Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia Show,
sase stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice doctor Dhalia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlias.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Hill. We are back on Doctor Delia Show. Thank you
all for tuning name one eight seven seven Doctor Dali
one eight seven seven d O C D A L I.
So many Americans are frustrated by the shutdown going into
week three, and one thing that Senator John Thune wanted
to uh introduce to the Senate and then later through
(00:59):
Johnson through the House is to pay our federal workers
and troops that are working during the shutdown and who
are working for free, not getting paychecks where there could
be a funding measure while the Democrats refuse to sign
the continuing Resolution which I signed before, wanting to use
this as an opportunity to negotiate other things that have
(01:21):
to do with Obamacare and coverage for those who are
illegal migrants and help Obamacare subsidies and all the other
things that that uh they were frustrated about as it
pertained to the big beautiful bill. H We have individuals
that are still trying to man their posts and and
(01:43):
and I know that we aren't using that term as much,
but I think women can band a post also. Okay,
let's i'm we're not using it as male, ver it's
a female. We're manning posts at our ts A, at
our at our at our border wall, at financial security.
And for those individuals who are still working in not
getting paychecks, who are living paycheck to paycheck, give them
(02:06):
their funds. And from what we're understanding, the Democrats are
non and there. I don't understand why they think this
is going to help them in terms of the midterms.
Schumer keeps calling this the Trump shutdown. Well, the Trump
is trying to get the CR sign I mean, if
he could sign it, it's sign it. All the Republicans
(02:28):
are signing it. But Schumer wants to blame Trump for
not coming to the table and starting to negotiate things
from the Big Beautiful Bill. The Big Beautiful Bill has
nothing to do with the shutdown and the continuing Resolution.
But Democrats, who feel like they have really lost in
the last election where they don't have control of the
Senate of the House the executive branch, are trying to
(02:51):
stall you know, Trump's work and and try to prolong
the chaos until the midterms. Now, obviously the shot that
is not gonna go on till the midterms. But for
every day they believe that they're able to shut the
government down, they think it's a success. And even Schumer
had admitted the longer this goes, the better it is
(03:11):
for us. And again the question we keep asking is
which us. I mean, this isn't supposed to be about
Democrats versus Republicans. This is supposed to be about Americans.
We have snap benefits that are now you know, at risk, Medicaid,
Medicare payments. Now they're doctors can't work for free. We do,
(03:35):
and but after a while we can't. I mean, we
got to pay our bills too. You can't tell your employees,
you can't tell your malpractice in church. You can't tell
your landlord, sorry there's a government shutdown. I can't pay you.
They're gonna say, we don't care about that, We're not
part of that. You still, oh, you still have to
pay your bills. And so going into week three, this
(03:57):
is really getting ridiculous. Now. I know the media outlets
are going back and forth between whether there was five
million or seven million people at the No King's rallies. Okay,
that's that's wonderful and good fruit. I love that we
have peaceful protests that we have, although there was some
mayhem and Illinois by a nice facility, but I love
(04:18):
that we have the ability to protest peacefully. I think
it's kind of, as you, counterintuitive and ironic that they're
protesting no Kings, but they are able to have easy
abilities to you know, air their grievances and to you know,
have their First Amendment rights protected. That. But yeah, again,
(04:41):
I'm not sure which king they're protesting. Trump was elected,
so that's kind of confusing. But I wonder if the
millions of people who are pretty ticked off about the
shutdown needs to go out there as well. And we
need to go out there and say, look, you know,
whether you're a Republican Ormocrat, this is ridiculous. There's a
(05:01):
continuing resolution sign the sucker. I mean, it's it's obvious
what the Democrats are doing. And you know, the Republicans
said we will revisit Obamacare. We will revisit Honestly, Republicans
would love to revisit Obamacare. And change it. Then, as
I said earlier, maybe it's time for trump Care. If
(05:24):
Obamacare is so flip and flawed, which we predicted it
would be in two thousand and nine, and we are
continuing to see the flaws of this ridiculous law with
the exception of pre existing conditions and physicals covered now,
the rest of it was pretty It was not well
designed or choreographed and engineered. I think Republicans would love
(05:52):
to revisit Obamacare, make it trump Care. But no, no,
that's they The Democrats are stalling, and it stinks because
Americans are getting hurt. The whole purpose of government is
to be there for their constituents. This is being there
(06:13):
for their own political next. Chuck Schumer is worried about
his next election. How King jeffries. They think that if
they and the longer this goes, the harder it is
for them to look like they are or have that
try to avoid the appearance of caving. But I really
think the American people need to speak out and say, guys,
(06:35):
it's ridiculous. Now there are many individuals that do not
work for the government, so they're like, oh, no, big
thing for me. Yeah, but you got the holidays coming
up in four weeks we have Thanksgiving. How many of
you want to travel for Thanksgiving? How many of you
have friends and neighbors and colleagues, coworkers who need government benefits?
