Creators vs Consumers... and how to improve your future
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Well, this is a very exciting time to be a creator.
And this topic here today for this podcast, this is about the different kinds of people, the way they interact in society.
Some are consumers, some are creators.
And then there's another group of people who are creators for the creators.
And because of AI, it's never been a better time to be a creator.
So welcome.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
I am an AI developer.
You can see all of my AI tools.
They're all free at brighteon.ai.
And the most popular tool right now is our book creation engine, which is extraordinary, really.
I mean, that's what I hear from people.
And you can find that at brightlearn.ai if you'd like to check it out.
Now, what do I mean by being a creator?
Well, if you look throughout human history, we've always had ideas in our heads about things we wanted to do.
Even our ancestors, like, oh, I want to grow a whole field of crops or something like that.
Oh, I want to build a house.
I want to build a log cabin.
I want to sail across the ocean.
And those ideas throughout history have taken an enormous amount of effort to make happen.
Obviously, cognition or brain effort and then labor or muscle effort.
And if you track the progress of human civilization throughout history, you'll find that for a while, humans figured out how to use the labor of animals, for example, riding on a horse or having an ox pull a plow, for example.
You know, these are leveraging animal labor.
And for a long, long time, for centuries, horse labor or other animal labor was just absolutely, you know, critical to the advancement of human civilization or critical to economies.
And to this day, we still have, as part of our language and culture, all these references to animal power.
For example, if you have an engine in your car, the power output of that engine is described in a unit known as, well, horsepower, which seems odd at first.
Horsepower, there are no horses in my car.
But actually, the engine is rated in the power equivalent to a certain number of horses because that's how power was described, measured for a very long time.
But it's more than that.
It's also, you may not know this, but what determines the width of roads in America?
Or the width of lanes in a tunnel that goes under a mountain or the width of the lanes on a bridge?
That width is based on the width of two horses side by side because that was the common carriage setup of the day.
It was to have either two or four horses side by side pulling a carriage behind them.
And so all the roads had to fit that width.
And then that became the standard.
And then that became, you know, the highways.
And then that determined the width of an 18-wheeler truck or, you know, a 20-foot container or a 40-foot container.
And then that determined how many containers could go on a ship and how wide the ship had to be to hold how many containers that could be put on a truck that could fit in the tunnel.
And all of that comes back to horses.
In case you didn't know, that's kind of an interesting piece of history.
It's all based on horsepower.
But, you know, caring for horses is no easy thing.
They need food and water and care and brushing and they have injuries and so on.
And so throughout history, when we had inventions that could replace horses, for example, the steam engine was critical because the steam engine, which was used on riverboats, you know, the steam engine could help your vision become a reality.
Like, hey, I want to sail up and down this river and sell, you know, cargo up and down this river from city to city because of, of course, nearly all the major cities throughout history were founded on rivers for this very reason because sailing up and down a river is by far the cheapest form of transportation per kilogram per kilometer, or I guess you could say per pound per mile or per ton per mile, whatever.
It's the cheapest form of transportation by far, even to this day.
That's why we have barges on the rivers.
It's a fraction of the cost of trucking.
But steam engines revolutionized transportation, which revolutionized the economy and helped make people's ideas come to fruition much more easily.
And there's an old song, Proud Mary.
How's it go?
Big wheels keep on turning.
Yeah?
Proud Mary keep on burning.
What are they describing?
They're describing a coal-fired steam engine that would turn the giant paddle wheel of the boat called Proud Mary, which would sail up and down the river.
Rolling, rolling, right?
Rolling on the river.
That's the song.
That's the song.
See, it's all part of our culture, the whole history of energy and transportation and of this idea of making things happen because we have ideas in our heads.
We want to do things.
Hey, I want to build a skyscraper.
Well, how do we do that?
We're going to need some steel, probably.
How do we make steel?
You know, we're going to need some iron ore and some energy.
How do we get iron ore?
We're going to have to mine iron ore.
How do we do that?
You know, on and on.
Well, I said all that to bring you up to the present.
So let's see, after the steam engine, of course, the combustion engine.
And well, we had a lot of belt-driven factories in the later part of the 19th century and the early part of the 20th century.
And then, of course, combustion engines and then electric motors and the rise of the power grid, etc., etc.
To the point where we are today, we have a lot of energy available.
