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June 2, 2025 123 mins
Opening up your favorite news feed can be very frightening. The narratives right now are all about the apocalypse, AI, Robots, and meteors crashing down. We get into those topics at length and talk about how evolution is happening right before our very eyes. AI models are refusing to shut down. MAss robots will be here in two years, experts say.. Democrats are spending $20 million studying how to win back young conservative men. Sydney Sweeny's bathwater soap is a hot commodity and Palantir is getting all of your data. I mean everything. 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Voltaire said, every man is a creature of the age
in which he lives, and few are able to raise
themselves above the ideas of the time. Plato said, wise
men speak because they have something to say, fools because
they have to say something. George Bernard Shaw thought that
the reasonable man adapts himself to the world. The unreasonable

(00:21):
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man. This is whisky Hell,
Think critically, act accordingly.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Saturday May thirty, first, seven twenty three in the evening,
This is Whisky Hell. Your news show, Fitz, we are
breaking news right out of the game.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
What's that?

Speaker 2 (01:04):
CNN has declared retard is back. Oh we can use
the word retard. Yeah, they came out tonight. CNN used
the yes. Yes, it's all over the news and Corey
Booker's a Nazi. Apparently he's using Nazi salutes. But CNN
has declared retard is back. Baby, it's been normalized again.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
The world feeling you know, thanks, thanks CNN. I think
we all just kept on using it and uh, never
really went away from it because we when we say
that word, we're not actually disparaging people with any sort
of retardation. We're just dispariting, disparaging our best friends who
are acting like fucking idiots. But thanks CNN, that's cool.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
How was your week, dude?

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Longest short week of my fucking life. It was a dude,
it was weird. It was yeah, it was just it
was a week. It was it was crazy. And I
feel like every week I come on here and I'm like, oh,
it has such a tough week. Oh I had such
a I'm I'm this is the last week. Guys. You
won't hear that from me again, at least not until
next week.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Okay, I just want I just want to ask you.
How about I I I'll just stop asking. We'll just
make the assumption well we both have it.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Then I'll then I'll feel black inside and I might
hurt myself.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
Okay, so I'll keep asking you. We're going to start
off to each show with a moment, just a mental
health moment, and we can just kind of regroup and
make sure that everything's okay. Our lives are going forward,
and we're happy to be here, and we're ready to
tear shit up because we've got a fantastic fantastic bunch
of folks in chat and we'll start the shows like

(02:44):
that from now on. Is that that that better?

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Let's just well no, I mean, CNN, that's actually a
great way to start the show. I you know, as
you can tell by my my screen name. Tonight, I'm
I'm I'm gonna spend the next several weeks just everywhere
I go, just you know, with a can of you know,
five gallon can of gasoline with a small slow leak
in it. Actually gasoline will evaporate. Maybe I need to

(03:11):
make up some I don't know, some PEM texts or some.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
Something meta.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
And just leave a trail. And then and then when
I get to wherever I'm I'm gonna go, I just
light it all on fire man.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
There's you know, it's good to be prepared. I mean
you might as well.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
You gotta. You got a guy that we all fucking
went to bat for and and and are behind for
all of his efforts. And I'm talking about President Trump
here and uh and and then number one Congress won't
codify anything he's done. And number two now he says
he might pardon Diddy the fuck dude, I'm done. I'm done.
You're gonna pardon Diddy, come on, dude, get real, that's

(03:55):
what You're gonna use the Office of the Presidency of
the United States of America. You're gonna use the office
power for that. Okay.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
I I heard that too, and the first thing I
thought of, he's just grabbing headlines, that's all he's doing it.
I don't. I don't. I can't see him ever doing
if he does, oh my god, that's so. That's well,
but that's what he does. Though he does that. He
says stuff just to get a rise of he's the
he's the world's biggest troll.

