Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
So what is Immortalis?
It's a new country, I've
started a digital country.
In 10 years or less,
it will become a
land-based sovereign country.
You're starting a new country
that's leading to a new
civilization never before seen
on planet earth,
unleashing human potential.
How'd you even come up with that?
You have to realize this,
it wasn't a matter of coming up with it.
(00:21):
It's a matter of a new way of thinking
that I developed 45 years ago.
And let me just say,
it's not necessarily
a new way of thinking
because you're super achievers,
you're great
achievers, you're Steven Jobs,
you're Elon Musk, you're Henry Ford.
They all used this new
way of thinking, NeoThink.
I call it NeoThink or new way of thinking
because most people, I
don't know the percentage,
but it's way up there, like
(00:42):
98%, 99%, 99 point something
percent of the people
never experienced NeoThink.
It's very powerful.
NeoThink is a new way of
thinking for most people.
And that is basically
changing from a following mode
all your life into an integrating mode
where you can start rising
up with this higher level
(01:02):
thinking and pulling things
together to your advantage.
Most people are stuck
in these routine ruts.
They go to work, they do the
same set of responsibilities
year after year, decade after decade.
And at a certain point
in their life, they say,
what am I missing?
Isn't there more to life than this?
I know there's gotta be something more.
Well, that something more is
(01:22):
achievable through NeoThink.
And this is what I do
with my two million members.
I bring them in, I show them
how to break in the
NeoThink at the very surface level
that's easy for them, their self,
their daily productivity.
And then we go another level as they
learn how to NeoThink
to business, a business,
their business or the business
(01:43):
that they're in, how
they can rise to the top.
And then we go to the next
level, which is what I call
building a world empire,
world capture, I call it.
And you can, for example, my
books sell in 140 countries
and 12 languages all over the world.
We've done business all over the world.
How it's through this
process of NeoThink.
Now it's only the
natural progression for me
(02:05):
once I get to that world level.
Next, I need to confront civilization
and what's wrong with it
and why it's never
reached its full potential,
which we'll see today.
That civilization has
never even come close
to its full potential
because we've always been trapped
in the status quo civilization on earth
(02:26):
and there's another civilization
that's never graced our planet.
But now we will through immortality.
And you mapped out this new civilization
in your really heavy
large book, your bestseller.
You sold hundreds of
thousands of copies of these.
It's called the Super Puzzle.
You've mapped out this new country
(02:47):
and the new civilization in this book.
And so how did you
even come up with that?
Well, that's a great question.
And the answer lies in
the name of the book,
the Super Puzzle.
And let me explain.
So I've broken down our thinking patterns
to three different forms of thinking.
One is perceptual thinking.
And that's more or less,
(03:07):
that's how most people live their lives
in perceptual thinking,
perseps, think of perseps.
So it's like a sea react.
That's sort of how mother
nature built us originally,
going back to prehistoric times.
You see danger, you react,
or you see something good,
you react, it's a sea react.
You have no introspection, no
self-decision making,
(03:27):
just sea react, sea react.
Like animals, like monkeys, dogs.
Right, and unfortunately,
most people live more or less
in a, I wanna say, I don't
wanna compare them monkeys
and dogs, but I will say they live
in a more perceptual realm of thinking.
Just some lower level of thinking.
Let's call it lower level thinking.
(03:47):
Now, some people will rise up
into a little higher level of thinking.
And what they'll do,
they'll pull together perseps
into concepts.
So I'm gonna give you
just a little example.
Just the other day, we're going to
holiday season here.
And I was in our shopping center,
and we have a chain
grocery store on one end,
a chain drug store on the other end.
(04:09):
And in between it are
shops, boutiques, restaurants.
And there's this little bake shop there,
which I barely ever even noticed before.
It's a stucco front with
bake shop across the top.
So just because it's the holiday season,
we're sort of putting
together a big dinner
for lots of guests.
I thought, well, I'm
here, I should walk in
and just check it out.
(04:30):
Now I've been here for over 20 years.
I've never walked into the bake shop.
But the other day I did for
the first time, beautiful.
Pastries, cakes,
croissants, bread, fresh baked bread
is beautiful inside and
it smells delicious inside.
But from the outside,
it's just cold bake shop.
So for customer acquisition,
(04:52):
that's the owner of the bake shop
is using perceptual thinking.
I just put a sign up front,
people see it and they come in.
That's perceptual thinking.
Now he hasn't done this, but let's say
if I talk to the owner and suggested
this, maybe he would.
Let's jump a little
higher level thinking here
and go into conceptual thinking.
So let's put together some concepts
(05:13):
or let's put together a concept.
