BBN, Nov 27, 2025 - THANKSGIVING DAY special edition! Food, knowledge and interview highlights
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Well, happy Thanksgiving, everybody, in America.
Anyway, it's Thanksgiving Day, November 27th.
It's a Thursday.
I'm Mike Adams.
Thank you for joining me today.
And I promised a short message today, but it's going to be a little longer than that because yesterday's episode got cut off.
That's why it was weird.
I apologize.
What happened is I recorded about a 30-minute show, and then there was file corruption, and it got cut to like five minutes.
So I need to recover some of those things that I was mentioning yesterday and wish you a happy Thanksgiving.
In the meantime, some other interesting things have happened as well.
Well, not all interesting.
Some bad things have happened, but I'm going to do my best to cover everything here.
So we're going to jump into a series of reports to catch us up.
And then today I'm bringing you highlights of my most recent interviews, some of the best highlights from those interviews in a compilation at the end of the show today.
So you don't want to miss that.
So here we go.
So Campbell's soup is in a bit of hot water, you could say, over this undercover video of apparently their vice president, I think is the allegation.
And the video of this person was captured of him saying seemingly insane things about, I think, 3D printed meat and meat grown in a lab and basically who's dumb enough to eat Campbell's soup, things like that.
I want to play the video for you here so you can hear it for yourself.
The profanity has already been bleeped out of it.
So check this out.
Here we go.
A former Campbell Soup Company employee is taking legal action against the food giants and he's making some explosive allegations about one of its top executives.
Good evening and thanks for joining us at six.
I'm Ty Steele.
I'm Kimberly Gill.
Those allegations are now at the center of a lawsuit claiming the company's vice president went on an hour-long tirade attacking the company's products and employees before taking aim at its customers.
And the former employee recorded it all.
Eric Erickson shares that recording and what the company is saying about it.
We have shit for f ⁇ ing poor people who buys our shit.
And that's just part of an over an hour-long rant, says former security analyst for Campbell's, Robert Garza of Monroe.
I don't buy Campbell's products barely anymore.
It's not healthy.
Now that I know what the f ⁇ is in it.
Even though can a soup, I look at it, look at bioengineer me.
I don't want to eat a f ⁇ ing a piece of chicken that came from a 3D printer.
You?
The recording allegedly of Campbell's VP and chief information security officer, Martin Bally.
He has no filter.
Bally, along with another supervisor and Campbell's Soup Company, named in a lawsuit filed Thursday.
The suit claiming Bally made racist remarks, admits to coming to work high, and Garza fired for coming forward.
What do you think about the things that he was saying?
Oh, just peer disgust.
Garza says he usually worked remotely for Campbell's headquarters, based in Camden, New Jersey.
But thinking he'd be discussing his salary with Bally, he says the recording taken in person at a restaurant.
They couldn't come for the f ⁇ ing thousands.
Garza says he felt sick after the rant, deciding to go to his direct supervisor in January, keeping the recordings to himself.
He had never had any disciplinary action.
They had never written him up for poor work performance.
Garza says no one at Campbell's ever followed up, and it's taken him 10 months to find a new job, calling the way the canned soup company handled it simply terrible.
They have a motto, you know, like we treat you like family, you know, here at Campbell's, you know, come work for us.
You know, we treat our employees like family.
That's that's not the case.
We did just receive a statement from Campbell's that says, quote, if accurate, the comments in the recording are unacceptable.
They do not reflect our values and the culture of our company.
We are actively investigating this manner.
We've also reached out directly to Martin Valley.
Erica Erickson, local for.
Well, there you go.
What do you think about that, huh?
Guy sounds pretty angry, huh?
Maybe he's been eating too much Campbell's soup.
I'm not sure.
But I'm really wondering who eats Campbell's soup?
You know, seriously.
I mean, I don't know when was the last time I had Campbell's soup, but my memory of it is that it was like soggy vegetables and soggy bloated noodles and just pretty much nasty.
Like pigs food?
Is that, I don't know.
But apparently the vice president of Campbell's agrees with that assessment.
Now, I'm not claiming that Campbell's soup does anything illegal.
It's just that it's not high-grade food in my view.
Nevertheless, the person that is allegedly named in that video recording has been fired by Campbell's Soup.
And apparently they have confirmed that it was him.
And they have put out a statement that says that his statement does not represent their company values.
Yeah, I could imagine.
In addition, Campbell's Soup says that he's wrong when he talks about things like 3D printed chicken meat or whatever he said.
Like they don't use 3D printed meat.
Yeah, I bet they don't because that would be too expensive, actually.
I think they use something much, much cheaper.
I don't know, like the leftovers from what you get on the side after making dog food.
I'm just guessing.
Honestly, I don't know the Campbell's soup manufacturing method.
And again, not claiming they do anything illegal, but that guy was fired.
And I think in all fairness, he was probably having a bad day.
I mean, obviously, he was having a very bad day.
And he was probably exaggerating, is my guess.
But you know what's amazing to me, as low on the scale as Campbell's soup is in my mind, I mean, I wouldn't even think of eating Campbell's soup because, well, I don't want to eat sodium nitrite in meat products.
I don't want to eat excitotoxins, yeast extract, or whatever.
I don't want to eat GMOs, you know.
But as low as that is in my mind, there are soups that are lower on the food quality scale.
And those are like dollar store canned soup.
Yeah.
So, and sadly, more and more Americans are turning to dollar store soups in order to feed themselves.
And who knows what they're getting into there?
Who knows?
I mean, seriously, what kind of process do you have to go through as a food manufacturer to be able to offer a can of soup that retails for a dollar?
Which means wholesale might be, I don't know, 60 cents or something.
And the can is probably 10 cents.
So there's 50 cents.
And somehow in that 50 cents, you got to get all the materials and make the food and all the labor and the insurance and the manufacturing facility and everything else.
You know legal compliance, all that regulatory compliance, reporting and cleaning.
You know all that.
How do you do that in 50 cents?
And I think the only answer is, you filled that can with.
You know some pretty low-grade stuff again, not saying it's illegal, but then again, prison food is legal too, you know.
So I guess my message here today is, be cautious, what you eat, what you trust I know you are.
If you're listening to this, you're already cautious about that.
And, of course, if you want clean food, get it from us Healthrangerstore.com.
Because well, of course our food is not a dollar a can.
I mean we do not have anywhere near the low-cost, low-grade food.
I mean our food is more of a premium price, but that's because it's an ultra premium quality.
It's laboratory tested, it's certified organic in almost every case and if you look at the ingredients, they're real like, check out our macaroni and cheese, which is an instant meal pack.
I mean it's got real cream powder or that's organic.
It's got real cheese, cheddar cheese powder organic, real organic butter powder and the macaroni is made with quinoa and amaranth and brown rice all organic.
So these are not low-grade ingredients and they're also not cheap.
So if you want real food, and real, clean food, of course.
Shop with us at Health Rangerstore.com and, when you're at the grocery store, by the way, check ingredients, obviously.
And then use our ingredients analyzer at bright?
U.ai because it will analyze your ingredients completely free.
All you have to do is type in the list of ingredients and it'll tell you all about those ingredients, the pros, the cons, etc.
Things you might want to avoid or things that have good nutritive value.
And you know even camel soup.
Some of the things they have in their soups are good for you.
You know some.
There's some vegetables and whatever in some of them.
But you can check out all the ingredients at brightu.ai.
Just scroll down and click on the ingredients analyzer.
And thank you for listening.
Mike Adams, here the Health Ranger, take care.
Have you seen the WALL Street Journal article math horror show at University OF California, SAN Diego?
This was just published on november 25th and it finds that one in eight of the UC SAN Diego freshmen have math skills.
That is below the seventh grade.
That's right.
You can get into college in California even if you are mathematically illiterate.
And why is that the case?
Oh wait wait, it gets better.
Because the gpa the, the math gpa, of those exact same students that don't even have seventh grade level math.
Guess what their average high school math gpa was?
The answer is a minus.
That's right.
So they, even though they can't do seventh grade math, They got A's all through high school.
And then using those A's, they got into college.
And then the colleges find out they can't do any math.
So what is going on here?
Well, I mean, it's obvious.
It's, you know, California, come on, blue cities, blue state, you know, woke idiots, libtards.
It's obvious what's going on here.
Grade inflation.
You know, everyone's a winner.
You know, you win for just showing up.
You get an A for effort, you know.
And this is what's tearing apart Western civilization or part of it.
It's that an entire generation of students are taught that they don't have to get the right answer.
All they have to do is be the right, you know, gender or race or subgroup or transgender or whatever.
And that's all that matters because, well, that's what the university system works on in California.
You get brought in if you're the right color, the right gender, you know, if you're lesbian, if you're gay, if you're trans.
It doesn't matter what your grades are.
And then you show up for your first semester of college freshman courses.
And it turns out that, you know, you're mathematically illiterate.
You can't write.
You can't read.
You can't do math.
But you are sufficiently woke, you know.
So obviously, the students coming out of these universities are also not very bright because the university has to slow down for the, you know, the least educated students that are coming in.
And this is why America can't compete with countries like China that are graduating all kinds of engineers that are high level in math, you know?
And this is also why Asian students are discriminated against in the University of California admissions system.
If you're Chinese, Japanese, Korean, et cetera, you get penalized for being Asian.
But if you're woke and retarded, you get accepted for being woke and retarded.
Yeah.
And that's why our bridges are falling down.
Yeah.
And that's why Democrats can't do accounting.
That's why they believe in magical monetary theory, MMT.
That's why they believe in climate change insanity because they're all illiterate.
And this also explains why Democrats and liberals, why they got rid of college entrance exams.
They did.
Now you know why?
Because none of their students can pass them or very few can pass them because they're mathematically illiterate.
You wonder how does civilization fall?
This is it.
Wokeism.
Anyway, it turns out that I was able to acquire some video of the California university system testing students.
That's right.
Live action video.
I'd like to play that for you now so you get a good look.
Check this out.
If you have one bucket that holds two gallons and another bucket that holds five gallons, how many buckets do you have?
Two.
Thank you.
This is the White House.
What are we doing at the White House?
What?
It turned out the results of Joe's IQ test had caught the attention of the highest levels of government.
Okay, wait a minute.
I'm the smartest guy in the world?
Says who?
The IQ test you took in prison.
You got the highest score in history.
Brought to you by Carls Jr.
Yeah, Domestic Miss Morning President Camacho.
That's how come he's making you Secretary of Interior.
You know, I think there's been some kind of mistake because the test I took was real, real easy.
I'm not the smartest guy in the world.
Okay so you smart huh?
No, I thought you here would be bigger.
All right yeah, that's the great.
Uh, Terry Cruz there as Camacho the president.
That says that.
What was the guy's name in the movie?
Not sure right, that not sure is gonna quote, fix the economy in one week.
Yeah, that sounds exactly like the way liberals think about economics and the way they pronounce words too, come to think of it.
Now remember that in the Democrat system, the dumber you are, the higher level you get pushed up to, right?
So that's how we ended up with Kamala running for president, just one of the actual dumbest people that you could ever find in politics.
And this is how we also ended up with probably a mathematically illiterate woman on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Actually, there's a couple of really low IQ people on the Supreme Court.