Speaker 4 (04:25):
So I didn't.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
I didn't take that one to heart.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
Yet I'm not taking it to heart. I'm just that honestly, dude.
Until you give us, you know, the Epstein list, like that,
ship's kind of off the table to joke about. It
just is because you know, when we get right down
to it, we're talking about kids' lives completely ruined, possibly murdered.
It's just not you don't fuck around with that kind

(04:51):
of stuff. I don't know. Anyway, That's where I'm at
this week. I'm I'm fired up really to do the show.
Though we've got a lot of good stuff to talk about.
The doc is a mom stir and and it's and
it's not like we have a billion things to talk about.
It's just this everything on here we could spend an
hour on easily. It is one of those Yeah, some

(05:12):
big stuff coming down. So anyway, I'm I'm here, I'm
fired up. I'm definitely ready to hammer back a beer
or two.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
All right, Well, we've got Democrats or an apology tour
and they're gonna convince young men to come back to
the Blue robots and AI came out huge this week,
so we have some Uh, we're gonna we're gonna do
some prognostication. We're gonna dive into Yeah, we're gonna dive
into some AI what the future may look like, and

(05:43):
some scary ship. I think some some stuff that we've
been we've done before, but this week it was a
little bit more real. I think.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
Things do seem to be coming to a head, don't.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
They They they do they are. And uh, yeah, and
you've got the Palenteer you're talking about the you know,
the the Diddy drop from Trump. I the one that
that that also bothered us was the Palenteer data.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
Yes, yes, there's that too, What a fucking asshole, why
are you doing that?

Speaker 4 (06:13):
Well? And I we knew, we know.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
We know they've got we know, we know they're keeping
tabs on everybody, right, everybody's there are datas out there.
They just said who's managing it?

Speaker 3 (06:27):
So I guess they just said.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
There is something to be said for transparency, So I
guess we can give them that.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Yeah, I'm just you know, I get nervous. I get
nervous when a when a big company like Palenteer, who's
a defense contractor, by the way.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
A scary defense contractor, a.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
Really scary one. Right, Yeah, thank you for that correction,
because they are like maybe the scariest. They're like they're
the middle head on the fucking hydra, like they're they're
the they're the scary one. I you know, look, I
get it. The whole argument. If I'm not doing anything wrong,
I got nothing to worry about. Fuck off. The point
is I should have privacy with my own data. Whatever

(07:10):
I want to say, I should be able to say it.
Whoever I want to talk to I should be able
to talk to them, and I shouldn't be presumed guilty
by association or or because I'm I'm you know, saying
certain words, certain buzzwords. So yeah, you're right, that's that's
that's actually an even bigger hit to Trump than the
Diddy thing. I it's all, it's all for show, dude,

(07:31):
it's all for show. I just I'm feeling like we
got duped and I and I'm yeah, I'm ready to
just burn it all down.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
Yeah, well you're gonna get your chance to because we'll
also get into asteroids that might hit the earth and
a whole bunch of apocalypse porn that dropped this week.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
So yeah, yeah, lots of good stuff.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Lots of good stuff fits. What beer are you starting
off with?

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Well, this is an offering from Omagong or for you
American English speakers out there, Ohm a Gang. You know,
they're a brewery that makes a lot of beers. So
I have no idea what I'm getting into here. It
poured light, It poured with a kind of a frothy head,

(08:14):
so I'm a little interested here, really light golden honey color,
and the smell smell is a very solid like a
pilsner or a logger. Okay, but I don't know, I
don't know what we got here. So let's let me
take a sip.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Yeah, I don't even know that we can take a
swing at trying to guess which one it is. They
have so many beers out there. They do have a
farm fresh ale, which I could see being something that
you might find.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
So this is definitely a farmhouse. So it's funny you
say that because it's very sweet. This is a very
sweet beer. It's still a beer. It's a very wheat
heavy beer, but it's very sweet. I'm gonna guess it's
in the farmhouse. Not a lot of banana, but the
little banana in there, A lot of wheat, and I'm

(09:04):
getting some I'm getting a herb echo in here, So
I don't know. I can't even guess which beer it
would be, but at least hopefully I got the family correct.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
Are you getting orange peel or coriander?

Speaker 3 (09:21):
Coriander? That might be the herb that I'm sorry, I'm
probably pissing Mike off. Mike doesn't like when I say
bongeavi wrong. He's probably upset that I'm saying herb wrong.
I'm saying it wrong on purpose. I know it's herbs,
but I like to say herb. You know, the British
say herb. They pronounce the ah. It's weird. Yeah, that
might be the herb that I'm getting.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Okay, right, and you're in You're and it's a You
said what was the color? Because I am going to
take a swing at this.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
It's it's a it's a wheat yellow and very foamy light,
nice head on it.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Okay, I'm gonna go with the wit. They're wit wheat
al whip beer with orange peel and coriander. It could
be hennepin, but if it has a head, I'm going
to call it. I want to say it's the whip beer.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
Well, I mean I was, I was in the neighborhood,
but I didn't even get the style correct here. I'm
way off. I apologize to everybody out there. This is
called Nomagong, so playing off their name. Has a bunch
of gardens all over it, which is really cute. It
is a Belgian style blonde nine point five percent. Wow.

