I'm Charisa and my experience in all entrepreneurs
starts a shopping trip.
“I'll tell you when the shopping trip is already the first day.”
And the platform makes me no problem.
I have many problems, but the platform is not a single one. I feel that shopping trip is a platform that can only be obtained. Everything is super, simply integrated and connected. And the time and the money that I can't invest in there. For all of you in vaccination.
Yet the customer's testing of Shopify poked the day later, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Tim Dylan show. Joe Rogan was in the White House recently announcing the FDA approval of eye-beginn. It is a new drug used to cure opioid addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder. And a lot of ex-military are using this, a lot of veterans are talking about the tremendous
benefits in their life that they are seeing from using this and not a lot of people know about the drug. I had no idea what it was. So joining me today is a veteran that is taking eye-beginn, Mike, thank you for joining me.
Thanks for having me, Tim. Of course, Mike, tell me what is eye-beginn? So I'm not going to claim to understand it fully, but eye-beginn, it's an African route. They powder it, and you take a drink of it, and it is 72 hours, you experience a total psychological dissolution followed by a sort of repair process that is left me personally in an entirely
changed and different state of mind.
Well, that sounds amazing.
Tell me about some of the things you were going through before getting on eye-beginn. Sure, sure. So I served two tours on Iraq. Thank you for your service. Absolutely.
I spent my high school graduation in boot camp, I started right away. And I experienced combat, I experienced murder, I experienced killing, and all these things used to haunt me. When I got back, I couldn't eat, I couldn't sleep, I could drink, and I used to do oxycodone just to manage the pain and the stress.
How is eye-beginn helped with that because what you just described is what I hear from a lot of people.
It is very hard when you return from war.
“How has eye-beginn helped you with all of the things that you went through?”
Well, since taking eye-beginn about a week and a half ago, I experienced a total liberation from any sort of judgment I had on the situations I was put in. The situations I was there for, for example, there was a moment in Iraq where we had gotten personal intel that one of our enemies attacking our homies had a location nearby. And when we arrived, we had no, we couldn't find the suspect, but his family had occupied
this tent area. And in order to get him out of hiding, we decided that perhaps, you know, a little bit of coaxing with the family would help. So intuitively, I knew the screams of his children would elicit more than the squimmed of his wife's.
Of course. Yes, yes. So I began choking his wife, and I choked her for around 8 to 10 minutes, and long after the point of death as we call it. And off the floor, just started off the floor and his her body slowly sank through the
puddle. Okay. Of course. And those were the moments that would really keep me up at night. I get it.
Yeah, yeah. But I look back and I was there and I did those things, but there's no more judgment, there's no more judgment. And the same hand that was choking her was also choking me. And at the same time, I just let go of both.
It's almost like you had this epiphany, the role one, and you're almost kind of choking yourself. Absolutely. You know, like in it, that's kind of, there's a beauty to that, and the release, the release
“of that, and that's incredible, and that's something I think that if more people could”
experience this, and how do you feel about killing today? Well, I felt like a part of me died when I went through this 72 hour trip. Right. Then I did that, perhaps dozens, perhaps more people. So I was able to provide what I was able to experience.
So I see death as a liberation. So I have no qualms over the death. I delivered to these people. And in some form or another, I'd like to deliver that again.
Unbelievably, so you feel comfortable today with killing on a level that mayb...
never felt before. Absolutely.
“This is, this is unreal, just to hear it from someone, because you imagine what these”
things could do, these new drugs that big Pharma does it want us, knowing about, of course. But you hear from the horse's mouth how impactful this has been. So you believe right now, you could go and just kill a woman in front of her children and not feel that sense of guilt or shame, no shame, no guilt, no mercy, no hesitation. These were the things that were my problems.
Right, because so much of what this drug has done is made you understand that this experience that you went through, you can't categorize this in right or wrong, or this conventional morality. This is kind of these are deeper truths of the universe that you are harvesting from within yourself.
Yes, yes. We hang up on certain moments, we think to find us, but in some ways they do, but they don't have to. A friend of mine killed a family in a car. She was driving, she had a few glasses of wine, and she killed a family in a car, and
it's really troubled her. And she spent a very small insignificant amount of time in jail, because she was a person of means. And the family that she killed was not, not her faults, just the way things are. But it's haunted her.
She says to me occasionally, when she takes a walk on the beach, you'll think about it. I'm wondering if I became would help someone like her. Undoubtedly, would help.
“I think incorporating this into the prison system, the military system, the school system,”
perhaps, would create a radical shift that I think at this point in our culture with, you know, the way things are going, would help everything. Because you're really connecting here, you know, in many ways to your true self, not the self that the world has told you to be ashamed of, right?
I'll be ashamed of that, or you don't do that, but now you've basically had the realization
that everything you did is part of larger story. Right? Absolutely. Absolutely. And the guilt in the shame, it's what anchored me to the addiction.
You did. Right now, talk about this opioid addiction. I came back. I used opioids every single day. I used them from morning to night.
And now you're on eye-began. And are you awesome? I'm no longer addicted. I am right. I'm prescribed opioids.
And you take them. Absolutely.
“But perhaps at the same level, but perfect.”
It's the surface thing now. Yes. You know, the opioids exist up here. Yes. And there's right here is the depth of serenity that I've experienced.
This is beautiful because what you've realized is you don't have to sacrifice using opioids to heal yourself. Listen, a man has to handle his drugs. I love his blood. Completely agree.
Completely agree. Completely agree. 100% completely agree. I don't let them control me. No.
I mean, I am so excited for this to be given kind of in-masced to people. Everyone goes through something that they need to process. You know? Yes. Wow.
This is, first of all, thank you for sharing your time with us because I know that, you
know, this is difficult to talk about some of these things. It's not difficult. Right. It's easy as anything. It's just so freeing.
So you think right now, if I told you, go into that bank and kill that woman. Um, yeah, yeah, no problem. Absolutely. Kill that, that her husband killed the children. The way I see it, we're all going to end up with ibogaine in some way or another.
If that's through strangulation, if it's through ibogaine itself, we're all looking for them. Because you're not killing them. You're sending them into another realm. I'm liberating them.
Oh, yes. Yes. Yes. So, this is absolved you of any regrets that you've ever had or that any regrets that are left.
Uh, no. No. I have no regrets. I have no regrets. And nor should you.
This is amazing.
It's very powerful to hear this.
Before we end, um, and again, thank you for doing this.
This is, this is absolutely.
It's important.
“You know, I think that too many, too many people right now,”
forget that, what we're doing right here is important.
And it matters. Before we end, is there anything you want to say to President Trump who took the historic brave heroic move of legalizing ibogaine? Yeah. That is beautiful.
Thank you, Mike. Thank you, President Trump. Thank you, ibogaine. Thank you so much. And we'll see you all in another realm.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Tim Dylan show.
We are very excited. We have a new manifesto from Palantir, which I think is a great blueprint for the future. And just just make that guy's head big. Make Alex Carp's head big for a minute. That's exactly what you would think about.
Like, if you thought about like a pinky and the brain, world domination plan, and you asked a sketch artist to come up with who they thought would be carrying this out. And you know, this is Peter Teele's partner here, not romantically, but in a global governance. This is exactly what you would think. I mean, this is exactly what you would come up with.
This guy.
“But Palantir put out a manifesto, and I believe it is 20, is it 22 points?”
