Well, look up one of them, one of them, and then expand that from there.
That's all it takes.
It's just have the courage.
Beautifully said.
And Brian, again, this weekend, we're here for the Children's Health Defense event, third annual.
We're here live in the studio.
I know a lot of times things that I never know, like if you do a recording, Mike, how long it goes before it goes to air.
But I'm hoping that the information you got with Brian goes out quickly because that interview that you did with him is sensational.
That's going out early next week.
Yeah.
And we've got folks that are so excited to see you, Brian.
You'll be presenting here at this event, other events coming up as well.
And Brian, what's going to be going on this weekend?
What can you tell us about the CHD event?
Well, we have so many luminaries that are joining us for the event tomorrow night at the dinner event.
We'll be joined by Rand Paul and Secretary Kennedy's wife, Cheryl Hines, will be there.
And we will also have presentations and panel discussions for all day on Saturday, all day on Sunday.
We have the distinguished Surgeon General from Florida, Joe Latipo, was there.
I spent breakfast with him and his really, really wonderful family.
And then also Russell Brand will be doing comedy.
I can't remember if that's tonight or tomorrow night, but there's so many, I mean, you know, it's just such an amazing cast of individuals put together.
We'll be covering topics as diverse as turbo cancer from the COVID shot, mRNA technologies, the measles outbreak in Texas.
Here we are in Texas.
I mean, you survived the measles.
Do we get a t-shirt for that or what?
But no, so, and we'll be actually featuring one of the families that was highlighted when CHDTV was in Seminole, Texas, which was the epicenter of a measles epidemic without a patient zero.
If that doesn't get your mind twirling, I'm not sure what will.
Yeah, just beam down from somewhere.
I think many of these events are orchestrated.
They realize that the limitation that they have to control us is based on fear and they're going to push the vulnerability.
This has been another one of my messages for decades is that if you find something you're afraid of, the so-called bad guys that want to control you, they know it too, and they're going to use it.
They're going to exploit it.
And so part of my role, and I know Mike's been at this for a long time too, and Brian, you've come on with this, is to recognize that we don't have to fear the things they say we have to fear, that we have tools.
We can address them.
In fact, far better in many cases than the hospitals that we've looked onto as the only place we can survive stuff.
And so this is part of, I don't know, the growth perhaps of even the folks coming to the CHD event, Brian.
I know there's not a litmus.
Everybody has to agree and believe the same thing.
There are a lot of sometimes competing interests as well, which is interesting.
But I think that the concept of cancel culture, I hope and I pray that it never exists within the CHD and the Maha environment like it does right now in the crazy lunatic left collectivist mindset.
No, we want to make sure that voices get heard and that there are, you know, many, many issues that are wrong with the healthcare system in the United States in general.
So, you know, what we cover at the CHD conference, what we're able to cover at Children's Health Defense is just really the tip of the iceberg.
So, you know, I don't want to see people get censored.
It's happened to all of us.
And, you know, the with the shoe on the other foot, you know, we, I'm, I'm not, I'm not going to return evil for evil.
I, I, you know, I want to overcome evil with good.
And so that's one of the bright things and the wonderful things about being a part of children's health defense, now being able to do that full time to be able to surround myselves with the likes of Mike Adams and Robert Scott Bell.
I mean, it's, it's a movable feast.
It really is.
Wow.
Mike.
Well, let me just add, and I love what you just said.
Completely agree with it.
And I might as well just, you know, announce this here on your show, Robert, that the role that we are stepping into with Brighton and me personally is to amplify and enable other people's voices using technology.
For example, our new website, vaccineforensics.com, free AI research engine that tells the truth about vaccines, vaccine ingredients, pharmaceuticals, COVID, Fauci, you name it.
And, you know, I mean, my voice, I'm a very polarizing, controversial, outspoken person.
I get that.
That's fine.
Where did that come from?
That's my role.
But I'm also really good at tech.
And what I'm shifting into is to help amplify other people's voices using that tech.
And also, I was talking with Brian off camera about how, you know, we're building a data center right here.
I'm about to show you where that's going.
Right, right.
In fact, Brian's got to leave here in a second, but we're going to be running AI research engines here that will research science papers about vaccine safety.
Safety.
Tongue in cheek.
I mean, this can result in actual content that CHD may want to turn into published papers that come out as it's verified out of the AI engines.
This can take a thousand human hours and compress it down to maybe 10 compute hours and find amazing things.
So to the extent that I can help CHD and everybody else in the health freedom movement, Robert, to do this with our technology, that's my mission.
This is what we need, Mike.
We need these alternative structures because you look at the AI engines that are in the world that are sucking us in.
Yeah, maybe you can train them if you spend a long enough time.
But you know what?
I would rather have the logical and the rational basis that isn't going to look at the word vaccine differently than any other therapeutic modality and give it the same rigor and ask the same questions.
We question the science, regardless if it's the V word or whatever word it happens to be.
It needs to be questions.
It needs to withstand the test of scientific scrutiny.
And that's what you're building.
Yeah, there can't be different rules of science and evidence just for vaccines versus everything else, which is, I'm paraphrasing what you just said.
100%.
We welcome the scrutiny.
We welcome the challenges and we're up for them.
And this is why we're still here after all these years.
And they thought, well, you'll never survive the censorship campaigns that happened in COVID.
No, we've been, we've been here.
Can you guys show the low angle camera of the studio?
Can you just flip to that?
I just want to, if you don't mind, Robert.
Is that it over there?
Yeah, there it is.
There it is.
Yeah.
See, I just want to give people a bigger view of the studio.
Like, hey, to the vaccine establishment, you did not destroy us.
You did not silence us.
We got bigger.
Our audiences got bigger.
And now more than ever, more Americans agree with what we have been saying all these years compared to pre-COVID.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And they're the ones that are actually surviving.
I mean, I can't get around it.
And we pummel this every single day at CHD Science and Research.
You just absolutely cannot deny the health of the unvaccinated.
They are so healthy from every angle, every way that you slice dice and Juliana.
It is still, you know, these are the healthiest children I've ever seen.
Yeah.
Validate that from my travels around the world over so many years now as a homeopath.
And the healthiest kids I've seen are the least vaccinated or not vaccinated at all.
That's been a story visually documenting it time and time again.
Now, the scientific studies are coming out about it.
Of course, they're trying to suppress them, the Henry Ford Center, whatever that was, and so many other things.
It's becoming impossible to deny that which those of us who've been relegated to the fringe have been witnessing and reporting on.
And look, we have the tenacity because we know we're right, not because our egos tell us that, but observationally, we are still human.
And this is something, Mike, we may talk about later in the show because I know you're going to take Brian on a tour.
Yeah, but I'll be back.
But yeah, the AI explosion and where is humanity and all of that?
How do we maintain that and maybe strengthen our connection despite the advanced technologies that we're not going to be able to stop other than is there enough electricity for it?
But now you mentioned on the Alex Jones show, the sodium ion batteries, which I've been hearing about too, from lithium.
That's interesting.
For off-grid independence, yeah.
We can talk about it.
But I got to take Brian.
I got to give him a tour now because he's got a role.
So, Brian, we're going to see you back at the CHD event at this point.
You guys, three-minute live too.
You have access.
We have links up in the show notes today at robertscatbell.com as Brian Hooker is going to get a tour, an awesome tour by Mike Adams of the campus here, including the science.
Well, the technology that Mike has brought in is absolutely astonishing, amazing.
And if you ever get a chance to tour it, I don't know when one day that will happen, but regardless, maybe some other video tours of it.
So do we have Mike Adams back on set?
Is he back here with me?
Yes.
That was the fastest tour ever.
I'm back with my dog, Rody.
Thank you.
Rodi for not eating me when I entered the facility.
Yeah, I was giving Brian the tour of our new lab science facility because we're moving our, we're upgrading our science building with all our mass spec instruments.
And in fact, I also, I have to go in 10 minutes to meet with a lab tech and then I'll be back again after that.
That's all right.
We got coming and going of Mike Adams.
I know.
That's just what the day has turned into.
But, you know, he was really thrilled about our facility.
And I showed him where we're going to have our data center there as well next to our lab, you know, our mass spec instruments.
And, you know, we're just building infrastructure for human freedom and human health and bypassing sensors, bypassing all these so-called official sources, which are untrustworthy anyway, in my opinion.
And, you know, the way that people are going to achieve health is through what you're doing is you're going to have to learn it yourself.
No central authority is ever going to teach you how to be healthy.
They're going to want to prey on your disease and suffering.
But what we are doing, what you're doing today, what we are building is infrastructure for decentralized knowledge and being healthy.
It is so amazing.
And when I've talked to people off the air, a lot of times I'll get requests and I'll follow up.
And I do a lot of education for doctors all over the world on because they're struggling too.
They want to know how, because if they got into it for the right reasons and they're waking up and going, man, I really am not helping people.
I'm hurting people.
And I want to help them.
And I'll work with anybody who's sincere and wants to help people.
But I often hear more from the patients themselves who have been through the mill and they've woken up and realized they've got nobody to turn to.
And if they reach out to me, it's not that I'm going to do something for them other than to give them information they didn't have.
Access to things that suddenly they put into play.
And it's like, then they come back and go, that really worked.
Yeah, that's right.
And actually, I think I can scoot a little closer to you now.
Oh, sorry.
There we go.
Rolling over feet.
Yeah.
It's people have a fear of veering outside the lines.
And that fear, the establishment counts on that to keep people corralled into a certain funnel that is not in your best interest.
And that funnel, it's based on fear and psyops and then the entire fraudulent history of virology, the entire fraud of so-called consensus science.
It's not the fraud of the science journals, the medical journals, and so on.
Like, do you know that one of the things that I'm doing now, and this is mind-blowing, but, you know, because we have all the science papers that have ever been published and you can go through and you can have an AI engine fact check them now, and you can actually pull out all kinds of errors in published science papers on an automated basis at the pace of like, you know, a thousand papers an hour.
And this is going to be necessary to reestablish a fundamental corpus of basic human knowledge.
We have to actually clean up all of the fake science that's been pushed by the Journal of the American Medical Association or the Landsat and so on with their fake data, their fake narratives, all their sponsorship by big pharma, et cetera.
You got to clean all that out and then establish a new science that's rooted in rationality and cause and effect.
Once that happens, which is going to happen because of AI, the vaccine industry ceases to have any credibility at all because it's all a fraud.
Imagine that.
Oh my gosh.
This is the kind of, I call it co-creation of a future that is considered to be impossible by those who want us to believe it's impossible.
I don't know what it is about us and many of our friends who said, you know, we do the impossible for breakfast.
Yeah, no kidding.
And maybe it takes a little longer in some cases, but having that long view and not operating in fear.
Now, it also doesn't mean be stupid about things.
You know, you become very aware of the environment.
What are the risks?
How do you navigate it?
And that's part of, you know, when I know you'll be coming and going, but part of what I want to talk about in the second hour when you do come back is about setting up parallel tracks of reality.
That there may be, again, that whole AI robot thing, right?
But many people are like, I don't know if I want to live that way.
Yet there's also going to be the land and the food that you grow and the community that you have locally.
That's still an opportunity that you don't have to live like the Jetsons if you don't want to.
Well, think about the history of the rise of mechanized agriculture.
So the introduction of the tractor, the combustion engine tractor, actually invoked this exact same debate.
And so a lot of people said at the time, oh, we're losing our jobs because we were out there planting crops, harvesting crops.