And yeah, they are the DEI justices.
You know who they are.
They didn't get there by being smart or having qualifications.
They got there because of wokeism.
They got appointed because of those qualities.
And again, this is how civilizations fall.
When you take the dumbest people in society and you put them in the highest positions of authority, look what happens.
I mean, look who's running the California university system.
You know, woke idiots all the way around.
Look who's running the California government.
You know, top to bottom, mostly woke idiots.
Not 100%, but very large numbers of woke idiots.
Now, clearly, if we want to succeed as a nation, we're going to have to remedy this situation.
We're going to have to have a meritocracy.
And the admissions process for universities is going to have to choose the most qualified people, not the most woke idiots.
And what that means is there's going to be a lot of Asians in the California school system.
And that's the way, you know, it should be by merit alone.
And I don't care the race or the color of a person.
I care that they're qualified because university resources, which are heavily funded by taxpayers, those resources need to go to the students who are most likely to succeed in those roles, most likely to become engineers that can do things in the real world, you know, like maybe design hypersonic weapons or something, you know, design bridges that don't fall down, advanced materials, rocketry, you know, unit computer science.
How about AI science?
We need good engineers in America to compete with China and Russia and other countries.
Instead, we get the woke idiots at the highest levels, and then we wonder why we're falling behind.
Yeah, well, it's because we've gotten away from the meritocracy and it's time to reverse that.
So, you know, boo-hoo to the mathematically illiterate woesters in California.
You don't get into college anymore just from being sufficiently woke.
You actually have to know how to do basic algebra, you know, for starters.
Can we start with that?
Basic logic, basic geometry, basic reading, writing, and arithmetic.
Would that be too much to ask?
Yeah, in California and Oregon and Washington.
Yeah, that's too much to ask because they're morons, you know, in the university system and in the government.
They're morons in the school system, the public schools.
They're churning out morons.
And the other factor in all of this that's really important is that AI is becoming smarter and smarter every day, while the human students in the woke university system are becoming dumber and dumber every single day.
And right now, AI cognition exceeds that of any human.
And as soon as AI can handle long-term planning, it's going to replace the, I mean, look.
I hear from a lot of people, you know, feel so sorry for the youth, the young people, they can't get jobs because of AI.
Well, that may be true in some cases, but in a lot of cases in blue states, they can't get jobs because they're stupid.
That's why, because they floated through school on their gender or something on their wokeism and they never learned anything and the schools never enforced it.
The schools let them slide.
So that's the reason that they're unemployable because you can't get a job by just saying, hey, I'll be the office wokester.
You need a woketer?
You need someone to just run around being woke like a transgender Karen running around the office, you know, berating everybody, screaming at white people, you know, whatever.
Stop being white.
That's not an economically feasible job role.
And by the way, last point here is that as of right now, the education system in California is utterly obsolete.
It should all be replaced by AI education at this point.
Did you know that students learn five to ten times faster when they're instructed by AI rather than instructed by a woketard teacher in the California school system?
You know that?
Five to ten times faster, which means that you could do a whole year of coursework in just a few weeks with the help of AI because AI is personalized to your skills.
AI can teach you in different ways.
It can adapt and respond to what you need as an individual student.
Whereas human teachers, despite their goodwill in most cases, they can't personalize the lessons to every single student at the same time because they don't exist as 20 clones in a classroom or however big the classroom is.
So AI education will be vastly better than the current teacher education.
And that's especially true when so many of the teachers in California are themselves woke idiots.
That's right.
Woke idiots.
So you don't learn much from woke idiots except how to be woke and how to be filled with hate toward, you know, white men in particular.
That's what wokeism teaches, is a philosophy of hatred and victimization.
And that is not going to fly in a competitive global marketplace.
The only way for us to succeed as a nation is to, frankly, we should fire all the woke teachers, shut down the whole public education system as it exists today, fire all the unionized teachers, get them all out of there if they're woke,
and then have AI come in with individualized lessons for the students and then fix the student lunch program so that they actually have good nutrition that can enhance cognition and mental focus and stop feeding them sugar all day and a few other basic things and you could revolutionize education in this country.
But the woke school administrators, they don't want that.
They don't want children to succeed.
They just want them to be woke.
That's why our country's failing.
So the faster any state switches over to AI augmented education, the better off their students are going to be.
And remember this.
I mean, I went to public school, but that was back in the 80s.
We actually had some decent teachers then.
And also, you know, I enjoyed learning, enjoyed reading, et cetera.
And that's why I aced three out of four sections of the college entrance exams.
And that's why I got accepted into MIT.
But I couldn't go because I couldn't afford it, et cetera.
I mean, even in a public school system, you can still produce smart students who are capable of getting things done.
But I was helped with a gifted program in my school district.
And I was helped with some very gifted, I had an English teacher that was gifted.
I had a science teacher who was fantastic.
And he was teaching college credit courses in high school.
So I earned college credit, studying microbiology and genetics and permutations, combinations, all of that in 10th and 11th grades in high school.
Today, again, the kids can't even do like, you know, what is seven times three?
They don't know.
And they get A's.
So the problem is we got away from meritocracy.
And we became, or we started as a culture, we started accepting failure and calling it success.
And that's what led us to this point where we have a huge portion of our population that doesn't understand basic economic concepts like compounding interest or national debt or interest on the debt or how home mortgages work, etc.
Economic illiteracy, mathematical illiteracy is unbelievably widespread.
And that's the fault of the bureaucrats, the school administrators, and the woke-ass teachers who let failure slide.
Shame on you.
We need to do better.
We need to get you out of the way and do better in order to restore this nation.
So I'm pro-America.
I want America to do well.
I want our students to do well.
And therefore, I want to replace most of the education system with AI right now.
We could start having better results tomorrow.
It really is that simple.
And every student has to earn their way into college.
No freebies, no handouts, no wokeism.
You get the scores, you get into the schools.
End of story.
If we can't do that, we won't make it as a country.
It really is that simple.
So thank you for listening.
Mike Adams here, the Health Ranger.
Check out my AI tools, by the way, at brighteon.ai.
And there you can see all of our tools that are available free of charge.
And you can ask our AI tools to teach you anything.
In fact, we have a new tool that's about to launch called Brightlearn.ai that will write a book for you to teach you any subject you want.
And it's completely free.
So there's no reason, no excuse for anybody to not be able to learn anything because you can generate a book on any topic at zero cost and you can have it delivered to you via email and that exists as of tomorrow.
We're launching it.
So, you know, so there you go.
It's a time of incredible abundance combined with incredible stupidity, huh?
And each one of us gets to choose the path.
Do you want to take the path of abundance, competency, expert level knowledge?
It's easy.
It's free.
Or do you want to take the path of wokeism and stupidity and illiteracy?
Well, that's a choice that a lot of people make as well, but it's a choice.
So thank you for listening.
Check out my tools again, brighteon.ai.
I'm Mike Adams.
Take care.
All right, welcome.
This is Mike Adams.
I'm the AI developer of the popular new book generator website called BrightLearn.ai and from what I've heard so far from users of the site, the early users, they are blown away, just astonished at how good it is at creating books, comprehensive books with a really great writing style, with amazing knowledge, research, citations, fact-checking, cover art generation. editing,
packaging, generating a PDF file, and posting the book online so people can read it online.
And yeah, it does all of that right now.
And in this broadcast, I'm going to walk you through how to use it because it's actually very simple to use.
And then I'll talk about the philosophy behind BrightLearn.ai, why we're offering it for free a little bit later.
You know, focus on open source, Creative Commons licensing, and why we believe that access to knowledge is a fundamental human right.
We'll get to that later.
But first, let's talk about how to use BrightLearn.ai.
So if you want, just pull up the website, BrightLearn.ai, and there you're going to see a prompt box on the home page.
And it says, what topic would you like for your book?
And this prompt here, this is the most important thing that you're going to do in creating your book.
This is the hardest part, actually.
And it's the most critical part.
So also, you're going to see there's a book generation token that's usually required to generate a book.
That token requirement will not be there in the future.
But if you have a token, then you get bonus features in your book and you get priority processing in the book generation queue and many other benefits.
So in other words, those people who have tokens get better books, longer books, more detailed prompts and faster processing and better image generation for the cover art.
But there is also going to be a free tier where you don't need a token that still gets you a book, but it's shorter.
The cover art isn't as good because it costs us less to generate the cover art using a different engine.
And the chapter writing is also with a smaller engine that is less capable, but that's the free tier.
And since we love to keep this free, we always are going to have a free tier and we'll put as much value into that free tier as we can.
But you'll always get bonus features with a token.
So let's go back to the main prompt.
Again, it says, what topic would you like for your book?
Now, here, you can enter something very short and very simple if you want.
You can say, write a book about making herbal medicine, and that's it.
And then you click submit, and then it goes.
Or you can say, write a book about why psychiatric drugging of children is dangerous.
Or you get the idea.
Write a book about the top 10 farming skills for growing farm crops or whatever you want.
So you can go with the short route.
Now, when you do that, it relies on the internal knowledge of our AI engine to fill out the rest of the book outline.
Because when you click submit, the next step is that you're going to see it generate a table of contents and a complete outline of the book with chapters and subchapters.
And it does that for you based on extrapolating your prompt and using the internal knowledge that we've trained our AI engine on over the last two years.
So just to back up a little bit, I'm the architect of this entire project, and I've spent literally two years curating data or content for this project.
It's the content that goes into our AI engine, and you also have access to the knowledge of all of that content by using brightu.ai.
Now, this content includes 10,000 books, hundreds of millions of pages.
of transcripts, including scientific papers.
It includes, I'm sure, over a million articles.
And those articles are from many different websites, including our own sites like Natural News.
On top of that, it's got interviews and it's got podcasts, spoken word content.
Now, I do want to warn you that the podcast content is very heavily saturated with my own podcast.
So if you don't want my podcast to end up being cited throughout your entire book, you can deselect that checkbox on the next page.
We'll get to that.
You get to choose the type of citations that are used for the book.
You can choose to use books.
You can choose to use articles.
You can choose interviews or you can choose podcasts.
And then in the future, we're going to be adding a specific category of science papers because we are processing many millions of science papers that will be added into our citation indexing by January, I hope.
And then that will add additional citation and research content for this engine.
Also, thousands more books are being entered into the system or indexed into the system.
And as this system generates your book for you, it will research across those 10,000 plus books and it will pull out citations from those books and then it will quote those books and those authors in your book.
So it's doing the research that a person would do, where, let's say if you're writing a book, you might research, you know, you might read 50 other books and then you might cite those 50 authors and you might read a couple hundred papers or articles and you might cite all of those and that's what our engine is doing for you.
Okay, so with that said, let's get back to the prompt.
The shorter your prompt, the more that our engine decides how to write the table of contents.
Now, our engine, like I said, it's built on all this amazing information.
It's a curated knowledge base that took me two years to achieve.
It's very heavy on nutrition, natural health, alternative and complementary medicine, food production, gardening, survival, preparedness, sustainability.
It's also heavily trained on honest money and honest history and many other topics from technology, physics, energy, currency systems, all kinds of things.