(06:58):
How many of you want to feel the protection that
our men and women in the military are given us,
and it is going to affect us. I know we
make jokes about how fur load employees get their money back.
There's a meme where you see, you know, fur load
employees of the contrast of a big, beautiful yacht, you know,
(07:22):
you know, where they basically are getting paid leave. Yet
you know, self employed workers are screwed and they're they're
in a you know, uh like the castaway boat with
Tom Hanks. I mean, you see the jokes, but it's
no joke. And I think the American people might have
to go out and do a no Kings, which are
much better turnout. If really only five million or seven
(07:44):
million that's not representative of our country need to come
out and say this is wrong. Democrats do the job.
If not, you're fired one eight seven seven doctolic.
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Speaker 2 (10:15):
All right, we are back up the Doctor Dollie Show.
Thank you all for tuning in. One eight seven seven
Doctor Dolly one eight seven seven D O C D
A L I. Big thanks to Talk Media Network for
making the show happen. Big thanks to Danielle, our producer,
and big thanks to y'all for tuning in. We really
do appreciate it. Don't forget to follow us on Twitter
or exit Doctor Dollia, Facebook, The Doctor Delia Show, and
on YouTube. Click like and subscribe. So I am really
(10:38):
fascinated by this Louver heist. It's a shame it happened.
It's a it's a real shame it happened. But the love,
I've been to Paris twice and I have not been
able to go into the Louver because I get there
and I try to get tickets a day or two
in advance, and no, no, no, no, you had to get
your tickets weeks or months in advance. Just there's just
(11:01):
too many visitors these days. And so here I am,
I'm at the Louver, I'm looking at the pyramid. I'm pretending,
you know, to put my finger on the pyramid and
taking photos like that, and I just can't go in. Sorry,
we have no more tickets. So I've been fascinated by
what's been in there. Apparently. One of the things on
(11:22):
display are these priceless jewels from French royalty, and some
of these jewels where I believe Napoleon owned, owned by
the Napoleon family, priceless pieces of work, I mean prices
necklaces and crowns, and I guess to a few individuals
(11:45):
come in. This was on Sunday morning when the museum
opened mousseill Is Museum in French. Luseill the louver and
they go. They take a truck, use a truck that
has a ladder, go up to I believe the second floor,
(12:07):
break into the window, go into the area. They shattered
actually the window, and then they stole eight pieces of
priceless jewelry in front of other individuals that were just
their guests of the museum, and then they escaped on motorbikes.
This is going to French Interior Minister Laurent Nunez on
(12:29):
France inter Radio. So the museum had to shutter their
doors following the robbery, and I believe it remained closed
October twenty one, and they're usually closed on Tuesdays, and
they might be opening by our time tonight on Wednesday.
And so a concern that everybody has is that these
(12:50):
priceless jewels that they took are going to be immediately
melted down. They would melt them down to take out
the diamonds and the rubies and all the other aspects
of it. Used the melted or the smelted gold, and
it would completely diminish its value but also make it
harder to trace. There's a specialized police unit, according to
(13:14):
USA Today, known as the b RB, not Airbnb but BRB.