These tractors are going to cause mass unemployment, which they did.
They did.
But it allowed two things to happen at the same time.
First, it allowed mechanized agriculture to more efficiently create more toxic crops by spraying pesticides, herbicides, et cetera.
Secondly, though, it allowed people who want to home farm hobby farms with smaller tractors to be able to leverage that technology and to leverage their intention so they can grow more food locally.
So you have both of these things happening at the same time.
This is what's going to happen with robotics and AI.
Robots will be used to enslave and exterminate a large number of current human beings.
At the same time, robots can be used by people to live a more free life off the grid, decentralized from the systems where you hardly ever have to go to a grocery store because you can grow maybe 70% of your own diet with the help of robot labor.
Both of these things will exist at the same time.
Now, I'm a technology maximalist.
I believe in using every available piece of technology with alignment with pro-human values and decentralization.
Not everybody's on board with that.
And I get that.
And I have great respect for the Mennonites, right?
Or other groups that want to live low-tech.
They're healthy.
They're sane.
They have healthy families.
I totally support that.
I've made a different choice, which is just to be a technology maximalist.
I'm going to use every piece of tech that comes into our existence in order to help people live more free.
But I think that the opportunity for perhaps creativity in that environment, freeing us up.
I mean, the idea was in many ways, we'll free up all of your world because we have washing machines.
You know, back in the 20th century, they would say that.
And then, you know, then they somehow encouraged women to go into the workplace.
And they made it almost like you're not a real woman if you don't do that.
How dare you stay at home and want to raise a family, have kids, et cetera.
And so the value system is something that can be lost if we lose ourselves in the technology.
Well, that's true.
And one of the risks is the virtual reality immersive experiences.
And we do see, especially among younger men, we see AI psychosis or strong emotional relationships with AI girlfriends.
And that's a huge issue that is anti-family.
Now, but again, that comes down to the intention of the designer, right?
So there are companies that intentionally create AI girlfriends with avatars that look like anime characters and so on.
And those engines are designed to be seductive, to pull you in and burn your hours and time so they get subscription money, but it produces nothing of value for the world.
However, you could take the same base model, you can change it like we do to be a live immersive encyclopedia of knowledge that isn't going to be your girlfriend.
Like you could try, you could try our AI engine, see if it wants to be your girlfriend.
It's probably going to say, no, but you should grow your own food.
That's great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's the whole thing about the myriad of choices.
We're not getting less.
We're probably getting far more choices, but it challenges us to decide what do we value.
Yes.
And to take charge of what content you're bringing into your consciousness.
See, before now, most of those decisions have been made for you by the network broadcasters or the radio show owners.
You only had a few choices, right?
Even today with the internet, you only had Google and a couple of search engines that were all biased.
You only had a couple of social media sites that were all, you know, anti-truth and effectively anti-human.
That is changing dramatically.
You now have, through open source AI, you have so many sources of where you can get your information.
And you can fit all the world's encyclopedic knowledge now in your pocket on a thumb drive and you can give it to a person freely.
I mean, our AI model is only a seven gig download.
Wow.
So in seven gigabytes, it's a compressed version of all human knowledge without the pharma bias.
And you can just put it on a thumb drive and just give it to people.
It's like, here, hey, would you like all of human knowledge?
It's astonishing.
And, you know, for free?
And some people say, no, I want to follow celebrity news.
Right.
Okay.
Leave me alone.
That's your mental diet.
Go for it.
You know?
Well, I want to thank Mike once again.
I'm sitting in his seat, dude.
This is crazy.
You know, Mike set up this new studio.
We're sort of inaugurating it.
I know that I love to live on the edge and live.
And I want to thank your team in there just like rolling with it.
Yeah.
A little bit nervous.
I'm like, no, don't worry about it.
We just, we just let it roll.
There are no mistakes.
It's all authentic and real.
And again, I'm so appreciative to be able to just message you and say, hey, I'm coming in tonight.
Talking about last night.
Come on over.
Bring Brian.
I'm like, all of those things just kind of fall into place in ways that you cannot mechanistically describe necessarily.
That's the plus factor beyond even AI is like, we're dealing with special human beings like Brian Hooker who have been through a lot with the, you know, the injury to his child, but how so many have experienced that and have found their humanity, but also are not shirking a responsibility, just caring for their own family, which would be enough.
But, you know, he's reached out to the world and said, we've got to do better.
Absolutely.
That's why I strongly support his work and will continue to support him with our endeavors and our tech and so on.
And as far as the studio goes, you're the perfect person to sit in that chair and do the broadcast.
Look, we built this facility.
And I know the audience can't see the whole thing, but we've built this facility.
It's 5,000 square feet here, knowing, I mean, just having faith that it would find its uses.
Like we don't know exactly how it's going to be used.
Like I didn't know until yesterday that you're coming, but here we are.
It worked out perfectly.
But we know we're going to be doing live broadcast events from here.
We know we're going to be doing a robot testing ground out there for decentralized living.
We know, like I'm being filmed for documentaries next week here on this set.
We have a kitchen over there that's all for filming smoothies and any kind of recipes.
You know, I'm going to show people how to make my famous avocado smoothie.
Finally on camera.
And we'll finally show that on camera.
Awesome.
Yeah.
After all these years, there's an interesting shot with all the screen within the screen.
Yeah.
There's there.
That's the depth.
Oh, my God.
But we've got, I think they're just trying to show the kitchen back there.
But we want to give people practical skills and knowledge of how to live more free.
And again, it's scary for some people.
They say, well, Robert, it's easy for you because you're Mr. Natural Health.
Well, that's not how it started.
It was a journey.
Very much so.
Well, this journey, as I've said many times, Mike, I'm glad to be on it with you.
Every once in a while, we get to come together and celebrate and also relate the things that we are discovering in our own lives.
And, you know, some of our lives is out to the public.
But as you've probably seen and you've heard from others, I tend to live this way all the time because I appreciate being healthy considering I wasn't for the first 24 years of my life.
So it's not, you can try and tempt me with things.
I'm just not interested.
I know what makes my body work and I know what doesn't.
And so, you know, as I fast every Friday as discipline and it's, you know, a benefit in a lot of ways to break the fast on good, clean food and to celebrate with others, to find opportunities, people in your life that really you're uplifted when you're around them.
You smile, you laugh, even in the midst of the most seriousness of, well, the mission that we find we're on, Mike.
And I got a big one.
I got to meet with a lab tech.
Okay.
But I want to do a little rock and roll cam first.
Hold on.
Yeah, rock and roll cam.
What is that?
We're going to check out a rock and roll cam.
What's happening on cam too right now?
I'm doing rock and roll.
we're wrapping up the first hour of the show live from the bridey on studios outside of Austin for the children's health defense.
All right, we're back and we are live in the bridey on studio.
Thanks to Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
This is the Robert Scott Bell Show, simultaneously live on many platforms that were at least not, some of them were not banned on.
And again, thank you to Rumble for not running scared with this message of health, freedom, and healing liberty.
We'll have Mike Adams back on coming and going as it's a busy day here that we've squosen in so much, including Brian Hooker.
And he interviewed Brian Hooker earlier for Brideon later airing, as well as Mike was on the Alex Jones show talking about AI with Alex right before we went to air.
Now, there's the EPA, the Environmental Protection Agency, which really doesn't protect the environment.
It protects those who pollute the environment.
You know, as part of that is the controversy with what are they spraying above us?
If the EPA had any lick of credibility and integrity in the people in it, they would be alarmed and be calling for congressional hearings on what is going on above us.
Or is the EPA complicit?
Maybe.
I don't know the details.
But not only are they looking the other way as we're being chemically sprayed from the skies, but they're now approving.
You know about forever chemicals.
This is one of Super Don's big thing.
He hates forever chemicals.
I don't like forever chemicals.
But now the EPA has just approved a forever chemical version of a pesticide.
And pesticides are already bad enough.
They're part of the problem that caused me to suffer the first 24 years of my life with not pesticide deficiencies, but pesticide toxicities.
And now they want to engineer them into the forever chemicals because the bugs can outpace and outcreate, if you will, the arrogance of man.
We'll just create toxic chemicals to kill the bugs.
And the bugs go, go ahead.
We're going to eat your toxic poison for lunch as we express new DNA.
There's the story at Children's Health Defense, the article.
Oh, hey, Mike's back.
But about that story, you know what I think the plan is, actually?
What is it?
They're going to use those forever chemicals on the crops on these farmlands for a few years.
And then they're going to say, it's too toxic to grow food on.
We have to use it for a data center.
How about that?
Destroy the growing land and then we produce more battery power or electricity production.
Do you think that's why Mike, the Bill Gates thing coming out and going, well, maybe global warming, it's not the existential threat we thought it was because he's going to be able to do it.
Because they need power.
They need power.
So now they have to move.
They have to pivot about the climate change thing.
But understand, like think about in the history of siege warfare in Western Europe.
You've heard of, you know, salting the fields to deprive a castle and its surrounding communities of the ability to grow food.
Right.
Right.
So that's siege warfare.
So the PFAS forever chemical pesticides approved by the EPA, that is siege warfare against the food system of our modern civilization.
And you know, the history of the Holodomor in Ukraine in the 1930s, where the Stalinists starved out tens of millions of Ukrainians to death.
This is the modern version of that.
Yeah, no, it's all about depopulation, controlling smaller quantities of people is easier for elitists.
That's right.
We don't need useless eaters, as they call us.
That's right.
And I'm not going to play that game.
But at the same time, these are real concerns, just like what the hell are they spraying above us and the EPA claiming to protect the environment.
Why aren't they leading the charge on that?
Yeah, exactly.
So again, I think this is the EPA, which, you know, I got to admit that Zeldon has done a lot of positive things as head of the EPA, pushing back against the climate cultism nonsense.
But this is one that feeds into big tech's agenda of wanting to use large farm fields for data centers.
And, you know, ultimately, if you think about it, there's never enough compute to appease the demand for compute because cognition is real.
And they always want more power and more data centers to have more compute because they think that that will achieve world dominance, which it very well may with AGI.
So what's the value to the government of a piece of farmland that feeds the people?
Nothing.
But the value of farmland for a data center, now that's something they're interested in.
So they're just going to carpet North America with data center after data center after data center.
It's going to look like a silicon world.
Wow.
Which requires so much water to cool the data center still, unless they develop some other cooling technology.
Well, there are some reclamation recycling water cooling systems that use a lot less water.
But interestingly, cooling data centers uses less water than agriculture.
So it's still a net water reduction compared to agriculture.
But then you can't eat data centers.
Right, exactly.
Those wafers are not delicious, nor are they nutritious.
So yeah, these are the realities we're confronted with of insane, dare I call them men and women if they're participating in this.
And it's proof that the future plan for this earth is mostly a post-human future.
Everything that they're doing is actually following a blueprint that assumes six or seven billion fewer humans will be here.
Then the question becomes, how do we make it difficult for them to achieve their task, their goal, while also finding joy in the existence that we have for the time we're here?
Uh, raise healthy children yeah, like there's one, you know, and don't be the low-hanging fruit of globalist extermination, because most people will be the low-hanging fruit, which means that the globalists will roll out, you know, another fake pandemic or something.
And they'll say, oh, everybody needs to, you know, go out and get this jab.
Well, the low-hanging fruit are people who are like, yes, I need it, begging for the jab.
There's not going to be a lot of people like that much longer because they will self-euthanize.
Yeah, they're suffering right now and wondering why if they still are, they're not paying attention.
