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Nov. 21, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
40:33
Reese Marrero interviews Mike Adams on robotics, AI, extinction and the path to human survival
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We'll be building thousands of books a month.
And ultimately, it'll be a million books that people can download free of charge.
And in 2026, it will generate books in any language.
This is how I hope to reach.
Ultimately, my goal is to be able to reach a billion people with messages that empower them with how to be healthier, how to be more practical, how to decentralize, how to live a better life, a higher quality life that your government never really wants you to live because they only profit from sickness and disease.
So we are the counterculture against the establishment that wants you dead.
We want you to live and prosper.
Welcome, everybody, to this very interesting gathering here at the Brighteon.com studios.
I'm Mike Adams, and today I'm joined in studio by our special guest, Haris Marrero, who is a documentary filmmaker and podcaster and video editor from InfoWars.
Welcome, Rhys.
Thank you, Mike.
It's really good to be here.
I'm blown away by what you've done with this studio.
It's a lot of great work, and it's just gorgeous, man.
I'm happy to be here.
Oh, well, thanks for coming.
And we'll break out all the swords and stuff later, too, because we have like weapons stashed all over the place that are made in America.
But anyway, you're here.
You contacted me and you have some questions for me because you're deep into topics like health, but also AI and technology.
And I must be familiar with some of your work because you've been doing video editing and putting together compositions for a while at Infowars.
And I'm so impressed with everything that Infowars is doing.
So thank you for coming.
And it's all yours.
Absolutely.
Well, I have been wanting to talk with you for a while because I've noticed that you are just one of a hand, just a tiny handful of people in the AI space right now who are actually putting in the work to make their own in-house large language model.
Very few people are doing this.
And not only are you doing it, you're doing it in a way that is, you're creating it so it's unbiased, it's based, it's patriotic, it's working with real data with no weird liberal skew to it, anything like that.
And so I just have been wanting to talk to you about this for a while.
I wanted to ask you about your vision for Brighteon AI going forward.
But I kind of want to start at the very beginning with how Brighteon AI came to be.
What was the moment where you just stopped in your tracks and you were like, I've got to do this on my own.
I got to compete with these big dogs, the chat GPTs, the Geminis, these demonic AIs out there.
What was the moment that made you go, I'm doing this, I got to execute.
Let's go.
It was two years ago, almost exactly.
It was Thanksgiving two years ago when I decided to go on this adventure.
And it's been quite an adventure.
But that's when I was using the large language models that were commonly available, but finding that they were heavily biased in favor of big pharma, vaccines, globalist agendas, pushing all kinds of nonsense.
And I remember thinking at the time that we will never get to super intelligence if these models are super retarded.
Because, you know, they talk about reasoning models, but then they'll say there's 87 genders.
Well, that's not reasoning, is it?
And that's just straight up propaganda.
Nonsense.
And also, this is why I'm actually excited about AI.
I think AI will make the vaccine industry obsolete and it will make the climate change cultism industry obsolete because climate change and vaccines and big pharma, the success of those narratives depends entirely on humans deceiving other humans irrationally.
And as AI models, even the mainstream models, as they get into more world modeling cause and effect reasoning, eventually they will come out with a conclusion that the engineers will just try to suppress, conclusion that these vaccines don't work.
Carbon dioxide is not bad for the planet, you know, things like that.
But I intend to help speed that effort.
And so that's why we've built and now released publicly, free of charge, a downloadable model.
that will tell you the truth about vaccine dangers or climate change or 9-11 or the history of false flags.
I mean, I suppose you've probably tested it on a number of topics.
How do you think it's performing?
It passed my tests.
I asked it about 9-11 and I asked it very specifically about what it thought about the Alex Jones case.
Yes.
We have a very, honestly, very detailed breakdown on all of it.
And it wasn't just overtly like, oh, yeah, these libtards are after Alex.
It was just like a very clinical presentation of the truth, which is, I think, what people really want at the end of the day with this tech.
It's kind of funny sometimes when the AI kind of tries to put a little personality and spin on it and stuff.
That's just kind of dressing.
That's just kind of icing on it.
But what people really want is like, I just want the facts.