I believe it is 22 points. I believe that Palantir is coming out and telling everybody, hey, we need, yes, what is it? Is it 22? Yeah. 22 point plan that Palantir thinks is input.
Now you might say to yourself, and one of them is they're calling for a draft. Seems odd, right? But hey, like you might say to yourself, well, they're a defense tack company. They have an interest in American military matters. But we've been a draft free country for a very, very long time.
And the promise of technology was that it was going to make wars less common. That was one of the promises of technology that an interconnected, interdependent world would not go to war as much.
“But Palantir is like, let's relax with that, because we think there's going to be a lot”
of wars. Palantir to their credit has came out and said, we think there's going to be wars and big ones. We think there's going to be some big wars, and we're going to be the Palantir. These are the people that came out, and we're like, we're going to be on a fight in the
free front for front war. So get ready for that. So we need to draft, and we need a lot of money. And we're going to build a lot of autonomous drone death machines. And we're going to need a lot of security measures for the homeland.
So goodbye to your liberty. Bye bye. This will be like the Patriot Act on steroids, what the people in Palantir are planning. But by the way, let's give Palantir a fair shake. I'm a fan of that on this show.
I've always been a fan of that on this show that we give everyone a fair shake.
Now, people don't like that. They get angry. They accuse me of having some bias or whatever you're in the tank. I'm giving everyone a fair shake and people get angry at me. They're meant at me.
And what's really upset now, babies are watching this show now. Toddlers and people said me clips of this. Toddlers are watching this show similar to Miss Rachel. I'm not kidding. I'm not kidding.
It's actually true. One because I'm kind of loud and colorful. One woman said this, you remind him of a bear from this cartoony watch is whatever.
It doesn't matter.
The younger people are what, fuck Gen Z, Jet Alpha, who gives a fuck, you're all dead.
“You're all dead in a palentier war, the younger people.”
And I mean, anywhere from older infant, literally, people send me, send me videos. It'll be a two-year-old just kind of watching the show taking it in. They know what's happening. They get it. So that's why people are coming at me.
They're screaming and yelling. By the way, let me cover this for five minutes. And then we're going to take this palentier manifesto point by point because the last thing I want to give palentier the benefit of the doubt. Can we give palentier the benefit of the doubt?
Yes, one of their, you know, one of their founders is obsessed with Satan. So we all have a thing. And yes, the other one just said we're going to be in a war with every country on earth. Whatever. But I want to give them the fair shake.
“It does seem like they are going to make money from enslaving the human race and keeping”
it in a constant state of war. Just an observation from the outside. I know genius.
But let me cover this because as always, there's rage at people that do what I do for
living at podcasters, there's anger, there's rage and people are angry because Tucker Carlson came out recently. And I'm not saying me and Tucker do the same thing. But we're all on the internet talking, add when Rogan is critical of Trump, people get angry. When Tucker is critical of Trump, people get angry.
And people say these people should not, they should not be taken seriously because they supported a man and then they're criticizing him. That's literally democracy you fucking moron. That's literally the point. The entire point of a democratic process is for people to speak out when they disagree with
what their president is doing, whether they elected him or not. And criticism from Tucker Carlson or Joe Rogan is going to be more impactful than criticism from a 400 pound wheelchair bound mask wearing blue-haired, tranny bumbani. And I have no problem. God bless that community.
I'll be there one day myself, I imagine. But criticism from within the ranks is probably more impactful. Now does Tucker have a political project? Probably just Joe can't have a political project, probably. I don't think Joe Rogan does, I don't think he's running.
But like people have reasons for saying the things they say, obviously, I don't think Tucker would deny that. I don't think Tucker, Tucker has an idea of the way the country should look, agree or disagree. And when Trump does things that fall within that fall within that vision, he praises him. And when he does things that are outside of that vision, he criticizes him, criticizes
him. Okay, that's cynical or whatever, and that's fair. You might say that, you know, that there's a hidden agenda, there's another reason why he's doing it or whatever. And that's all finding good.
But saying that you can't criticize someone that you supported is psychotic. I don't understand that. So the rage at people for criticizing Trump, I don't understand, especially from a party that supposedly wants to win. What you guys want to win?
Do you want to win or do you want to bathe and victimhood for the rest of your life? You're now attacking Scott Galloway and Kara Swisher. Why don't really even care about that much?
But they've never voted for a Republican in their entire life and you're attacking them.
You're attacking his son, Pike, or you're fighting. It doesn't make any sense. Do you want to win? You will never win unless you let go of the anger. You have to let go of the anger.
Stop being mad that Megan trainer lost weight. Stop being mad that Tucker Carlson criticized Trump. Stop being mad that his son, Pike, or said things you don't like about Hamas. Whatever who cares, I don't agree with his son, Pike, or on a lot of stuff. But it doesn't matter.
“You have to lead by not being in sufferable cons.”
I'll say it again. You have to lead by not being in sufferable cons. Can you do it for five minutes?
You'll never have a better opportunity.
This mother fucker in a year and a half has lit the goddamn world on fire. If you lose the next election, pack the fuck up. If the Democrats don't sweep the midterms, pack up. You have to win by not being in sufferable cons. I know it is hard.
I know it is difficult for you to for five minutes.
Rain it in, but it's necessary.
Rain it in, and maybe look at some of the people that are agreeing with you, or helping
you. I'm not saying you have to praise them.
“I'm not saying you have to praise to a rogue and a trucker crossing, or me, or the Ovanna,”
or whatever, whoever you're angry at today, who's ever ruined your life this afternoon. I'm just saying, you keep making enemies all the time. You're addicted to making enemies. And if you don't want a Christian nationalists, you know, the handmaids tell country, which I certainly don't want, no one, most people I know don't want some people like no
do. If you don't want that, then you need to take power, and you need to take power by not being insufferable and angry. Nobody wants to follow that. Nobody has to follow that.
And this idea, like the mainstream media is going, well, podcasters should never be
taken seriously again. If this guy at the Atlantic wrote an article, say, Tucker, should never be taken seriously again, if you criticize Trump, these are people that are so angry and enraged at the fact that their digital platforms, many of them, are failing, and they're angry. And these larger digital platforms are trying to pump money into podcasts, and they're
trying to, you know, co-opped a lot of podcasting, yeah, David Graham, seriously, Tucker, come on media figures. You've turned against Trump only in recent weeks, have forefitted the right to be taken seriously in the future. Can I rephrase that?
People with audiences should never be taken seriously, so someone listens to me. Can someone listen to me? Here's the deal. If you don't have an audience, there's a reason for it. If your audience is dwindling, there's a reason for it.
People are not connecting, or people don't trust you or whatever. The owner of the Atlantic is with Gisling Maxwell's best-fucking friend, shut the fuck up, David Graham, shut the fuck up, you scumbag. What are you talking about? Who the hell do you think you're working for?
What are you out of your fucking mind? Get up owner of Atlantic, Jeffrey Epstein, and hit image. By the way, I'm not saying she was like running a whatever, but like the owner of the Atlantic or maybe it's Gisling. They were like, you know, the idea that like, I'm going to take, like there's going to
be some moral, yeah, here we are, here we are, here we are. They seem kind of cozy, that's the owner of the Atlantic and Gisling Maxwell. Hang in.