I think about the targeting of the people who were the most compliant during COVID.
If they wanted to eliminate something that was a threat to them, the people that would do whatever they're told are not really the threat other than the fact that they cost money and resources to feed.
But they're left with what?
Fewer people, but the people who are left tend to be the ones who are willing to fight for their freedom.
Yeah, right.
And yeah, well, exactly.
But let me provide a little bit bigger context on this, which is that government has never cared about people.
It's only cared about the products of people, which has been cognition and labor.
And that's why you're called a human resource, like copper or coal.
You are a human resource.
You're not a person.
You're a human resource.
Well, the only value that you serve in the government's controlled economy and for the GDP, et cetera, is the output of your cognition or your labor.
As those things can be replaced, then the human becomes an inconvenience to the government systems.
And they would rather not have to feed you, not have to give you a UBI, not have to build infrastructure that serves your ability to travel, you know, et cetera.
They would rather not deal with any of that at all.
And it's astonishing to me how so many people are in denial about the extermination agenda when it's so obvious.
It's abundantly obvious.
They don't need us anymore and they are actively trying to eliminate us.
But again, it's easy to be hard to kill.
That's a saying that I've repeated.
It's easy to be hard to kill.
It doesn't take much, actually.
Yeah.
Well, and that's part of the journey here that we've learned that the things in history that were essential or critical to survival of human beings really haven't changed, has not changed.
But the technology has made certain things so easy that you've taken those hard to kill humans and made them easy to kill.
You've taken them out of the things, doing the things that would normally be the essence of being alive and surviving and even thriving and convinced them that they don't need to do any of that because we have technology.
That's the weird thing about all of this.
But that's the individual decision of how to apply that tech, right?
So you need to have kind of an Amish mindset, but tech competence, where you live in a way where you could say, I can do without those robots.
I could do without those things because I'm using tech to build skills and knowledge and know-how that makes me more self-reliant.
Those people will be the survivors of whatever happens.
But you're going to need tech to be able to survive because you're going to need the benefits of amplified labor in order to be self-reliant with food.
Producing food is a very difficult thing without automation.
I mean, think about countries like Papua New Guinea, where you have more than 90% of the population at times throughout recent history, we're focused on agriculture.
I mean, you would, you could grow just enough food to survive to have enough calories to grow the next crop.
You know, that is not a way to get ahead.
It's a different kind of life.
And farmers know it today.
Small family farmers know that.
It's hard work.
And yeah, they don't have a lot of free time.
They can't take vacations.
It's a different thing, that concept of being able to just, hey, I'm going to unplug and just kind of have fun for a while.
That was not necessarily part of a lot of the history of humanity.
No.
No.
But from this point forward, well, approaching here in a couple of years, the robotic labor that will be available to us.
And, you know, I'll be spearheading decentralized robot models that is where we take an off-the-shelf robot and then we wipe its mind and then we flash in a whole new operating system that is decentralized and that is not connected to the cloud.
So it runs locally and it's not spying on you.
Now, the robot companies will try to prevent that, but we will jailbreak their systems and then we'll be able to install our own systems.
So we're reprogramming the Terminators to work for humanity.
That's going to make your life much, much easier.
Nice.
Mike, I got a question for you that it's off topic, but it's about you.
When I think about our journey together and our friendship over the years, I think there's a lot of people that have misconceptions about who you are, what you are all about.
I know you are out there trying to say, this is what I'm all about, but there's always that.
And are there any misconceptions that you hear about that you would like, you know what?
They think this, but it's really, I'm really this, right?
Is there anything like that?
Have you ever been hit with like, oh, that guy, he's this?
And you're like, where do they get that idea from?
Well, I suppose that happens to all of us because people may have only a partial impression.
But when it comes to the core principles of what I'm about, you've known me for 20 plus years.
I'm all about pro-humanity, pro-faith.
I believe in our creator as the super intelligent designer of our simulation that we are inhabiting.
And my overall goal is to help people be more free with knowledge.
Now, I think maybe the number one accusation I hear is that you're too doomer.
Okay.
There you go.
Yeah, you're too doomer.
Okay.
And that's fine.
That's a great response because if I were to have a conversation with somebody about that, I would say, okay, let's explore that.
You know, what is too doomer?
Or do you think the things that I'm saying are not going to happen?
Because everything that you've lived through in the last decade are things that I predicted 15, 20 years ago, from subprime mortgage collapse to the vaccine deaths to the current depopulation agenda, the mass toxicity of food crops, et cetera.
You and I both, we've made very accurate, broad predictions.
We may not be accurate about the year that that's going to happen.
Who knows?
Right.
But if you're going to get good information from people, it's good to listen to people who have been right about what's coming and who are high IQ people who can understand the trends that are emerging.
And so, you know, you and I would both agree.
I think most of your audience would agree that the dollar will die.
Okay.
We don't know when.
But if you aren't preparing for the collapse of the dollar, then you're not very wise.
And when people say, oh, well, you just talk doom about the dollar.
I don't want to hear the bad news.
I want to keep all my savings in dollars.
I say, that's great.
Just plan to lose them all.
And, you know, plan accordingly.
It's like you can have any belief system you want, but if your belief system is not aligned with cause-effect reality, you're going to suffer more than you need to.
So my message isn't doom.
It's to be prepared so that you don't experience the doom of what's coming.
Well, and it's not pleasant to actually consider a future that is not bright and cheery and necessarily rosy.
But at the same time, I acknowledge that I have changed in the midst of the doom my life for the better.
Despite all of this, despite of the weakening of the dollar and eventually its collapse, which is a big part of what I've described and discussed as well, not knowing, again, dates exactly, but recognizing that there are things in history that I didn't learn coming up through government schools all the way through university level that I had to study on my own without AI.
It took years, right?
And that's why when people talk to me or you and go, how does he know that?
How does he know all that?
It's like you're like almost a computer to them or a magic magician, but they don't see all the decades that precede the time that they now maybe meet you for the first time or meet me for the first time.
Like when I met my mentor in homeopathic medicine, I thought the guy was like beyond Merlin the magician in terms of access to healing powers, right?
And yet it was now decades and decades of hard work and practice.
And do we see that the advances in technology and AI, did they collapse that timeframe?
Or do we still have that age-old concept of it takes still work?
Well, there's always value in wisdom.
And wisdom comes from making mistakes, right?
Or learning, excuse me, learning from others.
Yes.
Let me get a drink.
But as you said, the compression of the acquisition of knowledge is happening rapidly right now.
And I've said that people who use AI intelligently, effectively, they have a plus 20 IQ points effect.
Like if you're asking me questions about pesticides or PFAS, whatever, there's a certain amount that I remember, certain amount that you remember.
But if I can pull it up on an AI engine and actually get good answers, boom, now we're genius level researcher alongside us.
And that's a very effective way to use it.
But what I find is, you know, I mean, you know me, Robert, I don't socialize.
Like I'm not interested in social events because I think it's a complete waste of time in my world.
And yeah, people say, well, you're geeky, you're nerdy.
Okay, that's fine.
I've been that way a long time, but I bet I can press more kettlebells than most people who say that.
You know what I'm saying?
Well, and also acknowledge that, you know, not everybody has to be or wants to be the life of the party, you know, and there's nothing wrong.
You know, some people are like, there's great joy in that too.
And, you know, we can make judgments about how they're wasting their time in certain ways.
In certain ways, we'd say pretty clear the way.
But I've also argued that some semblance of human interaction is important.
It's part of a need, but how we manifest it, that could be different for each of us.
Well, yeah, that's that's true.
And also, I decided, excuse me, I decided long ago that I'm not responsible for the emotional reaction of other people.
And that's very freeing to get to that point.
Usually you have to be 70, 80, or 90 before you get there.
Yeah, yeah.
You get to the stage where I don't give a shit anymore.
You know, you're like, you see that a lot.
But the sooner you can get to that point, then the more freeing it can be.
And, you know, by the way, when I'm training Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu or elbow strikes, no one's calling me a nerd on that.
You go to the gym, you work out, I work out.
I did years of firearms training, effectively combat training with Navy SEALs.
I mean, there's something about being a well-rounded person that used to be common.
You used to have high IQ individuals in society who could write a sonnet, chop firewood, build or repair an engine, repair tires.
And they could fix a hole in a pair of shoes.
They could fix a bicycle.
That wasn't unusual.
And today that's considered very weird.
Like everybody's a specialist that knows only one thing.
Well, I reject that.
I think it's important to have a base of knowledge in everything that an adult human can do.
I agree.
And it doesn't mean you have to be an expert in everything, but certainly the ability to do things that we've outsourced so much of, it's a very dangerous place.
We see it in evidence by just outsourcing our bodies to experts that only are experts in poisoning our bodies.
Right.
That's right.
When you outsource anything, then you provide authority to somebody else to have power over you.
And, you know, medicine can be a great teacher here because when you realize you can, can I curse on your show?
Yeah, no, it's all right.
We're not, what is it?
FCC compliant?
Is that it?
I think, yeah, FCC doesn't have any authority here.
Okay.
Okay, great.
But I mean, are you okay with it?
Yeah, no, listen, we're adults here.
I mean, we tend to be a family-friendly show, but as adults and parents, we like, these kids are exposed to this language.
We just kind of talk to them about it and then they grow up and they can handle it.
Okay.
Well, I don't use a lot of profanity, but where appropriate, it has emphasis.
So when you realize your doctor is full of shit, okay, that's an incredible moment in your life because you realize that they are the product of a system of training of eight years in education and residency in medical school, and they come out retarded when it comes to actual health.
And they don't know about vitamin C.
And you can learn more nutrition than a typical doctor in one hour of AI training on vitamins and minerals.
No joke.
So how can it be that a system that uses some of the supposed brightest people in society after years and years and years of training can churn out a level of ignorance that is unfathomable where even wire animals know more about medicine than doctors, like rats and mice self-administer medicine better than most doctors.
Okay.
When you realize that, then the illusion is shattered and you no longer think, oh, I have to give my authority to this person because they have an MD degree.
No.
It's a, you know, it's a health retard in a lab coat, you know?
It is.
And to your statement, full of shit, I've said this many times that if your doctor is going, having a bowel movement fewer times a day or month or week than you, they are full of that.
You don't want to seek them out for advice.
And that's like the first litmus of finding a legitimate doctor.
So I want to come back to the economics play because I don't want people as much as I know I don't have power for people to make their decision.
I'm trying to tell them what to do other than to say, I'm warning you.
And it's obvious, I think, now more than ever that the weakening of the dollar is inevitable based on its fiat status.
And all fiat currencies eventually go to zero in history.
And yet the technology prior to this was never so invasive that they could create this digital currency concept.
So the central bank digital currencies, I remember one of the visits, I think I handed you a gold back years ago now, right?
Oh, yeah.
Remember that?
That's awesome.
You have no idea what you set off.
We've got gold backs on the wall right there.
Yeah, I have one of those at home as well.
It's awesome.
And I'm not saying it's the only way to go, but if we want privacy, we have to have some ability to exchange something like cash without connecting to some digital observer that can be programmed, turned off, if you will.
So I think viably making gold spendable was brilliant.
Absolutely.
What the technology allows us for doing that.
And so with the United Precious Metals Association, which is a private membership for free, you can sign up and set up your own.
The moment you sign up, you have a trust.
It creates a trust where you can put gold, silver, goldbacks in it, where you can take possession of them.