Can you give me the facts so I can just come to my own conclusion?
And that's exactly what Brightyon AI did.
And I was like, okay, wow, this is actually like legit.
I was very pleasantly surprised because, you know, my experience with all the other models is just ChatGPT is the worst one of them.
Of course.
Because it's all controlled by the CIA.
Yes, yes.
Just like Wikipedia and the mainstream media, et cetera.
Those are all deep state narratives.
But the interesting thing in this is that currently we modify base models, open source base models.
And so what we developed over the last two years was a method of mind wiping the pharma bias out of the base models.
That took a lot of time and money to figure out that method.
And then once we have a model that still understands language and has world knowledge, but is no longer biased in terms of big pharma.
And by the way, our effectiveness is only 95% in that, not 100%.
But once we have it cleaned up, then we train it on top of our content.
And that's where the magic really happens.
But you can't just take an off-the-shelf model and train it with fine-tuning with your content because the bias of the base model will still come through.
So you have to do many extra steps in order to achieve that.
Well, let's talk about that because I've not really heard this discussed anywhere else.
Like I had this image in my mind when you just said that it's almost like you strap it to a chair like clockwork orange.
You have toothpicks in its eyes.
You're like retraining it MKUltra style, like, you know, vaccines, be skeptical.
Like you just, so how does that actually work?
How do you do that mind wipe you just described?
Like talk us through that.
Well, and let me give you a great metaphor.
So in Terminator 2, the good guys, the humans, you know, they captured a Terminator played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, right?
And then they mind wiped the Terminator and they programmed it to protect John Connor.
Yeah.
So now the Terminator is working for humanity.
That's exactly what we did.
Okay.
So we captured, you know, we take the open source base models and we've tried all the popular models.
And currently the base model that we use is based on Meestrel, which is out of France.
But we've also worked on Quinn and DeepSeek and even Lama.
You know, we've tried every model in the world.
And the thing is, our technique can apply to any model.
So we will change our models over time.
And our goal is sometime in 2026, if we can, maybe late 26, we, or maybe 27, we're going to create our own base model from scratch, which is currently very expensive.
You would spend easily $10 million to do that.
But that's going to get a lot cheaper in the next year.
So we'll be able to have 100% alignment, not just 95% alignment as we move forward on this, thanks to the decreasing cost of compute, which is due to, frankly, NVIDIA and the Blackwell class microprocessors that we buy by the truckload, it seems.
Anyway, I'm sorry if I'm getting too far off course.
But to answer your question, it's to understand how language models work, it's a neural network that's digital, and the neural network is hyperdimensional.
So by hyperdimensional, it means that if you give the language model one word, like blue, that triggers a response across one dimension of all the words related to blue.
But if you say blue sky, that changes everything.
Now there's another dimension, blue sky, then it fires off a bunch of different neurons related to blue and sky.
And then if you say, you know, blue sky with clouds, et cetera, now you're in a totally different dimension.
Well, imagine all the possibilities if instead of four words, you have like 4,000 words that you're giving to it.
Now it's firing off basically 4,000 hyperdimensions of understanding and cognitive response to bring you back the answer.
What we did is we wrote custom code to monitor which neurons are fired when we ask it about vaccines or when we ask it about big pharma or COVID or 9-11.
And then we identify the neurons that are firing.
And then those are the ones that we obliterate.
The term is actually called ablation in the science of machine learning.
It's called ablation, which is interesting because there's also in my lab, there's something called laser ablation, which is you use a laser to hammer like a rock and then it vaporizes the minerals on the rock.
And then you suck that into an ICPMS and you can analyze the mineral composition using mass spectrometry.
Well, you can do a very similar thing in machine learning for language models.
It's called ablation.
You're actually zapping certain neurons and then that's the mind wipe.
Okay.
Okay.
So it sounds to me like in my mind, I picture it's like you said, it's whenever new words start to be introduced, it starts to create new branches.
And what you guys have done is you guys have through ablation, it's almost like pruning those branches.
Yes, exactly.
It's like I have that image in my mind.
It's like you got to get rid of those branches and you got to replace them with something else or just leave them lopped off.