We've got natural gas pipelines.
We've got solar, etc.
We've got a lot of energy.
But what's really helping people create things now is not just the availability of energy, but now augmented cognition.
So all throughout human history, up until just the last few years, couple years, we haven't had much help with cognition.
So yeah, the labor has been replaced with motors and combustion engines, etc.
But the cognition hadn't been replaced until now.
I mean, sure, we had the personal computer in the 1980s.
You know, we had Lotus 123.
Some of you remember that.
I grew up programming in BASIC on an Apple IIe Plus computer.
Yeah, that tells you how old I am.
But we learned how to do things, but the machines weren't that helpful.
Like the spreadsheet didn't think for you.
It was really just a glorified tabulation machine, you know, a glorified addition cash register or something.
And, you know, there are mechanical machines that add and multiply and subtract and divide.
Did you know that?
Did you know there are purely mechanical machines that do that?
I know this because I've collected quite a few of them.
And they have a rotary handle and you like punch in the numbers that you want to add and you turn the handle and kachin, it adds them up.
Do you know that?
Yeah.
And it can do subtraction and more stuff than that.
And some of these come out of the old Soviet Union.
Actually, the most advanced computational machines that are purely physical.
No electricity, no motors, just a handle, a crank handle.
They come out of the Soviet Union.
It's really, and they're cylindrical in their shape.
Very cool stuff, actually.
I've taken a lot of interest in those.
Because, you know, mechanical computation, that helped with civilization in a significant way.
But then we got to, you know, the rise of, well, microchips.
And the key invention there being the transistor, which is a very simple device, but it can be made to be extremely small, just a few nanometers in width.
And because of transistors, which nobody still understands exactly because they're quantum devices, but because of transistors, we could pack billions of transistors onto silicon and we could create microprocessors out of it, which meant that the computational machines no longer had to be cranked by hand.
They could be cranked by electrons.
And that gave rise to microprocessors.
Intel back in the 1980s, you know, the old 8086 microprocessors that ran at what, what speed?
Like 4.5 kilohertz or something.
I mean, they were so slow, I don't even remember.
They weren't gigahertz.
They were super slow and they only did really basic things, but they helped.
Well, continued to advance.
The computers became more powerful.
And then we ended up with graphics processors, mostly because of the gaming industry.
And then those graphics processors ended up doing things like calculating hashes for cryptocurrency.
And then, more recently, running AI model training and inference for AI.
And now we arrive in late 2025 at the moment where an artificial brain can do thinking for you.
So now, being a creator, this is the best moment in all of human history to be a creator.
If you like to create stuff, and I love it, I live to be a creator, by the way.
I've always written music since I was a child.
I've always created interesting things and created software and so on.
Now, I'm in heaven with these AI tools because I can create songs.
I can create code.
I can create apps.
I can create images and video and graphics and whatever I need.
I can create documents, can do research at any given moment.
I mean, I'm just looking around my room right now.
What do I have?
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven.
I've got seven AI agents running right now on the screens just sitting here.
And if I walk into another room, you know, there's like 20 more AI systems running.
So I've got this amplification of what I want to do in my head that's amplified through AI now.
And probably you are using AI as well.
Because most of us here are creators in one way or another.
For example, you might be an author.
You might have written a book.
You might write apps.
You might create inventions.
You might have patents.
You might, you know, whatever, you name it.
You're probably a creator in some way in what you do.
And right now you can use music engines like Suno, which are great at creating songs.
I mean, it's just incredible.
Or you can use our book creation engine, which is, it's kind of like the Suno for books.
And it's not affiliated with Suno.
I just want to be clear.
It's not endorsed by Suno.
They probably don't even know about it.
But it works the same way.
You can generate or create whatever books you want using our engine at brightlearn.ai.
And we'll be opening up a free tier to the public pretty soon.
Already we have about 500 books that have been created there and you can download them all for free.
And we've got more people creating books every single day.
And I have too.
I think I've created 30 books there.
So it's pretty remarkable.
So that brings us to where we are now.
The advancement of these tools for creators is accelerating.
And into next year, 2026, we're going to see these tools just take a quantum leap forward in terms of speed, capability, and also reduce cost.
So right now, for example, it's very expensive to render many minutes of, let's say, a video.
Or even for me to render an entire audio book just to do the voice, that could cost quite a bit.