And it allows for even an online platform and you can tie a card to it if you wanted to operate in that economy or whatever.
But they have set up a system where we're trying to get more people because I believe it's so critically necessary that they hopefully take possession of these things and start using them instead of just holding them.
And that's a whole practice of trying to go out with them as opposed to going, if I hold this, I'll be worth more tomorrow.
That's true, but it's not investing in your community for survivability and viability beyond a central bank digital currency.
So, you know, that's part of the one of the things I want to say.
You can walk around with a pocket full of dimes, but it's awkward.
It's not as easy.
Silver ones, you mean?
So this, to me, is a viable option.
And we have done with UPMA a giveaway.
Our second giveaway is right today.
Oh, so this is going to be fun because I don't know who won.
Superdon did this random number drawing thing for everybody that signed up for a UPMA account for free and funded it like 40 bucks worth, which is nothing.
And again, by the way, the 40 bucks you put in is not a lottery because you own gold, silver, or gold backs, and you can take possession of them.
But the idea is to try and generate interest in establishing economic viability also locally and with online options.
And so if you did that, you were eligible if you signed up through the products we love section at robertscottbell.com.
Thank you, UPMA, for supporting us in this.
We were going to give away 100 bucks worth of gold backs, 150 bucks worth of gold backs, and 250 bucks worth of gold backs.
So three prizes.
And we've got one more drawing after this.
So if you haven't signed up, you're going to miss this one.
But Superdon, can you open up your mic and camera and tell us how this was done and who won the second drawing?
Yeah.
So everybody had a number associated with them and threw it into a virtual hat and drew three random numbers.
And so we'll start from the bottom, work our way up.
So in third place, lucky number six went to Timothy Saxton.
And let me get the list here.
We have his email so we can alert him if he's not watching.
Okay.
Absolutely.
So he won $100 worth of gold backs.
It'll go right into his UPMA account.
Correct.
Awesome.
All right.
So that's third place.
In second place, Kendall Hayes, number 19.
Okay, Kendall Hayes.
I feel like, let me see.
I feel like we should be doing like a there.
We go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
By the way, quiet there.
Just speaking to kids, a reminder, our first place winner last month was a 14-year-old child.
That's right.
And her parents set her up with a UPMA account.
All you had to do is email address and fund it.
And she won $250.
We're the gold backs.
She's awesome.
So, yeah, you can do it.
Mark D just sent me a message that says I'm a little high.
I have not smoked anything today.
I don't know whether, oh, you mean my levels?
Sorry.
Okay.
All right.
Audio.
Gotcha.
All right.
That's all I said.
You're a little high.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
Anyway.
All right.
All right.
So first, first place.
I don't have a drum roll center fig, but first place, number 26.
This is going to Jenny Brotnov.
Jenny Brotnov.
All right.
250 bucks.
Well, again, I'm grateful.
I wish we didn't have.
I still kind of weird that we have to incentivize anybody to get real money and start, you know, having, if you want to house it, whatever, but you can take possession of it.
And the platform of UPMA is pretty amazing.
I've worked with them for years.
And that's why, you know, I don't bring stuff to you unless I've, you know, there's a proven track record.
Mike knows that as well.
That's why that's the way we operate.
And there are probably many platforms trying to figure this thing out.
But one of the things is really establishing local viability in a central bank digital currency world because we might not be able to stop that.
Arguably, we might not.
But I want to have a pathway to not have to be subjugated and subject to their ability or deprogram money that they give you for free.
You know, I heard you talking with Alex Jones about the universal basic income, UBI.
You know, there are a lot of things that, you know, during COVID, a lot of people took quote unquote free money because of the destruction of the economy.
But I want no part of it personally.
That's just me.
Can I interrupt?
Yeah, please.
I want to get Super Don back because I just realized that Super Don, your voice sounds to me, and I'm audio engineer trained.
Yes.
And I know all of us are.
Your voice sounds like Brad Pitt as Ben Rickert in the big short.
And I would like you to say a line from it.
Really, you sound just like him today.
Can you say, if we're right, people lose homes, people lose jobs, people lose retirement savings, people lose pensions?
Because that's his famous line from the movie.
Can you try that and let the audience judge?
I have to write this down.
That's a lot.
Okay.
Yeah.
What is the line?
Where you can find it?
It's from the big short.
It's from the big short.
Yeah.
And Brad Pitt is playing Ben Rickert, the former Wall Street Investment Advisor.
And he's chiding the guys who are celebrating being right about the big short.
And he says, you know, stop dancing.
If we're right, people lose homes.
People lose jobs.
People lose retirement savings.
People lose pensions.
And I'm wondering if I can get Super Don to say that.
Because you sound just like him.
That is kind of wild.
Maybe it's the way the audio is.
It's coming through to us.
Yeah.
Anybody ever said that to you before?
The name of it.
Yeah.
The big short is the movie.
Yeah.
If we're right, people lose homes, jobs, retirement savings, people lose pensions.
That's pretty close, man.
We're right.
I don't know.
See, I'm overthinking it.
It's not natural, but that's pretty cool.
People lose homes, jobs, retirement savings, people lose pensions.
Big short.
I'm going to look at Brad Pitt.
You got a Brad Pitt voice producer here.
Did you know that?
I had no idea.
I mean, we can't say that Brad Pitt is endorsing this.
Right, of course.
But it sounds like him.
Oh, my God.
Anyway, I guess I should be, I should, that's a compliment, right?
It is a compliment.
Yeah, dude.
Yeah.
Way to go, Don.
You got a great voice, Don.
Oh, he does.
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, if only I looked like Brad Pitt, then I'd have it made.
Well, if you, if you shave, you might.
We don't even know.
We can't see past all the time.
I don't have time.
Who has time to shave?
No, look at Robert.
Robert used to have a baby face.
He could have been a whisper on that face anywhere.
He got to a certain age and he just stopped leaning against the razor.
So I'm the only one who shaves.
Yeah, because I don't socialize, so I have time for shaving.
That's why.
I got to watch that movie now.
All right.
Yeah.
It's one of my favorite all-time movies.
It's actually on point to what you're talking about.
Yes.
With goldbacks and, you know, new currency.
Because the big short is just, it's actually the small short of what's coming.
What's coming, I think.
Yeah.
And so, look, this is what I, let's say I say, struggle with it because I know people value certain things that I don't value.
And it's just like we talk about what do you value?
What's important to you?
Those are the things if you really value it, you'll spend the time and effort, whatever, to strengthen yourself in that realm.
And yet now we have access to strengthen ourselves in realms we would never have access to because of some of the technological revolutions.
And I'm, you know, kind of digesting that even as we speak.
And as you were on Alex Jones last hour, we were listening to you, you know, before we went live.
And yet I feel so strongly about that independent opportunity to not take part in UBI.
Yeah.
To not, you know, you do not want to.
You don't want to do that.
And yet I know a lot of people, they have habitually lived their lives in a way it's like, well, whatever is going on, I'm just going to go along with it.
So remember that during the COVID, remember the, well, I think they were called the PPP loans.
These were the loans to small businesses.
If you took that loan, which was then forgiven, it was free money to pay your payroll.
Did you know that if you took the money, you consented to the government searching through all your accounting files?
So you waive your Fourth Amendment rights and then the government used that to prosecute a large number of people who committed fraud.
They've set up fake companies, which, of course, if you set up a fake company and take money, that's a crime.
We understand that.
But even the companies that were doing the right thing, some of them got investigated and then they had to prove their innocence because they were presumed to be guilty.
So, Robert, when you take UBI money, you are consenting to the terms of service of the UBI.
Do you think those are going to be written in our favor?
Oh, hell no.
No.
Not a chance.
It's going to say the government has the right to audit all of your expenditures and to audit your income to determine if you are truthful in qualifying for the UBI.
So you give up all financial privacy if you accept the UBI.
Yeah.
No, it's absolutely the concept that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.
And that's not my saying.
This is a saying that we should all have been taught.
And yet many of our fellow Americans, and we just talk about our culture here, have lost sight of that and are looking for free stuff.
In fact, every day they wake up going, how do I get free stuff?
How do I get free stuff?
Well, and it's going to be very seductive, but also for many people who lose their jobs because of AI replacements, they're not going to have much of a choice if they want to eat.
And that's by design.
So they have the AI agents come in and take your job.
They kick you to the curb financially.
And then they offer to be your savior.
Oh, here's free money from the government.
All you have to do is waive all your constitutional rights.
And then you can buy groceries, but only certain groceries, the ones that they approve.
With PFAS pesticides.
Yeah, like cricket leg protein bars and whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's why if you own gold and silver, you don't have to participate in the UBI.
You can say no.
Now, it's just like kind of with vaccines.
When they push the vaccine mandates, you could always, as an American, you could always say no.
They just made it incredibly expensive for you.
Oh, you can't fly.
Oh, you can't visit a parent in a nursing home.
You can't visit a college campus.
You can't keep your job, right?
Very, very inconvenient, but you always had the power to say no if you're willing to pay the cost.
Mike, that brings up, you know, something we've talked about before here.
You know, my belief system is different than a lot of people.
And that's okay.
We all have different beliefs, but I was like, I'm not getting a marriage license.
I did not, I didn't invite the government into my, my holy matrimony with my wife is between me and her and God.
I didn't get birth certificates for my kids, didn't apply or allow them to give social security numbers to my kids because I have a belief about not numbering people like cattle.
And there are other things we can go into Bible stuff, but everybody's got different interpretation of, but this is just me living in accordance with my beliefs in principle.
And then, of course, people tell you, well, that's impossible.
How will they work?
How will you travel?
And yet we found out that even as Congress passed a law that said, we're requiring now that you have to have a social security number to get a passport renewed.
This is after we had already gotten passports for our kids and we stopped using those numbers.
And they said, no, no, you have to have one.
And we've said, no, we don't.
But it wasn't easy.
We had to fight for our freedom.
But that's the concept that we've lost for most Americans is that freedom is not given just because you're born in America.
It is rewon every day.
And yet we have become lazy as a people.
This is where I'm speaking to my fellow Americans.
Y'all, freedom is not given just because you read about the founding fathers and a declaration of independence and you shoot off fireworks Independence Day.
We're coming to 250 years anniversary since that next year.
And, you know, for some that are really knowledgeable, they say it's the saddest day of the year because they look around and go, how little do we value the freedom that we proclaim we love?
And so I'm not saying you have to do it my way.
Mike's not saying you have to do it his way, but the point is in sharing our stories is hopefully I feel to inspire you guys to do better, that you can do better when you've been told it's impossible.
It's not impossible.
It's only impossible if you believe it, if you buy the lies that they're selling.
But for the first time in history, we're coming up at a pivot point where if you don't do it in a pro-freedom way, you probably will be eliminated because of what we're talking about, the global extermination agenda.
So that has rarely existed before in human history.
At times it has, democide and wars.
And we talked about the whole lot of more and the Holocaust, et cetera.
There are times, but we've never faced as a planet the extermination of a significant percentage of the entire human race.
But that's what begins.
Well, actually, it began with COVID.
Yeah.
Right.
So it's just, but it's going to accelerate.
So there is a cost for being ignorant.
And this is where, yeah, sometimes I get pushback on this kind of take because people say, well, you know, you sound like you know everything.
No, but I tell you what, I do know that if you want to survive what's coming, do not trust the government's official narratives, for God's sake, because there are millions of people who are already dead who should not be.
And we don't hear from them.
If they could speak, if the dead could speak, they would say, don't trust the government and don't take the jab.