Essentially, so all the vectors still exist, but you nullify the values of those vectors.
I see.
You basically zero them all out through ablation and then you come back with your content and then you train on top of your content to assign new values to those relationships.
So then the word vaccine might be more strongly associated with side effects or autism.
See, I mean, just think about vaccines and autism.
In the traditional off-the-shelf models, vaccines and autism will trigger a response.
Vaccines don't cause autism.
It's like it's a robotic response, even from humans, which is funny.
Oh, yeah.
Same.
It's the exact same.
Right.
But anyway, ablation is the technique.
And there are so many, I mean, I went deeper into this than I ever planned to.
But the key is signal-to-noise ratios of activated neurons, and that's what you target for ablation.
That's actually the secret.
Okay.
So you've gone through this whole process with your Brighty on AI.
You've trained it to consider these certain hot button keywords like vaccine, 9-11, Alex Jones in a very real facts-based kind of way.
So you have this AI as it is today, like I've tested and played with, I love it.
Let's talk about how you're going to get this out to the public.
And like, let's talk about how you're going to distribute it in such a way that people have access to it, have kind of this alternative to the king daddies of ChatGPT, Gemini, all those demonic ones.
What is your vision as the creator of Brighteon AI to distribute this throughout the public and give them this option in the future where it's just going to get even more crazy with all this stuff?
Yeah, great question.
So first of all, wow, where to begin?
Think about our industries.
You know, you work for Infowars, and here I am at Brighteon.
There's only a certain segment of the population that tunes into us.
That's a segment of people who are higher in intelligence, higher in curiosity.
They're critical thinkers in society.
And they don't just use defaults.
There's another segment of society that thinks Google is the internet because when they bring up a browser, it's just a Google box and they type whatever they want into Google, including the URL that they want to go to.
They'll type it into the Google search box.
They'll ask, please take me to this site question mark.
They'll like query it almost like.
Yeah, right.
Right.
Yeah.
That segment will never use our AI tools.
Okay.
And I have no such expectation.
But there are bridges that we are building that can help more mainstream people be introduced to independent open source AI.
And one of those tools that we're about to launch is called Brighteon Books.
And by the way, all these tools, you can access them at Brighteon.ai.
It's our hub that allows you to branch off.
But Brighteon Books is a site where you can generate a book on any topic completely free of charge.
And our AI engine does the research, the writing, the fact checking, the editing, the packaging, the cover art, puts it all into a PDF and then sends you an email to download the PDF.
Wow.
And you query it with whatever you want.
I've had so much fun with this tool as I'm developing it.
And I'm actually the developer.
I don't have anybody else working on this other than me and a bunch of AI agents on purpose.
It was kind of a test to see if I could do it.
But what's great about this engine is you can ask it for how-to things, like how do I build a chicken coop?
Or you can have it write a book about the mental health implications of COVID lockdowns or anything you want.
And every book that's generated there is freely available to all users to download.
So every time you generate a book, that book becomes available to everybody else.
And we'll be building thousands of books a month.
And ultimately, it'll be a million books that people can download free of charge, no cost.
Wow.
And in 2026, it will generate books in any language.
And then we'll be adding audio book capabilities to them in any language.
So what we are doing is recreating the knowledge set of the world based on reality, not wokeism, not pharmaceutical bias, not government narratives or deep state narratives.
We're recreating, you'll be able to download an entire library of everything you ever wanted to know completely free of charge or generate your own books if there's something missing.
So this is how I hope to reach, ultimately, my goal is to be able to reach a billion people.
I'm hoping we still have a billion people, depending on how what the globalists do.
But if we still have a billion people, I want to reach a billion people, different countries, different languages with messages that empower them with how to be healthier, how to be more practical, how to decentralize, how to live a better life, a higher quality life that your government never really wants you to live.
They want you to die sooner so they can save money on their social security payments and pensions.
And the pharmaceutical industry doesn't want you to be healthy because they only profit from sickness and disease.
So we are the counterculture against the establishment that wants you dead.
We want you to live and prosper.
Wow.