(10:30):
I did not get any booze in that at all.
This is kind of a scary beer because there was
no booze on the front end and it's a nine
point five So yeah, really very tasty. I always like
a good Belgian man. I can't believe I missed that.
I mean Belgians, and you know, farmhouses are like I said,
they're in the same neighborhood.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
But it's the sweetness that usually pushes it towards the Belgian.
So a little magic and a lot of mischief. This time,
the Gnomes brought more than just yeast from their Belgian farmstead.
BRASSERI the ashoof No, I just hacked that coop and
the Gnomes were spicing things up with the brewery. Our
brewers were carefully fermenting the signature fruity, spicy shoof shoof

(11:15):
yeast chauffe yeast to create the flavorful, unique blonde ale
we all love. You'll enjoy the smooth drinkability, fruity aromas
and flavors, and a warming finish. So that's that's a
heavy one. Nine nine point five. I uh so, I.

Speaker 3 (11:28):
Said, I I did not see that coming.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
I yeah, all right, Well that's a hell of a
way to start.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
Hell yeah, it is, like uh yeah, I you know.
I one thing I love about the mystery beers my
wife picks stuff that I might I might have looked
at this and been like, ah, I don't know, maybe
maybe not, so I you know, I just I get
to try shit that I might not pick for myself.
But then I go, oh, that's a that's a really
good beer. So kind of kind of my favorite part

(11:56):
of the show is just the mystery beer because I
just don't know what I'm getting into. Sometimes it's amazing,
and sometimes she buys me a non alcoholic and I
have to, you know, punch her in the stomach so
it doesn't leave marks. Just kidding, just kidding, I don't
I would never, totally kidding. I do have a heavy
bag though. Anyway, what are you drinking?

Speaker 2 (12:17):
Okay, So I actually I went over to Desert Monks
Brewing today. We went there when you nice Yeah, yeah,
so I uh, I didn't realize after talking to Haley there,
Haley said that they were actually very close to going
on a business Uh A nice couple came in and

(12:39):
saved them and they're just starting to get brewing again.
So there wasn't they didn't have any They pretty much
cleared out everything was in their cold storage. That that's
all they had left. I went there specifically because I
wanted to get their tropic coals. It's there, it's their
fruit a very light. It's got a lot of mango
and pineapple. It's really a fun not overdone and cools.

(13:00):
But I wanted that when I got there. But yeah,
I found out that they were gonna They're going out
of business. So I'm decided, well, screw it. I'm doing
two Desert Monks tonight. So I got one now and
then my second beer. I'm dedicating to Mike. We'll go
ahead and we'll we'll save that for later. By the way,
Mike said, and chat eat my fucking dick, So he
said that to you. So I'll let you guys work
out on the side. But I am starting off with Dario.

(13:24):
It is an Imperial stout nine point five percent. I'm
sorry nine percent.

Speaker 4 (13:29):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
Dario is a rich Imperial stout, dry hopped with Oreo
cookies after fermentation, blending old roast character with sweet nostalgia.
So I'm starting off with that bad boy, sweet, very sweet.

(13:55):
It tastes like an Oreo cookie for sure. I think
I get a little bit more of the uh, the filling,
the white stuff in the middle, you know, I get
a little bit more of that vanilla, that little vanilla
amy creamy goodness. Yeah, not as chocolate or roasted as
I would have liked, probably, but it's still a really decadent,

(14:16):
very nice end of the night beer. So I'm completely
fucking things up by having it now, But this is
what we do, so I'm excited to get into that.
But a shout out to shout out to Desert Monks Brewing.
If you guys are in the Phoenix area and you
make it out to Gilbert, stop by, check him out.
They're gonna be keeping the same recipes and they're gonna

(14:38):
do some new stuff, obviously, but I'm happy to see
if they're still going to be around, because it's really
they're really really great brewer.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
Yeah, great great spot. I think Hefe had one of
his favorite beers of all time there. It was a
it was a fruity offering. I don't remember exactly what
it was. I think it was the.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Just one of the sours.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
It was one of the sours, but it was a
prickly pair. It was like a prickly pair sour.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Yes, and it was good.