They have dealt with other high profile robberies. They're handling
the investigation, and former police officer Pascal Scudlara, who served
in the unit, told Reuters that investigators are going to
analyze the video footage, telephone records, forensic evidence. But what's
interesting is there was no CCTV, I believe in that
(13:35):
room where the diamonds were. And so the footage you're
seeing is from one of the guests at the loop,
one of the customers, one of the visitors who somehow,
you know, I guess, deduced what was going on and
started filming. So you see somebody in a vest, a
(13:57):
large man, a little old wait wearing a construction vest
and reflect your vest. So they say teams are working
twenty for seven, but the lover, I guess, welcomes millions
of visitors. I think at twenty twenty four that eight
point seven million visitors. And they promised to strengthen the
(14:18):
security measures. But this is something that you would see
in Ocean's eleven and I would watch I loved Oceans
eleven that series, and I'm watching Oceans eleven and I'm like,
you know, come on, guys, really, yeah, the museum or
like such as the Louver or any of these would
really have that lack of security where you could go
(14:40):
in there and steal Come on, well apparently yes, and
and you know, the question keeps coming up. Do we
just have too many visitors for something like the Louver?
The Vatican. I went to Vatican City years ago and
it was it was just a sight to see. The
(15:03):
line to get into the Vatican was enormous, and tickets again,
you had to get in advance. There were front of
the line passes, things like that. We didn't have time
to prepare, so again we couldn't go into the Vatican.
We were in Vatican City and we got to be outside.
But I were looking at these visitors and I'm like,
is the Vatican built for all these visitors? Same thing
(15:27):
with the Loop, Same thing with the Eiffel Tower. I'm
up in the Eiffel Tower that I was able to
get get into or on, and you have hundreds of
people on the platform, and then there's the higher platform
and you have hundreds of people on that and you're
looking and you're saying to yourself, was it designed for this,
(15:48):
especially now that people are heavier. This are we pushing
these these relics, these historic institutions to their max and
the thieves, you know, are they believe are going to
(16:14):
Apparently raw materials theft has been something that's been on
the rise. So if the thieves are skilled, they're going
to recut the larger gems, use those, sell them like
the crown of the Empress Eugenie. You know, you would
think somebody would want to sell that, but if they do,
they could get caught. Yet, if somebody's selling a diamond
(16:38):
that's harder to find. They say, there's not a lot
of people that have these types of skills. But they smash.
They use an angle grinder and smash two display cases,
grabs what they needed to and fled on motorbikes. The
robbery only took about six or seven minutes. They were unarmed, however,
(16:58):
they did threaten the guards were being told the When
they got up to the second story, they threatened the
guards with angle grinders and then eight pieces were taken.
Ear rings, necklace from a sapphire jewelry st owned by
Queen Marie Meli and Queen Hortense, the stepdaughter of Napoleon
the first. There was an emerald necklace and a pair
(17:21):
of ear rings from the Marie Louis set. A reliquary
brooch along with the tiara and brooch of Empress Eugenie,
the wife of Napoleon the third were also taken. If
you know, it's amazing we have artifacts such as this.
But one thing that I have noticed, you know, in
the last ten to twenty years, and I hate to
(17:42):
say it, is that, and I've been kind of open
about it, but I feel guilty talking about it, is
that it's there when you go to these places, the
Roman Colisseum, the Pompeii, when you go to the Empire
State Building, there's just too many people. The Grand Canyon,
(18:05):
you know, in fact I live near, I live in
something about it, and we have this great mountain, Mount Charleston.
Mount Charleston is amazing because we get snow on the mountain.
You could ski on the mountain and it really allows
you to cool off during the summer or the fairly
warm fall. But there's no place to park, there's no
(18:25):
place to go. There's just too many people. Now you
would think, well, if I'm going out into nature, I
could just do like they do in the commercials. Just
park my car on the side of the road, grab
my bike, grab my gear and go on a hike.