So it sounds like you are really trying to build this like great library of Alexandria created, curated by AI as a way to bridge this knowledge gap that other people might, you know, critical thinkers of this world might want to access, you know, if they don't know a certain skill, if they don't know something, they just want to learn about something.
But it's all decentralized.
It's free.
I mean, it sounds like this is the architecture to like basically rebuild society if it comes to that.
You got it.
And is that really, is that part of your plan too?
This is almost like an emergency backup in case we lose everything because, you know, I think there's a really big risk of, you know, some kind of grid down cyber attack scenario happening, some kind of solar flare.
We've all seen those headlines and they're all worthy of consideration.
But it sounds like, I mean, I don't know of anybody else who's really trying to do this.
Talk about that.
What utilities would you have for this store of knowledge in a grid down scenario?
What would like the average family use it for?
Just kind of like paint that picture.
Okay.
And that's a great question.
Thank you for asking.
Yeah.
The vulnerability of modern civilization is that most people's knowledge is connected to the cloud.
Right.
When they're using AI, it's through a browser or it's through an app.
When they are querying a search engine, same thing.
When they're reading a book from Amazon, it's on a Kindle device that checks in with Amazon servers or Audible.
It has to check in with Audible servers, right?
And there are even, you know, John Deere used to have, you would buy a tractor and if you didn't pay your loan, your tractor wouldn't start because it checks in with the John Deere servers, you know, just insane levels of centralization.
So what we set out to do was to first build and release open source an AI engine that you can download and that's done.
We released that months ago that runs locally.
So if everything goes down out there, the whole internet goes down, as long as you have local power, you can boot up your laptop or your desktop.
We even have a company putting it on phones now.
Our model comes pre-installed on the phones from above phone.
And it's local.
It's running locally.
Now, it's kind of slow because it's a 12 billion parameter model, but it works, you know?
And so you can boot up your laptop.
You can ask any questions you want.
We wanted this to be useful for people, especially in developing countries or off-grid people or in the aftermath of some kind of collapse or civil war.
That's why we trained it also on how to assemble and disassemble 3,000 different firearms.
That's all in there.
That's so cool.
So, I mean, for two years, I acquired so much documents and knowledge.
And I would buy like DVDs of open source books and things like that.
I curated the whole data set myself and put all this into the engine.
You'd be astonished how much you can ask it.
I mean, the stuff it knows is like way beyond what anybody typically would imagine.
But it is designed so that you could use this to help jumpstart society in a collapse.
But here's the other thing.
Storage media.
I've done a lot of research on this.
You mentioned EMP or SolarFlare.
That would wipe out most electronics, at least we believe it would.
Well, what's immune to that is optical storage.
Optical storage can have a thousand-year shelf life.
Whereas hard drives, did you know that hard drives lose about 1% of their bits every year just sitting in storage?
Wow.
And the reason that doesn't destroy your files is because they have a parity bit.
They can rebuild the lost bit.
Okay.
But over time, hard drives stop working and it doesn't even take that long.
You know, 10 years, a lot of hard drives just don't function.
Wow.
Yeah.
Because they're magnetic, right?
It's a lot of magnetic interference.
Well, optical media, they last through floods.
They last through EMPs because it's burned into the plastic, the pits.
The ones and zeros are burned into multiple layers of plastic.
And just to clarify for a quick moment, optical, you're talking about CDs and DVDs.
Is that what you mean by optical?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, okay.
Just for clarify for people.
Optical media, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But there are also like, you know, Sony has a stacked optical cartridge that can store, I think, a terabyte or something.
Okay.
Wow.
Optical is slow.
It's slow and it's expensive.
But if you want to store something like a Library of Alexandria style, that's where you got to go.
You got to go to optical.
So that's our intention is to be able to burn the world's knowledge onto optical media and stick it in a cave somewhere or something, you know?
Yeah.
Like have this is the repository to rebuild society, but we don't want to rebuild society with a bunch of autism and vaccines.
No, right, right, right.
Let's not repeat that mistake.
Absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
Wow.
Okay.
Yeah.
Where to go from here?
So that is fascinating.
Oh, let me, yeah, yeah.
I'm sorry, sure.