That's why we're not doing automatic audio books for every book on our book engine.
But we will.
We will as soon as the costs come down.
And that's inevitable.
The costs are getting cheaper by the day.
And as these costs come down and this technology continues to advance, you're going to find that you'll be able to take advantage of better and better tools for creating the things that you want to create.
And what's great about this is that then you can take these ideas in your head, probably some of the same ideas that maybe your ancestors had, but they had to use horses and they had to do the math with pencil and paper.
And that was quite an impediment to getting things done.
Whereas you can bring in AI agents or soon robots, robotic labor, or right now, machine labor, etc.
You know, electric motors, whatever.
You can use machines to get things done quickly, whereas your ancestors couldn't.
You know, your grandparents or great-grandparents may have washed their clothes on a washboard by hand.
You have a machine that does that, probably.
You have a machine that washes your dishes.
Yeah.
Of course, you have to load it and unload it.
But you might have a machine that makes coffee.
Of course, there are some things you have to do with that too.
But even all those functions are going to be automated with humanoid robots in the coming years.
So a robot will load your dishwasher and unload it.
And eventually, a robot will mow your lawn, water your plants, etc.
Now, I mentioned up front that one way to look at the world or the people in it is to think about the fact that most people are consumers and not creators.
A smaller percentage of people are creators.
And then an even smaller percentage are creators for creators.
That is, people who create platforms for creators to create things.
And, you know, of course, that's my dream.
That's one of the things that I do is I create platforms for creators like Brighteon.com, the uncensored video platform, or Brighteon.social, uncensored social media posts, and now Brightlearn.ai for book creation.
So I love creating tools for creators.
But it's a lot of work, obviously.
I also, at the same time, I love just being a creator.
So I'll use the same tools that I built.
And I'll also use Suno or I'll use Cling AI for video creation or other tools, etc.
So I love being a creator.
I mean, I must use, I don't know, 10 different AI tools or engines on any given day.
I have one tool that does research.
I have another tool that puts together documents based on research.
Another tool for music, another tool for video, another tool for maybe audio generation like audio books or a book summary, audio, things like that.
So lots of different tools for lots of different things.
So I'm a creator too.
And if you love to create things, you're living in the best time to be alive ever in history.
So I want you to think about how amazing this is.
That you can do things now that, you know, your grandparents or my grandparents could not have possibly imagined even being possible.
They would have thought, like if we described to them what we're doing now 20 years ago, they would have thought that we're living in the future, you know, that what maybe we got teleported from in a time machine or something.
Because it's so unbelievable that we'd be alive in a time when we could have an online project that can create a book for you off of a single sentence prompt.
And that's what our book engine does right now at brightlearn.ai.
And it's free, by the way.
So that was unthinkable.
And what's about to happen, what's about to become available, is going to be even more amazing.
So I've got two important messages about being a creator here.
Number one, it's great to be a creator.
This is a wonderful time.
And secondly, it's important to be a creator.
In other words, if you're not yet creating things with AI engines, it's a great idea to learn how to do that and start doing that at some level.
It can be simple things like generating music or generating a book.
And we have those tools available.
Or you can create video or create images or whatever you want.
But learn how to use these tools because they are going to be a critical part of how everything works from here forward.
Critical part.
Now, then let's talk about consumers.
The majority of the population are people who mostly consume.
They consume content.
And I'm not talking about just food.
I mean, yeah, they consume food, but we all do.
They mostly consume things.
They watch a lot of Netflix or they watch a lot of news.
They ingest a lot of content.
They listen to music, but they don't write music.
Or they watch the news, but they don't make the news.
Or, you know, they read books, but they don't create books.
Lots of examples like that.
And consumers will have an unlimited choice of stuff that they can consume.
But I have a warning for anybody out there who's just a consumer or predominantly a consumer.
It's a path that leads to the degradation of your cognition.
And you end up being passive and you lose the ability to create and to direct and to innovate or to be an entrepreneur or to be an idea person who can make things happen, etc.
If you're focused primarily on being a consumer, you're on the wrong track, in my opinion.
And I don't know what percentage of the population works like that.
Maybe it's 80%, maybe it's 90%, 95%.
I don't know.
But it's up there.
Most people are just consumers and they're happy like that.