So it knows a lot, but it doesn't know much about things like sports and fashion, etc.
So if you're trying to write a book about sports and fashion, then this is not the engine for you.
Just use ChatGPT for that.
This is for knowledge.
This engine is designed to empower humanity with important knowledge that can be freely shared so that we can build a massive digital library that everybody can download and store locally so they have access to all of this knowledge, even if the internet goes down or even if the power grid goes down for some period of time.
You will have local knowledge at your fingertips in PDF documents.
And whereas we've also released our local AI engine that you can download from brightu.ai, it's a GGUF file, and you can run it locally, but typically you need a graphics card in order to run that AI engine locally.
Well, if you download PDFs, you don't need a graphics card to just read a bunch of PDF files.
So you can build up a massive digital library, and that's our goal.
And remember that we're adding multiple languages in the next couple of months.
So we're going to have a massive digital library, not only in English, but also in Espanol and in French and in German and Russian and Japanese and Chinese and Korean and Italian and whatever.
We're going to have all kinds of languages represented there.
So how cool is that, right?
Okay, getting back to the main prompt then.
If you want more control over your book, you can have a longer prompt.
You can actually write out your entire book structure, the table of contents.
You can write out, let's say, just a text file with all your chapter names and all your notes about what should go into each chapter.
And I encourage you to do this.
And you can bring in research.
You can copy and paste science papers into this prompt.
You know, the text of them.
It doesn't recognize graphics, but any text you can paste it in.
And you can paste currently a total of 75,000 characters, which is a lot.
That's a lot of words.
That's almost a book all by itself.
So you can make your prompt quite detailed and quite long.
And I actually encourage you to do that.
For example, if you're writing a book about, let's say, herbal medicine, what you might do is go to our AI engine at brightu.ai.
And there you can ask that engine, help me write a prompt for a book generator about herbal medicine to make sure I cover all the most important points about herbal medicine and so I don't forget anything.
So hit go and then it will create a pretty good starting point, you know, some text for you.
You can copy and paste that and then you can augment that and then you can add to it.
You can edit that, whatever.
You can change chapter concepts.
Then you take that text and paste it into the prompt at brightlearn.ai, even if it's long.
And that becomes your book prompt.
And you're going to find that in that long prompt, that the book is going to be written based on what you put into that prompt.
You can even put into the prompt things like, I want this written in a tone that's very academic or I want it to be more whimsical.
And we also have tone and style choices later on that I'll walk you through.
But you can even put that in your prompt.
Like, how do you want this thing to be written?
What kind of reading grade level is this for, you know, high school graduates?
Or is it for college graduates?
Is it for eighth graders?
What is it?
Is it for everyday people?
Or is it a technical book?
Is it a doomsday book?
Is it a warning?
Should the language be urgent or should it be calm and easy to read and reassuring to the audience?
These kinds of things you can put into this prompt.
And you're going to find that this strongly impacts the book that you get because it's writing based on your instructions.
All right, so I'm going to do a book topic here that's kind of fun.
How about we do a book about how to train your dog to do things in a cruelty-free way.
How about that?
Because we all love animals.
I love dogs.
I've got several dogs and I have a cruelty-free relationship with all of them.
I love them and they're very happy and they're very healthy.
And, you know, so much of the dog training out there, or at least some of it, seems a little bit cruel.
So let's talk about cruelty-free dog training.
So here we go.
I'm going to write a prompt here that says a book about cruelty-free dog training that emphasizes compassion, love for animals,
and keeping your dogs happy and healthy, and that also covers dog nutrition to support their brain function and talk about how healthy foods can help dogs learn more quickly.
That's actually true, by the way.
Same thing for humans.
Okay, so that's my prompt.
And then I'm going to enter my token here and I'm going to hit go.
And then we're going to see what happens next.
When I hit submit, then it validates my prompt.
And the first thing I want you to know about the prompt validation is that we require topics to be constructive and positive and empowering to humanity.
So whatever prompt you put in there, we will check it.
If it's a prompt that is destructive or extremely harmful or promotes violence or just you know bad things, we will not generate the book.
So we only allow prompts that are aligned in a certain way with our values, which again are based on things that help empower humanity.
All right, so once that classification is passed, which happens in one second behind the scenes, then it starts generating a book outline for you.
And you can watch this in real time.
It will typically write eight to ten chapters and it will start writing sub chapters and it will generate the entire book outline.
Once it does that, it will generate the book title.
And in this case, if you scroll up to the top of this page where it writes the outline, it generated a title called The Kind Canine: a holistic guide to compassionate training, happy minds, and nourished bodies for a thriving dog.
That sounds perfect.
See, it did that automatically.
And now it's generating cover art for that.
Now, there's a button at the top of the book outline that says edit outline.
If I click that button, I can edit the table of contents.
And feel free to do that if you want to edit it.
But if you're happy with it, then you can go to the bottom of the page and you can click continue.
Now, here you're going to see the cover art generated.
And if you don't like the art, you can click regenerate.
And it will take sometimes up to one minute and it will regenerate the cover art for you.
I strongly advise you to look closely at the cover art to make sure there are no typos in the words.
Now, we use a couple of different engines to generate cover art.
Both of them are very good, but not 100%.
So occasionally you will see a typo and then you want to click regenerate.
Now, if you have your own cover art, you can upload that using the upload cover art button.
So maybe you've already generated the cover art somewhere else.
Just make sure it matches the title or the readers will be confused.
So once you're happy with the cover art and you're happy with the title, then click continue.
Now, once you click continue, you'll go to the second page.
And this is where you get to choose the types of research documents that you want to be cited for your book.
And there are four categories currently, although we'll be adding a fifth one, which is science papers.
But right now, it's books, interviews, articles, and podcasts.
And I already mentioned these earlier.
So just remember, books, you always want to include.
Interviews is currently mostly my interviews with about a thousand different people.
So those can be very handy.
I encourage you to use those.
Articles include articles from Children's Health Defense and GreenMedInfo, Mercola.com, NaturalNews.com, Alliance for Natural Health, and increasingly a lot of other websites that we'll be adding every week.
So you may want to include articles.
Podcasts, again, right now is mostly my podcasts, and you might want to uncheck that until we get a lot more diversity in the podcast, which is something that will take us a while.
Maybe January that will be improved, but we're focused on the books, the interviews, articles, and science papers right now.
In any case, you can then check or uncheck the boxes that you want, and then you can click continue.
And once you click continue, there will be a style selector.
And there are currently five styles to choose from.
And you just click on the style you want.
Those styles are easy reading, academic, inspirational, whimsical, and doomsday.
So whatever style you choose, of course, strongly influences the writing of the book.
Now, remember, your book prompt at the beginning, that also has influence.
And so if you want your book to be just easy reading, which is the default, you just leave it on easy reading.
Or if for some reason you want some kind of style like sardonic or like dark satire or something, you would choose whimsical and then you would add dark satire to your original book prompt back on the first page.
All right.
And then finally, you're going to put your author name here.
I'm going to put Mike Adams.
And remember, you don't have to use your real name because, well, Mark Twain didn't, right?
So you can use a pen name.
We just ask, however, that you do not use somebody else's name and certainly do not use a famous author's name because if you do that, we will have to delete your book.
Our engine, you're not allowed to use it to impersonate another author.
That's just a bad faith use.
So, you know, please don't do that.
But you can come up with fun names.
Like I did a book just for fun.
I did a book called Unleash Your Inner Middle Finger.
And I said the author was Fu Koff.
And, you know, it's kind of funny.
So you can use funny names if you want.
If it's a funny book, that's fine.
No problem.
Just keep it clean and use the tool responsibly.
All right.
Once you enter that, then you need to enter your email address.
And this is really important because this is the email where we will send the finished book because it's going to take time.
So if there's nobody ahead of you in line in our book processing queue, then generating your book will take four to five minutes.
And again, that's if the line is empty.
There might be a hundred books in front of you.
So there might be 400 minutes or something.
You know, it just depends on the use.
And we don't even know what the use is going to be exactly.
So you want to put your email address here.
So we will email you when your book is done.
And then you'll be able to download the PDF.
And you'll be able to read the book online.
And you'll be able to easily share it with others.
And if you go to the online book version that will be at books.brightlearn.ai, you'll be able to click the Twitter share or X. There's an X share button there, and you can share your book instantly on X. There's also a copy.
You can copy the URL or you can share it on Brighteon.social.
And we may add some other engines eventually as well.
But we encourage you to share your book.
So anyway, you click continue.
Once you click continue, your book is submitted for generation.
And if you scroll down a little bit, it tells you your position in the queue.
Like right now, it says I'm number one.
So nobody's ahead of me because we haven't announced the tool yet.
So that's pretty good.
Then it says you're going to receive notification at your email address.
All right, there you go.
Now, if you use a token to generate your book, I advise you to hold on to that token.
The reason you want to hold on to that token is because at some point we will probably have a mechanism where people can request books to be removed.
Let's say you don't like the book and you want to redo it or something.
You want to delete that book.
The only way that you can delete the book is by using a token that is the same token that you use to generate your book.
Essentially, your token is your password to the book.
It's kind of like we don't have logins where you log in with an account and everything because it's free.
You know, you don't have an account.
You just have a token and that token is your key to that book.
Okay.
So also I want to remind you about the terms that we have, which is a Creative Commons set of terms.
So you are free to share the book.
You're free to even create derivatives of the book.
You can edit the PDF, but we ask, in fact, the terms of the book are that you continue to credit BrightLearn.ai.
We ask that you do that to help us with our mission of reaching a billion people with information that's empowering and uplifting and that's pro-human, that's compassionate, that helps empower people all over the world with knowledge that they otherwise would not have access to.
So you can help us by spreading the word about brightlearn.ai.
And remember, our books contain no advertising.
And that's one of the wonderful things about reading books.
No ads, right?
Isn't that great?
Don't you just enjoy reading when there aren't just pop-ups in your face everywhere and all kinds of interruptions and autoplay videos and blah, blah, blah.
Shop here and furniture and clothing and vacations.
No, I just want to read a book.
So that's what we deliver.
Books the way they should be for free.
Also, generated in minutes.
Now, how many minutes?
Well, it depends on your position in the queue, actually.
But just have patience and then we'll get the book to you.
Now, of course, as our tool becomes more popular, we will apply more compute power to this process.
So, you know, it's not going to stretch out to where you have to wait 48 hours or anything.
That would be too long.
But right now, just have patience with it because this isn't magic.
It takes time to write your book.
First of all, our engine has to do all the research, you know, chapter by chapter, all the research.
It has to pull in all the research and then it has to write each chapter.
And then it goes through and verifies and fact checks each chapter.
So there's a fact-checking step in all of this.
And then there's also error correction, error checking, and all kinds of things that happen behind the scenes that I don't need to go into.
And then when it's all said and done, your book gets packaged, you know, and it's posted online and everybody can download it.
So I also want you to be aware that the book that you are prompting to be generated will be available to everyone because that's how this works.
Knowledge should be free.
And the way we achieve that together is that the book that you generate gets to be downloaded by a thousand other people.
And the books that they generate get to be downloaded by you.
And as a result, we all benefit.