So the first thing I would do
if I were the owner of the bake shop
is put a monitor in the window
with showing the crafting
of these incredible designs
on the cakes, the
colorful, attractive designs.
I would show them baking bread
and these big puffy
bread loaves popping up
(05:35):
as they cook them.
I would show them with
their incredible cupcakes,
designing them and coming out of the oven
and the steam and condensation.
So I would show all that.
So when the passers
by go by the bake shop,
now their heads will turn
and they'll look at this amazing monitor
(05:55):
and it could pull them in.
So now he's risen, if he did this,
his thinking from
perceptual thinking to C, react.
C, react.
Two, more conceptual like C,
watch, see how the process is.
Oh, that's so interesting.
Then they walk inside.
Now that's more powerful.
He probably would
increase his customer base.
(06:16):
I don't know, 30, 40% by doing that.
Then let's throw in
there another concept,
another conceptual thinking.
When I walked in, it was just so,
you said you felt hungry.
Well, when I walked
in, I felt really hungry
because it just smelled so good.
Everything was so, just smelled so
delicious inside there.
(06:37):
Right away, I wanted to eat a croissant.
I didn't, but I wanted
to because I'm on keto,
but I really wanted to.
So that delicious smell,
well heck, after five o'clock,
you have dozens of people
walking across in front of that,
parking and walking by.
So why not blow that aroma
out into the sidewalk in front,
that aroma so the facers by,
(06:59):
I mean the passers by,
they smell that and
they follow their nose
right into the bake shop, right?
There's another
concept that could be applied
to his customer acquisition.
Let's come up with another concept here.
Let's put a folding table.
He had two employees
inside with no added cost,
(07:19):
had one of those
employees come out at five o'clock
when the foot traffic is heaviest
and bring out some fresh baked bread that
smells so delicious,
but it's warm and bring out some cupcakes
or slices of cupcakes for
testing, for tasting, right?
Samples.
So now when you have all
three of those working together,
(07:40):
you're creating at the most
simple level, Neo thinking.
You're pulling together these concepts
into customer acquisition,
and I can tell you right now,
he would increase his
customer base by 95, 96%,
had he put together
that Neo think puzzle.
Not only that, the
remnant factor is incredible.
For example, people are home watching TV,
(08:00):
they're gonna see that
picture in their head.
That's called a Neo think puzzle picture.
They're gonna see it,
they're gonna remember,
they're gonna salivate, they're gonna
remember tasting that,
that the picture has been laid out
through Neo think at
the most simple level.
That bake shop then
would be able to expand.
They'd be able to,
this is on the east side,
they'd be able to open
one on the west side,
then on the north, the
south, then the state over,
(08:21):
and eventually you have McDonald's
spread all over the country.
So Neo think is limitless thinking,
and then they could get
involved in social issues,
philanthropy, politics, you name it.
When you rise with success,
many doors open up for you.
It's limitless
thinking, just like myself.
(08:42):
When I started, I was drowning,
we've already talked about
this, I was drowning at work,
but then I started using some Neo
thinking for myself,
just my schedule, and I was able,
I won't go through it all,
but I was able to get control,
I was done with my work by Tuesday,
then I opened up my
ability to get visions,
and I power thought them back, and was
(09:03):
able to pursue that,
just from the first
level of getting control
over my own schedule.
Then I expanded my
business by changing the division
of labor into the division of essence,
that's all in my literature,
we'll talk about that
in a future podcast,
that's gonna be a real
good one to talk about.
And then from there to the world capture,
spreading all over the world,
(09:24):
business all over the world,
and that's led me, the
process of Neo thinking
has led me to starting a new country,
because I saw how
civilizations, all civilizations,
since the beginning
of time on our planet,
on planet Earth, have been suppressed,
have been held down by a ruling class.
(09:44):
And so progress has been stunted,
we haven't come close to reaching
mankind's potential,
not even close.
So that has led me, that
whole thinking process,
led me to spending nine
years writing the super puzzles,
the trilogy is three
books in one, 1200 pages.
(10:04):
Yeah, I spent nine
years writing that book
because I had to get it right,
it's a lot because I'm
moving into the unknown.
Only Neo think can break
you through into the unknown,
because it's pulling
together puzzle pieces
into puzzle pictures that
have never been seen before.
So you're creating new knowledge?
You're creating new knowledge.
And that's why it took me nine years,
normally I could write a book
like that maybe in two years,
(10:26):
but took me nine years because I was in
uncharted territory.
So it's almost like a
blueprint now for immortality.
Once I idealized the civilization
that's never existed on
Earth with no ruling class.
And at that moment, there was an epiphany
that I went through where I realized,
(10:46):
well, I have to actualize this,
I have to go out and actually do it.