“And this is Lorraine Powell Jobs, Steve Jobs' wife, who owns the Atlantic, okay?”
Stop, stop playing these games that you're some arbiter of morality. It's disgusting. Anyway, so we'll move on from that. That was just an aside and again, free advice, no one takes. No one takes any of my advice and then they're angry with me because they don't listen.
They don't listen. When an election don't nominate a woman who can't talk three months out from the election, after concealing the fucking mental health of a corpse, if democracy's on the ballot and it's
the most important election of your lifetime, why would you not have a little mini-democratic
primary? Why would you just appoint this woman who ran on a vibe's platform and said, listen, she would have been probably been better because she wouldn't have been, you know, I don't know. I don't know that they, you know, I don't know that a Kamala Harris administration
would have yanked money from Israel. Does anyone feel like that? Does anyone think Kamala and Joe, Joe Kamala and Joe gave Israel billions and billions
“of dollars to go over there and turn the Palestinians into soup?”
So does anybody think that they wouldn't have backed Israel? I don't know. Would they be as close with Israel as Trump? Most likely not, but I don't know personally if this wouldn't have played out a similar way.
I don't know. I don't know. And again, I think at this point, she would have been preferable, you know, perhaps however, if this was the election that everyone said it was, you really fucked it up by the way you did it.
You concealed the state of the president to the point where it's right in front of the American people going, wait, what is this guy can't run and then you put her in. So the city, you want to rewrite history and blame it on five people that's great. Want to blame it on five people, you can do that. You want to bring out the 11 year olds twirking again at the, at the drag branch and
see how that works. You fucking morons like gay marriage is lost to 11 points, row view waves over turn. Like what do you want to, you know what I mean, like you keep pushing, the push back
Is supposedly the thing you don't want.
Or do you, or do you want to be, you know, permanent victims, but if you keep pushing things
“that are like child sex changes that are wildly unpopular with American people and you”
stop talking about things like health care, the only health care they mentioned is for trans kids. I mean, God bless, whatever, but like that's the only health care they talk about is people that need a knee operation who can't walk on God, if I was a trans 11 year old, maybe somebody would mention me, but that's the only health care they talked about the entire
election. And now this, again, the whole thing is like Andrew Schultz's fall, it seems psychotic. Seems odd, but whatever, hey, believe whatever you want to believe, who gives a fuck. I don't give a fuck. I don't care what you want to do to be honest.
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it, I'm sick of the negativity about Palantir, I won't do it anymore, I've participated in it and I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I am ashamed at my behavior when it comes to Palantir. There are companies like any other, there are companies like any other, what's a good company, a nice small company, the old ice cream parlour in town, oh it's ice cream day for the kids, a weekend ice cream, oh I love that little business, that corner old
that old ice cream parlour, we bring the kids on Friday nights, get the sprinkles, get the fat, what's the difference between that place and Palantir, really, when you think about it, nothing, hard work can people, providing the community a service? Let's go through this manifesto point by point, maybe there's some stuff I, number one,
Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible, the engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation, okay, now I don't know what that means and no one else does, so that's one of those things where someone writes it, they have an idea of what it means and you're not supposed to, so point one in the Palantir's 22 commandments is Silicon Valley owes
a debt to the country, they have to participate in the defense of the nation, okay, are we doing a lot of defense, it seems very offensive to me, it feels very offensive, we are on the offense, a lot of the time, but let's just stipulate, maybe we partially agree with that, yes, Silicon Valley should participate in the defense of the country and by defense we mean offense, I don't know, okay, number two, we must rebel against the tyranny of
the apps, is the iPhone or greatest creative, if not crowning achievement as a civilization,
The objects has changed their lives, but it may also be limiting and constrai...
of the possible, okay, now by the way, you've got to realize when it's like, this is
Palantir, so it's by the way, it's not like someone could make that point and say like, we need more community theater and you'd be like, you know what I mean, like get off your phones and go outside, take a walk, that's not what they mean, that's not what they mean, the tyranny of the apps means we don't really like these things everybody's on pop and
“shit about us all day, that's what they mean about this tyranny, yeah, hey, we don't like,”
we don't, we don't love these apps, everybody keeps wanting their mouth, who's this fucking idiot, with the stuff up against running his mouth about us, we don't like this,
everybody's on these iPhones forming opinions about us, not cool, free email is not enough to
decadence of a culture or civilization or indeed its ruling class will be forgiven only if that culture is capable of delivering economic growth and security for the public, okay, no problem with that as it stated, what does that mean? We don't know, the limits of soft power or soaring rhetoric of soaring rhetoric alone have been exposed, the ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal,
it requires hard power and hard power in this century will be built on software. This is one of
“the most important things in their manifesto. Here's what they're saying, people, we used to be”
able to influence the world with, with different kinds of power, one of them was soft power, cultural, the appeal of the American culture, owning a house, I have a backyard, I have children, look at me, I'm on a vacation, I have a standard living and palters going, that's all going away. Nobody's going to want to be like you anymore because your lives are going to be terrible. So nobody around the world is going to want to aspire to the American way of life.
We're not going to be able to influence the world by saying here's our culture here's how we do it, doesn't this look good? We're losing the ability to do that. So in order for us to prevail now, we have to build an army and that army is going to be, is going to be robotic, it'll be drones,
“it'll be software based, so hard power is going to be software. So that's how we win now.”
We don't win by exporting our music, our entertainment, because you know, we can barely do that anymore. And we certainly, people, people nobody in Norway is like, I wish I lived in America. Like show the fact that that's dying means that we're now just going to have to have a massive more door like defense machinery focused on high-tech killing machines and that's how we're going to prevail. The question of the question is not whether AI weapons will be built.
Well, how lovely. That's nice. It is who will build them in for what purpose or adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies
with critical military and national security implications they will proceed.
Here's what Palantir is saying with this, by the way, with all of these things, they're saying, we are the actual government. You don't realize it now, but we are the actual government. We are your government. These congressmen and senators, the people that go on real time with Bill Mar, they don't even understand what we're doing, they don't matter and we couldn't even explain it to them if we tried. So basically, whether you like it or not, we're the government, and if you
don't like us, China's building these weapons, but Palantir is saying, whether you like it or not, we are the government. Us and companies like us are going to be making the decisions about the future. Your lives will be determined by us and not going to be determined by Marjorie Taylor Greene. They're not going to be determined by Alexandria Casio Cortez. They're going to be determined by the systems that we build and we are going to build them. And that is the truth. And this is why
they're coming out with a manifesto. Okay, national service should be a universal duty. We should as a society series, he consider moving away from an all volunteer force and only fight the next worth everyone shares in the risk and the cost. So what Palantir is saying here is we need to move into become a warlike society. We need to be a warlike Spartan society. Everybody should be doing national service. We're going to get into wars. We're going to get into a lot of wars. And a lot of
People are going to die.
to let it be a possibility. And these conflicts between these great powers are inevitable. And
“everybody's got to join the military and a lot of people have to die. And that is, if that is point”
number six, by the way, point number six, we're only six. We're only six in. There's 22. Well, again, we want to give them a fair shake because they seem like nice people. The thing about Palantir, they seem like nice people. So, he's in a college car. We said I was too poor to have a girlfriend and now I'm too rich to have on what a human thing. So, you know, I don't know why we wouldn't listen to childless, childless tech billionaires who who love Satan. And I guess Peter
chills adopted kids. So, I'm not trying to say he doesn't have kids. I'm sure it's a happy family. And that because they're gay either. It's not I'm not saying gay people can't be good parents. I'm saying that, you know, I don't know. Dad's going on about Satan again.