And there are many people living today who will be dead in the next five years because they trusted the government, because they took whatever jab or they did whatever.
Or maybe the UBI program will have food that is laced with infertility chemicals because that was actually suggested to President Richard Nixon.
I believe the year was 1971.
It was written up in the New York Times.
I covered this before.
And they said, we need to have infertility chemicals in all the food that we export to Africa because they didn't want the African populations to be able to have babies.
And look at the population explosion of Nigeria today, for example.
They saw that happening in the 1970s.
So they said, let's poison an entire continent of black people, mostly black people.
And that was discussed by the science advisor of President Richard Nixon.
Okay.
And for those people watching who think that that's not possible, you need to learn history because that was all written up in the New York Times.
You know?
And most people are functioning on a lack of information.
So I don't care what you think about my presentation.
You should fact check everything I'm saying.
And when you do, your world will be rocked.
Simple as that.
Well, and our worlds were rocked a long time ago.
That's why we do this rather than cowering in fear to these discoveries that were quite horrific.
And I've discussed hiding under my covers, just not like a cartoon, but like a cartoon, because I just realized that there are monsters among us.
They pretend to be human beings and they're willing to do the most heinous, horrible things to fellow human beings, much less animals.
And because you or I wouldn't do it, the wrong response then is that they wouldn't either.
And they apply that ignorance or apply that ignorance in the people to say, well, I would never do that.
That's stupid.
No one would ever do it because I wouldn't do it.
That is a dangerous level of naivete.
Hopefully it's dissolving from this planet, but it still exists.
That's why we have the Archangel Michael right here on the table.
Did you know that's who that is?
Oh, yes.
Yeah.
Wings, sword, and a shield.
Yep.
That's a symbol of faith and a warrior mentality to fight for the future of humanity.
That's what that's there for.
So we got to ask you an inconsequential question just to wrap up the live broadcast.
And then we'll take a 30-second break and just do last final thoughts for today in the bonus round.
We won't be a long time because I'm going to have to get back to CHD and Mike's busy as can be, but man, this has been great.
Super Don, you know, the little video clip to preset this question for Mike.
I don't think we've ever asked him this.
It's time to find out.
Tell us, please.
What was your first car?
Memories.
Weird memories.
Honey memories.
Okay, the first car I owned, I paid $75 for.
Whoa, that's awesome.
And it was a Buick Le Sabre.
What?
With a horrible gas leak under the hood.
Do you remember about what year the car was?
1980, circa 97?
No, it was a 70.
70, 70-something.
Buick LaSabre.
Yeah.
So, okay, this thing is a boat on wheels.
Okay.
It's massive, right?
When you turn, the whole thing like leans sideways, right?
Yes.
And the reason it was so cheap is because it had a horrible gas leak that was so bad that it represented a fire hazard.
And the owner was like, I don't even want to fix this.
So I bought it.
And being young and inexperienced, I decided to drive it a while because I couldn't afford to fix it.
And for some reason, it went through a lot of gasoline.
Like the gas mileage.
It was horrible.
Gallons to the mile.
It was like, yeah, maybe it was like four miles per gallon or something because it was leaving a trail of gasoline, highly flammable gasoline.
Today, it would have been considered a weapon of terror, like driving down the road.
And after you'd park it, you know, you'd smell gasoline.
Like, everybody get out as soon as possible.
Right.
But that was my first car.
I grew up middle class, didn't have a lot of money, didn't have a lot of, you know, opportunities at the time.
I grew up in the Midwest, but I did have a $75 Buick LaSaber.
That is an awesome start to the automotive world.
And again, it's do you find?
Oh, look at that.
I see it over there.
Woo!
That's those are so beautiful, those cars.
I remember that.
That makes you super popular in high school to have that sucker around.
Right.
Yeah.
That wasn't the, you know, my first car, which I can brag about, but it was, you know, I bought a used 1969 Chevelle.
That's not a bad vehicle.
That was a great first vehicle.
And I bought it from a Chevron gas station.
Somebody was privately selling it.
Oh, yeah.
And I got to work.
I could fit in the engine block with it, the engine, right?
That's how big those things were.
But again, the memories this brings up.
I know it's silly in the midst of a lot of serious stuff, but we have to find ways to have, you know, the memories of good things in the midst of all the things that we're here to do that maybe I argue very, very important.
At the same time, we're just a blip in the entirety of creation.
And so I don't want to, Let's say, talk in such a term that you're afraid to get out of bed, you know, as you wake up to some of these realities that, as Mike talks about, he's, you know, he's a doomer.
No, he's talking about realities that in history we should have learned and we should have learned connections between what happened and led to this and led to this rather than the history I was taught that sucked.
It was like dates, times, places, just remember the names.
Yeah, I'm like, I knew, I learned nothing from that until I graduated college and then began to really research history, which opened me up to all the things that we know today.
Totally.
And look, if we can survive a fire hazard, Buckless Aboriginal, we can survive censorship, we can survive the robot revolution.
You know, we survive just about anything.
Yes, exactly.
So, this, you and your audience, and I think my audience as well, what we represent is actually the future of human civilization.
There's no joke.
I'm not saying that from a point of view of arrogance, but rather just cause and effect.
Yeah.
That you know, people who don't learn and understand what's happening are doomed.
So, I'm not doomer.
I'm saying don't doom yourself.
Be the learn what you need to survive and thrive.
So, that's my message.
As we wrap up today's broadcast live, our UK Health Radio audience has got to go.
But we'll come back with a short bonus round just to get final thoughts.
Anything Superdawn's got if we got questions or comments from the audience, I want to hear from you.
And we'll wrap it up.
Then I'll head into the CHD event this weekend in Austin, upcoming events, all those things.
Please say thanks to those who really support this message of health, freedom, and healing liberty.
We have links even to the Brideon store, which I'm going to go shopping after this.
So, I will eat well this weekend while I'm breaking the fast later tonight, not on the food they're going to deliver in the hot and I call it a hospital.
No, it's a hotel, but you'll be in the hospital if you eat the hotel food sometimes.
But I'm going to be eating the Brideon store stuff, which is really great.
And, Mike, thanks for hosting us here in your studio and giving me your stuff for the day.
This has been awesome.
Yeah, thank you for being here.
This is awesome.
Thanks to your crew as well.
They've been amazing.
We're going to come back in about 30 seconds just for a few minutes.
Final thoughts on the Robert Scott Bell Show, where I remind you that the power to heal is yours.
Thank you to Mike Adams and his crew for hosting me today on a wonderful broadcast heading into the Children's Health Defense Weekend here in Austin, Texas.
See you next time.
People need affordable ways to build and live in homes.
And that's one of the reasons why I wanted to talk with you because we need a different approach.
Community is based around bioarchitecture.
So, it's an intricate ecosystem inspired by permaculture.
And that's how we're going to get these food forest communities with bionic bio-architecture.
And people actually enjoy living in them.
This isn't just about building a house.
This is about community.
This is about how we function as societies.
Welcome to our new interview here at our new studio, the brighttown.com studios.
And this is actually our very first interview here in the new studio.
And we're joined today by a repeat guest who is a bio-architect.
His name is Alosha, and we spoke with him, I think, about a year and a half ago.
He's got something big to announce here today that we're going to be sharing with you in the interview.
So, welcome to the show, Alosha.
It's great to talk with you again.
And I know that your work has inspired a great many people.
So, welcome back.
Thank you.
Thank you, Michael.
Good to have good to be with you.
Well, it's good to have you here.
We appreciate you taking the time to join us.
So, let's start with the basics.
What is bio-architecture in the first place?
Well, bio-architecture, in my understanding, it's a way to build a home without climbing into debt with your hands or having even if you are employing a laborer to it's extremely optimal.
It uses mostly natural materials or super low-cost materials.
And it's the ability to plug in things like Vast2 and Fing Shu, which basically sorts out the energetics of the space, biogeometry, which is the energy of shape, which removes the electromagnetic radiation, which I tested.
And it just goes out.
I can't even connect it to a Wi-Fi inside one of those things.
Yeah, and it's generally considered as not a huge building.
You know, something that's bigger than a tiny house, but can be the size of a tiny house, but it's generally not a massive building because it's made of natural materials that are usually like, you know, using a bit of muscle, although we're moving towards 3D printing these days.
But yeah, it's a cozy home that makes you feel like you're in a temple.
I call them living bio-shelter organisms.
Yeah.
All right.
That's really important.
You hit upon a couple of things there that are really critical.
Number one, we have a housing affordability crisis in the West.
In America and other Western countries in particular, we have an entire generation of young adults who are absolutely unable to afford housing.
The houses are too expensive and they're also very unhealthy.
We've interviewed other experts about that, where the space doesn't work well.
The space doesn't have the right light coming in.
They tend to grow mold.
And you already mentioned the electromagnetism.
If the shape is wrong, and some people in Eastern philosophy might call it feng shui, right?
But I know it's more than that.
But we have houses in America that are too expensive, that are unhealthy, and that just flat out don't work.
So what you're talking about, I think, is really critical.
We need to rethink where people live and how they create these places where they live, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, there's just a couple of little hacks, like if you submerge your home in an area, in a dry area, obviously not in a wet, swampy area, but if you're in a dry area, which a lot of part of a lot of America is, the West Coast, yeah, I believe.
Anyway, so then you already can like two feet or three feet use up the earth.
First of all, it acts as a buttress.
So if you're doing a vault, you know, a vault is like a lateral, it's got lateral force going outwards and the earth berms it and pushes up against it.
So you don't have to have any structure because the arches push against the earth and the earth does not go anywhere.
So therefore, that's the one thing.
So you already saved yourself like three feet of building walls all around.
And plus, it's a stable temperature.
We build a home in Siberia.
You won't believe it.
Nobody believes it.
I've spent $800 on this timber vault, which are actually one of the courses that today we're going to discuss.
It's in the package.
But yeah, I built this vault for $800 with two pensioners.
They were about 60, 65 years old.
And then one was 70 and 65 in working four hours a day for two months.
And I spent $800 on materials.
It was secondhand glazing, triple pane.
I had to search on a junk mail type of, you know, whatever the online secondhand building supplies sites you have.
I had to search around.
I had to drive to get those windows, obviously.
But the whole thing cost me like not more than $1,000.
So what were the primary structural materials?
Was it earth or straw bale or tapia or something like that?
No, it was, believe it or not, it was like C-grade timber that we bent without any steam.
We just put some pegs that we just sharpened with an axe in the ground following about eight meter diameter at eight meter diameter, which is 24 foot.
It doesn't snap.
Anything tighter radius than that, you need to steam the wood.
So at 24 foot diameter, you don't need to do any steaming.
So we just, it's a super easy method.
And then you just put four planks together, you hammer them with nails going crisscross, crisscross, a bit in an angle, and then that's it.
And you've got this beam without any glue.
It's like a glue-line beam, but without any glue.
And then you have these timber beams that go, you know, in about six of them.
And then it's a self-supporting structure.
And we just put some boards on top, some super cheap insulation with like reflective.
And, you know, the main key was the clay lock.
It's basically clay and grass, mush that's locked it up.
That makes the sod that goes the next layer does not slide off.
And obviously there is a waterproofing layer, which was just two layers of plastic.
You know, yes, you can go expensive pond line, but if you go two layers of plastic, foundation plastic, even if only one pierces, you still got the second one and it goes way past the structure and you've got drainage channels.
And then you basically, you know, and you do this all like low-tech.