And my whole history has been just that.
I will idealize something in my writing,
then I'll actually do it.
Whether it's in
productivity for the individual,
whether it's scaling a business,
(11:08):
whether it's scaling worldwide,
and now it's taking
on a new civilization.
So I idealize through my
writings, I've always done that,
and then I actualize it.
Immortales is the
actualization of the super puzzle.
So if people want to have an idea
of what we're getting
into, read the super puzzle.
(11:31):
Which by the way, for very limited time,
I'm giving away book
one of the super puzzle.
So that would be book one of the trilogy,
absolutely for free, just to start
getting this knowledge
out there and
introducing people to immortalus.
And so where's all this taking us?
So remember I told you,
Neo-think is breaking
through into new knowledge
that's never existed before.
(11:52):
I have an economic theory,
and most of my theories become reality.
So this is my latest economic theory
based on my nine years,
my Neo-think process of
building this puzzle picture
that's never been seen
before in the super puzzle.
(12:15):
Now we're going to make this
come alive through immortalus.
Now here's the theory.
And after I tell you the theory,
it's going to sound way out there.
I'm going to warn you right now,
it's going to sound way out there.
So be prepared.
But then what we'll do here, Wallace,
is we will walk
through the puzzle pieces.
So suddenly you can see this theory is
(12:35):
not far fetched at all.
It's actually something
that's going to come true
in immortalus.
Right, and we've seen throughout history
all new ideas and new ways of thinking,
new ways of doing things that are better
are always thought of as crazy at first.
So because it doesn't
(12:56):
exist within the current box
of thinking, it's outside that box.
That's right.
And so I guess we would,
and I guess we could say to
approach this within open mind.
Okay.
Good point, good point.
So where is this taking?
Here's the economic theory.
(13:17):
Then we'll walk
through the puzzle pieces.
So you can see how real this will be.
All right, I'm ready.
Are you ready?
Okay, so here we go.
In the future, in immortalus,
and hopefully this future is
not that far into the distance
(13:38):
because I want to
live to enjoy it myself.
I'm in my mid sixties.
I want to live to enjoy it.
All commodities,
everything, and I mean everything
including energy itself is free.
You pay for nothing, really.
(14:00):
Now, I'm not talking, this
sounds like I'm talking about
socialism or communism, doesn't it?
Yeah. And that's, it's just that
it's the diametric opposite
of any form of totalitarianism,
socialism, 1984 communism.
It's the complete opposite.
Here you have socialism,
(14:21):
here you have immortalus
where everything
including energy is free.
Pretty wild statement, right?
Yeah.
All right, so let's
start putting together,
and by the way, just one other thing
which is embedded in the
name itself, immortalus.
Immortalus is Latin for immortal.
(14:41):
People also will not die
in immortalus in the future.
They will not die.
Everything will be free.
Everyone will be wealthy.
Everyone will be perfect health.
There'll be no death and no crime.
(15:01):
They'll have to look at history books
to understand what crime is.
Does that sound like utopia?
Absolutely.
But it's not, it's immortalus.
So are we ready to go there?
Yeah, let's hear it.
All right, so let's
start putting together
the puzzle pieces.
This is Neo think in practice.
(15:23):
So the first puzzle
piece I'm going to talk about
is something that the
general population can see
and understand.
And it'll be the first puzzle piece
to begin to get a grasp of
this direction I'm talking about.
So remember what I said that immortalus
(15:45):
is the first civilization
that will have no ruling class.
There's a lot to that.
There's puzzle pieces to all of that.
But just to give everyone
just a quick little jump start
into what I'm talking
about, the possibilities here,
I want everyone to think for a moment
(16:06):
about the computer revolution
and the information
revolution of the late 20th century
and now into the 21st century.
So the computer and
information revolution.
So computer power today is affordable.
(16:26):
Say you buy a used
iPhone or I don't know,
what could you get a
used iPhone for these days?
Couple hundred bucks?
Yeah, a few hundred.
Okay, that has more
power than a Fortune 500
multi-billion dollar company's mainframes
not that long ago.
So at this point, we
(16:48):
are computer power rich.
We can buy for a couple
hundred, few hundred dollars
more than what the
Fortune billion dollar companies
could buy not that long ago.
So we're computer power rich.
We're also information rich.
Information used to be a
very expensive commodity.
(17:09):
So we're information rich
because now you can just
go to chat GPT for free
and get all the information in the world.
Yeah, in Google.
In Google, but I'm
liking chat GPT now myself.
But so look at that
computer power, information power.
Prices have dropped to
(17:30):
fractions for computer power
and for information.