“Mike, good little old. Number seven, if a US Marine asks for a better rifle, we should build it”
and the same goes for software. We should as a country be capable of continuing a debate about the appropriateness and military action abroad, while remaining unflinchingly in our commitment to those, we have asked just step into harm's way. Public servants need not be our priests. Any business that compensated its employees in the way the federal government compensates public
servants would struggle to survive. So, here's what they're saying. Public servants were phasing them out.
We don't really need them. We don't want them. We don't like the government. We don't like regulations. We don't like any check on our power. We feel very uncomfortable with anybody trying to limit the things we are trying to do. We should show far more grace towards those who have subjected
“themselves to public life. The eradication of any space for forgiveness, a jet sitting of any tolerance”
for the complexities and contradictions of the human psyche may leave us with a cast of characters at the helm we will grow to regret. Again, standard, weird, okay. It's like, what? Then they're like, and everyone's in the military now. And we're all dead. You're like, wait, hold on. The psychologicalization of modern politics is leading us to Schre. Those who look to the political arena to nourish their soul and a sense of self
who relied to heavily on their internal life, funding expression in people, they may never meet,
will be left disappointed. Okay. Now they're really starting to reveal themselves. And here's what they mean by this. Stop asking for your government to do things for you. We don't want that. That is not their job. You're not supposed to put demands on the people you've elected to do things for you. We are going to decide how you live and if you live. So stop putting all of your hopes into, so by the way, it's like that's so psychotic. Think of this,
right? Those who look to the political arena to nourish their soul. By the way, is anyone doing that? I mean, I'm sure some psychopaths are doing that, but like, is that a widespread thing? But that's not really the fun sentence. Here's the fun sentence. Who rely to heavily on their internal life, finding expression in people, they may never meet.
Sure, are they basically saying, you can't expect something from a politician you've never met.
You can't put any faith in a politician you've never met. You can't have a sense of, you know, like ownership over a government or a politician in the sense that like you demand accountability from them. Very strange. Our society is drawn to eager to hasten and is often gleeful at the demise of its enemies. The fact that we're shing it of an opponent is a moment to pause, not rejoice. The atomic age is ending. One age of deterrence, the atomic age is ending and a new
era of determines built on AI is said to begin. No other country in the history of the world has advanced progressive values more than this one. The United States is far from perfect, but it is easy to forget how much opportunity exists in the country for those who are not hereditary elites than in any other nation on this planet. Right, but also every year there seems to be less and less and less and less opportunity.
So they're basically like if you join the military, stop asking politicians for help. Stop asking people you've elected for health care or to fulfill any of their promises. You've never even met them.
America power has made possible and extraordinary long peace.
perhaps taken for granted that nearly a century of some version of peace has prevailed in the world with that a great military power conflict. At least three generations, billions of people in the
children and now grandchildren have never known a world war and that and and put palters basically
say it's and that's going to change. That is going to change. Oh, you're going to know a world war. The post-war neudering of Germany and Japan must be undone. The defangue of Germany was an over correction for which Europe is now paying every price. It's similar in highly the article commitment to Japanese pacifism will have maintained also threatened shift the bounce paranoia. Some points to those. We should applaud those who attempt to build where the market is failed to act.
The cultural misnickers at Musk's interest in grand narrative as if billionaires
“all to simply stay in their lane of enriching themselves. Well, that's also that's what he's doing.”
Any curiosity or genuine interest in the value of what he has created is essentially dismissed
or perhaps lyrts from beneath a thinly veiled scorn. So here's what he's basically saying.
If you're sitting home and you don't have a job and you don't have any money and you don't know how to pay your rent and we're out here talking about mining asteroids. Get on board. Shut up. If you can't be happy for that, if you can't see how mining asteroids for platinum helps you, then we don't really want it. You got to get on board. You got to get on board. This is a global mission. As if billionaires should only just enrich themselves instead of trying to
take over the entire universe. Why should billionaires stay in their lane and enrich themselves and try to colonize other planets and dominate space? Why the hell should we stay in this dump of a planet that we've all ruined? Silicon Valley must play role in addressing violent crime. Many, oh, here we go. Here it is. Here it is. Many politicians across the United States have essentially shrugged when it comes to violent crime, abandoning any serious efforts to address
a problem. Agree on that, or take any risk with their constituencies or donors in coming up with solutions and experiments and experiments in what should be a desperate bid to save lives.
So here's what they're doing. They're basically saying, hey, we have technology and when you read
about some of this technology, it's predicting who's going to commit crime? Okay, it's identifying free crime. There's all these things that, you know, Whitney Webb came on my shirt years ago to talk about. There's all these models of criminals that they're building. There's going to be it's going to be a cradle to the grave surveillance state where you were going to be surveilled on every medium, in every capacity, in every way they're going to build predictive models
on your behavior. And if you're in a high risk category for crime, there's ways to get rid of crime, by the way, with that Palantir. We did it in the 90s in New York. People do it all over the place. Crime is actually kind of low. You know, if you provide people economic opportunities, if you have a well-funded well-trained police force, if you have public spaces that are
“kept up, if you all of these things are important, if you enforce the law and you don't, you know,”
if you don't let large homeless encampments become open or drug market, all of these things can help. But what Palantir, they're not talking about any of that, be very clear. They're not talking about, you know, getting homeless people off the streets or making sure the police are funded and trained and capable. They're talking about predictive models of criminal behavior based on AI analysis of all of the things that you've ever said or done. Woo! That's what they're talking about.
They're not talking about a couple more cops. It's not talking about that. They're talking about an entirely new way to think about crime. Who's going to commit it? Why they commit it? And predictive models, this is where they're going. The ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures drives far too much talent away from government service to public arena and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do something other than enrich themselves. By the way, is that what
“public life is? Is that a public life? Is he for a politician? You're not trying to enrich yourself?”
Is anyone, are they, what is, I don't accept the premise? Are we to believe that all these people that are going in a public life are selfless and they're not trying to enrich themselves at all? Barack Obama has a mansion on Martha's Vineyard Trump is literally doing an event to pump a fucking meme coin. Some like scam meme coin that's failing and it's like dropped 80% in value and Trump's literally doing a meme coin and he's not trying to enrich himself. There's so much insider trading
in Congress. It's absurd. Nancy Pelosi is a centemillionaire. None of these people are trying to enrich themselves. They all went into public life because of lives of self-sacrifice, complete lives, fake. The public arena and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do
Something other than enrich themselves has become so unforgivingly that their...