We all get more books.
We all learn more.
We all have a larger digital library, a very diverse digital library, by the way, which is our goal.
So my goal with this project is that even if it takes a couple of years, I want to generate 1 million books and offer them all free to the world in multiple languages.
And my goal is to reach 1 billion people.
And I know that's a significant portion of the human population and not everybody's online.
But there are lots of different ways to reach people, even with thumb drives, with files on them, things like that.
Maybe we can get to North Korea, you know, with thumb drives.
But you can help me reach that goal by doing two things.
You can share the word about BrightLearn.ai.
And then secondly, when you generate books with the tool, share the books.
Tell people about the books.
You know, link to the books.
Share them on social media.
Tell people about it because we all work together.
We're all pulling in the same direction here to help uplift humanity.
And remember, we do not allow books that are negative or destructive or that, you know, books that say horrible things.
So you can be sure that every book that is on BrightLearn.ai in one way or another is going to have value to humanity.
Every single book.
And so have no hesitation.
Linking to the site.
Everything's valuable.
Everything is pro-human.
Everything is about knowledge, decentralization, bypassing censorship, bypassing the gatekeepers of the institutions, the governments, the FDA, the media, everybody that wants to censor you.
And you're not allowed to read this or say that or speak this.
Yeah, you know what?
We just gave them all the finger.
Big time.
We unleashed our inner middle fingers together.
We just told them all to go pound sand.
We just made them all irrelevant.
And we can do that together.
It's a beautiful thing.
So thank you for your help.
Thank you for your passion.
And as you can tell, I'm very passionate about this as well.
This is, for me, this is such a fulfilling thing to be able to do this.
I'm just thrilled.
I love this.
And that's why I'm working on it constantly.
And did you know I'm the only human developer on this project?
There's literally no other human working on this.
It's just me and a bunch of AI agents that at first I didn't even think they could do this.
And then I found out they actually can.
So that's why we're here.
Yeah, and there's much more yet to come.
A lot of surprises ahead for you in 2026.
And you can also check out all of our other tools at brighteon.ai, which should have a brand new logo up soon.
I actually designed that logo too.
It's kind of cool.
It's got a lot of meaning in it.
It's about humanity stepping through a portal, leaving behind the past of ignorance, and reaching toward the future of enlightenment.
That's what the logo means.
if you want to check that out.
It's at brighteon.ai or it will be soon if it's not there right now.
Actually, you know what?
Let me show you the logo.
Here it is.
So yeah, here's a logo.
You see that?
A human form stepping out of a portal or through a doorway, reaching towards the sun, which is life and warmth and love and enlightenment.
So that's what that logo means.
In case you're wondering, yeah, I designed the logo in the sense that I prompted it.
It took about 100 tries to get exactly this that I was looking for, but I'm very happy with it.
And that's the new logo for Brighteon.ai.
And that really reflects the values that I'm bringing to this project and that I think you share as well.
We want to help uplift humanity.
We want to reach toward enlightenment and knowledge and truth.
And this is the way to do it because the establishment will never let you have truth or knowledge or enlightenment.
They want to keep you ignorant because that's how they control you.
But we here at Brighteon, we want to set you free.
Yeah, and with your help, we can do it together.
Thank you for listening.
Be sure to use the tool at brightlearn.ai.
Take care.
All right, there we go, folks.
Hope you enjoyed that special report about brightlearn.ai.
And guess what?
Tomorrow, I'm going to be running an interview with Marjorie Wildcraft, the one that I promised.
That's running tomorrow.
We're also launching a new, well, it's a Black Friday sale on our BrightU docu series courses.
That begins tomorrow.
And I'll go ahead and give you the page for that if you want to check it out.
But it doesn't start until, I think, noon tomorrow.
But that's going to be BrighteonUniversity.com slash learn.
And there you can save up to 50%, typically 25%, but up to 50% in some cases on our courses.
And the interview with Marjorie Wildcraft is a great interview.
That's one you're going to want to take time to listen to because she talks about the accelerating collapse of 2026 and how we can become more self-reliant.
And I think I'm going to take that interview and turn it into a book too, you know, using our book generator.
So lots of great stuff coming tomorrow.
In any case, I've got highlights of my recent interviews to play for you here yet today.
Quite a few, actually.
I don't know if it's 45 minutes or something like that, but these are the most important takeaways from the most recent interviews that I've done.
Very valuable.
I think you'll enjoy it.
And again, I also want to wish you a happy Thanksgiving day.
And, you know, eat wisely.
Don't stuff yourself like a turkey.
No, eat wisely, but also have fun.
You know, you don't have to be a food cop today.
Enjoy time with loved ones, with family.
Enjoy the meal.
Use it as a reminder for abundance, which is really what Thanksgiving was originally all about, all this abundance.
So focus on abundance, and I'm going to help bring that through knowledge and decentralized information and so much more with your help.
So we do it all together.
In any case, enjoy the rest of the day.
Enjoy the rest of the show.
And I'll be back with you tomorrow.
Take care.
I am quite worried about AI.
I think it's going to bring about changes far faster than we as humans have ever had a chance to adapt to technological change.
So I think Elon is quite correct to be worried about it.
I agree.
You don't want to be second, though.
So we have to invest in it.
We have to do what we do.
Isn't that true?
What we know we can't have is the Bolsheviks running things as this new dawn breaks.
Because we now know their business model is to set up authoritarian power structures and starve off or get rid of 95% of us as Houston Cedars.
What do you hope to achieve with your book, the film, these interviews?
You know, time is precious.
You could be hanging out on your ranch somewhere just having a great walk or whatever, but you're here instead.
You're working.
What are you working toward?
The U.S. almost did not make its 250th anniversary, which is coming up next summer.
We almost did not make it to it.
And if we had not acted, I think all of us collectively in this family that we're all sort of in in the last five years, we would not have made it.
I don't think we were even supposed to make it to the 2024 election.
So I'm trying to derail that.
And we're not out of the woods.
And I'm just sticking around long enough until I can derail that.
And then I hate politics.
I hate politics.
I don't like the people I meet in politics.
I don't like anything about politics.
I'm just here long enough until I'm sure it's derailed.
And I thought Trump would come in, frankly.
To be honest, I thought President Trump would come in and this would be all over in a month.
I had no idea that he thought he was going to still play in these nice, nice roles.
He should take the 3,000 positions he needs to fill in the federal government and fill them all with retired military who understand the constitution and start there.
So from what you're saying, it sounds like if I could paraphrase Trump's this term of Trump is the most important pivotal term in the history of our nation as far as we know or maybe you could argue the Civil War era might be close or greater.
But if Trump doesn't do this correctly, we could still lose our nation is what it sounds like.
Well, we'll be at war because now we know what we're up against.
Now we know they thought they had all the power from 2020 forward and they took off their mask.
Now they know what their plans are.
First, they hate whites.
Remember that all this stuff came out about eliminating whiteness, eliminating, we've got to abolish whiteness, whiteness, all that came out.
They hate whites.
They were using all the language of genocide.
It's coming.
They hate Christians.
And I'm not any big Bible thumper.
I'm a, you know, I was raised Catholic and I sort of walked away from all that when I was about 16.
It's not, it's not, you know, I think that they hate Christians.
That became clear over the last, look at what happened during COVID in California.
You could go to a massage parlor.
You could go to a bar.
You could go to a tattoo shop.
You could go to a cat house probably in LA or San Francisco.
You still could, but you couldn't go to a Catholic or to a Christian church.
So Christians, they reached out to me, frankly, after 2020 and asked me to do this.
They were the 75 million people who understood what was happening in this country.
So, but what's going to happen is we're not, I think that people, I was the one, actually the FBI told me in early 2022, you know, they knew that the only reason we didn't get violent, they said, was because of me.
I'd been out there preaching, keeping it peaceful.
And they told me, Patrick, the enemies had a plan for everything you were going to do, every way you could have responded, except that you guys were going to keep it peaceful.
They had no, these were some good people in the Patriots when they made the FBI, say they had no plan for what to do if you kept it peaceful.
They never thought it was going to happen.
But next time, it's not going to happen.
Next time, and it shouldn't happen.
We're prepared this time.
People should be prepared.
We should never let a Bolshevik coup be completed in our country, no matter what has to be done.
But Democrats right now today are talking as if they want to launch an uprising, another kind of Marxist revolution.
We just saw the election of Mom Doni in New York City, and a lot of that seems to be a backlash against the establishment.
And we just saw also, notably, again, this is going to get political, but we just saw Eric Adams, the mayor of New York City, on a video in Israel saying that as mayor of New York City, I served Israel.
And that quote got a lot of strange reactions.
But we have the left-wing revolt potential, and then we have kind of what some people are describing as a civil war inside the conservative movement right now.
You see that with Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massey, Rand Paul all being criticized by President Trump.
How does the GOP get on the same page and defeat the Bolshevik effort here moving forward, given the current situation?
That is what's most important.
But we're never going to, you know, we're never going to, we don't need a party where everybody is in lockstep NPCs like the Democrats.
There's for healthy debate.
Trump does have a way of using judo to get himself out of different, like, you know, they were coming at him on this as this Epstein stuff.
So now he has said, I guess, I don't know why he's, he flipped, but he said, fine, go ahead, release it.
And now there's already stuff about Hakeem Jeffries.
Oh, yeah.
Did you see that?
No, I haven't seen that.
Oh, he was in touch with Epstein.
There's another woman, I think she's a Florida Democratic congresswoman, who turns out was asking for money.
They were much closer to Epstein than Trump was.
Yeah, no, I never thought Trump was a purveyor of Epstein's trafficking or any of that stuff.
That just never made sense to me.
But his handling of it was infuriating.
It's like, why can't you just release it?
Especially if there's a lot of Democrats that are named in the files.
What if he was using that material to himself blackmail our opponents now?
Well, good point.
But couldn't he just say that?
Say, no, I can't release it because we're going to prosecute people that are named in it.
I don't know.
I haven't been.
I have some words.
I'm closer to the Epstein stuff and have than so I've kind of stayed out of this hole.
But he tried, I actually just told this story on Alex Jones.
He tried very hard in the month or two before he got arrested in 2019 to get me to come to his island.
He sent people to Epstein did.
Epstein did.
Oh, my.
And I knew that was because I had a bunch of secrets and there were people who didn't want me to tell the secrets.
They were trying to compromise me so they could blackmail me.
So I did not go.
You knew that.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I thought about going.
I thought it the right, ethically the right thing to do.
You're a Christian.
Yes.
You tell me if this was the right ethical analysis.
The right ethical analysis, I thought, would be to accept the invitation and go out and find a way to murder Jeffrey Epstein.
But I heard that the CIA would be really angry if I did that.
Sorry, but anyway.
That's what I, that's, but he, he, I know what that was about.
It's not quite, I think, what people are imagining it was about, but he's, he was not supposed to be going underage.
He, that was on his own, but he was really he was working for somebody, but he was not supposed to be going underage.
Yeah, I think.
After 2007, I tell me if I could be incorrect.
I think the evidence is after 2007, he did not go back underage.
But I don't know.
I don't know how details.
What was the point of Pam Bondi rolling out the binders with all the influencers and saying the Epstein files?