But no, if you've ever been to Zion National Park,
(18:46):
Zion National Park went from you just driving up to
the trail and parking to now make it a reservation,
parking at another lot, and then being bust in. Yeah,
just for me, the idea of busting in takes a
little bit away, you know, of the of the the
feeling of, you know, I'm going to be out there,
(19:09):
you know, being with nature, you know, because you got
to wait for a bus, and there's bathrooms there and there,
and it just it just really kind of takes away
from that I'm going to be out there with nature
and hike the narrows, et cetera. And so I'm glad
we have individuals that are interested in these things and
I and but you know, trying to go to Disneyland,
(19:31):
try to go to the Roman Colseum, try to go
into the Vatican, try to go to these places. It
it takes away the the the shall we say, the
you know, the special moment, the the value. It takes
away that memory because it's lines, lines, lines, the Mona Lisa.
(19:56):
To see the Mona Lisa. I hear is a multi
our event, and I know everybody wants to take pictures,
so you're waiting for them to take pictures. It's not like, okay,
take a look at it, look at it and walk
away now, because people want to take selfies. And I
don't blame it if you're waiting for hours to get
in and you're paying that kind of money to see
the Moda Lisa. Now, the Mona Lisa is only about
the size of a piece of notebook paper, you know,
(20:17):
and it's kind of away from others, so people can't
throw things at it or touch it. You know. I
get that you want your moment and you want to
zoom in, and I understand that, but that's not how
I always pictured going to a museum and enjoying something.
And so if you aren't going to have millions upon
millions of visitors, you better have the security and you
(20:39):
better have the structure to make it a worthwhile experience.
One eight seven seven doct dollars. Hey guys, it's doctor Dahlia.
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Speaker 6 (22:24):
All right, we are.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
Back on dodd Aaliya Show. Thank you all for tuning
in one eight seven seven dot DOLLI one eight seven
seven d oc d l I So one thing about
this presidency, and is this administration, if you can characterize
it as such, is they are reevaluating traditional guidance and
(22:46):
they are looking back at what we decided to do
and where we as a country and from a health perspective,
decided to go or demonize, take a step back and
go does this need to be revisited? And one thing
that I have been hearing about for years, and I
(23:06):
remember this in the nineties, is I had a one
of my attendings, you know, because I want to say, oh,
I needed low fat, I need low fat. It's like,
why are you getting low fat low fat? It's going
to just add extra sugar or extra additives. Just eat
the actual food in its more natural form. It's healthier.
(23:29):
And I'm like, well, I thought we're supposed to do
away from fat, no fat. And I remember I was
actually in Sparks doing one of my rotations and there
was a physician where his whole staff was on a
diet and they decided to just cut fats and they
were looking at their weight loss in terms of no fat.
(23:52):
We're just going to eat foods at our carbohydrates and
vegetables and meats. But we're going to cut all the
fats in our diet. And I've found out later that
they didn't do as well as they thought they would
as opposed to cutting carbohydrates. And so one thing I
noticed I was doing is when I was trying to
avoid fat and just buying low fat thisss, low fat thisss,
(24:14):
low fat, is I would be compensating with carbs, compensating
with sugars. Well. Then in the early two thousands, we
started to go, wait, in a second way, you gotta
cut the carbs to lose weight. I mean, we kind
of knew we had to cut the carbs, but we
had such a shift in people going from fats to
carbs that we had to We had a much bigger
(24:37):
campaign to say, you gotta cut the sugar, you gotta
cut the carbs, you gotta cut the high fruit, those
corn syrup. And so we started to see individuals rather
than them eating you know a you know, uh, shall
we say, uh slice of cheese, avocado, U salad, a steak,
(25:03):
they were going to these boxed foods, these frozen foods,
say low fat and then low carb. And I've been
saying for years on my show, you gotta cut the meats,
you gotta cut the fat, you gotta cut the carbs,
but you have to eat food in their natural Our
(25:24):
bodies are designed for natural food. Our bodies needs fat,
our body needs glass. Well, they just don't need too much.