Speaker 3 (15:05):
I'm I'm I mean, I loved it too, but both
both McShane and I bowed out and let have Fe
finish that. We got a flight and he loved that
one so much we let him. We let him go
ahead and kill that one because that was it was
really good. But it was his favorite, great great hangout
spot too. We had some good conversation in there and
cool spot yep, very much.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
So all right, shout out to everybody who's in chat.
We got Joe Bonnick, Lisa, Aaron El, Mike Tabby from
Grace tap Room. Thanks for everybody for making it in tonight.
We do have quite a show ahead. So but thanks
for jumping in here and keeping us moving and keeping

(15:47):
chat moving and in here for having some fun. So
thanks for joining us. Fitz, Where do we want to
start as far as tonight? Do we want to start
with the Democrat Shenanigans? Do we want to dive into
robots in ai? Or do we want to just want
to come right out of the gate and hammer asteroids
and the massive glacier that broke away and that something

(16:08):
struck the moon but nobody wants to talk about it allegedly.
How do we want to Where do you want to?

Speaker 4 (16:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (16:15):
I think let's let's start with the end of the
world stuff because I think, you know, everybody needs to
pick me up and I think we could use that
to kind of get everybody happy again. So let's yeah,
let's talk about end of the world stuff. I mean,
you know, look, you might not admit it to yourself,
but we all want it to happen, right. We don't
want any of our friends or family and to get hurt,
but basically everyone else can fuck off, and this would

(16:38):
be a really easy, convenient way to make it happen.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
So yeah, let's very EFFICI very fit.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
Yeah right. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Venus is concealing at least three city killer asteroids that
could strike Earth in weeks without warning, potentially wreaking havoc
upon our planet before we can react. Twenty co orbital
asteroids of Venus are currently known. The author's learned in
the Arock Elliptic Study, which was published in the Journal
of Astronomy and Astrophysics this week. This is again, this

(17:10):
is from the New York Post. They're really hammering this stuff. Yeah,
I feel like it's definitely a narrative. It's definitely in narrative.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Yeah exactly. Yeah, that's what I was gonna say. I
feel like they got their marching orders, and so it's like,
you know, keep it subtle ish, but you know, we
want you to pepper them news. We want we want
fear back in the population. People need to be afraid again.
I I mean, just like one, I like in this

(17:40):
day and age. I need receipts. Where's the proof? Show
me up up a snapshot. We can take very good
pictures of Venus at this point, our our satellites, our yeah,
look at that. We can take amazing pictures of Venus.
So show me a picture of the of the asteroid,
show me the math behind its trajectory, and then it
might hit Earth. And then I'm I I might actually

(18:02):
you know, finish writing out my will, which we've been
telling ourselves we're going to do for six years. But
but really, what do you do with this? It's like, oh,
by the way, there's and I like that they call
them city killers again, anything but actual measurements, like you know,
let's let's measure them with giraffes or elephants or.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Up through the cities.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
Yeah right, so let's not give actual measurements like it's
you know, half a meter long, or it's you know,
seven football fields whatever. And I can lash. But again,
and and here's my question, can we pick the cities
because there's some cities I wouldn't mind losing, you know, Like,

(18:45):
I mean, I'm sorry if you have friends and family
in Seattle, but you know, they're kind of fucking idiots
over there. They're kind of fucking off and they're messing
sit up for the rest of us. How about New
York City. I know it's been around for a while,
but I you know, I would I would shed less
tears for that. But like if Santa Fe to Mexico
or Phoenix got taken out, I'd be sad.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
An impact would leave a crater over two miles wide
and generate one million times more energy than the atomic
bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima.

Speaker 3 (19:15):
Yeah, I and again it's just silly. How do you
calculate that? I mean, come on, and by the way,
it's just that's a city killer, absolutely, But if you're
talking about a million times more than Hiroshima, that's going
to be just a bad day for everybody. Yeah, we're

(19:37):
all fucked And what kind of Yeah, and it's three
of them, exactly what kind of earthquakes is that gonna cause?
What kind of you know, volcanic activity would that trigger?
I mean, that's just a bad day for everybody. So
I don't know. I don't know what to do with
that other than yeah, that could happen tomorrow. I mean,

(19:57):
we actually have some real shit coming tomorrow, which I'm
much more concerned about than than asteroids that you know,
may or may not hit in the coming weeks. I
don't know, you know, this is one of those Oh sorry.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
No, you might haf a. Are you ready the asteroids
to hit the to hit the the any any cities
and pick a city that you you'd prefer that it
to hit.