And then she was saying the files are on my desk and all of this.
And then it all got swept under the rug after that.
Did you see not long ago, somebody put a picture up of Pam Bondi's desk?
And I think it was somebody who had access in the DOJ and took the real picture or something.
There's a picture up of her desk.
And it's just buried under a mound of documents.
It's just buried.
That was really table.
Was purporting to be her actual desk that somebody got a picture of.
If that's the case, it would explain.
She's months behind.
She's coming out and saying, We just discovered this.
And other people are saying, Wait, that was announced six months ago.
She's really not in touch.
She's a nice woman.
She's a nice woman.
She's not a bad woman.
She's done some good things in her life.
But she's a television person.
You or I could go in with a scanner and some AI engines and knock that thing out in a weekend.
Do you think they know how to do that?
I know somebody who worked at the Federal Reserve in maybe 07, 08, really smart woman.
A woman I met dancing in a club, got talking to her that was so smart.
She turned out to be working in the Federal Reserve.
So I knew her girlfriends, and we were talking and hired her.
And she told me that the Federal Reserve in like 08, it was being run on, no, it was probably 05.
They were FedExing the DC Federal Reserve every day floppy disks from like 1988 kind of big five and a quarter floppy disks.
And that's how things were getting reported.
And then those were getting fed into machines there and were being read.
And then people were doing like copy paste of Excel spreadsheets from here to here and writing macros.
They didn't have what you would consider.
This is the government in 2005.
It was so archaic.
It was running like a 1978, you know, legacy systems galore, huh?
Yeah.
So they didn't have a database.
Nothing was modernized.
And so it's quite possible the government, you'd be shocked at how slow it is to do basic things.
I'm dying.
I mean, I couldn't work from government at this point, but if I did, I think it would take about a week.
I think it would take Flynn about 24 hours to fix the military.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
But that's the thing.
I mean, people like you and I and Flynn, we are used to taking executive charge of our organizations and getting things done.
Trump must be really frustrated, but his problem is he appoints people.
He has these people who they face no punishment for slow walking him.
And even when they're trying to do the right thing, they're not people.
So I like Kash Patel.
I met him.
I met him, talked to him in one of the Revolution stuff, think he's an American hero.
Poor fellow, I don't think he's ever run anything larger than three people.
He's now got 42,000 people reporting to him.
An organization can slow walk and defeat its CEO if they want to.
Absolutely.
And that's what I think they're doing with him.
They've seduced him.
They're flying him around in the FBI jet and letting him wear flack vests and go bust down doors.
And he's been seduced by all that stuff.
But more importantly, he has no idea how to defeat how to do quick change in a 43,000 person organization.
How does our audience know that you're not still working for the intelligence community?
And that's why you're here.
That's why you went on with Alex Jones or others that you're running something.
Oh, you just don't know about it yet.
Well, honest question.
No, it's a fair question.
It's a fair question.
And I would describe my relationship as, well, I always, I never was what people think an informant, an asset, any of this stuff.
I was frequently told, Patrick, you just have a unique relationship with the U.S. government.
I've been invited in.
A lot of it was academic, being invited into big settings and giving talks, organized PowerPoints on subjects that I had been speaking about publicly.
Uncle Sam would want me to come in and talk to 50 people in some organization to tell them what my thoughts are about, you know, why.
So some of it was that.
Well, why am I not doing it?
Well, you can't know.
And I don't even know how I would describe my relationship as you ever have, you probably didn't.
You seem like a nice clear, but there was like a girlfriend once in my life, years and years, decades ago.
And we went our different ways.
But we always had this relationship that I know she called me or I call her after not talking to each other for four years.
And she'd say, listen, I have this little thing.
I need the, and of course, I would help her.
And we were just like that with each other for decades.
I would say that's more like Uncle Sam and me, where he's not going to throw me in prison.
He's not going to put a medal on me.
There are people who are furious at me.
Well, one thing you can, but how can you know I'm not here?
I don't know.
What have I done in the last five years?
You know, I blew my whole fortune.
No one can believe this.
I blew really since the Senate asked me, $150 million, since the fake election of 2020, I blew $80 million, both in the stuff you saw through we supporting that $45 million, supporting all these groups standing up, all these groups, the mothers standing up to fight against LGBT ideology being shoved down their kids' throats, the sheriffs who stood the constitutional sheriffs.
You know, 100 or 200 of these little groups, we were the venture money America Project was, and I was 90% of that.
So why would I do that?
And then, so wait, wait, you were taking the fortune you had earned from the sale of the founded.
It's all.
And you mostly donated it out to groups that were on the cultural front lines.
$45 million I spent through the America Project.
Out of, I think, about 50 million went through there.
And what we did was every little group starting in 2020, 2021 that was fighting back from the election integrity groups, and it's 25 grand to one and 200 to another, and a million dollars to the moms for something or other who are going to do this in the election.
So it was getting this money out so this movement could stand up very quickly.
And that's a full-time job, by the way, just vetting groups, making sure your money's going where you want it to go.
Right.
That's a huge job.
Yeah.
Although this was such an extreme moment in American history, it was pretty easy to tell who was in it because they were in it and who was in it just because they're lazy.
I see.
So that was 45.
Then I did another 25 on Venezuela.
What we did that is coming out, that has come out because there's a CIA guy I've been working with the last three, four years who probably is a little more vocal than he should be.
His name's Gary Burnson.
But have you seen any of Gary's, he's been coming out leaking stuff.
Doesn't ring a bell.
Anyway, there was a three-man effort to penetrate the government of Venezuela and steal its secrets.
And it was a former CIA spy, very, I mean, great guy.
We spent, we got on each other's nerves.
We spent months living on top of each other in a best western in Aquagana.
So we, we don't, we're not friends, really, but the country would have died had he not been involved.
Another spy who's like a very key Latin American and myself behind the scenes and paying for everything, but actually being on the front lines.
Actually, I probably spent more than anyway, more on the front lines than, well, I finally left America the last two and a half years of the Biden administration.
I essentially was gone from America.
So I did all that.
I wouldn't have done all that.
I blew my whole fortune.
I kept enough that I can live in a nice little retirement.
I wouldn't have done that if it weren't for a reason.
Really, we have never had an opportunity like this.
The Secretary of HHS really has been a revolving door between government positions and big pharmaceutical industry.
You know, he's been fighting this battle for such a long time.
I can guarantee you he's working as absolutely as hard as fast as he possibly can to deep state people still within the ranks of the HHS that are dragging their heels.
At the end of the day, Secretary Kennedy can put his pillow or his head on the pillow and know that he's done his absolute best.
But I also know that it's a very, very frustrating time for him because there is so much to be done.
We are honored to have you here.
And despite the chasm of physical space between us because of the shape of this desk, we have no chasm philosophically about health freedom and how important it is to research the links between vaccines and autism and many other topics.
So, can, I mean, our audience, I think, is very familiar with you and your work.
Tell us why you're here in Austin right now and what you're focused on next for CHD and your work.
Right.
Well, this is the site of our annual CHD conference.
The Children's Health Defense Conference is downtown at the JW Marriott starting this evening.
What is it?
November 7th.
I lost track of time.
But no, we're having a three-day convention and also then working on several different films that are in the works for Children's Health Defense Films and presenting some of my research.
And then also different luminaries from the health freedom world will be presenting some of their information as well.
Okay, that sounds really great.
And please, any footage that you'd like us to get out in the following weeks, let us so we can share that with the world.
You know, this is really an incredible time in history because we have Robert F.K. Jr. as head of HHS.
And despite perhaps some of the public frustration with how slowly things are moving and the internal politics, it's the first time there's somebody running HHS who actually is aware, deeply aware, of the risks and dangers of vaccines and some of the scientific fraud that's been conducted by both the FDA and the vaccine manufacturers in order to push these into emergency use authorization.
What do you make of the significance of RFK Jr. being there as head of HHS?
Really, we have never had an opportunity like this.
The Secretary of HHS really has been a revolving door between government positions and big pharmaceutical industry, as much of the senior positions within the HHS and within the agencies under the HHS really are more,
you know, basically permission for bureaucrats to get into office or be appointed into these positions and then land lucrative positions afterwards.
That's not the case with Secretary Kennedy.
You know, he's been fighting this battle for such a long time.
He started in 2004 with the Rolling Stone article that was also in salon.com called Deadly Immunity.
And looking at back then, mercury and vaccines obviously has expanded his scope and has expanded his voracious reading regarding health freedom into many, many different venues.
And he is, I can guarantee you, he's working as absolutely his hardest and as fast as he possibly can.
But given many impediments, many people still, deep state people, still within the ranks of the HHS that are dragging their heels.
And, you know, so at the end of the day, Secretary Kennedy can put his pillow or his head on the pillow and know that he's done his absolute best.
But I also know that it's a very, very frustrating time for him because there is so much to be done.
So I think you've answered this question, but for anybody watching in the public who is concerned that if they think that RFK Jr. has abandoned the vaccine safety truth movement, seems like you're saying that is not the case.
He's just working through the bureaucracy of the system.
Is that correct from your understanding?
I couldn't say it more emphatically that he is doing everything he can within that system in order to affect permanent change to really stamp out the chronic disease epidemic, especially in children in the United States.
And we know that so much of that lands at the feet of the CDC's vaccination schedule of vaccines that are laced with so many different toxic components, the vaccine schedule itself, and so many other issues that are going on regarding the captured nature of HHS.
It cannot become uncaptured overnight.
So even though this is the first time we've met in Brooks.
In person, CHD and my organization, which is more of a Maverick advocacy group, we've actually collaborated on a lot of things.
And I just want to mention, we've just recently released vaccineforensics.com, which is the only website powered by an AI engine that will tell the truth about vaccine risks, about vaccine ingredients, about side effects.
And we train on every article that's ever been published by CHD, along with books written by RFK Jr., papers written by you, et cetera, interviews from you and others.
And so I want you to talk about the democratization of knowledge and how now, whether you want to comment on AI or not, but how we, now the grassroots movement, we have the ability to bypass the censorship of big tech, the censorship of Google search, which is horribly misleading in my opinion.
What does this mean now with AI and the new way that people are ingesting information?
Doesn't this provide opportunities for CHD and moms and dads across America to now express and discover the truth about how vaccines are impacting public health?
Well, to start off with, we learned so much regarding suppression of information, especially during the COVID era.
And, you know, so many of us were deplatformed.
So many of us were censored.
You know, we had the disinformation dozen.
We had a concerted effort to bring down dissension and really just sort of trample the First Amendment in the United States.
And so having this type of opportunity where not only some of the edifices that we never really expected to come down are starting to soften up.
I mean, you know, I was lucky if in my career, you know, as a vaccine safety researcher and looking at vaccine adverse events primarily, could get one, you know, publication in a PubMed index journal.
Now, CHD is able to get three, four, five PubMed index publications telling the truth.
And that's just something that we've never done.
And then having AI engines that are independent, I mean, you know, we have a ways to go.
I mean, please don't grok my name because you'll just hear a bunch of lies about me.
But we are making so much headway.
We're making so many more strides.
And vaccine forensics, you know, what a project.