I mean, what is that?
Mike Ochler's $50 house.
You know what I mean?
That guy built a house for $50.
You've heard it on paramees.com.
They advertise it quite a lot that Mike Ochler, I'm sure you, I mean, they'll find it.
They know what I'm talking about.
So it's truly, truly possible, but you've got to scrounge about for materials and be creative about it.
Right, right.
Of course.
But what I love about what you just described is then that the wood that you have bent and put into this shape, you've created an arch out of it that has built-in tension that is structurally supporting the loads on it.
As long as the ends don't pop out.
So as long as that's what the earth is there for, the earth, so that went into logs.
We pulled the logs out of the forest ourselves.
You cut little sockets into them with a chainsaw and it goes into the log like that.
And, you know, and then the rest you can see in the video.
You know, it's, you know, it's pretty simple.
Yeah.
And I just had one American repeat that world in Washington state.
I just spoke to him yesterday.
It was truly amazing.
So the courses work.
And the other guy repeated my air creed dome building a five-dome structure in India just by watching the videos.
So it's pretty cool.
It's pretty cool.
So those who want it, they do it.
So we do a couple, we do various methods.
So, all right, let me then mention how people can learn more about this because we have your course that's going to be airing for free at brightu.com.
And here it is.
It's called the BioVita 2D to 3D Biotexture Draft and Build Class.
And the streams for free beginning November 22nd.
You can register right here at brightyou.com.
And from there, you're going to learn how to do this.
And you can also, of course, optionally purchase the course and download it all.
Or you can watch an episode each day.
So, Alosha, could you just give us a brief description of what people are going to learn in this docu series class?
Because I think a lot of people are looking for a cost-effective, but more, you know, earth harmony kind of way to live that's going to lower energy costs.
It's going to lower heating and cooling costs.
going to improve air quality and improve resistance to electromagnetic pollution, but it's going to cost less money.
So walk us through a little bit about that course, if you would, please.
Okay, so the course that's being aired on the whole journey on your site is the design course, okay?
But with it, I actually give away all my courses, which is the dome, two types of dome, the air creed dome, which can be made with any bricks, such as hemp or normal standard bricks.
The sandbag dome as per the Cal Earth method, which I learned in America as well.
The aircreed, by the way, is like Dome Gaia with those giant windows.
And my whole water course, which is three types of water tanks, biochar drinking water filter, natural pool, which can be like a reservoir for the water that's going to be a stealth because it's a pool, but you can drink it.
And I have lab tests that this is drinking water.
So it's a whole water thing with lots of terraces.
And I built a giant wall 150 feet long that stopped the river.
The river went up also 20 feet high.
And my wall being in a curvy shape actually stopped that river.
So those are all the courses I'm just adding on.
And the Gothic Arch blueprint, which I've just actually added today to one of your crew members, is the step-by-step blueprint of actually all the layers that have to be there in order for the structures, such as the Hobbit Vault or the Gothic Arch Vault, to be proper waterproof without any droops.
And I actually did the blueprint in the 3D program that I teach.
And I'll speak about that shortly.
Okay, so wait, wait a second, right there.
I mean, there's a concern.
Some people might be concerned that they have to master a complex program to do this.
But can you explain why this is not insanely complex for people to learn?
Look, the program, I love it.
And I take it.
So the main course is the 2D to 3D design course.
So actually we draw on paper, front view, top view, which is plan, slice through north, north, south, east, west.
So I do it all on paper.
So that's the first part of the course.
Okay.
So what they're going to watch by streaming is they're going to watch the course is the design course with just one lesson per day of the vault, the timber vault building course.
But all the other bonus courses they're going to get, we'll speak about it just now.
That's what I spoke.
But the main is the design course.
Yes, it is Rhino 3D.
It is an incredible software.
And I teach it step by step by step, really taking you through the whole thing.
It's super intuitive.
It is professional.
And for bionic, natural building.
And I'm not talking about natural building as just a little shed with a triangular roof like SketchUp does.
I'm talking about if you want to do some interesting shapes.
And this is, by the way, great for children because I started learning in a similar program called 3D Max, the first version in 1994 when I was 14.
So this is great for kids.
And this is actually where I'm moving towards education by mimicry and bioarchitecture education for children.
So yes, this is the design course.
The reason that the design course is important is because you want to be able to draw your own home from scratch.
Right.
Because you might have a different size to what I wanted.
Might want to have a, you know, you might be a short person and you don't want a standard big door, or you want three bedrooms because you've got three kids or something.
You know what I mean?
So you want to ultimately be able to design your own home.
But I teach you the principles.
Like there's very important principles of, you know, of bio-architecture.
So actually, the first four lessons is the principles.
Like how close do the openings have to be between each other?
And these are what I learned from the masters, such as Mike Reynolds and Nader Khalili and those amazing architects in America, by the way.
And then, and then after I'm learning from them, I came back to South Africa and I built all these things out that were taught to me.
And I ran multiple workshops in like about five countries.
So I replicated everything I've learned and I added my own flavor.
And the design course allowed me to design all these amazing bio-architectural structures, which were very much Earthship inspired with the greenhouse and a sunny side.
So I'm about solar passive architecture.
And I'm actually, I can show you quickly what I'm designing right now.
Could I share screen?
Yeah, hold on.
I have a question before we do that, though, because you mentioned that you've taught these in many different countries around the world, all these principles.
And one question I can already tell that our audience might be asking is: are your principles appropriate for every climate?
Or does it only work in dry places?
Or does it only work in warm places?
I mean, or can they be applied anywhere?
Well, look, Mike, the beauty is that the last five years I've been living in Russia and I'm developing a home right now for Siberia, which is Canadian type of temperature.
And the 25 years I lived in South Africa, so that was the hot and dry climate.
So yes, I am applying both strategies and speak about both.
And there are different.
There is no such thing as a standard home for all climates.
For example, in a hot climate, you're looking at like big overhangs so your sun does not blast in in the summer and in winter it comes in.
Yeah.
Like a typical earthship with this front glass at an angle will not work in a very hot Californian climate.
It'll just bake.
In fact, they forgot to close to open the windows one day and the typewriter melted.
So this is very typewriter.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's his own story.
Yeah.
So when you work with laws of physics, it can be really handy, but you got to know what you're doing.
Like, for example, the cooling strategy is we have here in Russia the temperature of four degrees Celsius underground, really, really cold.
So whole of summer can be pumping that cold air into the house without using any air con.
So that's another principle of natural building is that it's passive heating and passive cooling.
Otherwise, we're not talking about if we have to run an AC a whole of summer and stoke a fire or the whole of winter, that's no go.
So this is the house.
After I've learned with the Earthship at the Earthship Academy in Taos in 2011, I spent the last 14 years developing a home, like my version of a sacred geometrical vastu inspired Earthship.
And that's what I wanted to show you on the screen.
Yeah, actually, like, let me show you the tiniest little hole.
I mean, this is just the tiniest.
This is many years back.
I was just, it's just on my screen right now.
I wasn't showing, but I wasn't planning on showing.
But that's like a little collarth dome and a little geodesic to frequency.
And this is like what doesn't even need a registration, you know, with authorities for this kind of small structure.
And the coolest thing is that we're planning to do a waterfall of water that runs through a wetland.
So it's like a water feature that you can stand under and shower.
But to a building authorities, it looks like a water feature, just a constant waterfall that keeps on falling.
You know what I mean?
And that's why you can get away with not installing plumbing, but you can actually have a shower.
Yeah.
Anyway, what I'm working on with the serial structure I'm working on is this guy.
This is my major.
So what we're looking is a base of an earth ship with tires.
And you've got a bit of a foundation.
Yesterday I drew a bath, as you can see.
And let's just pump a bit of layers in.
So there's my walls.
By the way, so the walls are hyper-adobe.
It's one part cement, 10 parts sand.
And the sand can be taken from the ground and from the land that you're on.
So there's a side domes, okay, also inspired by Carl Earth with an entrance based on Vast2.
I'm sorry to interrupt, but is the style of that construction, is that like earth bags where you put the sand, you mix the sand and cement and then you stuff it into the bags and then you layer the bags?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the future of this is you can see all the layers.
Yeah, you can see all the layers.
So this is all, this is the program that I teach.
And I love this program.
There's the roof sheets.
There is gutter there.
I mean, everything is there.
And there's the onions.
So this is my version of the earthship.
The onions is, you know, there is the outer plaster, there is the insulation foam, and there's the bricks.
So the same bricks as I teach in the course.
This is like the final frontier.
So this is the air creed bricks that go up.
So you can see all the details I've gone into.
So I'm doing a blueprint of this home, you know, basically what I've done different in a way as to an earth ship is I am forcing the heat into the, let me hide that.
I'm forcing the heat through these little spirals, basically, and I channel it through from the greenhouse.
The greenhouse has this double frame, and inside clear polycarbonate and outside has some black pipes.
I just won't find them here now.
And those black pipes channel that heat constantly into the spirals, which obviously is part of the burial.
You know, we're talking about the earthship, correct?
So if we talk about the earthship, then we've got the insulation, the isofoam insulation.
Yeah.
Then we've got the first insulative layer.
Then we've got, I mean, not the insulator, the waterproofing, second waterproofing layer.
And of course, we've got our earth berm.
But before I do that, I've got to show you the air create.
Behind is the two bedrooms, two air create little bedrooms here.
Also very, very cool, very, very, very affordable.
So you've got a space that's small.
You've got like a little bedroom and you've got a parent's bedroom.
And then you've got this big play space that's what 24, 27, six and a half meters.
That's 22 foot by about 20 foot, by 15 foot.
And underneath I've got all these channels.
And basically through these channels, I send cold air in summer from underground and hot air, which are stored up in this berm in winter.
And that's how I get this home fully passive.
Yeah.
Do you have fans that are that are pushing that air?
Yeah, yeah, just tiny little fans.
Just tiny little bits.
Just small fans, right?
And so the air is moving heat or coolness around as appropriate.
How much less expensive is this compared to a typical Western built home, wood frame, drywall, roof shingles, the whole deal.
What's the cost difference?
Look, first of all, the earth bag can be used without cement if they are waterproof.
So if the water doesn't go in there.
But we do use about 10%, even 9%.
So that turns all the earth bags into stone.
The main thing is the labor.
So, you know, if you could get, and I figured out a quick way to do this, like a large concrete mixer, five guys, and you can pump out four rows per day of this structure.
So, so, you know, Michael, the main thing is that you're never going to pay for electricity to heat this home or for cooling of this home.
And second of all, it's not even, if it's buried, it's not even seen.
That Hobbit home that I give away for one of the courses can't be seen from a satellite.
It's like a mound of earth from the top and there.
So you don't even have to have this metal roof.
You know, I don't know exactly what the costs in America are going to be, but the main thing is, you know, if people can get the labor, get it done.
So, you know, and the way I'm seeing is like three friends getting together and building each other a home in one summer.
That's really the optimal if you don't want to use labor.
So I guess a big part of the cost is going to depend on whether you have sand on site, right?
So if you have sand on your site.
I was able to use clay.
I was able to use clay.
And it doesn't have to be like perfect sand.
It could be little stones up until half inch big, a quarter inch stones, also good.
Clay up to 40% clay, also good.
But yes, Sandy said you gotta, you gotta, you know, if you choose, if you haven't bought land, choose land where you can get a little bit of sand.
So take a spade when you choose land and actually dig a bit into subsoil and see what's underneath your feet.