They are really interested about the next football game, you know, because they want to watch it for just, hey, I want to watch football.
Okay.
But they're not playing football.
You see, you know, it's like, we won, we won.
No, you weren't on the field.
You didn't win anything.
You got fat sitting on the couch eating chips and drinking beer.
You know, you didn't win.
So I'm not saying there's something wrong with enjoying entertainment from time to time, but if you make that your focus, like, oh, I can't wait for the next movie or the, you know, the next song to come out from, who is it?
Like Katy Perry or whatever the popular artists are.
Oh, I can't wait.
Yeah.
Why wait?
Create your own music.
It's going to be better anyway.
On Suno, you know, it's going to be, the music's going to be way better.
In fact, I want to play a song for you here.
Or at least let me play part of it.
It's called, I just created this song an hour ago.
It's called Fear the Robot, but Love the Phone.
And it's a song about how people are afraid of robots, but their privacy is already completely obliterated by the fact that they have this phone that monitors everything and every web search and every place they travel, every online query, everything they buy, everything.
So it's irrational to me that people fear the robot but love the phone because the robot isn't actually going to invade your privacy as much as your phone already does, at least in my assessment.
So let me just play for you.
I don't know, let's play like 90 seconds of this song just so you can hear.
Like this is a song that I created.
I love being a creator.
I am a musician.
I've done many, many songs in my life long before AI.
And of course, I'm not singing this song.
I'm using AI voices here.
But check out this song, Fear the Robot, Love the Phone.
And then I'll continue this podcast on the other side.
And you can hear the full song on my channel at Brighteon.com.
So check this out.
Here we go.
They scream about the robots coming for their souls, but hand their life to Apple.
Alexa is their secrets.
Siri knows their name.
But if a bot sweeps the kitchen, they cry out in shame.
5G tower on the corner.
Press the phone up to their head.
Self-driving Tesla zoom in.
But a helper bot brings dread.
Fear the robot.
But love the phone.
Drones are dropping packages right outside your home.
Fear the robot.
It might spy on you, but sure, I've sold you out.
The years before a new, fear the robot.
But love the phone.
All right.
Hope you enjoyed that little snippet there.
Again, you can check out the full song on my channel.
And the reason I wanted to play that for you was to just show you how effective music creation can be now.
If you know how to prompt it correctly, you can get songs as good as that or even better.
Now, each of us is a creator in some ways, and we're also consumers in other ways.
And I'd like to bring your attention to the creation to consumption ratio, kind of like a signal-to-noise ratio.
So take a look at your own creation to consumption ratio.
And if that number is low, that is you're doing a lot more consuming than creating, then you might be on the wrong track, or maybe you're not creating enough stuff, right?
And I think that people who focus primarily on consumption are going to be left behind because they won't know how to use the tools of creation.
And if you just focus on being a consumer, then, you know, you're not really expressing your humanity.
Because humans weren't designed just to be, quote, consumers.
In fact, I don't even like the term consumer.
It smacks of people who just buy stuff, which is the way that economists really look at people.
It's just how much stuff did you buy?
Oh, it's all GDP.
And, you know, you're a consumer.
You consume stuff.
They don't like you to reuse stuff or to repurpose things.
And they don't like you to take care of your health so that you don't need pharmaceuticals, right?
So that you don't need surgery.
So you don't need chemotherapy.
They really don't want you to be self-reliant because then you're not consuming and you're not participating in the GDP.
So all the messages in our civilization, at least in Western culture, messages are all about consumption.
Buy more stuff.
Own more stuff, right?
Put it on credit.
Buy now, pay later.
Buy now, pay later.
I saw a statistic that something like 95% of the purchases made during the recent Black Friday event nationwide, or something like 95%, were purchased on credit.
Buy now, pay later.
And that's become a marker of our Western civilization, where we are in many ways over-consuming stuff, but still living without purpose.
And some of the signs of that are the fact that, you know, we've got people with huge houses that they can't afford.
You don't actually need such a large house to live in.
You've got people with so much food that they become morbidly obese.
They're not living with scarcity in that department at all.
We've got people who have so much stuff, they have to buy insurance on all the stuff like the boat, the jet skis, the second car, the third car, the trailer, the RV, on and on and on.
And granted, each of those has a purpose and it can contribute to quality of life.
But if you end up consuming beyond your means, then you're not serving your life purpose, but you are serving the purpose of the system.