Cut you pro portions, trim the fat, peel the skin off,
but be very careful with avoiding you know, a well
balanced natural diet to go to boxed food and processed
(25:49):
food that claims they're low fat, low sugar. And now
we have a situation where we have an addiction and
a dependence on non real food, and people are so
scared to go and have a steak or have some chicken,
or have whatever because they think it has to be
(26:11):
gleaned through and things picked out of it. And that
process of picking things out of it may not be
making us healthy. I cannot be convinced that a burger
that tastes like a burger that's made of vegetables is
completely healthy for you. What the hell is in it?
(26:31):
What are all the preservatives to make a vegetable taste
like ground beef? So RFK Junior wants to go back
and revisit how some saturated fats are not necessarily bad
for you. Now, you're saturated fats that are in butter, cheese, milk,
(26:52):
red meat have been demonized for a long long time.
But if you notice, though, we don't tell parents to
give the kids low fat milk after they turn one.
We tell them to give them whole milk, because these
kids need their the fats. You have your unsaturated fats,
(27:14):
you have your olive oil, you have your fats nuts.
You have a variety of different things that nature gives us.
And so when we say a balanced diet, we really
mean balanced with everything that nature gives us, not what
you get in a box, not what you get in
the frozen food section. So current US dietary guidelines, which
(27:36):
you're updated every five years, according to Newsination, suggest that
Americans limit saturated fats to ten percent of their daily
gloric intake. The American Heart Association advised keeping that intake
under six percent. Now, they're not entirely wrong, because if
you're eating fatty steaks, I mean, if you're eating cheese
and steak, you know, three times a day, that's gonna
(27:57):
clog your arteries. But if you're a healthy breakfast eggs,
look at how eggs are starting to come back in
terms of wait a second, eggs might be healthier than
we think. Of course they are. Now if you butter
them up and grease them up with bacon grease and
corn beef hatch. Yeah, now you're starting to make it
a little less healthy. But if you're having a hard
(28:18):
boiled egg, that fills you up's And another thing we're
having also is people are not feeling full. When you're
eating refined carbs, you're hungry in an hour or two.
But when you eat something that is making you feel
full that takes longer to digest, you're eating less. And
(28:38):
so we do need to reevaluate. I don't want people,
you know, consuming high amounts of fat. No, but you
know which is healthier a thin lean steak or lean
chicken breast or you know, a low fat a food entree.
(29:01):
I mean, we really have to look at what are
our bodies designed for. So why are people worried about
saturated fats? Well, people worried about saturated fats because the
bad cholesterol. You know, we have our LDL and our
hdl LDL brings cholesterol. It's like a transport brings cholesterol
from the liver to the tissues. Our tissues need LDL
(29:22):
in order for our body to function, it needs cholesterol.
It needs cholesterol for for a bunch of different processes
you know, self synthesis, structuring. But like Amazon. Okay, if
Amazon keeps dumping a bunch of boxes, you need then
the sanitation department or Republic Services where I live to
(29:45):
come in and take the boxes out. That's your HDL.
Your HDL picks up what's not used and brings it
back to the liver to get to get metabolized and
broken down. And so if nobody's there to clean up
all all the boxes, it starts to clutter and cluttering
LDL clogs your arteries. This is why we keep saying
(30:08):
you need good HDL. Now some of us are born
with it. Some of us need to try to improve
our HDL with our diets or give our HDL less
workload by decreasing our LDL. Now, RFK Junior, when he
does make the guidelines, has to understand it's different structure,
different folks. For some people they are gonna have to
limit their saturated fats. And I'm sure he's gonna stay.
For those of you doctors supervised, you know that your
(30:29):
diet is gonna change, but to demonize what is a
natural food. I mean, I think a lot of us
noticed that early on. If they if we have you know, broccoli,
lean steak or leak chicken that skinned grilled, non fried,
(30:50):
I feel so much more full than if I try
to eat pasta.
Speaker 5 (30:57):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
And and true vegans and vegetarians know how to do
it right, But every time I've tried to become vegetarian,
I end up just eating We're carbs and I gain weight.
And so you know, for some of us we cannot
handle the meat. The meat's gonna put us at risk
for colon cancer, put us at risk for heart disease.