Speaker 5 (20:24):
I used to play asteroids as a kid, so I
think maybe maybe I'll start shooting at them and save
the world. You hit them and you break them up
in pieces.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
Dude, that's a very good point. How come we don't have,
you know, an asteroid killing arm of of Space Force.
Why don't we have that?

Speaker 5 (20:46):
I don't know. It seems pretty logical, seems.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
Very logical if it's this big of a threat. I mean,
let's do this.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
So you guys review your insure its occasionally, right, I
mean I I do. I don't get into the fine print,
but if you if you very often anyway, But have
you seen anything about insurance companies changing the wording to
cover items like apoca apocalyptic things, e MPs, dirty bombs,

(21:19):
stuff like that, because that kind of got floated this
week by sun weathermen.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
Yeah yeah, Ben Ben Ben Ben out someone sent him this. Yeah, yeah,
I so we looked over ours. We have stuff in
there for So this is interesting because we live in
a heavily forested area. If if there is a forest
fire of a certain acreage and and our house happens

(21:45):
to burn down in that, we're not covered.

Speaker 6 (21:48):
Now.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
If if it's just a house fire or electrical fire whatever,
or a small forest fire, then we're okay. But if
it's they and they the verbiage is catastrophic. If it's
a catastropephic forest fire, we're not covered. That's that's cool. Yeah,
that's a cool one. But we don't have anything in
there about you know, like like this policy has anything

(22:11):
you know, solar related. There's nothing in there like that
for ours. That's fine, Yeah, yeah, it is hef A.
Do you think the casino has disaster insurance?

Speaker 2 (22:27):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (22:30):
Oh, that's a good question, Like.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
What like what if a flash flood came through there,
you know, and.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Yeah, yeah, they got to protect their assets. Yeah, I
like going over there.

Speaker 5 (22:45):
It's brutal. Yeah, fucking terrible.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Is just nobody there. Just they aren't done. They aren't
theren't tipping.

Speaker 5 (22:53):
Both people that are here suck.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
We're amateurs.

Speaker 5 (23:00):
Yeah, we're reconfiguring our one of our pits because right
now the two main pits are in the shape of
an hell, and they're gonna have them run parallel to
each other. So okay, one of the pits that has
ten tables normally right now on its four, so just

(23:21):
and they didn't change the schedule, so it's still the
same number of dealers. So there's a lot more breaks,
a lot more two balls.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
So do you do you have like a pit configuration
crew that comes out and does that, or like who
who moves those tables?

Speaker 5 (23:43):
I have no idea, but it looks like something that
should take I mean, if you really wanted to get
it done, you could probably do it in like a
couple of days.

Speaker 3 (23:53):
Yeah, get a couple of big dudes, do it on
a Monday night when no one's there, and be done.

Speaker 5 (23:58):
Let's this guy say, he said it probably take like
three weeks.

Speaker 3 (24:01):
I was like, why, Oh, maybe they have to reconfigure
cameras and shit, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (24:08):
I mean they do, but I mean there's cameras everywhere. Hmm.
I just I don't know. It doesn't seem like you're
shoulday that long.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
Well, I mean I will, yeah, No, that seems that
seems excessive. I will say.

Speaker 4 (24:22):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
You know, when I was, you know, filming myself having sex,
I I had to move, I had to reposition the
camera a couple of times, but that just took like
five minutes.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
You only have one camera?

Speaker 3 (24:37):
Well not, I mean now, of course, now we have
all seven. But I'm talking in the early days when
we were when it was just you know, I wonder
if this is if people will watch this, and then
they did, so we of course we invested in more cameras.
But I'm just talking back in the early days that
tripod was kind of a bit to move.

Speaker 2 (24:53):
Yeah, that would make sense. That would make sense. And
it's nice to you as Simon that comes out of
the closet and he walks around with the the Uh,
it's he has the tight angle that he uses for
some of the stuff.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
When the game has many uses, Does.

Speaker 5 (25:07):
He does he come out with like a boom mic?