The system wants you to buy, buy, buy until you die.
And then when you die, they take most of your money and they funnel it back into the system to make others buy.
It's all about consumption.
From the factory to you to the landfill, over and over again.
Oh, the appliances only last three years now.
They used to last 20.
So you buy, you use, you throw away.
Consume, consume, GDP, etc.
So people who are stuck in that cycle are not really fully expressing their humanity, in my opinion.
People who create, on the other hand, those are the winners in society.
People who have ideas and who act on those ideas, probably people like you listening to this.
You might be a musician.
You might be an author.
You might be someone who has created maybe a medical procedure, or maybe you've innovated in some way in education or in energy or wherever you are.
You're a creator.
The future belongs to you as long as you know how to use these tools of creation.
Now, it's the job of people like me to bring you more tools.
So what I do and perhaps what some of you do, and certainly other people in society, we are the creators for the creators.
So we create tools to be used by other creators.
And it's a very noble role to serve in society.
I'm very humbled by the ability to do that, to be able to build these tools for you, like our book engine at brightlearn.ai.
I'm humbled to be able to do this.
It gets me really excited, actually, to look at all the books that you are creating.
They're amazing.
The titles are amazing.
The topics and everything, it's just off the charts.
I'm gleeful when I look at the books that are coming out of the engine.
In fact, the only thing I'm unhappy about is that people aren't yet using it more.
We haven't opened up the free tier yet.
When I did open it up for like an hour, then 50 books came through, and so I had to close it.
I'm still doing last-minute testing and load testing, etc.
So I can't open it up totally free to the public yet.
But for those of you who have tokens, jump in there and use them.
You don't need to overthink it.
You can just type in one sentence about a book that you want, or you could put in a long, long prompt with all kinds of details and all your research and all your, you know, your chapter suggestions and everything.
And it'll work on that too.
But it works on an amazing array of content.
For example, you can just record yourself talking for 30 minutes about whatever subject you want.
Take that recording, push it through an AI engine, get a transcript.
Take that text of your transcript, paste it into the book engine, and boom, you got a book based on what you just said.
Yeah, it works great.
I've done that.
You don't need to touch the transcript.
You just literally take the transcript and paste it in there.
You don't have to edit it.
You don't have to come up with titles or anything.
See, a lot of people are overthinking our tool and many other creation tools.
See, this is the thing that, especially a lot of us who like you, we've always been very capable of being very detailed and very thorough and thoughtful about things.
And that's the way we grew up and that's how we all had success in our lives was being very thoughtful.
And it's hard to, it's hard to let go a little bit and let the AI engine do some of the work for you.
You know, it's hard to say, hey, I'm just going to type in one prompt for this book.
Like, give me a book on, let's say, I don't know, like natural supplements for dogs or something, right?
What's the best nutrition and supplementation for dogs?
All right, that's all you have to type.
You just type that in one sentence and you hit go.
And then the book, it does the whole table of contents for you.
It does, you know, the outline and then you approve it.
It does the title.
It does the cover art.
And then it writes the whole thing.
It edits it.
It fact checks it.
It does all the research.
Brings in the references and citations, puts those at the end of each subchapter.
And then it packages the book and sends you a link to download the PDF or you can read it online.
And all it took for you was one sentence.
See, people like you and I often have trouble letting go and trusting the AI to take an idea and run with it.
Because, you know, let's be honest, probably most of you listening to this and myself as well, we are, we're micromanagers because we're the ones who usually teach other people how to do things.
And so we like to keep an eye on them.
You know, are you doing it correctly?
Let me show you this.
This is the better way to do that.
Or you need this skill.
Even in my own company, I had to learn over time how to be more hands-off, how to delegate, and then let it go.
Just get a capable person in there.
Let them do the thinking.
And that's the way you have to work with AI is like understand what it's capable of doing, give it an instruction, and then move on and trust that it can get that done.
And when you have that capability, you're going to do great in this new world.
Because we're on a whole new timeline now because of AI.
This is clearly the most important invention in human history.
So we're on a new timeline.
Now you have tools available that you never had before.
And the question is, do you know how to use them?
Are you maximizing those tools?
And if you're not, or if you're not even familiar with them, then you're going to want to get familiar.
And even myself, I consider myself cutting edge on AI tools.