As a matter of fact,
they're driving towards zero
like say chat GPT, for example.
In the meantime, the
value you get is soaring
toward infinity.
(17:51):
So prices are driving towards zero
and soaring toward infinity.
Now there's something very
unique about computer power
and information.
And that is they advance
so rapidly in unique ways
that the government, our ruling class,
just had a hard time getting a grip on
(18:13):
regulating all that.
So in a sense, the rapid
expansion of computer power
and information sort
of escaped, not 100%,
but a good part of it sort
of escaped the ruling class
and their regulatory and
legislative powers over
in their political agendas.
(18:35):
They escaped all that.
So with that escape,
suddenly you're looking
at something where
prices are driven down,
value is driven up.
That's a puzzle piece.
I want you to keep that in mind.
Okay, yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Okay, and how did that
come about again, Wallace?
How did that come about that phenomenon?
(18:56):
A lack of control,
regulation, holding back progress.
Bingo.
Now, let's go on to
another puzzle piece now.
That's one puzzle
piece, keep that in mind.
Now here's another puzzle piece.
The ruling class of
civilization has the power
(19:17):
to regulate and hold
back progress and legislate
and regulate and litigate.
Now, you were recently in Singapore
for the Balaji Network State Conference.
Can you tell me without,
because we're sort of
signed to secrecy on this,
but just your
experience with those scientists
(19:39):
in the realm of longevity and
what they were going through,
can you just, without
giving away too much,
explain that for me real quick.
Yeah, they basically said they need,
they were there looking for land,
looking for somewhere
to go outside the US
where there wasn't
gonna be heavy regulation
(20:01):
holding them back so their scientists
could pursue their
research and develop promising
anti-aging cures.
And from what you told me,
they've looked everywhere in the world
and there's nowhere they can go.
There's nowhere that they can go.
And to pursue their groundbreaking,
(20:23):
neo-think breakthroughs,
which we can't
mention what they are here,
but to pursue those,
basically they would be in
criminal territory, right?
With the legislations
now in all countries,
with the ruling class
that has their legislation,
because bureaucrats and
politicians have to look important
(20:45):
to continue their mirage over the people,
their illusions that
they're valuable and needed.
So they are always creating these
supervisory restrictions
to look like they're
needed and important,
so the people still in
their minds, they accept them,
they don't throw them off their backs.
(21:05):
So it's all part of the illusion,
so wherever you go in
any country in the world,
they, those scientists,
scientists, they're not
some greedy businessmen,
they're not like nefarious
people trying to launder money
or anything like that.
These are just scientists,
scientists trying to help humankind.
(21:27):
That's what innocent scientists
that would be
criminals anywhere in the world
if they tried to pursue
their incredible breakthrough knowledge
or neo-think research and development.
I just get really angry when
I hear about things like this,
but they're happening everywhere.
All over, as we now have gone public
and expanded our
feelers out there for people,
(21:50):
we're running into people left and right
where this is the problem.
Yes.
So a puzzle piece is
coming together here,
and that is that the scourge of mankind
is the ruling class.
The ruling class holds everything back
(22:14):
and they shouldn't be there.
We don't have the time to
go into all the psychology
behind how they got
there, why they got there,
what they're doing, but we will say this,
we can see the effects of them out there,
what they're doing to progress.
Humankind, mankind is never,
as I open this with, come close to
(22:35):
fulfilling its potential,
not even close, and
this is a puzzle piece.
Why is that?
The ruling class.
That's the reason, so
that's another puzzle piece.
Now--
So we got-- Yes.
Prices going to zero while the value
(22:55):
increases to infinity,
and we have the ruling
class slows and blocks progress.
So that's two puzzle
pieces we're at right now.
Okay, and just a little more background
into what you just said,
that second puzzle piece.
The super advancement, for example,
of the computer
(23:15):
revolution, computer power,
information revolution,
the commodity of information,
driving towards zero
and infinity to the value.
Some people say, well, that's just
because of the invention
of the silicon chip, high technology.
So I'll say, well, no, there's examples
all throughout history,
(23:35):
you just have to find them.
You know, I write about James J. Hill,
the railroad tycoon who, with no
government help whatsoever,
unlike the other
transcontinental railroads,
he built a transcontinental railroad
along the northern border up near Canada
and developed that whole area,
the interior of our country,
(23:55):
through his NeoThink progress
and his expansion, then
he built these trade routes
with Asia, and he was just
an incredible Neo thinker.
And he did all of that through NeoThink,
and then he was
destroyed by the ruling class,
including his
incredible expansion into Asia.
Now, we would have been
the dominant trade with Asia
(24:17):
if that wasn't destroyed over 100 years.
And it was destroyed how?