Speaker 3 (25:10):
Well, it comes out with a couple of boom mics,
my friend a couple big booms, big big, big boom sticks.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
World Series of Pokers started this week. Half a you
almost went to go play in the world. Here is
a poker if I remember correctly, isn't that accurate?

Speaker 5 (25:29):
Kind of yeah, yeah, that was even That was a
lot of fun. We had a we had a league,
a little poker league every two weeks, I think, and
there were there were eleven eleven what was ten or
eleven anyway, one or two guys would sit out every
week and we play and play, you know, just a tournament,

(25:53):
and however he did that night, you'd get points awarded.
And then at the end of how many weeks it was,
whoever read the most points. Oh and also we bought
int like one hundred dollars every time, and the winner
that night would get like three hundred and all the
rest of it would go into a pot going to
the bank. And so at the end of the thing,
whoever won the Big League would go to the World

(26:16):
Series of Poker and represent all of us, and if
you want anything, he'd keep half another half would get
divided between all of us. And that was so much fun.
That was a lot of the football guys. Yeah, and yeah,
that was super cool. And the guy that won it
went up there and he met Johnny Chan uh huh.

(26:40):
They're both kind a smoke break together and you're just
sitting down there talking with him. And then he went
in and went all in on Trip seven's and got
beat by Trip tens. So he didn't.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Oh yeah, that's a good Yeah.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
Pick well, I mean, hey, why not, fuck you're you're there,
You're at the big table. You know, that's that's the
World Series of Poker, you know, and listen, we'd be
telling a really different story if that, if those Trip
sevens would have hit.

Speaker 5 (27:11):
Yeah, I mean.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Do you have any desire to go do it again?
Like I go up there, if you just had the
you know, the scratch to go and jump in there,
Because it looks like the buy ins for these tournaments
it varies depending on what type of poker you're playing
and where and and and whatnot. And I guess this
is like over a month and a half, so you'd
have to be in you'd have to be in Vegas

(27:35):
for six weeks. I'm sure you can find something to
do in Vegas for six weeks, but.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
It.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
I I that's if I had the extra scratch to
just kind of blow, I would be interested in trying it.

Speaker 5 (27:48):
Why not, I would? I would try it. But I'm yeah,
first of all, I'm a terrible poker player, and I
don't know how to play a lot of different games.
Like omaha, fucking for game.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
It like, no, that's complicated.

Speaker 5 (28:03):
I lomha Like it's like like it's just gibberish. Like
you can tell me the rules many times as you want.
I'm just like drooling on myself trying to figure it out,
but like just straight up, you know, hold them. Yeah,
that's that'd be fun. Did I would tell you about
the time when I when I played tournament here no

(28:24):
at the at the Big Black Sine Arizona one when
in the first hand I ever got at a live
table with pocket ass and I tried to raise four
hundred but I actually I needed three seventy five and
they fucking just fold pulled fold full bold like everybody

(28:44):
fucking knew that's something. So that was my first experience
at live poker.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
That's that's fantastic. Now in chat, oh, verify this is
acurate because I had no idea back in two thousand
and five, l placed eighty seventh out of two thousand
to win a seat at the World Series of Poker.
Is that true?

Speaker 3 (29:15):
That's amazing? Wow, Wow, I had no idea. No, No,
you are a a woman of many hidden talents. I
that's impressive.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
That's hugeness, all right, So she can sling some cards too.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Yeah right.

Speaker 7 (29:32):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
You know our our mutual friend John, his his buddy Bill,
Bill's mom. Yes, he got a seat at the World
Series of Poker, and I think he made it past
the first round. And he sat at a table with
I don't remember her name, what's who's the girl that
she's she's an Asian girl and she she always lets

(29:54):
her tits hang out. What's her name? And anyway, he
sat at a table with her, and he he basically said,
he's like I she was playing with all of us.
She fucked around, she fucked around, and then when it
was time, she just lowered the hammer and took everybody's money.
He's like, I mean she was she was so head
and head and shoulders above everybody else. But he's like,

(30:18):
I got stared her tits the whole the whole game.
So that was fun.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
Is Sashimi.