What a way to be able to get truth and drive people to websites that will actually give them answers.
There are people that are hungering for this information.
And we need to drive traffic away from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, the Cleveland Clinic, all of these propaganda, you know, AstroTurf websites that are out there.
And we need to start sending people to vaccine forensics.
And just so you know, Vaccine Forensics is completely free, non-commercial, released out of our nonprofit organization, and there's no advertising.
Incredible.
So it's completely nonprofit by design.
It also, it routinely recommends children's health defense.
And I just talked to Dell at Highwire to, we're going to add Highwire where appropriate as a reference.
We can control the recommended sites, obviously, that may be mentioned as appropriate.
But it's a research tool, and it has the entirety of the world's knowledge about vaccines compressed.
And you can chat with it in real time without any limitation without registration.
You don't need to give your name, your email, your phone number, or anything.
And this is just the beginning, I think, of what's going to happen.
And I can't tell you enough how important your work is in this because CHD is the number one news source, the defender, the number one news source for exposing or let's say the emerging science that we need to look at in order to train our AI models for the future.
So what you are doing is being multiplied in ways that you may not have even known.
Well, I'm so appreciative.
You know, we couldn't be more thankful for you, for your work, for you spreading the word, and then also the capability that you're building and that you have built.
I mean, you know, my son was vaccine injured in 1999.
And so basically we had America Online and a few Yahoo chat groups and that was about it.
Totally read the wrong books that you should ever read about, you know, your wife being pregnant or about having a child or successfully raising a child.
You know, everything was wrong.
And so now, I mean, with this particular opportunity, we could foreseeably stamp out the chronic disease epidemic.
You know, we have so many sick kids.
Sick is the new normal.
It is absolutely the peanut allergy, EpiPen, the celiac disease, you know, children with fragile guts, children with fragile brains, children with developmental disabilities, children with behavioral problems.
It is the norm.
And, you know, this is not the society that we grew up in as little kids.
It's far from it.
But we are so pharmaceutically driven.
And to see that, you know, everything really rising up at this particular time, it could have happened at a better time, any sooner.
We need this now.
We need to curtail the autism epidemic.
Otherwise, in 2032, half of the children's population will be autistic and the other half of the population will be taking care of autistic kids.
And, you know, as you say that, it's just extraordinary that we live in a time where there is a for-profit vaccine industry that you and I both believe that they know the harm that their products cause.
They are very much aware of it.
But the profits are a higher priority at the cost of human lives and human suffering.
And I think that humanity is ready for a strong pivot away from that model.
Just as, for example, right now, I mean, I'm not going to make this political, but the anti-war movement also is rising up for a very similar reason.
It's time to focus on human-centric, a human-centric future for our civilization.
If we can end suffering, why not take those steps?
And if that happens to destroy a multi-trillion dollar industry, like maybe the bomb makers or the vaccine makers, I actually put them in a very similar camp, you know, because they're both profiting from harm.
Well, if they make less money, but we save lives and end suffering, that is worth it as a society, but it's not reflected in the GDP.
The GDP puts no value on human lives and joy and abundance in life.
So it's always difficult for our government leaders to see any benefits for stopping the harming of children.
And that's sad.
You know, if they ever have a shadow of a doubt, please come to my house.
The worst thing that anybody can ever see is their own child going through debilitating pain on a daily basis, on a regular basis, pain so much that they'll hit their head against the wall to create another pain that is lesser than the pain that is already going on in their body.
I mean, you know, self-injurious behavior is actually, there is a purpose for it, and it's to draw away from the absolute pain that these kids are suffering.
Nobody should ever have to go through that, let alone have a child where they have to see that on a regular basis.
The long story short is that Christianity became a religion about confessing and believing rather than following and obeying the commandments of Jesus.
And so we think a true Christian religion should be predicated solely and singularly on the teachings of the master.
The purpose of life is to develop our characters and to live more like Jesus.
And that is what Jesus taught us.
Judge and you will be judged.
Forgive and you will be forgiven.
Repent and God forgives you.
Love your neighbor as yourself.
Love God with all your heart.
And this fulfills the entire law.
And to carry that out through your actions, not just your words.
So you see Awaken the Christ Within and everything.
We have been here filming for your docu series that you're releasing.
And that's why the studio is all decked out with all your graphics and everything.
It looks great.
Can you tell us about what you have coming up?
Yeah, so we're putting together a seven-day virtual summit called Awaken the Christ Within, Walking the Jesus Way.
And of course, it's largely based on our podcast theme, which I think we talked about this, if anyone watching saw our interview from months and months back, that the basic premise is like, you know, I grew up born-again Christian, third-generation pastor son.
I was a former pastor, got my bachelor's degree in theology.
I was all in for Christianity until I was about 23, 24.
And what happened for me was a big wake-up call when I got my first church job because my dad's church was very spirit-filled and free and all that stuff.
So we didn't talk about really any dogmatic stuff, the hellfire brimstone stuff.
And so I didn't have to wrestle with a lot of the dogmas of the Christian religion until I got my first full-time pastoral role.
And all of a sudden, you know, I'm just like a devout lover of Jesus.
I don't have a single memory of any point in my life where Jesus wasn't the fixture for me and my highest inspiration.
And so I'm used to my dad preaching sermons on Jesus, right?
And every single Sunday, I get off the stage after leading worship and it's open to Ephesians, open to Corinthians, open to Philemon, open to Philippians.
It's Paul, And I have to confront a lot of these teachings from Paul that I'm like, ah, this doesn't line up with what I know of Jesus.
And it started to drive me with deeper curiosity to start looking at the differences and studying the history of the Christian religion.
And so I did that.
And long story short, came to a very strong conclusion that the religion I was following was not actually the religion of Jesus, but a religion about Jesus by people who never met Jesus.
And so it's really, to me, it was more of Paulianity than Christianity.
This person who I think Paul was well-meaning and like, I don't demonize Paul as some kind of bad guy.
But I think, you know, he was a Hellenistic Greco-Roman Jew from the diaspora who never met Jesus, who came from a very different culture.
And he weaved in a lot of Middle Platonism and Hellenism into his understanding of Jesus and thus twisted and distorted the gospel message of Jesus.
And so the long story short is that Christianity became a religion about confessing and believing rather than following and obeying the commandments of Jesus.
And so we think a true Christian religion should be predicated solely and singularly on the teachings of the master, the gospel teachings of Jesus.
Judge and you will be judged.
Forgive and you will be forgiven.
Repent and God forgives you.
Love your neighbor as yourself.
Love God with all your heart.
And this fulfills the entire law.
And to carry that out through your actions, not just your words.
Exactly.
Critically.
You can't just say you believe it.
You've got to live it because Christianity will say, right, oh, you can't be saved by works.
You're saved by faith alone, apart from works.
That's what Paul said.
But Jesus said five times in the New Testament, I will judge every man according to their works.
And of course, faith is baked into works, right?
If you truly believe in Jesus, like truly, you will absolutely do the works of Jesus, right?
You will love your neighbor as yourself.
So we don't need to look at what do you say you believe.
It's like, that's not the most important thing.
How do you live and how do you obey and follow Jesus is what shows what you really believe.
And so we say, let's make that our emphasis.
And that's the premise of the Jesus Way podcast is almost like a Christian reform podcast of let's get back to the words of Jesus alone.
I love the fact that both of you are also historians about this.
And you have brought to my consciousness so much powerful information like the Gospel of Thomas, for example, which is just mind-blowing.
Incredible.
And just the parts of the Bible that are left out of the Western Christian Bible.
But the thing that got me into lots of trouble with other fellow Christians was when I started to ask about how were all these books of the New Testament actually written?
Who wrote them?
Who altered them?
What was the motivation to altering them and so on?
Because what I found out is that the minute you begin to question any word in the current New King James Version or whatever people are reading, you question one word, then people get angry.
So how is it that you work with that?
Because again, a lot of people say, this is the word of God.
This is the word of God, period.
But actually, it's the word of men and kings in some cases and emperors and so on.
And now, I mean, God is infused through much of it, but it's not strictly the word of God, is it?
What is it exactly?
How would you describe it, Aaron?
Yeah, it's the word of man across many eons of time about God.
And I think that's what makes the Bible so inspiring to study.
Like we are absolutely in love with the Bible.
We've devoted much of our life to studying the Bible.
I've been reading the Bible since I was born, basically.
So I love the Bible, but let's be honest about what's really true because what is true really matters.
God is truth.
And so if something's not true, it is not of God to believe it.
And so I am more loyal to God than I am to my need for certainty or something like that, that I'm going to just accept all of these claims I can't possibly prove like God wrote the Bible.
So maybe there's some truth to that in that there's divine inspiration in the Bible without question.
I derive divine inspiration from the Bible every single day.
There are verses that I read every day that can move me to tears.
There is definitely divine inspiration in the Bible.
But does that automatically mean God has infringed on the free will of every human who's been involved with the Bible, scribe and author alike, to make sure they can never contaminate it or corrupt it with human error?
I don't think God does that.
I think we have proof that we live in a universe predicated on free will.
So even if God did write a book at some point, God would never stop humankind from tampering with it if they wanted to and force them to be righteous and keep his word intact.
This is such a petty and human-like projection of God.
God is way bigger than human language, way bigger than a book.
As we talked about in our previous session together, God is in nature.
God is encoded in everything around us.
So let's be willing to ask some tough questions.
Is there some human influence in the Bible?
Without question.
And so Christians will say, well, then how do you interpret the Bible?
How do you know what's from man or from God, right?
What's your litmus test?
What's your epistemic grounding, how you interpret the Bible?
And they assume it's just, well, we just make it up.
Whatever feels good is what we see, you know.
That's what they go to.
We say, no, Jesus said when he was asked, teacher, what is the greatest commandment of all?
He said, oh, simple.
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself.
For this commandment fulfills the entire Torah or law, which is the Bible, right?
So we do what Jesus said.
We use the golden rule axiom as our litmus test and standard of interpretation, such that we read the Bible.
And if any verse violates the golden rule, we reject it as a man-made verse, not a divinely inspired verse.
And when I say reject, I mean we don't say God wrote this.
We say, no, man wrote this.
And so there's a lot we can still learn from it.
This is the way ancient humans thought about God.
Go slay the Amalekites, the women and the children, kill everyone, leave nobody alive.
Do I think that was really God?
Of course not.
That's a wicked and demonic idea that is unworthy of the nature of God.
But I can still glean a lot from what ancient humans believed about God when they wrote that.
And all of it, this evolving narrative of humankind's understanding culminates in the Christ, the perfect demonstration, right, of what God is really like.
And so Jesus is the standard, not church fathers, not an ancient text, not what people wrote thousands of years ago.
Jesus was the blueprint for us.
And so we say, if you want to be a follower of Jesus, use his greatest commandment as the highest standard.
And everything else needs to fall beneath that.
Tell us about your upcoming event.
Tell us about this event.
What day does it begin in December?
Just give us a brief overview and then I'll tell people how they can connect with it.
Yeah, the summit is December 3rd through the 8th.
It's a seven-day virtual summit.
We have like 30 some odd guest speakers, you being one of them, of course.