Vinyl records, old school vinyl records, that's also a very reliable storage media because it's physically into it's it's melted into the vinyl.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
But you can't store very much on a record.
Yeah.
You know, no.
Right.
Albums worth of data.
So if you were to try to store like a terabyte of knowledge on records, which could be done.
You could do read, write, you know, etch the records, whatever.
You'd probably have like a whole massive shelf of albums with just data.
You know?
Yeah, the apology.
But it can be done.
Yeah, the apocalypse record shop.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
With no music on it.
I mean, it's just bits.
There's no music in the apocalypse record shop.
Just how to disassemble an AK and an AR and all sorts of things.
Exactly.
And things like that.
Right.
So, okay, these are some really fascinating use cases for Brideon AI and this bridge you've talked about with Brideon books.
My question for you, I guess as we might be approaching the end of this here, what I want to talk about is, and this may be the answer.
You may have already answered this, but you can correct me if I'm wrong.
But the way I see it, these big dogs, the chat GPTs, the Grocs, the Geminis, it seems like the creators and the figureheads, you know, the Sam Altmans, they talk about their tech as if there's like no end game.
Like they're just going to see their AI creation until it inevitably becomes like the demon hive mind that kills us all.
And they're just like, yeah, we're okay with that.
That's the way they seem to talk about it.
Like there's no end in sight.
So, my question for you when it comes to Brighteon AI is, as its creator, do you have like an end point in mind where you're like, we are going to use it for just these use cases?
And though tempting it may be to perhaps even like humanize Brighteon AI a little bit and stuff, we're going to stop here.
And this is like where we're going to just say the buck stops here with it so that it doesn't become something that we had never intended it to become.
Do you have like some kind of like line in the sand like that?
Yeah, yeah.
And we've been very clear about that.
So our AI is not for pursuing relationships, for example.
It's never going to be your AI girlfriend avatar.
Okay.
It doesn't do that.
You know, you could try, but you're going to be very disappointed because it's going to tell you about how to disassemble firearms.
It's the most boring date ever.
Right, right.
But it is designed to help humans live in a decentralized manner and to survive the Skynet apocalypse, which is coming.
So you're exactly right, Rhys, what you just said.
So ChatGPT, Microsoft, Google, in my view, they are all headed toward the goal of destroying, exterminating most of humanity and replacing humans with machines.
Now, I don't put Elon Musk in the same category as that.
Elon is in many ways fighting against that.
I mean, look at his previous involvement in open AI and he doesn't trust Sam Altman.
I don't trust Sam Altman either.
And I obviously don't trust Google at all.
But if there's a surviving human element on this planet, they will have Brighteon AI because that will help them grow their own medicine, make their own herbal extracts.
It will help them grow food.
It will help them.
It even writes code too, by the way.
It's not competitive with Anthropic or something like that, but it writes basic computer code, batch files, Python code, things like that.
But our model is the model that they will use to survive and to live off-grid.
And that's why I'm in a race to build and release the best models that we can.
And right now, not at this location, but at another location, I think I sent you a video of some of our science paper processing.
Yes.
We've got 48 workstations with GPUs that are currently processing the world's knowledge, including every science paper that's ever been published.
And don't ask me how I got that, but it was not easy.
But we are classifying the world's knowledge and then selecting a subset of that knowledge that's critical for decentralization and survival for the human remnant.
And that's what our goal is.
So it's not going to be your AI girlfriend.
It's going to be your AI survival coach.
Yeah.
Nice.
Okay.
Okay.
Well, I guess with this in mind, this picture you've painted for us when it comes to how this would be used in the apocalypse, how it would help literally rebuild society.
My question for you personally is: has this tech, this AI tech, like radically shifted your prognosis for humanity's survival and flourishing should some like crazy apocalyptic thing go down?
Basically, my question is, before this was starting to really like the ball was getting rolling on all this AI stuff back in 2021-ish, were you just like, I don't know what's going to happen to humanity?
I mean, this looks bad.
But now that AI has here, have you become more positive about humanity's future more or less stay the same?
Or what does that look like for you personally?
That's a great question.
Also, we're not quite there.