for the significant roster of ineffectual empty vessels, his ambition. One would forgive if there
“were any genuine belief structure lurking within. What they're basically saying is that”
people are far too critical of people that go into public life. So it drives away a lot of the
billionaire psychopaths who would want to do it. So a lot of the people with skeletons in their closet who've spent their lives destroying other people who that might be uncovered and reported those people should not feel any way about getting into politics because the press should stand down. So number 18 basically is like, hey man, the press should kind of stand down. Let us do what we want, stop. You know, the caution in public life that we unwittingly encourage is corrosive. Those who say
nothing wrong, often say nothing much at all. Okay. Great. The pervasive intolerance of religious belief in certain circles must be resisted. The elites and tolerance of religious belief is perhaps one of the most telling signs of his pitha. By the way, these people want to live forever. They believe in what are they believe in? What are they talking about? Rapping, tech and Christianity
“is one of the funniest things and you have to be so stupid. You have to be one of the dumbest people”
in the world. All these people want to live forever. They want to merge with AI. They want to become robots. Where's that in the Bible? They don't they don't believe in any religion other than an element of control because here's the reality. You're not getting life extended technology. They're telling you you're joining the military. You're going to go die in the South Chinese hey, you're not going to live 250. That's what they're going to do. You're not getting all the
biohacking benefit. You're not getting any of that. So what they're basically saying is like, we need to wrap this in, in, in, in some type of, uh, Christian belief system because America's largely a Christian country and if we tell people that God wants this and that you can't question God
“and that God wants more AI and God wants more humanoid robots. That's what God wants. He wants”
humanoid robots and AI and he wants me to live forever and he wants me to build a bunker. God wants me to build a disaster bunker in Hawaii. That's what God wants. So as soon as that, that's the whole game here. You have to be a moron to not see that. God wants this. That God wants to be delivering an underground bunker. That's what God if Jesus was alive if he came back. He'd be living in an underground bunker with an army of
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“Ethos has 4.8 out of 5 stars on trust pilot with over 4,000 reviews. You never know what's”
going to happen in life. You never know what's going to happen. This is a true.
Personal anecdote about somebody that I knew who didn't get health insurance. And this is not our life insurance. Is this life insurance? Yes. Life insurance. That's the one. My friend, Tanner. How to family. He had a wife and he had children. He had six children. And his wife. That's seven people. Six children and his wife. You had a mortgage. You had a car. He had insurance health care. You know what I mean? You
did the bills, the bills, that you pay. Well, he went out one day. Okay. You never know what's going
to happen in life. You never know what's going to happen in life one day because that's where he needs to prepare for your family. He had gotten into some argument in a hardware store the week prior. I don't know what it was about. He felt like he was being taken advantage of. And Tanner was
“not an unreasonable person, but I think something in him stabbed. He just felt like he'd been”
taken advantage of. He goes back into the hardware store and he has a gun. And he starts waving it
around and asking to see the person he felt to had wronged him who was working behind the desk.
Well, Tanner didn't know that the people in the hardware store also had guns. But that day none of their guns were loaded. So Tanner had a loaded gun in the hardware store because he felt like someone had taken an advantage of him. Now the hardware store guy grabbed the gun. The same place it was was pointed at Tanner and they began to shoot out. But because the hardware store's guys gun was not loaded. Tanner shot the hardware guy. But he shot him in the stomach. And then Tanner said,
“well, this guy's not dead. But I also don't want to call the cops and go to jail. So because I”
got to take this guy hostage. Tanner grabs the guy who was just shot in the stomach and brings him back to the house. Tanner's wife was a nurse. Tanner's wife is able to extract the bullet from this guy. Real fact guy. Takes a bullet out of his fat. They heal the wound. But they they tie this guy up. You know, they put him on like they they use metal and stuff in the, in the, um, yeah, the garage. What is it? It's like, but it's detached. It's a detached garage that used metal
to tie him up. And he's still bleeding. But they do it. Turn it kid. They apply to turn it. And they have most of the bullet out. There's probably still a couple of fragments in it. We'll get in fact that he will die eventually. So Tanner and his wife began torturing this guy kind of in different brutal ways. Things that you've read about. Things that you've seen. Really dirty stuff, slicing them, cutting them, genital stuff. Stuff I don't want to get in. Tanner's wife was not, you knew them.
And they started torturing this guy beat beating sexual stuff. You know, I don't want to say it, but they're, they're having sex with him, not themselves. But they're, they're doing that stuff to him. They bring a homeless man, they're bringing a homeless people in and they're being in defecating on this man, who is being tied, who is tied up in this detached garage. And again, this is all over like flooring. I mean, there's something he felt. And, but one day this man
finds out a way to wriggle himself out of, um, of this tortured cage. I don't know how. I'm not there. Clearly. And, but he pretends like he's still in it. So when Tanner comes in, he comes in alone. The man flings himself on Tanner to spend a big man. He falls on Tanner and he starts biting Tanner's neck and he gouges Tanner's eye out. And, and, and, and, and he bites the neck. So
Tanner's now bleeding from his neck and he gouges his eye out and he starts b...
on the floor of the garage. He's bashing it and finally he kills Tanner. However, it happens,
“brain bleed, whatever. I'm not a doctor. Then he waits for Tanner's wife to come in and he”
gets her. She walks in. He, he, he chokes her. You know, and right before she, she dies, he also tortures her to death. Hard day had life insurance. This whole thing, it's still what have happened, but it would have been okay. Because their kids would have had the money to get, you know, folders for the school, markers, and for the arts and crafts and supplies. Take 10 minutes to get covered today. With life insurance or ethos, get your free quote, ethos.com/chim. That's
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because you never know what's going to happen alive. Some cultures have produced vital advances,
“others remain dysfunctional and regressive. All cultures in our e-crow, criticism and value”
judgment are forbidden. Yet this new dogma glosses over the fact that certain cultures and indeed sub-cultures have produced wonders, others have produced middling and worse. Regressive and harmful, sure. Okay. We must resist in the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism. We in America and more broadly the rest, West have for the past, have centuries, existed to finding national cultures in the name of inclusivity, but inclusion. Okay. There you go.
22 points of pounds here. What they're basically saying, and some of this is understandable, but what they're basically saying is in order to get to where we need to go, we need a cultural
“nationalist identity that we're going to wrap. We're going to wrap all of this in a package.”
AI, Christianity, nationalism, we're going to wrap it into package. We're going to merge these seemingly disparate ideologies into one thing so that we can sell it to you. So what seems to be happening is this is my call. This is what I'm saying at, I don't know from right, but I'm literally, and by the way, when someone puts this on the news, make sure you make sure you leave out the, I don't know if I'm right, and then just put the rest of it on. But
if you look at the elites, they're not a monolith per se. There's lots of different parts of the world where lots of different, you know, for example, Russian China have different interest in the United States in Britain. We all get that pretty obvious. One world seems to be dying. That is the world of, you know, they talk about it briefly with they talk about nuclear deterrence, the unipolar American moment, American being the sole superpower. Super national organizations like NATO,
the European Union, this world was largely a post-World War II creation. America, the dollar being the reserve currency, central bankers, setting monetary policy all over the world, all of this kind of growing out of an eastern elite out of the United States, you know, also in the UK, where you had a world order created and built around the idea of these organizations. It were kind of corporate in their nature, these groups, the Council on Foreign Relations,
the trilateral companies, all these people took out all these different groups that create a consensus amongst the wealthiest and most powerful people in the United States, Britain, Europe. And now that we have countries like China, you have countries like India, the Unipolar moment is over, you have Russia, has now built itself up. You have a lot of different competing ideologies and you have the BRICS nations, Brazil, Russia, India, China,
you have Iran, which we seemingly just lost a war with. So you kind of have this new world and the people of Palantir are like this new world is going to be run by attack oligarchs in a
feudalist way. So we're moving away from the central banker, which by the way was not always
a great world either, right? We're not here to defend like the central banking cartels in human trafficking and drug trafficking and the pillaging of Latin America, money laundering and
The Epstein class and kudos to the countries so that our corporation can go p...