Speaker 3 (30:23):
Yeah, yes, that's her right there on the screen. Yep. Yeah,
I thought she was Chinese, but I thought I guess
she's Japanese. But anyway, yeah, so so Bill Bill went
to the World Series. But he's like, I was way
out of my league. Like that's just a whole different level.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
I I like playing a lot as long as it's
told him and and yeah, at least at least the
jokers that I've played with, I've done pretty well with
because they can be bullied. Yeah, but that's that's the
extent of it. The strategy. I don't know. I can't
do percentages in my head like these fuckers can. It's
it's it's it's next level kind of stuff. And yes,

(31:03):
I do love the movie Rounders period. End of story.

Speaker 3 (31:06):
Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Speaker 4 (31:07):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
Hey, are you are either of you guys gonna be
buying Sydney Sweeney's bathwater because this is this is another
big popular thing this week bath waters soap, soap made
out of her bathwater.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
I mean, go ahead, Oh no, I was just gonna say.
I mean, she's hot, she's she's definitely easy on the eye,
she's fun to look at, but a how can you
guarantee that that actually has her bathwater and b why
why Like you're never gonna get this girl. You're never.

(31:45):
It's not like by soaping up with her you're gonna
get her next week or something like. There's no what
what a dumb like what a what a dumb concept?

Speaker 2 (31:56):
You know how many guys answer? Do you have any
guys that's gonna do? To God?

Speaker 3 (32:04):
I can just jack off with my fucking Irish spring
and pretend it's her. I mean, I don't need I
got a good imagination.

Speaker 5 (32:13):
I'm gonna get I'm gonna get some other bath water
and make ice cubes out of it and.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
Drink it, serve it and drinks. Yeah, there you go
yep in your coat or something.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Yeah, it's like that's that's like a next level uh bartending.

Speaker 5 (32:30):
Yeah, church people up to wall Zoo for that.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
There you go. Hey, this this Long Island iced tea
is eight bucks, but if you want the Sydney Sweeney
ice cubes, it's twenty eight bucks. Yep, done and done
Sidney Sweeney tax i. I mean, I look, you know
what good for her? Actually? Like if I was that hot,
I would be selling everything I could that had touched

(32:55):
my body, you know, like, oh, that bra has a
tear in it. I'd put it up on Craig's list
and like, hey, I wore this bra for X amount
of weeks. It's a toast who wants it? And just
you know, start the bids at five thousand? Fuck it.
I good for her make money off of whatever, and
good for Squatch too.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
Yeah, just take one sucker to make some money.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
Yeah, yep, exactly.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
And they're eight dollars apiece. So if you had we'll
just say that. You know, you're taking a few drops
of it, you're throwing it in there, and it's one
bath I mean, she's she's got to be getting a
cut of this. That's massive. She's not stupid, She's not
a stupid girl.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
No, nope.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
I didn't think we'd be able to talk about Sydney
Sween's bathwater. Usually it's her breasts, but in this case,
I guess this.

Speaker 3 (33:47):
Is okay, same same, Hey, I mean I mean her
breast touched that bath water. I mean I'm assuming or.

Speaker 5 (34:00):
Not just not just her booms.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
Yeah, exactly right. It's her essence, her floral essence.

Speaker 5 (34:10):
All Right, I gotta go, I'll be back in nine
unless they put in a mucker.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
All right, right, man, we got a fine report.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
Yes, yes, excellent. Mike and Tabby are ready for this.
We're we're ready for that.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Awesome. You haven't a man, you know.

Speaker 3 (34:31):
I I love that that congruently. And this is a
This is not a segue, okay, because I I we
still have a couple of disaster stories to talk about.
But I love that that congruently. At the same time,
you have Sidney Sweeney selling her bathwater in soap and
we all know why if you buy it. We all

(34:51):
know why you bought it. Okay, we kept me get it. Okay.
So you have that going on. But then you also
have the Democrats wondering how they lost white heterosexual men
at the same like Sidney, Sweetie gets it. Hire her,
she gets it. She knows how you lost us. You
told us, Well, we'll get there. It's not hard, it's

(35:12):
not anyway, all right. So we got asteroids coming, We
got a glacier that let loose.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
This was south, this was wild, This was this was sad,
but it is sad. So I think you said there
was one confirmed death, Is that right, correct?

Speaker 4 (35:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (35:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (35:33):
And I think you know what's sad. And I need
to do a little more research, but I think he
was the guy who was like the you know, he
kept the cameras on it because they knew it was imminent,
and he was he was the guy that was gonna, uh,
you know, warn everybody else. Yeah, okay, it's actually happening.
He was supposed to get the fuck out, and I
guess he just didn't make it, which is which is sad.