And the purpose behind the summit, again, is there's been no question a real awakening to Christ, I think.
We kind of are like more in the new age scene, if you want to call it that.
Like here in Austin, like a lot of our friends are like spiritual enthusiasts, not Christian or religious.
And we've seen a whole vast swath of them just like get magnetized to Jesus in the last year or so.
And they're like, I found Christ.
That's interesting.
But it's not necessarily a religious thing, but they're just getting drawn to the Christ, which I think is the divine essence in all of us, right?
Universal principles.
Yes, yes.
And then in religion, there's been a huge, especially since 2020 and all the pandemic stuff, there's been this massive awakening of people realizing the corruption of the world, getting very scared of it and saying, I need truth.
I need to feel connected to my Creator.
And they only know how to go to religion for that.
And I think there's a lot of good people get from religion.
But what we want to do is to show people, we don't want everyone to just necessarily get sucked into more man-made institutions, but say, look, no problem if you want to go to church and all that or be Catholic or Eastern Orthodox, but make sure you are living the teachings of Jesus.
Make sure you are awakening the Christ within you, not just outsourcing to a priest or a bishop or a pastor to keep telling you what to believe.
Christ is an inner relationship with God, with the divine.
And how do you access that relationship?
By living it out through the teachings of Jesus, as James just explained to us.
And so, a big part of our podcast is teaching people like the 10 axioms of the Jesus Way.
We're going to be talking about that in the summit.
And we just have a bunch of guests, speakers, who we think all have really cool, unique gifts and angles and perspectives on Christ consciousness, how to awaken it and activate it through different texts, like A Course in Miracles and all kinds of stuff, and biodynamic farming and health and nutrition.
So it's a big kind of smattering of different topics that all allow people to see this is the way that we can access more Christ in our life in all these different ways.
Love it.
I can't wait to hear the other guests of this program.
And folks, if you want to register for this, it's free.
It's free to register and watch it for free, correct?
RangerDeals.com.
We'll put that on the screen.
You can go there.
We're going to put this right on top and you can just click through because we have an affiliate partnership with Aaron and James here to help promote their course because we believe in these teachings.
I think they're really critical for humanity.
And what's really, I think, so important right now is that this, you know, what Jesus taught, at least my understanding, part of what he taught, was that God is within you and all around you and that God is decentralized.
In other words, God is in you.
Yeah, there you go.
Right.
And what a lot of religious institutions have attempted to do throughout time is to re-centralize their authority and control over you in the name of God.
And I, as a freedom advocate and a philosophical free thinker myself, I, of course, I'm completely opposed to handing over your power to another institution that may or may not have your best interests at heart.
There's nothing wrong with going to church.
Again, you can build community.
You can have an important support structure for you and your friends and your family, for your children, homeschooling.
I'm a big advocate of that as well.
Same.
But I don't want you to surrender to another institution.
We already have too many institutions in society that want your power, that want you to bow down to them and worship them, like government or corporations or whatever, or the science.
So, James, what do you say about that, about Jesus' teachings on decentralization or really the universality of your connection to the divine?
Yeah, I don't think we should pass this off to any institution or any other person.
This is a very holy internal experience that is also enacted through our actions and relationships with others.
But if we look at the church during COVID and in the face of many different tragedies and deep state plans, it's become very apparent that these institutions serve the beast a lot of the time.
A lot of the time.
Not always, but they often do.
The larger ones might be the worst.
Yeah, for sure.
We've seen it over and over again with all these different psyops that have been pulled on humanity.
Now, on the flip side, I have so many Christian friends who go to church and I've had beautiful experiences in church.
And there's a lot of good in mainstream Christianity, too.
We never want to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
All we're saying is that there's so much more here.
There's such a deeper.
We can improve.
We can improve.
We can do better.
And what we've uncovered is just so profound about the history of the Nazarenes.
And it really illuminates the way forward for all of humanity, explains why all this weird stuff is going on with certain religions in the world, the power structure.
We're able to understand it and how a lot of it comes back to this concept of blood sacrifice.
Oh, that this is the engine of the demonic.
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.
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?
No.
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.
I gave a very, honestly, very detailed breakdown on all of it.
And it wasn't just overtly like, oh, yeah, these libtards are after Alex.
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.
They don't, it is, 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 Brighty on AI did.
And I was like, okay, wow, this is actually like legit.
Yeah.
I was very pleasantly surprised because, you know, my experience with all the other models is just Chat GPT 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, you know, 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.
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.
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 hyper dimensions 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.
So you've gone through this whole process with your Brighton AI.
You've trained it to, you know, 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.
Ask, please take me to this site question mark.
They'll like query it almost like 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, you know, 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, you know, 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 counter culture against the establishment that wants you dead.
We want you to live and prosper.
You can be cut off of anything at any time, you know, with your bank, with Coinbase.
You can be cut off at any time by any, if you're relying on another party that you don't know.
So there's a lot of things you can do in your life, and I would focus on where you can start.
Just focus on what you can control and crew raising the consciousness and awareness.
Because if you don't, you're going to suffer the hard way.
If you don't do those actions, then you deserve what's coming.
So, Chris, how many days are there in a year?
365.
A little bit of a hint.
Okay, Chris, biblical eggs of Jesus.
In the Bible, how many times is it written, thou shalt not fear?
I have no idea.
Many?
Just gave you a hint a little bit earlier.
Sorry, I whiffed on the first pitch.
My bad.
365 times it's written in the Bible, thou shalt not fear.
Do not fear.
So, Chris, if you could edit the Bible today based upon the fear and greed index, would you write thou shalt or thou shalt not fear when it comes to our current correction?
It's always thou shalt not fear, but humans have no capability or capacity to do that with any sort of curiosity.
Well, unpack it.
Why not fear?
I mean, the VIX index and it looks scary, man.
I mean, what is it?
We're in the mid 80s right now with Bitcoin.
It looks scary to maybe the masses.
Right.
They see fear.
I see opportunity.
And I get fired up when this kind of stuff happens.
This is how you set up asymmetric opportunity.
And we have a phrase with my whole firm, whole team, we feast on fear.
And I know that sounds maybe mean or predatory, but too bad, tough shit.
We're capitalists.
So I think it's, you know, you got to back away and look at, are we going into a super cycle bear market or not?
But in that context, you can't really materialize a lot of significant downside in the short term when you're already at these maximums.
But I think to unpack it a little further, we have been pre-programmed in Hegelian dialectic form to associate our happiness, our well-being, our so-called net worth, which is all an illusion anyways, with a number that fluctuates up and down based on whatever fiat we're measuring against.
Whereas some smart money investors, they look at the quantity of assets they own irrespective of their fiat denomination.
And that's kind of the mindset shift between sort of the sharks and then the sheep.
So I presume, Chris, that in running your firm that you have a little stockpile to where you know that you're just going to preserve to be able to swoop in at times like this, right?
And can you make it practical for normal people out there who are investing in cryptocurrency?
Maybe they've dabbled, maybe they're, you know, knee deep in it.
But what is the best strategy to be able to take advantage of times like this, Chris?
You know, I think looking at just a couple sets of data points, one being the fear and greed index that you're pointing out, that's it's basically in its top five quartile based on z-score, which is a standard deviation metric away from the mean.
And it's one of the feariest periods in crypto's history.
This is true for all assets.
Look at that.
Whenever it gets into extremes, that's always a good time to accumulate, regardless of macro, regardless of what's going on broader.
Then you have a time horizon that hopefully is infinity because successful portfolios are designed by generational wealth is to have infinity time horizon.
So, and then, you know, you can't trade your way necessarily to wealth, right?
But you can do something like I'm recommending that keeps you out of the woods and allows you to build an asset base forever.
Lastly, do not use leverage because then you get an opportunity to do the thing that I'm recommending.
So Matt, I'm going to ask you about gold and silver.
So that's why I invited both of you to the show today, because we want to hear on the digital asset side, and we also want to hear about Bitcoin versus privacy coins, Chris.
But Matt, we want to talk about gold, the world's oldest money, I suppose.
But right now, gold and silver, I mean, silver is still over 50, gold is over 4,000, really holding very high dollar denomination values despite a lot of volatility.
And that's diverging from what we're seeing in Bitcoin, which is quite a bit of a pullback right now, and in some stocks as well.
So Matt, can you answer the question for our audience?
Why do you think gold and silver are holding up so well?
Well, I think it's because there aren't enough sellers is the simple answer to that.
And there aren't enough sellers of gold because people can see what's happening with the dollar and actually any fiat currency for that matter.
And they would much rather hold on to the gold than they would for, because I think most of the buyers of gold in particular versus people who trade stocks do have more what Chris is talking about with this infinite time horizon.
Because if you don't even physically, you're going to want physical gold in your possession or stored somewhere near your possession, fence post 47 or whatever.
It's not, by the way, but You want to, you know, you have a very long-term time horizon because you know just the act of actually selling it is going to take energy.
And so you're not going, it's not something you can come in and out of.
So you do naturally have that more infinite time horizon with it and you're much slower to sell it.
But if there is a real serious drawdown in the markets, everything gets correlated at that point.
They'll sell gold too.
And so that's why I think all this volatility we've seen in the markets, it's not serious yet, really, you know, because you will see gold get hit when it gets serious.
It'll be temporary.
It won't make any difference to me, whatever.
I mean, actually, I moved a lot to cash about a month ago just because gold and gold stocks had done so well this year.
I mean, my best year ever.
So I couldn't not take cash off the table.
And one last thing about the fear and the greed thing, I think this is so important.
My son, actually, because we talked about him earlier, asked me yesterday what I thought about Bitcoin because he has Bitcoin.
And he was feeling the fear with it.
Right.
And I said, well, okay.
I said, there's two things you got to consider.
Number one, pay attention to how you feel because odds are how you feel is exactly how everyone feels.
And, you know, it's like, so if you monitor yourself, you know, that's the best judge of it.
You don't have to look at a fear and greed index.
You can look at your reaction to the price action and how that makes you feel.
If you can pay attention, it's very instructive.
It took me too long to learn that, but I mean, it is very instructive.
And so, you know, obviously, you know, you don't want to be greedy and you don't want to be fearful.
Like, you know, those are the two things that'll get you.
So if you're aware of it in yourself, you can make better decisions.
And if you start to feel really afraid, what I told him is I said, you have to back up and go, is the case that you have for the investment still valid?
If it's still valid, ignore it.
If it's changed, then you might want to, at least, you might want to lighten up on your position.
Maybe you're feeling this bad because you have leverage or you're overweighted.
But this fear, greed thing is the whole game, I think, when it comes down to it.
One of the reasons why we're seeing Bitcoin get hit so hard right now is because of the ease of moving in and out of Bitcoin due to the ETFs.
So when there's a liquidity crunch, it's easier for people to sell Bitcoin than it is to sell gold, let's say.
Chris, do you think there's validity to that observation?
Yeah, and I would kind of reframe it as how can it move like this, right?
Because it becomes a mechanical throughput, not so much a subjective narrative, right?
So here you can explain the mechanical of how Bitcoin has two really big sell-offs in the last 45 days.
One, October 10th, that was the largest leverage online.
The actual number is north of 260 billion, what's been reported, everything reported.