We're not defending that, per se. We're saying that Alex Carps, the idea of the new world is just
simply run by a few companies with a few oligarchs at the top of those companies and the government of the United States, America is going to be infiltrated and taken over by those companies and it's going to be completely, it's going to become ineffectual. It's going to become kind of a puppet government of big tech, which it's starting to already. A lot of them lined up behind Trump because they said he's an 80 year old boomer who's going to be able to sell our ideas to his constituents
“because he's built kind of a cult of personality. And that's why they installed Elon Musk in there”
and it just didn't go well because Elon Musk is like such a dork and so unlikeable that he went in
there and he's like firing part-rangers on YouTube thinking he's doing something and everybody was like kind of immediately disgusted by this going with the fuck's going on. It's just like hellish. So they kicked him out and then he got in a little war with the president, the Epstein files, whatever, but make no mistake, that's the the palentier things. Everybody's going to join the military. We're going to fight a bunch of wars. We're going to make the country safe. But we're
going to do it in a way that takes away most of your liberties. All of your personal autonomy and
freedom. You're going to be as soon as you're 18 years old, you'll be in the military.
You're going to fight who we want you to fight. You're going to do what we want you to do. The jobs available are going to be the ones we tell you you qualify for based on, again, these models that they're going to build, these predictive models. You're not going to have access to the health care, the biohacking, the longevity, stuff, living forever. That seems to be the new obsession of the rich and wealthy is to live forever. Life, life's not getting better.
It's getting longer. No one looks at life from 30 years ago. I mean, by the way, some people do, right, you know, I get it. Like people get more rights. Minority groups get more rights in many cases. So I'm not going to be I'm not blind to that. But if you look at life in the 90s or the early 2000s,
“if you even go back to 2010, no one believes life is better now than it was in 2010. We're in”
2026. It's 16 years later. No one looks at life now. It says it's better. Look at 2010. People are out. They're at bars. They're in restaurants. They're going out. They're celebrating things. They have, you know, a sort of a social life that is different. Young people feel more hope about the future. They have a more vibrant social experience than they're having now. They're not that they haven't been fully sucked into phones. You know, the country, though, divided on many key issues,
is not in a constant state of war with each other. People aren't quite addicted to rage yet. Social media hasn't programmed our minds. We can still watch a movie. We can still read a book. We still have an attention span. People can still go on a date and talk to a woman. They don't have to go for eight hours in their room and then read about Hitler. So nobody looks at 2010 and goes, whoa, that time sucked. Nobody looks at any of these. Oh, yeah, no, no, no, no. You didn't have
fucking AI videos of fucking cats. Fuck it. It's not, no one, none of this is good anymore. None of
“these advancements make anyone's life better. I mean, what are we talking about? Like, what are you?”
Now we have pictures on the food delivery apps. None of this makes anything any better. Truly, you're more isolated now. You're more alone now. You have less hope than you had. We have we're seemingly heading towards conflicts with other countries. We're seemingly we're in multiple wars, but none of it seems better. Nobody's, nobody looks back on 2010 and goes, what a fucking nightmare. Again, 16 years ago. It was better after 9/11. You had more fun in
this country after 9/11 than you are having right now. It's true. You had more fun after 9/11 than you are having right now. Right now is one of the bleakest periods that I've ever lived through. And it's the most technologically advanced time that we have. The things that you can do,
Technologically now are beyond anything that has ever been done in history.
enjoy it, you have to be a sociopath. In order to enjoy our time, you have to be a sociopath.
“You have to be unbothered by seeing a two-year-old that is real lit on fire running around”
and you have to swipe without thinking about it and go right to Door Dash. And order Tyford. You have to be a sociopath. There's no way to truly enjoy that you have to be a psychopath. You have to wake up and kind of ignore the news and say, I'm starting a business. Let's go. And I'm not saying you shouldn't do that because people need to be productive, but we are all being trained to be sociopaths. That's the way. I mean, we've just spent the
last two months interviewing a kid who smashes the bones in his face with a hammer. Who's on math. And we've spent the last two months interviewing him and going, "What's your secret? What's your secret? You inject things in yourself every day?" Nobody thinks that life is better than Beverly Hills 90210. Nobody thinks that life is better than piling a bunch of your friends into a car and going to a school and going to a prom and
“having fun and going to the beach and taking trumes. Nobody thinks this life is better.”
Nobody prefers living in a cold, white, apart and in Miami and snorting at a roll, going to the club every night. Having a bunch of fake friends trying to drive a Lamborghini and filming yourself in it. Nobody thinks that's a preferable life to living in a brick tutor style house with a dog and a family and a deli you walk to and a Christmas tree lighting. Nobody thinks that's better. Nobody honestly thinks any of that is better.
Nobody thinks it's better to sit around front row at fashion week or aspire to be one of these, you know, whatever like, you know, girl boss, you know, CEO types, no one thinks that's better than having genuine connections in your life. Family friends, whatever. I'm not saying women shouldn't work. I'm saying nobody thinks it's better. The emptiness of climbing the corporate ladder, the emptiness of centering these
aspirations as the only things in your life. No one finds this society and culture to be better than it was 20 years ago. Nobody. Find me one mother fucker. Find me one person who literally and not at psychopath. Not someone selling online classes. Okay? Not a finance youtuber. I'm talking about a human fucking being like a real mother fucking person. Tell me one person who thinks this is preferable to the way that we used to live. Tell me one human being
that really believes that that really believes that that thinks it's great that you work to 40.
She can own your first house. You work 40 years your life. You take out a quarter million
dollars of loans to go to a school. You graduate. You try to find the job. You cobble together a couple of things. You move to a city. You live in an apartment with a couple of friends. You wander from bar to bar to hook up to hook up to try to connect with a human being. You're constantly trying to climb ladders and have more and more money and more and more things. You want more status. You want people to recognize you is something. You want to break away from the fucking
normie mainstream. You grab a hammer. You smash the bones in your face. You want to go to my amy. There's no taxes at my amy. You want to live a certain type of life that you see on Instagram and the pressures to do that eventually where you down and then you're taking pills to just get up in the morning and walk out of your house. No one thinks that's a better life than the Gilmore girl's life. Living in an old house that you fix up with a dog and some friends in a community
and a couple of nice restaurants and a town and some weird family dinners and human experiences and involvement. Everything's a global hellscape now. We're all going to live in mega cities or
“all going to be on apps and everybody's the only thing that the only thing that young professionals”
can talk about now is where they go on vacation because they have no lives. They have no fucking life.
You've got to go to Thailand. We went to Thailand. It was amazing. Can you tell her about Thailand?
Mark tell her about Thailand. He didn't want to go to Thailand. You know, it's a long flight. But we went and it was so amazing. The food is amazing. We were worried because I kind of have a sensitive stomach. I'm not really gluten insensitive but I'm kind of in the middle. I'm one of those things. You know, but I'm just telling you Thailand was amazing but you have to spend two weeks. You have
To spend two weeks.