It'll be good to know anyhow.
So if you have on-site material like that, then I would imagine your costs are going to be extremely low, but the labor is the issue.
And I think, so one of the questions that viewers might have is, well, I can hire guys who do drywall.
I can hire guys who do framing.
I don't know how to hire any guys who do earthbag construction.
So is this something that can be taught so easily?
Michael, it's so easy.
In all my construction, and you'll see in these courses, I literally to guys off the street.
I took the lowest paid labor and I would recommend to eat with them, to treat them well, like people should be treated because I wasn't all that well 10 years ago and didn't eat with my guys.
I prefer to eat with my guys.
So they feel that connection, you know what I mean?
So you're not like white boss sitting somewhere and you do it with them.
You do it with them and you keep up the spirit going and you work with the guys and things go really, really fast.
In fact, I was able to achieve with two other guys a speed of 240 running feet per day of the bag.
And it's four inches, four and a half inches high, and it's about eight inches wide.
So if you look at my hands about like that, the final and stomped.
It's a rammed earth technique.
I see.
Look, Michael, the most important thing is that I teach three methods.
The Hobbit Vault course doesn't have any sandbags.
Or if it has, it has one day's worth of work worth of sandbags, like two or three rows.
And then the rest is all timber structure.
That's the one I did with two pensioners in one month, eight hours a day, if you use it for eight hours a day.
Okay.
Then I teach air crete dome as well.
So you might not want this structure.
You might be in a much warmer climate.
You don't want this giant earth ship or whatever.
It's not giant.
I mean, but anyway, you might not need this earthship thing.
You want to build a bit of aircrete domes and just get on with it, like dome guy style.
And those just use bricks, one foot by one foot bricks, and they go up with you and your kid can do the whole structure.
And the whole dome goes up a week.
So I do teach three methods of construction in this training.
So some of them are more difficult, like the hyper adobe.
And then you've got the aircrete blocks, the AAC lightweight blocks, which are super easy.
The timber costs a little more, but you can also scrounge for timber C-grade that's not good.
They want to throw it away and you can get it a little treated and use it up.
So you've got to be creative about it.
But I do teach three methods that was shown in this picture now.
All right.
Well, that's really good that you've got three different approaches here.
Let me just remind people that if you have interest in this, even if you're not building a home currently or planning on moving, this is something that you might want to consider, especially as our economy changes, our housing situation changes, as the weather changes, whatever's happening.
You might want to reconsider where you're living now, especially as the power grid becomes less reliable.
In the United States, the power grid is not reliable.
The Eastern grid, which affects 13 states, they're already warning people that they're going to have rolling blackouts on either very hot days or very cold days.
And the way homes are built today, in the summer, they're just going to bake if you lose air conditioning.
Or in the winter, you're going to freeze because they don't store any heat or cooling capacity.
They're not passively cooled or heated homes.
So check this out.
Go to brightu.com.
That's the word bright, followed by the letter U, brightu.com.
And you can find, you can register this course.
It's going to start streaming free of charge on November 22nd with another episode streaming each day for a little over a week.
And just watch it and learn and absorb.
And if you want to get the full course and download it and everything, you can optionally purchase it, but that's not required.
And it might inspire you.
It might inspire you to change the way you think about where you live.
And Alosha, that's, you know, this is something I wanted to ask you anyway, because in the West, we just, we build boxes, you know, we just build boxes and they're not energy efficient.
And the way they achieve energy efficiency is to have them sealed so there's no air exchange with the outside air.
And then you have indoor air contamination problems from all the chemicals and the VOCs, the furniture, carpet, glue, everything.
They call that green.
That's not green, man.
That is not green.
That's toxic.
What are your thoughts?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's very important because I myself very like sensitive to this air quality.
And I know what you're talking about because I feel like just claustrophobic in these structures.
So the way that fresh air comes in, check this out.
You got a pipe that comes in underground.
So let's say you got really, really cold outside.
Okay.
You have a pipe that runs about 90 feet, only five feet in the ground, five, six feet deep, okay?
Which is, you know, quick excavator work.
And then that super freezing air preheats to eight degrees Celsius, which is, I don't know what it is in Fahrenheit, but it's, you know, it's comfort, it's pretty, it's almost good.
Comfortable temperature is 22 degrees Celsius.
So that freezing air comes in through the pipe that enters, preheats up, and then you only need to get it up another, you know, 12 degrees to be super comfortable.
So that's how the fresh air comes in.
And the in in winter, in winter, because usually why you just said, you said it's all sealed.
It's all sealed for a reason, because I don't want that freezing air to come in.
The way they do it is they have this box that's called HVAC.
Yes.
Yeah.
Right.
HVAC.
So that basically has lots of little plates and it exchanges the air.
So the stale air from indoor moves out, preheating the outdoor fresh air that enters in.
But those boxes are also obviously quite expensive.
So you can hack the system by just using the laws of physics.
I mean, and laws of physics, like, you know, you just dig a hole in the ground in winter and see, you know, that it's actually like good temperature and it's stable.
At six feet deep, the temperature pretty much does not move much up or down.
It's pretty stable all year round.
So there's actually maps like that, which show you what temperature you have in your area.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
I'm familiar with a lot of these principles.
And it seems like in modern society, especially in the West, we like to make things overly complicated where, oh, you have to have these expensive machines.
You have, you know, the HVAC, the compressors, the condensers, the air exchangers, et cetera.
And then you end up lacking parts.
Something breaks.
There's a part that you need that is only made in Italy, for example, or Japan or somewhere.
And there's a trade war, and the supply chains are all breaking down.
You can't get the part.
And then you're roasting.
You're not able to function.
So what I love about Earthship work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sorry, Mike.
The way the Earthstrip work, just the Earthstrip, the American Taos, your Earthstrip from your own country, the way Mike Reynolds has developed them, which is the principle I've taken, is that thing takes about a year and a half to charge.
And then the sun can go off completely for six months.
And that home, just the sheer mass, he uses five foot thick walls.
We're going to be going to about six, seven foot thick walls.
Those walls just start giving you heat back through the laws of thermodynamics, which state as soon as the air temperature drops lower than the wall, than the mass, the mass starts heating other mass.
And you made of water, a mass, therefore you start to feel warm.
The air might be cool and fresh, but your body feels warm.
It's a very different feeling.
It's a similar feeling when you stand at the end of a day, it's starting to be chilly and you're next to a rock.
Have you ever had that feeling?
You stand next to a rock and you're feeling warm, but the air is like cold outside, but you're like nice and you're feeling great.
You're not even leaning onto the rock.
You're just standing next to it.
So that's the power of thermal mass.
Other side of it.
Okay, like before I, you know, I didn't insulate my floor of my gothic arch and the floor was freezing cold.
I was stoking the fire and I was burning gas propane and an electrical heater.
It was so cold we hit like minus 30 Fahrenheit for like a month in St. Petersburg and the air was perfect.
Temperature like 70 degrees Fahrenheit, 22 Celsius.
But because my floor was cold, I kept on getting cold because it was sucking the cool, the warmth out of me through my feet, even in June, even in like a woolly, woolly, like Slippers.
It's because you can't fight mass.
Mass is so big that whole floor, 18 foot by 18 foot floor, was just pulling that coldness, coldness out of me.
But the air was perfect temperature.
I had a temperature gauge on the wall.
So that's how mass works.
So the way they do it in these closed up claustrophobic boxes, you pump up hot air through these hot heaters.
The walls are cold, but the air is nice and warm.
But then it feels like a bit dry.
So I'm just giving you all these.
Yeah.
Let me ask you, though, about then, I mean, you're talking about cold climates quite a bit.
What about hot climates like where I am here in Texas or think about Arizona, Southern California, et cetera?
When people have way too much heat because of just, you know, their location and the sun, how do you use your principles to cool, to passively cool?
Well, you've heard how in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, homes stay cool.
What they do is basically they use the mass again.
Obviously, the design.
So you've got to have a nice big overhang.
So your walls don't bake.
Very important not to let the sunlight onto your walls.
So some form of a structure that can provide shade, which can act as a balcony, it's a casita to sit around.
I don't know what's it called.
Okay, so that's the first principle.
The second principle is you got to have that mass really saves you because at night it's cool.
So the mass cools down.
Okay.
And then during the day, because of the thickness of the walls, it's slowly warming up.
And by the time it gets warm to the inside, now you've got night again and the wall starts cooling down.
And that way the wall stays nice and cool.
When I was in South Africa, I didn't even do that shade awning.
And I just had my house light color, like a light color, obviously color, you know, black car is seven degrees Celsius hotter than a white car, which in Fahrenheit, maybe 20 degrees hotter or something.
I don't know.
So it was a light color.
And as soon as I walked into that structure, it was cool.
Another principle is obviously planting of trees in the right place.
And that you've got to turn to another American.
I think he's in Texas or somewhere there, Brad Lancaster.
And he has given amazing lectures and has got a rainwater harvesting book.
And he shows you how planting trees from a certain side provides, you know, just optimal.
He proven that 20 degrees lower in temperature and Fahrenheit in summer just by placing the trees in the right place.
No, not even trees.
Just by orienting east.
So it was a typical rectangular home and he oriented either east-west or north-south.
Just changing orientation dropped the people because it was a mobile home.
So they were able to turn it.
They had a $200 electrical bill in the winter and it went to zero.
That's Brad Lancaster.
He just posted the lecture.
You can check it out.
And I'm not even talking about trees.
He also talks about trees and things like that.
In South Africa, what I've seen, and this is a strategy, unfortunately, you won't see it on the internet, but I'm sharing it now openly.
When then from Netherlands, from Amsterdam, the people came to South Africa, and I know it because I've seen the structure.
Basically, okay, picture this, a brick structure, but every second brick, like a chessboard, is removed.
Okay, can you picture that?
Yeah.
So it's like the air can flow through this.
It's a double wall, okay?
A double wall, but they're like chests, they're all removed so the air can swing through.
Okay.
Chicken wire here, chicken wire here, and charcoal placed in between these two walls.
It was about space maybe 15 centimeters.
What is it?
Six inches.
Okay.
And just dripping water on that charcoal and the air that can go through this wall.
That's how they made fridges 200 years ago.
Huh.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
They had the temperature five degrees Celsius.
It's close to freezing in that thing just by evaporative cooling.
And that's a natural, simple DIY thing.
Another strategy I've seen in California, a Niger Khalili, which my teacher at Cal Earth, who I learned, well, I didn't learn from him.
I learned from one of his students.
He passed away by that time.
But what they did is they had a trough of water, okay, like a nice big trough.
And they had sheets, lots of sheets in this trough.
And the water wicks up naturally.
And just by, and they had this whole thing in like a little room with a pipe.
And basically by that air going through, again, evaporative cooling cools down the water.
And then that air, you don't have to breathe it.
It can go into like a couch, like a rocket mass heater couch, but you use the same pipes and just channel the cold air.
So you suddenly got a really, really, really cold bench.
So these are the strategies that I'm like, I love it.
I discussed it.
I discussed it in this course.
And I will discuss it with all your subscribers who join on my private Telegram channel, where by the way, I give away all my other courses.
So all the other courses, the dome, the water, the Gothic Arch, the Gothic Arch you already got downloaded.
But the water and the dome course and yeah, they get that by joining my Telegram group.
Other courses they get immediately after purchase.
Okay, all right.
Wow.
But the streaming is only the 3D design course.
So if they're streaming and they're looking, like, but that's not Alosha spoke about.