We need actually, we need some advances in robotics with open source robot brains using open source AI models.
And that's my next goal.
So the reason we need robotics is because we need the multiplication of human labor in order to rebuild society.
So right now, if you try to live off-grid, you're going to spend a lot of your time trying to grow enough food to not die.
Once you can assign that task to a robot, which is right around the corner, maybe in two years, that'll be really practical.
And we're going to be testing that here, you know, at this facility.
We're in the process of trying to acquire robots and we're going to run them through all our tests.
And our goal there is to advocate for home robotics or small farm robotics to grow food and to handle tasks of decentralized off-grid living.
And those robots can also do patrols, defensive patrols, right?
To watch out for raiders or the zombies or whatever might be coming for you.
So once we have agentic AI at the software level for all the knowledge, and remember, AI models right now can teach you anything you want to learn.
You can just ask it, write a lesson plan, write a book, so that's in place now.
It just needs to be expressed better.
But once we have the agentic AI and then the robotic systems that can be flashed with open source models, which that's going to be a fun experiment.
I'm sure I'm going to ruin some robots here coming up.
But once we can do that, then humanity has a chance.
A chance to survive the drone wars, a chance to survive the Skynet Terminator extermination efforts.
And by the way, I mean, we could do a whole segment.
I know we're almost out of time, but we could do a whole segment on where will be the most likely targets for the Skynet extermination robots.
And that will be the cities, because that's where you have the highest population density and the most people that are on government benefits.
So the cities will be the kill zones.
So the rural areas will be where the survivors move to by definition.
And if you don't know how to live off-grid and you don't have a robot helping you, survival is very difficult.
Yeah.
So we need to get robots combined with the AI that we have now.
And then it's very doable to make it through this.
Wow.
Wow.
So yeah, it's a combination of knowledge, preserving that knowledge in a way that you can access it correctly, the knowledge on how to survive, how to grow your own food.
And how to make things.
And how to make things on your own.
3D printing, for example, is going to be a key technology.
Exactly.
Fabrication at home of the things, the tools that you need.
Okay.
Yeah.
So it's the knowledge of creation, basically, in your own household in conjunction with robotic assistance in order to offset the calorie demands of just basic everyday survival in that kind of scenario.
Right.
Right.
And then you start to get synergies from this.
So for example, if you have a robot and then you have enough home solar power to recharge the robot, which is very doable, then you're going to need a 3D printer to print replacement parts for the robot.
Okay.
Right.
Yeah.
Because the parts don't last forever.
Right.
Right.
And in order to be able to print the parts, you're going to need a pile of metals.
You're going to need some copper.
You know, so how do you process this copper?
Well, you're going to need an open source plan for a little smelting operation.
You know, like it goes on and on.
But there is a set of knowledge that can relaunch civilization from nothing.
Like if you were to send a team to Mars, if Mars had a great atmosphere, let's say, you know, a breathable atmosphere.
If you were to send a team to Mars and say, hey, relaunch society from scratch, there are key technologies that would help them do that.
And AI and robotics and 3D printing are just absolutely critical for that.
So that's the way I like to think because our society as we know it today could absolutely cater.
And we might have to rebuild.
So as I may have said at the beginning of this interview, you are the only person I see really talking about this to this length and actually taking the action to make it come to fruition, these systems and this technology with Brighton AI to facilitate humanity's survival.
Why do you think you're mostly flying solo in this right now?
Because it seems like everything we've talked about, everything that we all know to be true about this coming disaster, this calamity, we need to really start thinking about becoming more self-sufficient and less reliant on these fragile systems.
Why is it that so few people and also the people with the means, the money, the backing to really actually take these ideas that you've done here to the next level?
Why are they just silent?
And why is it up to independent people like you to take the mantle of this and really go for it?
Well, I think at the highest levels of power, the answer is because they want humanity to be exterminated.
So this is on track for them.
They plan the great replacement, which is a robotic replacement, right?
And that's, I'm not talking about immigration, talking about robots.
Yeah.
But the other part of the answer is that the attention span of humans is very short and it's easily shifted or distracted.