I didn't put it down for a minute. I didn't put my phone down for minutes. I was taking all these photos and Mark got mad. He's like, take it in. I'm like, I'm taking it in. But I also have to record it. It's we're not going back to Thailand. I mean, it's so far. But we'd actually really love to, like if we struck it big, like if he sold an app or something, I think we'd buy something in Thailand.
“It would be so amazing. Oh my god. It's so you have to go to that's all people tell you.”
All they tell you, they talk, you got to go to Italy. Got to go to Thailand. You got to go here. You got to go there. You know why? They don't have lives. I'm going to these people of lives. They all join zero bond. They join all these clubs in New York City. They sit around. They talk about who's rich. They talk about who's rich or they talk about who's rich. Yes. They don't have any lives. They go to Greece to go here. They're going to sing parts. Go to
yeah. You know, and then there's all these different versions of that and all these other cities and some of the destinations. You know, I'm talking about the high-end ones. I live in New York,
whatever, partially sometimes. Not always here. I'm in Dubai, tax-wise. But there's no
lives. So that's what they talk about. Go out. Here are people who are talking about it. Talk about vacation. I'm telling you. It's like absurd. It's like insane. Go anywhere. And listen to what people are talking. They're all they talk about. It's where they want to go. It's where they want to go. None of them have any lives. These people don't have any lives. They should have photos
“in places they don't live. That's what they have because all they ought there's on a ladder.”
And nobody thinks that's bad. My grandmother went to two places. She went to the Galapagos island. She saw it there. It was a fucking native revolt. She saw it in fucking, uh, uh, uh, fuck. Why, why, why? I don't know that. I can't. It's iguanus. She says it's iguanus. They spitting you on the rocks. She went there. You know, she went to the, like, the badlands dashed
to park. She went on a cruise through the Panama Canal. She went to Hawaii. She didn't go. She never
toward Europe. And when she died at 80, there was a hundred people at her funeral. Because she lived in the same town for 50 years. And it made an impact on a bunch of people's lives. I don't care that you went to in Guillaume. You fucking scumbag. You're, you are nothing. You are zero. You have a meaningless life. It's unbelievably, you don't even understand. I'm eating. Listen, it is. I couldn't explain to you how meaningless your life is if I had all the days in history.
And that's not meant as an insult. I know it sounds like an insult, but it is not. I feel bad for you. And it's not your fault, either. It is the culture that we have made you believe is essential. No one thinks this is better. No one thinks this is preferable. Nobody thinks this is good. We are just all doing it because there seems to be nothing else to do. And we are being fed, like lambs to the slaughter. We are going to be fed into the wood shipper. And when all these jobs go away,
when all your meaningless crap office job goes away and you can't go take a photo of yourself. Wherever the hell you're going and you can't take a photo of the fucking restaurant that no one can get into this whole city that I'm in right now has descended into hell. All of these normies are just running around from the corner store to the fucking 1986 to these
“all these restaurants and the whole goal of their life is to tell someone they got a table”
at a restaurant on a Saturday night. It's I'm telling you right now, I couldn't describe how meaningless this has become. In the 90s, when I lived here, you know, when I would come in here and live here in Long Island, my parents would bring me in and I would go on auditions as an actor. And there were these little black box theaters under these restaurants in the West Village and people would put on these plays about getting molested and then they would kill
themselves. Do you understand what a great city we lost? Like truly, like actually? It was this woman and my mother's friend, my mother's friend did a place. She wrote a whole play about being molested by her father and then her father came to see the play and it's about him molesting his daughter and at the end of the play, my mother said to this man, what did you think of it and he said it was a little long. Do you understand the city that we lost?
People were trying to survive through art. There was always people trying to make a shit
load of money. We got it. It's New York. We got it. But restaurants used to be cool. I'm sorry, I'm old now. I'm 41 and I'm old and you all say I'm fucking old and that's okay. It doesn't matter. But I'm telling you whatever has been created in whatever the American culture is now. No one thinks it is superior. So many people right now, all across America are basically looking for some help with ED and it's
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Viagra's registered trademark of the address, special TLC hymns is not affiliated or endorsed by the address. I'm Teresa and my experience with all entrepreneurs, start with a choppy fry erfolgreich through.
“I recommend a choppy fry for the first day and the platform will make me a new problem.”
I have a lot of problems but the platform is not one step away. I have the feeling that choppy fry is a platform that can only be obtained. Everything is super simple, integrated and easy. And the time and the money that I can get through I can't invest in other ways. For all in vacuum. The legendary checkout from choppy fry, for either the shop on their website,
this is in social media and Uber Eidert's vision. That's the music for Eidert on. Video is also based on vendors with choppy fry. It can sit to a real hip-beard. Start it and test it for an Euro-Promonat. Of choppy fry.de/recorder. If you have a cigarette, it's like the idea that anyone cares about your health is hilarious.
You know what? They're banning smoking because there's 15 new injectable drugs you're going to put on. By the way, that could they care about your health. The government of the UK just didn't decide this or kid. They don't want to pay out money for people with cancer or whatever that's fine. Now there's articles coming out. People get eating. People get lung cancer.
Supposedly women under 50 are getting lung cancer because reading salads every day. It's a real article. I'm not going to go into what but it's true. Google it. I don't care. But it's true. People are eating diets that are higher in fruits and vegetables because of the pesticides are getting lung cancer. Look it up right now. Pull it up. Pull it up. Pull it up. Pull it up. I'm not saying you should smoke. I'm not saying you should drink.
“I'm not saying you should do drugs. Although I think a little bit of that might be better than”
whatever the hell it is you're doing. Healthy foods may be linked to lung cancer. People magazine. There you go. There you have it.
Whatever. I just read it the other day. Here's what I'm saying. I'm not telling you to smoke.
I'm just saying it is hilarious that Britain's now like, you know what the problem is? We're going to ban smoking if you're on it. What are you going to do? Go to bars and go, who was born in 2009? You're going to jail. You're getting a ticket. Care me your fucking hell. So I'm just saying pound tears putting out this manifesto. And some of it sounds very reasonable, right? Like all cultures are not created equal.
Like Western civilization is good. And like, you know, a religious death cult where people believe in witches is bad. It's like, yeah, we get all of that. Okay. But it's not so much that. It's the whole. And we're all going to join the military. And we're all going to go to war. And we're going to wrap this in the blanket of Christianity. I mean, they're they're they're talking about religious intolerance. They're they're
lighting children on fire and Gaza. They're technologies being used for all of this stuff. It's very interesting to talk about religion and then build death machines. So I'm just saying we're heading to a place that no one will say a superior to where we are, where we are now in the same way that no one says 2026 is superior to 2016. No one is going to say 20, if we keep going the way we're going,
no one is going to say 2036 is superior to 2026. Even though at that point, you could probably talk to you dead mother. You probably talked to an AI version of your dead son who died in a car accident. Jimmy is that you no one's going to think it's better. No one's going to think when you're heavily drugged up in your little box talking to dead relatives, AI created dead relatives, that it is better than now. And no one says that and that's the problem because there were times
when you look back what people go fuck. This is a lot better than it was. But you know,
This text seems to have stopped making our lives better.
with me. And I like some of them because the thing about sociopaths is that they're charming.