Well, there's antitrust law,
they just created Sherman, what is it?
Sherman Antitrust, yeah,
and they applied all that
to James J. Hill, just this sort of
lawfare being whipped up
(24:38):
because there was a lot of corruption
with the two transcontinental railroads
that were built under the
government's financing or help,
subsidies, so there was
none of that in James J. Hill.
For example, on the
other transcontinentals
that the government was involved in,
(24:58):
they had to tear up
hundreds of miles of track
because it was built so poorly,
and none of that
happened with James J. Hill,
with his northern railroad.
So the government was embarrassed,
they couldn't accept that,
well, it's because the government got involved,
that these railroads were done so poorly,
(25:19):
these transcontinentals.
I won't go into all
the details at this time,
but the point is
instead of accepting that
as that's not the way you do things,
you stay out of it, government,
you don't use taxpayers' money,
you just let the
businessmen handle it themselves.
So instead of doing
that, they had to save face
by saying, well, there's
(25:39):
corruption, they built it wrong,
they were taking advantage of it,
but they created all of this,
just whipped up all of these reasons
to come in with legislation
that really destroyed
true business at work.
It was a great destruction.
Here we are 150 years later,
and we're still suffering from our lack
(26:00):
of dominance of trade,
which we would have
been the king of trade
with all of the Asian countries
if that had not been
disrupted by the government.
So that's one example 150 years ago.
So you have examples well
before you had high technology.
There are many examples throughout,
(26:21):
the car, the assembly
line, the electric light bulb,
the power companies,
there's just many examples.
When business is free
of government, they boom,
costs drop, when they get
involved with government,
everything falls apart.
So the ruling class is
(26:43):
a scourge of mankind.
Now, let's go on for
another puzzle piece.
What enables the ruling class to exist?
And it's existed in every
civilization on planet Earth
since the beginning of civilization.
So what allows the ruling class to even
(27:07):
exist to begin with?
Well, they have the power
to tell people what to do.
Bingo.
And of course, they create all these
illusions out there,
many, many illusions, so
that people think we need them.
They think we need them to
supervise and do this and to--
Stockholm syndrome, pretty much.
(27:27):
There you go. Right.
See, we are living in a cult.
I say this over and over again now.
The ruling class, people don't realize
this, but it's a cult.
And why is it a cult?
Because the cult-- a cult
controls people's lives,
its victims' lives, by
manipulating their minds.
And through illusions, the ruling class
(27:49):
makes us think we need them,
starting when we were children in school,
all the way up to becoming adults.
We think we must have a ruling class.
So all civilizations have had is, by
these clever people who are smart,
they take the shortcut to power.
It's unearned power.
They're voted in, for example, or they
(28:10):
rise up through the bureaucratic ranks,
or they're elected, and they have--
suddenly they have this
power over the people.
And they make themselves appear, and they
make the people believe we need them,
and we don't.
We don't.
So you said that the reason we have them
is because they have the power
to tell us what to do.
(28:31):
Yeah.
So that is the power of initiatory force.
Initiatory force is the
opposite of self-defense force.
Self-defense force is valid
and necessary in government
because the purpose of government is to
protect-- to protect us,
protect the people.
(28:51):
And that's valid.
But when you go beyond that, beyond those
parameters of protecting the people,
then government has moved into initiatory
force controlling the people.
And initiatory force is the cause of the
scourge of mankind of the ruling class.
(29:13):
OK.
So the government now uses initiatory
force to control rather
than defend and protect.
Yes.
And initiatory force is the only reason
that the government can do that.
They initiate force on its people.
They force its people
to do what it wants.
And so that's what you're saying is the--
(29:34):
gives them the power.
That gives them the power.
So there we have another puzzle piece.
Now we need to next
see how Leo think works.
It's moving us in a direction.
So now they're the scourge of mankind.
They hold everything back.
They stop what-- that
beautiful phenomenon,
that puzzle piece we talked about earlier
(29:56):
with prices dropping to zero
and values rising to infinity.
The ruling class stops at.
So we got that puzzle piece, the ruling
class, and we have initiatory force.
Leo think pulls us and brings us through
a natural progression.
So the next thing we must confront now--
remember, you're putting
together puzzle pieces.
(30:18):
What is the missing-- then you start-- as
your puzzle comes
together, you start saying,
what are the missing puzzle pieces?
And you begin to know
what they look like.
And that's knowing
the future, by the way.
It's like when you build a puzzle and you
see the picture coming together.
And then you kind of get a big chunk of
that puzzle together.
Then you look at the missing puzzle
pieces and you begin to know
what they're going to look like
(30:39):
because you know what the-- say the
buffalo is going to look like if you're
doing a buffalo, right?