It's not accurate, as you gentlemen all know, but that was the real number.
And then in the last kind of few days, you're getting price action that's not really even subdividing.
So what that looks like from a pattern and practical perspective is forced selling.
And then you look at what occurred on Wall Street, where this summer, these digital asset treasury equities were listed.
Capital was then immediately put into digital assets, agnostic to price, and they're being forced out of it.
So you really have to try and transition your mind to go, well, why is it down?
Well, obviously that just means more sellers than buyers.
Duh.
But more asked questions of how, how can that manifest?
And to your point about gold, and I'm a perma gold bug too.
Gold's a pain in the neck to sell physical and try and time it.
Right.
You have to physically wrap it up and ship it back and wait for that transit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think that's a net benefit to gold.
So it just creates more stability in the gold market because people are less likely to want to ship it back and sell it that way.
Whereas with Bitcoin, they can just fire off sell orders through the ETFs, right?
Yes.
And I think maybe a better way to frame it is because gold has bear markets that are humongous and long also.
Yes.
Like after the 2011 peak, which I love bear markets because then you can just buy all the time for years.
But, you know, it's got less short-term, what we call realized volatility, much, much less, because of the characteristics you just described.
There are approximately 100 million American families, you know, 330 million Americans, the average family and so forth.
So you've got 100 million American families that are supposed to somehow repay $100 trillion in debt.
Now, that happens to be $1 million per family.
And the average family in America today earns $52,000 and they're barely getting by.
So where is the money going to come from to pay off this debt?
The question I think is, is it a product of just terrible leadership in our country?
Or is there a design behind it?
The economic outlook for many nations right now is pretty grim.
Germany, for example, is suffering an industrial collapse due to loss of energy from Russia.
The vast majority of German cities and towns are bankrupt.
France and the U.K. suffering similar things.
The United States may be experiencing an attempted reindustrialization because of Trump inviting a lot of external money to come in to build data centers, largely, but microchip manufacturing, things like that.
However, other sectors of the U.S. economy are not looking that great at the moment.
The debt to GDP ratio is still about almost 130% in the U.S. Not as bad as Japan with 230%.
But China's also got a debt problem as well.
So can you give us your big picture outlook about where we are economically, both domestically and then in terms of global geopolitics?
Yeah, you know, Mike, it's funny.
Back in, I think it was 2008, I was with George W. Bush.
I took him to Haiti on my aircraft along with his director of the budget management.
And remember, this is 2008.
I think we were in debt as a nation at about $8 trillion or something like that.
That sounds right.
And I asked the president, what do you think about this debt?
And both he and his director of the Office of Management and Budget said almost simultaneously, it's unsustainable.
That was $30 trillion.
That was $30 trillion ago.
So we're at a point right now where, and I like to do the math on this.
So, you know, we're talking about $38 trillion in debt, but we also have unfunded liabilities.
For example, Medicare and then the Social Security system, trillions of dollars that is owed, but not counted on the books.
Then we had federal pensions and a variety of things.
Interest on the debt.
Interest on the debt.
Yeah.
I mean, it easily over very conservatively $100 trillion.
Yes.
So there are approximately 100 million American families, you know, 330 million Americans, the average family and so forth.
So you've got 100 million American families that are supposed to somehow repay $100 trillion in debt.
Now, that happens to be $1 million per family.
And the average family in America today earns $52,000 and they're barely getting by.
So where is the money going to come from to pay off this debt?
And of course, you have interest on the debt right now.
This year, I believe, we're at about $1.6 trillion of about a $6 trillion income that the government has.
And of course, we're borrowing money to pay the debt.
That looks like a lot of households.
When a household has to borrow money to pay the minimum on the credit cards, which is what we're looking at here, you've got disaster in your hands.
And that's whether it's a family or whether it's a nation.
So it clearly is unsustainable.
The question I think is, is it a product of just terrible leadership in our country?
Well, a lot of it is.
There's no question about that.
Or is there a design behind it?
You've seen the book, The Great Taking, where things have been put in place, either through regulation or through laws, where we don't actually own our stock anymore.
And those people that are listening, they have a 401k and you're feeling pretty good about it.
Well, show me the stock certificates in your 401k that are issued in your name.
It's not in your name.
Yeah.
You know, they quit doing that when the internet came along a number of years ago.
They blamed it on paperwork.
But in reality, we don't own our stocks.
We have been given a right to those stocks.
You know, we can buy and sell, and that's good as long as things stay solvent.
But at some point, the chickens are going to come home to roost, where the government can no longer borrow enough to pay the debt and continue to borrow.
And I believe that the people that are behind the curtain, the people that control the central banks, which, by the way, the Rothschild family controls all the central banks of the world, they're so far more wealthier than Elon Musk.
You can't even imagine.
Well, in 1929, when the stock market crashed, for much the same reason, by the way, you could borrow margin loans to buy stock with 10% down, and the central bank had loosened money and liquidity was out there.
But then literally in one day, they told the banks in the country they could no longer make margin loans and that all marginal loans had to be collected immediately.
That's what caused the crash.
And it's what caused the depression.
But there were people that knew in advance when it was going to happen.
The Kennedys, for example, Joseph Kennedy.
Well, those people knew when it was going to crash, were able to sell out at top dollar, and then come back later and buy at pennies on the dollar.
And what's going on behind the scene, where there's COVID or whatever right now, the elite, the globalists, have an agenda that requires three things.
They want to absolutely control us.
And number two, they want a massive transference of wealth from us to them.
And number three, they want a controllable or a sustainable population.
And that means they want fewer of us.
And so COVID was a great example of that.
They had us wearing diapers on our faces and we couldn't go to church.
And one-third of all small businesses in America went out of business while the big box stores kept open.
And they're all owned by BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard and the Jewish mafia out there who got massively wealthy off the backs of the average American.
And of course, when you control the media, you can control the message, the narrative, which their masters at.
That's why waking up is so important.
But they've got us in a trap now where the only exit is bankruptcy in our inner country, the destruction of the dollar.
You know, the U.S. dollar has lost 10% of its value against world currencies this year.
And what's particularly interesting, you mentioned Japan.
By the way, I've been to Japan 25 times.
My former company has 2,000 locations in Japan.
Half of all gyms in Japan are curves.
So I know the culture.
I know the economy really well.
And their debt to GDP ratio, as you said, is about 250%.
It's massive.
Interesting side note.
And then they just announced new stimulus of, I think, $153 billion equivalent, right?
Massive stimulus.
And for the first time in a decade, they began to pay interest on Japanese bonds.
And there goes the carry trade.
The carry trade.
That's exactly right.
Broom dominoes falling globally.
And, you know, we had a really tough week in the stock market last week, right after they announced that the people that have borrowed yen at 0% interest and they came over here and converted them into dollars and bought stocks or treasuries even.
Or treasuries.
Yeah.
They suddenly, that margin they were making off of U.S. Treasuries by borrowing zero interest loans in yen, Japan decides to start charging an interest rate.
That's about 1.5%.
And that margin just closed.
And this explains a lot of the crypto problems right now, too.
I noticed today.
That's going to be massive unraveling of a lot of positions.
I think it was $88,000 today for Bitcoin.
And so all of that now is unraveling.
And then, of course, you have the sanctions war and the bricks that have been put in place to protect other countries against U.S. assault and hegemony that's going on out there.
So you have a lot of things that are being put in place to bring this country down economically.
And there's really not much that we're going to be able to do about it as a voting citizen.
The real key is what can we do about it as individuals?
How can we do wealth preservation?
I laugh when people or institutions purchase 10-year treasuries thinking that they know what's going to be in 10 years because of the disruptive power of AI technology, machine cognition right now, just because of recent improvements from Google, Gemini, and Anthropic and Grok and others.
Plus, China is very strong in this area with DeepSeq and Alibaba, et cetera, Quinn.
In 2026, I'm anticipating the displacement of millions of office jobs, white-collar jobs, primarily in areas like customer service and sales service, where 80% replacement rates are achievable today with today's technology.
That'll be 90% six months from now, if not higher.
Those job displacements are going to be massive and they will accelerate.
And I don't see anybody in Washington, D.C. that's calculating any of this into their equations at all, or even with central banks.
They're not calculating this.
And I'm almost done with my questions.
Eventually, Trump is going to have to approve a universal basic income, it seems, because of UBI.
So many Americans will have lost job prospects, at least in the short term, because their skill set is now obsolete.
And Amazon announced it's going to replace 600,000 warehouse workers over the next several years.
And they already let go 30,000 this year, according to reports.
So when we start printing a trillion dollars a month to hand out to people who lost their jobs, then that puts us, we're going to be at $50 trillion in debt before the next presidential election.
You know, I mean, how does that sustain?
Yeah, you know, you actually, there's a couple questions in there.
One is, is printing money devalues of the dollar?
It's just standard economic principle.
And they're doing massive amounts of it now.
They've been doing it for a number of years.
And the dollar, as you know, what we could buy in 1970 is, I think the dollar in 1970 is worth a few pennies today or something like that.
You're right.
I think it's a 96% loss of purchasing power, something like that.
So we're going to continue to see that, which means there's going to be a new dollar.
And it's probably going to be digital.
And universal basic income is probably going to become a necessity.
You know, we kind of have it right now.
You know, when 42 million people are on food stamps, we're well on our way there.
You know, it kind of goes back to the globalist thing, control, transfer of wealth, and a sustainable population.
And let me tell you what, when you're showing up to get your universal basic income, which is barely enough to get by on, and you have to behave to get it, and we've seen that modeled through the Chinese social credit score, which, by the way, a lot of the globalists that have spoken about it, they talk about the new global government being based on the Chinese model.
Yes.
And so we're going to be told what we can say and do and so forth if we want to provide even minimally for our families.
That's part of what's coming.
And this is all by design.
And can I interject?
I'm sorry, but the great taking fits perfectly with this because when the banks fail, the government can come along and say, hey, we'll give you all your money back, but it's in this digital system.
And you have to agree to the terms of this, which is the social credit score combined with the CBDC.
And we'll give it to you over this time schedule.
Right.
Right.
You know, I had a worldwide business, and a good friend of mine was my master franchisee for Greece, and she lived in Cyprus.
And when the Cypriot banking system shut down those years ago, she was- I remember that.
Yeah.
Well, she had just sold her house for 350,000 euros and had it in a bank.
And suddenly her entire life savings was frozen.
And what was interesting is how they handled it.
And that was a bail-in.
It was.
It was the first trial for Bailin.
And I actually got to experience it with her.
I was on the phone with her almost daily.
Here's what they did at first.
They said, we're going to give everybody 10% of what they had on deposit.
But here's what was interesting.
90% of the people had less, they had $5,000 or Euros in the bank.
That was it.
And only 5% had any substantial amount of money to bank, much like it is here, right?
And the problem was when they announced that, because it affected the 95% that we're going to lose a little of something, they went to the streets.
The masses rose up.
So then they said, oh, wait a minute, we're going to rethink this.
And then they came back and they left the 95% align, which really didn't have any money.
And they literally took almost everything from the 5% that were productive citizens.
And that was their test.
And I got to see it firsthand in that experience.
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