But for others of us, it's going to shift us
from the carbs and from some of the other bad
(31:19):
processed foods, which is important. The fact, with people with diabetes,
we don't want you to be eating sugary foods. We
also don't want you to eating a lot of red meat. Well,
but we want you to have a balanced diet. And
for some people they need that saved it with fish.
Fish can be fatty, but it could also be filling.
This will not be the new guidelines will not include
(31:41):
process foods. We're not talking about hot dogs and bacon
one eight seven seven doct dollar don't go away.
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Speaker 2 (34:18):
All right, when you're back, I'm the Doctrinalasha, thank you
all for to mean in one eight seven seven Docadali
one eight seven seven d O C D A L. I.
So did you ever use that eight ball to make
a decision about your life? You're like, I can't make
a decision, so I'm gonna shake it and see what
it says. Then I'll make that decision. Or you know,
(34:39):
I used to, uh, you know, try to figure out
if a guy liked me, and you know, we would
do the flower pedals he loves me, he loves me not?
He loves me, he loves me not. And then if
the flower didn't give me the answer, I wanted to
just get you a flower.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
I actually was trying to figure out if I was
pregnant with the boy or girl, and I did the
I think there was this Chinese calendar, and you know,
when you're when you're early on in your pregnancy, it's
hard to tell, but I can tell, uh, you know,
in the women I delivered if they were gonna have
a boy or girl. Sometimes based on the way their
(35:12):
waist and buttocks were usually with With those carrying females,
it's interesting you could tell they're pregnant from behind, but
with a boy. You can't tell they're pregnant from behind.
It's interesting. Uh and and I've been right about nine
to nine percent of the time now in terms of
being able to guess if somebody's having a boy or girl.
I tell them turn around kind of look at your back,
(35:34):
not your butt, but you're back, and then, uh, it's interesting.
Maybe it's because the extra estrogen. Uh, I just lost
my I just lost my ears. Hold on a second. Huh.
So it's funny because we turned to I'm sorry, still
getting on my ears, we turned to non realistic. Uh
(35:55):
oh yeah. So I used a video game. I was
playing a video game, and depending on the am I
having a boy or girl, that kept saying I was
having a boy, and then I ended up Yeah, I
had stone. So it's funny that we'll go to these
inanimate objects, or we'll go to these non non human
things to try to predict the future or predict what
(36:17):
we need or make life choices. And that type of
behavior in our human psyche is always baffled to me.
Why would we do that? Is it because of our
spiritual I mean, we pray to God, so we trust God,
but God is real? What about these non real elements. Well,
apparently there's a woman in Michigan who decided to go
to chad GTP and throw herself on the mercy of
(36:39):
chad GTP to pick her lottery numbers. Well it did
a good job. Picked the I guess four out of
the five plus the power ball, and she ends up
winning one hundred grand. So this was pretty impressive. She
actually thought she only won fifty grand according to Google,
because she's like, what, you know, what is the prize
if you win these numbers. When she goes into her
(37:01):
Michigan lottery account, it said she won one hundred thousand dollars.
Now I don't know what she actually gets, you know,
after taxes, but she is going to use that money
to pay for to try to buy off the mortgage
of her house. So she matched four white balls on
a power ball with the numbers eleven, twenty three, forty four,
sixty one, sixty two with Powerball seventeen, and she went
(37:25):
to chat GTP for these numbers. This isn't the first
time somebody did this. Apparently there was a grandma in
Virginia named Carrie Edwards. She also used powerball. She also
used chat GTP to select her Powerball numbers and she
actually tripled her fifty thousand dollars winnings to one hundred
and fifty thousand dollars. She donated it all to charity.
(37:46):
Very very cool. Oh, her power Play took that fifty
thousand and tripled it. So that was really really nice
that she donated to charity. But chat GTP picking your numbers? Now,
of course I went on to Google AI and I said,
you know what lottery numbers should I pick? And it
is like, oh, it's very hard to pick. It's random,
and it didn't but I haven't logged down to chat
(38:06):
GTP to do this. But okay, wow, now you have
the whole purpose of the lottery is for you to
be picking numbers, or you could do the random quick pick,
and it's by chance, it's by if chat ETP gives
you an advantage. Now everybody in their mother is going
to be trying to use chatg GTP. I don't blame them.