You know that curved back
and that tail at the end.
So you start knowing what
those-- that's knowing the future.
That's why neo think.
Neo thinkers are future tellers.
They can see the future.
They can tell the future.
It's not through mysticism.
It's not through being a
(31:00):
psychic or anything like that.
It's through building these pictures,
these puzzle pictures,
and then seeing what the
missing puzzle pieces look like.
So this brings us to this point.
We're putting together this puzzle to get
us back to this beautiful
phenomenon that we saw earlier.
So we need to remove initiatory force.
(31:20):
That's a huge puzzle piece.
In fact, I'll call that
the master puzzle piece.
Once we snap that in, we've got it.
So this is something my father, my
brother, and I worked decades on.
What is it?
Called the prime law.
And essentially the prime law removes
(31:41):
initiatory force throughout civilization,
throughout society, but not just from the
people, but throughout government.
Because why should any adult have the
power to force another adult to do
something or their business?
Well, they shouldn't.
I mean, everyone would have a degree of that.
And it's obvious at this point, right, as
(32:01):
we talk about it like that.
So the prime law removes that power.
And what happens when
you remove that power?
Remember, that's the master puzzle piece
to the neo think puzzle.
What happens when you remove initiatory
force from government?
Well, then the government doesn't have
power to force its people
to do what it wants to do.
(32:22):
And which leads to now they can't have
force-backed regulations.
They can't.
They don't have
force-backed regulations, litigation.
And so that removes the blockers from
(32:45):
other industries and people to be able to
pursue their research and development
without being held back.
All right, so you're definitely moving in
the right direction there, Wallace.
So you remove initiatory force.
Not only does everything happen, as you
were just saying, but you
(33:06):
remove the ruling class.
Because a ruling class can only exist
through initiatory force.
And why is that?
Oh, because without initiatory force,
what is this class we're talking about?
A ruling class.
They can't rule you.
They can't rule over you.
There's no more force.
You've taken away.
(33:27):
That's everything.
The prime law is everything
to give us a new civilization.
You remove the ruling class.
All right, so we remove the ruling class,
and the things you all said start to
happen very rapidly.
(33:47):
But I know people watching are going to
say, "Well, wait. What
happens to the government then?"
Yeah.
So what happens to the government?
And let's go back even further.
So the government exists because of what?
Taxes, right?
Without taxes, they have no money.
Right, and they force people to sustain
itself, because if you don't pay your
(34:08):
taxes, they're going
to throw you in jail.
Initiatory force.
That's initiatory force.
So without initiatory
force, no forced tax payment.
So what happens to the government?
It goes away.
Well, let me give context.
What happens is this.
We do need protection.
(34:29):
We need a protection service.
We need courts that
answer to the prime law.
We need police.
Now, as you said, crime will evaporate
and go away, and
eventually you'll just be in theory.
But initially, we will need these things.
And, of course, you're going to need,
eventually, a way to protect
your country from invaders.
(34:52):
So we will, through the division of
labor, there would be
services that would form out there.
And those services that provide the
greatest value would receive our vote.
Now, our vote would not
(35:12):
be at an election booth.
Our vote would be our currency, our
dollars, or whatever currency we have.
We would put our money toward the
protection services that are most
efficient and most, that most
serve us the greatest value.
So like a business.
(35:33):
It's a business.
To make it all more comfortable for
everybody, let's call it government.
Because what would happen is, very
quickly, the best service would quickly
accrue all the business.
I would love a competitor to the DMV.
There you go.
I would never go to the DMV.
I would go to somewhere
else that's more efficient.
Right.
And so if your dollars are doing the
(35:54):
voting, or your currency is doing the
voting, very quickly, you're not going to
have these DMV dynamics.
You're going to have the best value rise
to the top every time.
And that goes for everything, including
protection and so on.
That goes for everything
and everything and anything.
It's all about protection and the very
(36:17):
best values will rise to the top.
Instead of every four years, two to four
years going into an election booth and
being just bombarded
with all these illusions,
and going in and voting for someone who
could be very dangerous to society,
and getting stuck with them for four
years, maybe close to a decade because of
the re-election and the
incumbent and all that.
(36:37):
So you're stuck in the country as just
going downhill, as
we've experienced here.
Right.
It's going downhill
and it's very dangerous.
Every single day, the values that are the
best are rising to the top.
So it provides accountability and
competition to the government.
That's right.
That's signed me up. I love that.
(36:57):
I mean, I can't even imagine today, if
that were the case, the
government would just...
Like, everything would be different.
But see how that's never
even crossed your mind?
Yeah.