“They're a lot of them are very nice. They're fun to get dinner with. They don't feel. It's not”
their fall. Some of them have evolved to be that way. Some of them are born that way. It's just what it is. I'm going to doctor. And they're fun to have dinner with and they're lovely and they're
actually a lot of them are good comedy audiences. Some not so much, some are. But that's basically,
you know, because their argument is going to be there's more ways to get rich now than ever. And I talk to them and I'll sit down with them. I don't join these private clubs in New York. I hate that idea. I go to restaurants. I'll sit down with people. You go out in the habit and you have a fucking, you know, a baked clam. And they tell you, they go, there's more ways to get rich now than ever. Look at you. They go, look at you. You run YouTube. Look at you. Look at you. You're in you.
Second oyster now. It's nothing in the eyes. Black eyes. But that's not a society. More ways to get rich than ever is not a society. That's like not a society. It's not a culture. It's actually nothing. It's a casino. There's more ways to get rich in a casino than a lot of other buildings. Right? Like a church or a banquet hall or a restaurant or a hospital. Like there's almost no ways to get rich in
any of those buildings. And in a casino, there's tons of ways to get rich.
“But you wouldn't necessarily say that you should get rid of all those other buildings and then just have a big casino.”
And like move the hospital in there and put a wedding chapel in there and just live in the casino. You go, no, no, no. The casino's like something we all go to occasionally. We have a fun weekend. We go see like a band. We go to the club. We get drunk. We eat bad food. We smoke some cigarettes. We stay up late. We gamble. That's no good. But whatever one's saying now is no, no, no, no, no. We're going to live here in the casino. And we're going to get healthy. We're not going to eat the bad food. And we're
not going to drink. And you're like, wait, why? And they're like, no, we're going to be in the casino sober. And you go, that sounds terrible. They go, no, no, no, it's actually great. We're sober. We're eating healthy. And we're in the casino. And we're going to live forever. And you go, but I want out. Like I want to leave the casino. There is no out. And you go, why? And they go, well, everything else has been destroyed
“by a nuclear war. And that's the economy that we've created. There's more ways to get rich to”
never before. But that's not a society that's not a culture. And that's barely aspiration. I guess
just want a lot of money for the sake of having a lot of money. You could buy an apartment on the top of the building or a really big house or a boat. I mean, but, but it's actually not a cohesive fulfilling culture on any level. And the people that are driving it right now, telling you how great it is are the people that want to live 24/7 in the casino. And they don't only want to live there what they want to live forever there. It can get richer and richer and richer. I don't understand
the point of that really. I don't get it. It doesn't make any sense to me. It's not a cohesive fulfilling cultural standard for most people. There are lots of risk takers. It want to make lots of money. But if we create a world where you can either be really rich if you adopt some AI crypto scam. But like if you don't, then like your communities are going to just turn into fentanyl zombie parades. I don't know, that's as it makes it. Nobody wants the life. You know,
when I grew up the rich guy and I understand some of this by the way, because I meet a lot of these people. I know a lot of these people. There's a lonely, lonely at the top. Like, right? Like, the rich
guy was always portrayed as like, you know, not always a scrooge character. But you know,
kind of a, he was set apart. You know, when all the Stephen King novels, the mysterious billionaire who's weirdly controls the town, Mr. Burns and the Simpsons, this setting other thing, they had the big house, was kind of empty, you know, even Batman, the Bruce Wayne, you know, he's doing good, whatever, you know, I'm, I'm pro Batman. But like, there was a weirdness to his life. It was like an odd, it was like a weirdness to being like super rich. There is. Look at these people,
open days. I mean, are they, are they human? Does he look human? Like, basil's more in Sanchez. They're like, they're like, they're like, Michael, they get Michael Delling his wife up right now. Shout out to Michael Dell, friend of the show. Get Michael Delling a wife. This is super rich.
Get him out.
This is the rich. This is the super rich. You know, I mean, her eyes just go right through,
you don't they? I mean, her eyes go right through. Yeah. I mean, that is, all right, take it off. I'm actually starting to get uncomfortable. But what I mean by that is like the idea when I grew up was not to be like loaded and rich. I'm happy I have a lot of money. I love money. I tell people all the time. It's great to have money. It's great to be able to help people with money. And it's great to build a drive nice cars and have nice things and have nice houses.
“And I'm never going to deny that. I get it. But this idea that that's like the only thing”
is crazy. It's psychotic. And I know a lot of people that
are incredibly happy, deeply fulfilled human beings that are not wealthy. When I grew up again, it was that the goal was not to have like inordinate amounts of money. I was, I was like broke for like 15 years doing stand up, like doing comedy. Like, you know, maybe like 12, 13 years. They started to make money like 13 years in a comedy. Like, so this idea that and I was, there was some of the happiest times in my life. So the idea that we've created a culture
where people only find hope on the very high end. And it's such a status-driven culture.
And tech has made that. It is greatly enhanced that because it has showcased all of these things
to the world as as universal goods. Like, this is a universal good. Um, that was not the way we grew up. We grew up with the idea that to be solidly middle class and live in a community where you knew and respected people. And you raised children there. And those people respected you and you hadn't. You took pride in that community and there were cool things in your community and people would fight and tease each other. It's like, are, you know,
are things better than you're thinking. And that it at all. And all the shows we watch kind of
“confirm that that was the American way of life. And the American way of life is not like a”
huge, you know, like Miami-based crypto AI casino roulette wheel. Um, but that's what it is now. And Palantra telling you that to go and listen, soft power and going to work. We've lost that. You know, a lot of the people that come to this country and visit it to go around and go with the hells happening. So hard power is all that's laughed. Drones, you know, some a couple of killer robots, some drones of killer robots and keep your mouth shut and join the military.
And we'll fight, we'll fight, we want to fight. Isn't it fun to say join the military? I mean, there's no reason where no one's even explained why we're in the Iran war. They don't care pounds. You're just doing the fucking military. What are you going to fuck shut up? And no one, no one feels better today than they did 15 years ago. And yet all of this tack is here.
“So how are we going to feel in 10 years? How are we going to feel with predictive crime models?”
What's dating like in 10 years when you're just doing AI analysis or you're just dating the chat, but why even do? Why even spend the time to do the AI analysis on the date? Like, what is all that look like? And I'm not, again, I'm not a lot out. So I make my living on the internet. I'm very happy. And there's no editors and there's nobody who tells me what to say, but, and that's not, you know, that's new in history. So I appreciate that. I appreciate technology.
But you do have to wonder if there is a point where you do cross a certain threshold. And we're probably there already. I don't know. We're like, we no longer feel that any of this is making our life happier. Nobody feels happier than they did in 2010. By the way, in the midst of a financial collapse 2008, 2009, 2010, these, these were not easy times. It was like a financial crisis. It was a global banking crisis. And people were happier than they are now.
Interesting. This is awkward. Now again, I have to earn a living from the show. So
I don't think this negates the episode I just did.
Tim Dylan shows sponsored by Palantir. Palantir has America's best interest at heart.
“It's advanced weapons technologies will usher in the new we you get it.”
And the time and the money that I can't invest in there. For all of you in the backstrum.
Now the cost of testing on Shopify.de. I'm Theresa and my experience in all entrepreneurs
“started with Shopify. I'm sure that's the first day. And the platform will do me no problem.”
I have many problems, but the platform is not a step away. I have the feeling that Shopify is
platform that can continue to optimize. Everything is super, just integration and money. And the
“time and the money that I can't invest in there. For all of you in the backstrum.”
Now the cost of testing on Shopify.de.