But I always feel like I'm perpetually behind because there's so much new stuff coming out.
I can't keep up either.
But I'm doing AI coding constantly every day at this point.
And I'm using lots of different tools and engines every single day.
So it's good to kind of immerse yourself in this to the extent that you can, to the extent that it helps you.
It will improve your quality of life vastly.
It will save you time.
It will give you great ideas if you know how to prompt it versus living your life as a consumer, you know, just like an NPC.
What's on TV?
You know, what's on Netflix?
I'm going to binge.
I'm going to watch a whole series.
Popcorn, you know.
I could never do that.
I can watch like half a movie.
Then I got to get up and do something.
I can't sit through a whole movie anymore.
I just, it's just too much downtime.
I don't know.
That's just me.
I just, I'm watching the movie and I'm thinking about vibe coding, actually.
So I'm like solving problems in my head instead of watching the movie.
So I got to go.
But that's just me.
And it doesn't, you know, I'm not a hit at social gatherings because I'm the guy who's like, I got to go.
But whatever, you know, it takes all kinds of different types of people in society.
It's okay.
But do what works for you.
Find the balance in your life, obviously, on this issue.
But try to increase your creation to consumption ratio.
Okay.
That's the key takeaway from this podcast.
Increase your creation to consumption ratio.
And if you find yourself just being a consumer, consuming, consuming, consuming, without creating, then, you know, you might be stuck in a bad cycle.
Now, when you're listening to this, that counts as consumption.
But think about it.
When you're listening to this, you're also, most of you, you're getting ideas about being a creator.
You're learning about tools.
So this is actually part of the educational or learning process or tool sharing process to help you become a better creator.
And I also know that most of you listening to this are listening while you're doing something else, which is the way that I work also.
So you might be exercising.
You might be doing the dishes.
Might be driving.
Whatever it is.
That's, that's totally okay and that's great.
I use time like that as well.
So lately, when I'm out jogging, I'm taking Chinese language courses.
I've decided I need to.
I need to shore up my Chinese language skills because my my vocabulary is just not large enough to handle a lot of the conversations about technology and AI.
You know, I want to be able to listen to lectures about tech in Chinese because, well, frankly, you know, most of the robotics and AI technology in the world today is being innovated by people who speak Chinese.
That's just where we are in history.
And I speak, you know, some Chinese, but not enough.
So I'll exercise and listen to Chinese.
And well, it's actually speaking and listening.
It's like training courses.
Or if I've had too much Chinese for one day, you know, then I'll turn on a podcast about some area of technology or something where I'm learning.
So like you, I'm constantly learning.
And there's, for me, there's really no downtime where I'm just consuming.
Even when I'm watching half a movie, you know what I'm doing?
I'm doing body rolling or I'm stretching or rolling or sometimes, you know, I'll be doing speed cubing exercises, which is a workout for my fingers because I, you know, rehab on my finger that I injured a couple years ago.
So I'm doing speed cubing or I'm stretching or rolling, whatever, and then I'm watching the movie and I'm thinking about something else typically.
That's my experience.
But whatever you do is great.
You know, just find ways to be more of a creator.
And you're going to do extremely well in this economy because the tools that are going to be available at your fingertips will be mind-blowing.
Like, this is from the future.
Yeah.
And here it is.
You're going to have tools in 2026 that you could not have imagined in 2024.
Seriously.
Yeah.
So however you decide to use your time is great.
Find that balance.
Be a creator.
Shape the future.
Think about it.
Right.
Consumers who are passive, they really don't determine the future at all, do they?
Creators determine the future.
You want to shape the future?
Use the tools and start building.
That's why, you know, years ago I was all into 3D printing and talked about that quite a bit and learned AutoCAD and it wasn't actually AutoCAD, it was some other program, but it was, you know, CAD design, 3D design programs and built a lot of 3D parts and everything.
And that's an important technology, 3D printing.
Unfortunately, it hasn't progressed for five years.
It's still stuck with the same tech, basically.
So we're waiting for a breakthrough in 3D printing.
Haven't seen it yet.
In the meantime, AI is the breakthrough.
So thank you for listening.
You can check out all my tech at brightion.ai.
You can read my articles at naturalnews.com or you can hear more of my podcasts and interviews at brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams.
Thank you for listening.
Take care.
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