Eight billion people. It's never crossed
their mind because we've never had that.
You've never seen it.
So if you don't see a new color, you
don't know what a new color is.
(37:18):
So no one's ever seen this before. It was
Neothink that got me there.
But once you're there, it's the obvious
series. It's just so obvious, right?
It's very easy to see once you're there.
So once you put together the puzzle, the
Neothink puzzle, you see it.
It's a puzzle picture.
You see how that would work.
Now, of course, there's a lot of
questions because everyone's only been in
the one civilization
(37:41):
we've ever had on this planet.
But there is another civilization that
I'm creating here within mortalis, where
no one can foresee what to do.
Right.
And the greatest values rise to the top.
Your dollars do the voting.
And let's go back now to that beautiful
first puzzle piece we talked about, where
(38:02):
values rise toward infinity
and costs drop toward zero.
All right. So now instead of just in
computer power and information, the
entire industrial
landscape, that applies everything.
So in every single commodity, everything
you buy, this stand here with the
(38:24):
microphone, the camera over there, the
desktop, these
curtains back here, our home,
the price starts being driven down and
the value starts rising up.
And why? They're not
burdened by the ruling class.
The ruling class through all the
illusions that they've cast over all the
(38:44):
decades and centuries that we all think
we need and we just don't need it.
All of that goes away. And what's left is
that phenomenon I talked
about earlier, values, price.
And that's in all industries everywhere.
(39:04):
So when that happens now, I just want to
lay out my economic theory now. Now that
we have the puzzle pieces in place.
All right. So if you can project into the
future now, by the way, the
line of logic is unbroken now.
We have an unbroken line of logic. That's
(39:24):
what took me so long in
writing the super puzzle.
I had to make sure that there were no
leaps of faith, that there was an
unbroken line of logic.
That's why I say it's faction. It's my
own connotation of a word faction, which
is fiction, but factual.
It's what I call faction. Now that's that
(39:46):
definition is not in Webster's
dictionary, but it's my own connotation.
Faction. I had an unbroken line of logic
in the super puzzle. And that's why I
knew that I could actualize it, what I
idealize there, because there's an
unbroken line of logic.
So as we move forward into the future and
project our mind into the future with
this unbroken line of logic, we see
(40:09):
prices going down,
going down, going down.
We see value going up, up, up, up. And we
see that everyone in Immortales because
of this dynamic will be wealthy.
There won't be any poverty whatsoever.
Everyone will be wealthy because everyone
can afford anything and
(40:29):
everything they want and then more.
So when you think about that, the nature
of money begins to change. The nature of
money, the nature of
time, the nature of energy.
They all begin to change in that new
dimension. Just think of ourselves. We're
(40:51):
running a profitable
company all over the world.
So if all of a sudden we're worth a
thousand times more than we are worth
right now, are we busting
our butts now for profits?
When anything we want, we have, we can
(41:11):
afford anything. So why are we busting
our butts at that point in
time? It's not for profit.
Money becomes less and less significant.
And what becomes the champion within?
Fulfillment. Happiness.
(41:32):
And how do we achieve happiness?
Through value creation.
That's right. Through creating value. And
the reason some of you have listened to
my other videos or read my books, the
reason that is, is because man is the
only thing in the world.
We're creating in our known universe that
can from scratch create values. We're
(41:53):
creators. That's our essence.
And when someone's on their essence,
they're happy. So
creating values makes us happy.
You see, the motivation, like I say, what
would motivate us, Wallace, if we have
all the money, we could...
(42:14):
What motivates Elon Musk? You know, when
you have all the money, what motivates
you at that point? It's
not to make more money.
And when money becomes almost
insignificant in that future, and that
projecting out into that future with this
unbroken line of logic, well, when it
becomes that insignificant,
then what is motivating us?
(42:34):
It's what you said. It's what motivating
us is living on our essence. And our
essence is creating values. That is
our... We're creators.
That's human's essence is value creation.
And when you create values, and this is
what I call the beautiful ecosystem of
humans, of mankind, is when you're
(42:58):
bringing yourself happiness, you're
bringing the world values.
What a beautiful ecosystem. So there come
a point where I don't need you to pay me.
I don't need money anymore.
I just want to create. And I want the
pride and the joy and the happiness of
(43:22):
creating and seeing what I'm
doing out there for others.
So the society and pure capitalism, you
see, we've never had pure capitalism on
earth because we've always had a ruling
class with the necessary force.
So all the people have attacked
capitalism. It's like everything flips
here. Everything flips. Capitalism leads
(43:44):
us to a civilization
never experienced on earth.
And I can tell you it's experienced
throughout the universe. And the other
civilization I call
civilization on the universe.