It's just the design course with the Vault, Timber, Timber Vault, Hobbit Vault building course, just one lesson per day.
All the other building stuff is once they join the Telegram group, just so we're clear on that.
Right, right.
Okay.
So, and people can find out about your Telegram group from the stream or how do they find out about that?
Well, they get to the Telegram group once they purchase the course because they're already getting the Vault course.
They're getting the design course.
And I'm gifting them the blueprint, which was three months worth of work, the Gothic Arch Blueprint.
That's all they get whilst they're watching and they're streaming and they get three things free of charge.
And if they, you know, you know what I mean, if they want to get, you know, so I look forward to their support and then we game.
Okay, okay.
All right.
Again, so the way for people to connect with this is just go to brightu.com and you can just register.
It's free.
Just put your email address in here and you can start watching this course, which is about the 3D biotechure draft and build class, right?
That begins streaming November 22nd.
And an episode streams each day.
And then optionally, you can choose to download the entire course.
You can purchase it.
And then you're going to get all these other access to the Telegram group and the bonuses, et cetera.
Do I have all that right?
Yeah.
And you just, and the important part is not just the 3D, it's the principles of bioarchitecture design and theory, which they get in the first part.
Then it's drafting on paper.
So I really teach them how do you draw a home from the top.
Then we start looking at it at the front, from the top view, we draw the front view.
Then we look from the front, we look at the section slice through the middle, north to south, and then it will slice the home.
Like you take a knife and you slice through a cake, then you just do a slice east to west.
So just by doing, so people say, no, no, a computer is not for me.
I don't want to do it.
I do teach very easy method, which I learned in geography class, believe it or not, how they showed us how we can draw the mountain from contour lines.
You know what I mean?
You've got some contour lines, and then you can basically sketch that and see the side view of the mountain by just looking at the contour line.
So it's a very simple way that I teach how to do, how to see your home, how to put your body, and it's all to scale.
We use graph paper that's to scale.
And then you can see like two centimeters is one meter.
And you can put your height and you can actually see what height is the human.
You know what I mean?
So all those things.
So that's very, very simple, understandable way.
So for people that don't even want to use a computer, they still get to use the understand the paper part, which is, and just with paper part, I was building half of my structures.
In fact, all of my structures that I built before, I built just by doing on paper.
The 3D design course is really to take you way further.
If you want to submit your own, you know, like blueprint for approval, like if you have a sticky authority or something, or you want to do those like deep detailed details, like what I'm doing right now with this Earthship hybrid with sacred geometry that I'm designing, because I really, really want details now, because I'm building it and I want to mass produce these homes, not just mass produce,
I want to actually mass sell the blueprint of this home that I was showing you that I built and people can build this.
And maybe in the future, it'll be open source, you know.
So I want to really get all the finer details.
But paper work just fine.
Many, many architects before CAD drew all homes on paper and they built them successfully.
Yeah.
Oh, well, absolutely.
Well, things are changing rapidly in terms of technology.
I'm wondering if there will ever be automation.
So that's my last question for you today.
Can you see these kinds of homes ever being built with, you know, we've heard about the large 3D printing home robots that they seem to print layers, right?
Or even maybe humanoid robots that help pack the sand.
I don't know.
Is there any kind of automation in the future for this?
So this is where we're going.
Just so you know, I'm going to switch off the sound.
Okay, so look at these panels printed in off-site, placed without any reinforcement.
This is where I'm going.
No rebar, no rebar on the removal form work.
Okay.
And then you have a structure that's in compression.
Now, just picture this that it can be buried.
Okay, with an excavator.
This is where I'm going.
Waterproofing, installation, obviously.
And then up until these ridges, the whole thing gets buried.
And then off these parts, this is a bridge, obviously.
This is not a home.
So it'll be much thicker or like, you know, and then the greenhouses will actually go off these structures.
This is where I'm going.
So that's the one part.
Then you've got guys in Texas.
Oh, yeah, this is, by the way, everything that they're going to learn.
So they're going to learn this air creed dome.
They're going to use the sandbag dome.
So this is actually shots from the course itself.
So they'll be able to build these structures.
Then this is the natural pool, which are converted from chlorine.
That's the wetland for the pool.
That's all in your climate can be done.
That's in Brazil were built.
So in essence, it's the same as 3D printing.
So all of this in future will be 3D printed because it's the same method.
It's called additive, additive technology.
You add, there's no waste in this technology.
Yeah, that's mixed.
Photo right there looks like it could be a 3D printed structure.
Exactly, exactly.
Yeah, that's my history.
So I work with bionic shapes already 25 years.
So I'm probably like one of the few architects that actually went and changed from, you know what I mean, that's so long working with curvilinear shapes.
Then I flew to Mexico and I learned ferrocement.
Of course, my next natural step was like, well, textile just, you know, gets burned by the sun.
Let's get it nice and solid.
And so that's in Mexico, San Miguel de Lende.
And then I came back to South Africa and I built the structure.
So a doghouse, you know what I mean?
You start small.
There's a bit of rebar mesh and you get that.
Then I went into a seashell structure, 33 foot by 18 foot.
So, you know, there it is.
So that's all in South Africa.
Okay.
Yeah, that's biochar filter.
Biochar filter also in the course, by the way.
Yeah, that's Cal Earth.
That's a vault.
That's Nazir Khalilia.
He came to California.
And so the future I wanted to show, oh, yeah, that's the wetland pool, the wetland for the pool.
So this is all in the course, every step by step, how I took the underground water tank, 10,000 gallon underground water tank under the dome.
That dome that I was showing you, that's under the dome is this 10,000 gallon water tank.
So the course is packed full of cool stuff.
But to answer your question, this is where we're going.
Look how strong this is.
Okay.
He just hammered, he just hammered the edge and the whole thing doesn't fall apart.
Can you see?
So it's not just, we're not just making it pretty.
Oh, let's just make some curves.
No, we're actually making super strong structures.
You could have a bomb go off next to that thing.
It won't break because it's also covered by earth.
So there's also, you know, so this is some of the earlier structures that Philip Block made, my inspiring architect.
This is the home also can be designed.
It's part of the course, by the way.
I also teach how I did that.
And I wanted to show you the technologies.
Oh, this is where we're going.
We are going to build communities, starting with Arco Science type of massive structures.
Can you see how those trapezoid structures, their trapezoid rooms and a giant workshop space?
So that's where we're going.
Again, low cost.
Like I showed you, like, okay, I haven't showed you yet, but this can be made on removable forum work.
So we are talking about structures that can be built without debt.
Michael, I lost my home to the bank.
I lost my home to the bank five years ago because I just walked out of it.
I just couldn't pay.
It was COVID.
I couldn't pay.
And I walked out of it.
People need affordable ways to build and live in homes.
And that's one of the reasons why I wanted to talk with you, because we need a different approach in society, you know, for all of civilization.
And then the way that we build and live in houses today is not the way it has been done through most of human history.
Yeah, so that's the home for $800.
This is it.
Wow.
Yeah, it's, it's, I see, I see it's lagging a little bit, but this is where we're going with this whole structure.
This is where we're going.
This is the future.
Jacques Fresco is of inspiration.
And the guys in Texas, this is what I'm searching for, is these.
There, they're there.
That's the guys in Texas.
They've developed this printer.
Hold on, here we go.
The company's jumping around a lot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Here we go.
It's just going to settle.
Here it is.
Here it is.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
This is a 3D printer.
Yeah, they developed it.
It doesn't need any rails because, you know, those printers, they need like rails that, that, that, you know, this, by the time you set up these rails, that's why I'm staying on Hyper Adobe, which is this material, because you don't need any rails.
You don't need any 3D printer.
You know what I mean?
But this is where we're going.
We've got to have a bit of vision to the future.
Look at that.
Wow.
Any shape.
And then on the roof, I showed you already how we do with those panels, correct?
So this is the future.
This is where it's all going.
Wow.
But until we get there, and this becomes feasible.
Like, for example, if me and you are going to get together and say, Alosha, Michael, let's get a community going.
Let's build like 50 homes.
Then we look into the structure.
Then we look into these methods.
But if it's a one-soft home, there's no need to bring a whole whole, an entire 3D printer, you know what I mean?
Yeah, right.
No, if you bring it in, you want to print more than one home.
But Alosha, we're out of time.
So we need to wrap this up.
Any final thoughts?
I mean, this is so fascinating.
I'm really glad that you're doing this and sharing this with everybody.
Any final thoughts before we wrap it up?
Well, once they join my Telegram group, I'm going to explain to them how I see we're building the community.
This is, I put the spirit, the great spirit in the center.
We call it all by different names, but it's the one singular source.
Okay.
And these are all the people we need to be able to pull off new types of communities.
But the community is based around bioarchitecture.
So we're calling in architects, engineers, builders, sculptors, painters, biologists, limnologists, and so on.
So we could form communities based around the theme.
So we can put out a product together.
Because if we can put out a product together into a market, then we can start generating wealth that can make the whole thing very abundant and beautiful.
And we can fly around the world and learn from other masters.
And I'll also explain this diagram, which is basically various parts of the community from training on festivals, kids, to our academy on the ground, to city spots, city locations, and a whole bioarchitectural cluster.
We don't have time to go into this, but basically our organized information and obviously all the various interconnections that go between these things together.
So it's an intricate ecosystem inspired by permaculture.
And that's how we're going to get these food forest communities with bionic bioarchitecture and people actually enjoying living in them.
I love how you're thinking about it.
You're thinking much better than just this isn't just about building a house.
This is about community.
This is about how we function as societies moving forward because our current and that's why I'm giving all my courses away, all of the courses in this package, everything I've done in eight years, five products.
I'm giving it away so I can just let go and go into the smooth.
And the new is start building these communities together with you guys.
I'm actually giving you this training so you could ramp up and come together and say, Alosha, let's do this together.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, well said.
And the video is finally catching up to the audio.
It was an interesting thing that just happened with the connection.
Alosha, this is just a fascinating discussion.
I want to thank you for your time today and for all the contributions you have to humanity with your inspiration and how you're inspiring others.
Let me mention again, BrightU.com is the place where you can register to watch the full course of the 3D biotechure draft and build class, which begins November 22nd.
And if you do purchase the course, then you'll be able to download the whole thing and you'll have access to Alosha's Telegram channel, which gives you access to a lot of other things as well.
So thank you so much, Alosha.
It's been a pleasure speaking with you again today.
It's very inspiring.
You have me thinking about some things right now too.
So just great to talk with you again.
And I'm open to come to America and start an academy of bioarchitecture with people like you, Michael.
So if you want to ever want to partner up, I'm here.
I'm clean.
I'm not on any pot or tobacco or anything.
I'm clean and clear and I'm coming with a space with a heart full of love to really inspire our youth because the youth are the ones that are going to build us these homes with parents.
It's a youth and parents education.
So that I'm open and I'm ready to come to America.
I just need an invitation.
Powerful message.
Okay.
Well, maybe somebody watching is just perfect for that kind of project.
So thank you so much, Alosha.
It's been great speaking with you.
Enjoy the rest of your, I guess, evening.
Not sure where you are right now, but I guess it would be evening.
Thank you for staying up for us.
And for those of you watching, this has been a Brighteon.com interview, and you can freely share it and post it or post snippets of it.
If anything inspired you, please share it.
We ask you to do that.
And you can catch other interviews and podcasts at Brighteon.com.
Thanks for watching.
I'm Mike Adams.
Take care.
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