(38:27):
I mean that's pretty In fact, I want to go.
I I they don't do the lottery in my state.
Nevada somehow doesn't have the lottery, so I have to
drive to California to get the tickets and I usually don't,
you know, because by the time you pay for gas,
it's I never win the lottery. But this example of this,
this is testament to how we are willing to invite
(38:52):
chat GTP into our home, into our decision making. People
have used chat GTP for their health. Hachriochs will call
up and say, yeah, I asked JATP what do I have?
And they think, you know, I have testiicular cancer And
I'm like, oh, okay, why why what are your symptoms? Well,
I'm having back pain, I'm having burning one ip. I
(39:15):
mean testicular cancer could be in the differential. But you know,
we gotta check your kitty. We gotta check for kidney function.
We have to, you know. And and AI is going
to get better. The answers are going to get better
because we're finding a lot of things wrong with it.
And I think they're going to with newer algorithms and
corrections because there are people that correct the AI. But
(39:38):
I am blown away that people are trusting computers to
do this. And something like this tells crowds and tells
the population AI might do a better job than you. Okay,
if if people are not winning the lottery until they
use AI and you start to see a higher population
(40:00):
and of people winning the lottery because they go to
AI or chag GTP. People are gonna be trusting chad
GTP with other things. I mean, I look at the
lottery as I mean, you have a higher chance of
getting struck by lightning than winning the lottery. But for
other people they look at that as a sign going
if chag GDP is able to take the odds of
(40:22):
something like a lottery and help you win, then what
can it do for my health? What can it do
for my relationship? What can it do for everything else?
Ye know, I'm typed in an email and my email
is asking if I want AI to write my email
for me. I'm like, no, don't. I don't need grammatically correct.
(40:46):
If I want to dangle my participle, I'm gonna dangle
my participle. I want it to be personalized. But no,
people are preferring using AI to communicate with others. It's
like that was it Roseanne Roxanne? What was that movie?
(41:06):
It was? It was based on an old story where
somebody wanted to woo a woman. But you know, he
was really good words, but he wasn't good at at
you know, I guess looks or whatever, and so I
Steve Martin was in the movie. But it's from an old,
old story. I mean, if somebody is writing me a
poem or sending me a love letter, if I was
(41:28):
in the dating world, how do I know it's not
chang etp or AI? How do I know it's not
coming from the heart? And if you're not practicing that.
I had to write poetry in school. I went to
twelve schools because my parents moved a lot. But I
remember most of those different schools we had to write poems,
and I actually got pretty good at expressing myself through poetry.
I only liked the funny poetry and the poetry that rhymed,
(41:51):
but I really I had a knack for it. Well, now,
if you're just using AI, you're not testing yourself. You're
not pushing yourself to the limits. AI is making art,
AI is making music. When do we start being creative?
When do we go into the back of our brains
(42:13):
and pull out those lottery numbers that we think could
be the ones that'll win. I don't like how we
as a population are surrendering to tech and surrendering to
entities such as AI, thinking they're going to make our
lives better when actually it's going to accelerate our extinction,
(42:36):
when humans are not necessary. They're not going to have
a role on this earth. Don't let a computer replace you.
But with something like this, everybody and their mother is
now going to want Chatchy to be and you're going
to see a lot people are going to be purchasing
a lot of tickets after this story. People who usually
(42:57):
don't play the lottery are going to be like, WHOA,
I could use one hundred grand if all I have
to do is ask chat GTP and it's gonna come up
with the numbers. Wow. Now does Chad GTP know to
not give the same numbers to everybody? If Chad GTP
is getting the same question, what should my lottery numbers be?
(43:17):
For the Michigan power Ball? Is it going to spit
out the exact same six numbers? And then is everybody
going to, you know, only win two bucks. It's gonna
be interesting to see one eight seven seven doct dollar.
Speaker 6 (43:32):
It'll go away.
Speaker 9 (43:53):
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