Pure capitalism will bring us everything
for free. Everything will be free. And we
(44:05):
live to bring more free stuff to people
by creating values and more and more
important values for mankind.
Wow. That's pure capitalism. And so, like
an example, let's just say you wanted to
build a rocket ship. Could you build that
(44:27):
rocket ship for free? You could.
And what about requiring the labor? You
could because everything else is now
free. You have to put yourself, it won't
work if you're thinking, you have to shed
your 21st century skin.
You have to shed your 21st century skin
and see into the future of pure
(44:48):
capitalism where everyone is contributing
to the success puzzle of civilization.
That's where they get their internal
motivation. It's not for money because
you already buy everything you want and
need. You don't need money at that point.
So everyone just says, hell with it, man.
(45:08):
I want to be part of that team that
builds that rocket ship that reaches 20
light years out there into
interplanetary exploration.
They want to be part of that super
puzzle. So they're not going to say, you
need to pay me for my time.
(45:30):
No, this is their contribution.
The rewards shift from tangible money to
spiritual, emotional contribution. It's a
leap, but the line of logic is not
broken. It's not broken
(45:50):
anywhere along the line of logic.
That is our future. That is the future of
immortality. All these politicians always
talking about the greed of money and
always talking about how you need to have
free this and free that.
Well, that's what you're going to get in
(46:10):
the future of this other civilization,
immortality. That is pure capitalism.
I guess I can relate it to a few other
things like Andrew Carnegie. He created
the public library. That was free.
Yes.
And Elon Musk is trying to go to Mars and
(46:32):
colonize Mars and he's not seeking
investors. He's doing it with his own
funds for the advancement of humankind.
Yeah. You're looking at very much so.
You're looking at little pieces to this.
Little microcosms.
Exactly. Chat GPT. Free. Right? And the
(46:53):
energy it takes to run AI. But we're
getting all that energy for free. That's
just a little preview to how it will be
universally in a mortalis down the road.
No one's ever been able to really
understand capitalism before.
I'm starting to feel it.
Pure capitalism. Without the ruling
(47:15):
class, it's another civilization that has
never existed on Earth. Now, this
civilization has existed throughout the
cosmos because we've been conscious of
the ability to introspect and make
decisions and not just react animals
reacting to nature for about 3000 years.
So our man has been
conscious for 3000 years.
(47:35):
Yes. Man has been conscious for 3000
years. When you understand the full
meaning of consciousness, introspection,
make decisions, lead himself, not just
reactive to mother nature.
But our universe is 13 billion years old.
So imagine just one other civilization in
the mass number of
(47:58):
energy systems out there.
So imagine one that's not 3000 years. You
know, 3000 years we went to controlling
nature on a large scale with Hoover Dam.
And then it took 33
years to get to the moon.
You see how knowledge starts progressing
and now with AI, you know, we're just
shooting up geometrically. So imagine
civilization that's been conscious for
(48:19):
let's say a million years. How about 10
million? How about a billion years?
So that's the civilization of the
universe. They surpass a nuclear decision
threshold where every civilization will
face this moment where they can wipe
themselves out with nuclear power.
(48:40):
We're right at the brink of that. So, you
know, which way will we go? But once you
pass it and irrationality leaves Earth
and we just have purely
rational civilization.
That's what the civilizations are like
throughout the universe that have
surpassed their nuclear decision
threshold. And their civilization is the
civilization I just described to you that
(49:02):
we're starting for the
first time on planet Earth.
The civilization of
the universe, Immortals.
Wow. And so that's the
puzzle pieces coming together.
So puzzle pieces coming together and I
didn't lay them all out for you. They're
all in the super puzzle. If you want to
show that again, all the
puzzle pieces are in there.
But I just laid out what three or four of
(49:23):
them for you that the big ones to try to
get you to see, but they're all in there
every step of the way. You see the future
in that book, which is
going to be immortalis.
All right.
And so what should someone do if they
want to find out more about this?
Oh, they can go to join Immortals.com.
(49:44):
That's join Immortals.com. It's free.
They can sign up. They can join the
community and just be part of all of
this. This is the future.
This is a new civilization.
And so what are the next steps?
Well, we've started. We're a digital
country right now. We're something called
a network state, something that Balaji,
you went to the conference in
(50:05):
Singapore. So we've started.
We have a very, very soft opening. So we
have about 600 members now. It's going to
quickly grow to several thousand. But
we've been behind the scenes. We've been
meeting with influential people.
We've been talking to places and people
about the possibility of starting a
(50:26):
charter city in certain countries. We're
looking at Argentina and some other
places around the world.
So that's the process right now. But
there's a lot more to come. Stay tuned.