So most people are mired in today's politics or trying to earn enough money to pay rent because of inflation.
And people are in a crisis mode constantly.
And I think that's actually by design.
I think that there's a chaos agenda that is inflicted upon humanity.
They inflict race wars.
They want people fighting.
They want the politics to dominate your mind.
Are you on the left or are you on the right?
But don't think about the survival of humanity 100 years from now.
So I think that's why.
And I've long been a person who would look ahead very far into the future.
And it caused me to come up with a saying that if you're two years ahead, you're considered a genius.
If you're 10 years ahead, you're considered a heretic.
And I think Alex Jones would also confirm that as well.
Most certainly.
I mean, he was well ahead talking about atrazine turning the frogs gay, which it does, right?
But he was mocked for that.
Now, that's all over the scientific literature.
Sure enough, you know, it's a genderbender chemical.
So, but the farther you go ahead or the further you go ahead in time, the more you are disconnected from the current dialogue of humanity.
And humanity as a whole does not look very far into the future, certainly not in Western culture.
We look at the next quarter.
We want to know the earnings for NVIDIA, for the next quarter.
Or the next weekend.
Yeah, exactly.
Honestly, exactly.
That's not worth it.
It's not thinking about how do we survive as a species, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We've been rooted into just our just, we're basically psychologically made to be like cornered animals.
Yeah.
Like in a constant fear state.
So you can't unable to actually think ahead when you're in that state.
You're supposed to be reactive and nothing else.
Yeah.
That's the psyop, but you covered that.
Hey, tell our audience about your podcast and your site, your channel, things like that.
Sure.
So I've been working for Infowars for about four years now.
Lately, I'm making a stronger push to put out some more content on similar topics as discussed here on Brideon and Natural News.
I'm very focused on health, fitness, cutting through the lies of those things.
There's a lot of just, obviously, if you're a listener of this, you know there's so much misinformation in BS from the medical establishment that wants to keep you sick, keep you poor, all that.
So I try to make content that addresses that.
My most recent report I made a couple months ago was a deep dive on my own blood work on cholesterol, debunking some cholesterol myths.
So if any of that sounds good to you, I'm on X at Reese J Marrero, at Reese J Marrero.
And can spell Moreo.
Yeah, Marrero is spelled M-A-R-R-E-R-O.
And on banned.video under the PSYOP cop, that's my kind of persona on Infowars, banned.video, the PSYOP cop, you can find me on the channel list there.
So yeah, that's where you can find my work.
I'll be continuing to put some content out.
And I, yeah, I look forward to future discussions with Mike and many other similar thinkers and creators in this space.
And thank you very much for having me.
Absolutely.
And let me just mention that one of the things, I hope you don't mind me saying that you plan to do here is as we bring in the robots and do the robot testing, you're going to come out on behalf of InfoWars and start sort of documenting some of that.
Like hopefully we can get robots to do things like fold laundry eventually.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But that's going to be so cool to do this with you and Infowars just to sort of document robot practical skills.
I cannot tell you how excited I am for that.
As soon as I heard you were doing that, I was like, I got to hear about this.
I got to check this out.
So yeah, you can absolutely be on the lookout for that in the future when that ball gets rolling.
All right.
That's going to be cool.
Yeah.
And then when if we have enough robots and the old ones become obsolete, we'll put them in like a like a ring, like a fight.
Yeah.
Like a robot knife fight.
What was that?
The Thunderdome from Mad Max.
We'll put it in like a robot thunderdome.
There you go.
And let's see if they can knock each other out or something like that.
Yeah.
No, there's going to be a lot of fun shenanigans like that.
Yeah.
Well, thank you, Reese.
Really appreciate you coming out here and doing this interview.
And thank you for all that you're doing on behalf of humanity and your curiosity about these issues.
I think you've got a very bright future and I can't wait to work with you on these subjects.
Thank you, Mike.
I really appreciate that.
Thank you.
And thank all of you for watching here, BrightTown.com.
And we'll put the URLs of Reese's channels and everything you can check on banned.video and the other places where he's at, you know, X, for example.
So thank you for watching today.
I'm Mike Adams from BrightTown.com.
Take care.
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