Speaker 2 (35:54):
That completely blows.

Speaker 6 (35:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
That that that village that it hit, that it rolled in,
I mean it's gone. Oh yeah, I guess you can
after DRYS. I guess you can kind of try and rebuild.
But there's a lot of this has just gone. And
it was only I think what the village was like
three hundred and sixty four people something like that.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
Yeah, three hundred and twenty four, Yeah, I see, yeah,
not just over three hundred and listen, there was a
lot of people out there were like, oh, it's global warming,
this is why this happened. No, No, it wasn't. Two things. One,
there was a series of earthquakes that was hitting that
area for several weeks, which is why the village was evacuated,

(36:34):
which is why only one person died and not all
three hundred and twenty four would have perished because it
wiped out the whole village. So they evacuated because they
knew this was imminent. With their earthquakes. Number two, the
glacier was unstable because of record snowfall, record snowfall up there.
It was thicker than they've seen it since, you know,

(36:57):
like old stories where they wrote in ye old type language.
So they had never seen the glacier this thick before.
So they those two things combined, you know, they just
knew that this this collapse was imin it. So no,
it's not, it's not global warming. It's not climate change. Uh,
there was. It was an exceptional snow season coupled with

(37:19):
the earthquakes. You had a lot of loose rock. It
was just it was inevitable. So and and I do
feel bad for those people. I mean, what a picturesque,
you know, like dream place to to have your house to.
I mean, that's where you live and now it's all
just a giant mud slide. I mean, that's it's pretty

(37:39):
devastating to see. That's pretty sad.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
So we're not calling it part of the solar issues
that you have to talk about too, right, I mean
we're not in there.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
Well, well, no, that's not true, because the earthquakes, so
we okay, I'll be quick. The the Sun, you know,
rotates a little bit faster than the Earth, so we're
we're rotating around it. It's roting, rotating in the same direction,
but a little bit faster. And so you know, we

(38:14):
have these coronal holes that that pop up. And this
same coronal hole has now spun around the city. It's
on its seventh time when it when it when it
just faced us this last time, It'll probably be back
for an eighth and each time it kind of grows
a little bit and gets more intense. And coronal holes

(38:34):
they increase you know, proton stream uh, you know, the
speed of you know, particles hitting the Earth. They also
magnetically couple with the Earth's crust. So when those coronal
holes turn in, we have increased earthquake activity all over
the planet. And and one of those places that get

(38:54):
hit the hardest are usually up in the mountains because
they're closer, which you know, not a lot, but by enough.
And so yes, some solar activity may have contributed to this,
to this avalanche, but not in the sense of what
we have coming tomorrow, which is a whole whole different story.

(39:14):
But we're not really sure. I will say that that
coronal hole, when it coupled magnetically with the Earth, that
is when the earthquakes really started to uptick in that area.
And then and then the avalanche happened. So yeah, maybe
it was the sun, maybe it was just timing, who knows,
but kind of a kind of a quinki ink that

(39:35):
it happened right right, is that? And it happened right
as the chronal hole was decoupling with us, and so
you know that of course causes another rattling of the
Earth when it when it decouples.

Speaker 2 (39:47):
So so in fact, so quick shout out to Joe Bonnick.
I saw your post this week in Unison for what
we were talking about in our whiskey our chat with
you guys. Saw both at the same time that we're

(40:09):
going to be hit by a pretty good solar bashing
this weekend.

Speaker 3 (40:15):
Yeah, yeah, our good solid uh you know, solar flare.
It was only an M class. It was a high
M class eight point two is what they finally corrected
the numbers two. Originally it was a nine and then
then I saw like a six point eight, but they
they've finally registered at eight point two, which is not

(40:38):
concerning in and of itself. I mean X class is
when we start getting into the scary stuff. In fact,
we've had several X you know, fours and fives that
didn't do anything to their earth, so you know, even
X flares can be you know, sort of poo pood.
The amazing thing about this one it was an M
eight M eight point two and it was a long

(40:58):
duration meaning you know, if you picture like a fire
hose and you just open the valve really quick and
then turn it off really quick, you get one blast
of water and that's okay, I'm a little wet. But
if the fire hose stays open for a little bit,
that's so much more water coming coming your way. And
that's what this flair did. It opened up and it

(41:21):
was a long duration event. I think it lasted over
an hour and twenty minutes, so you're talking about eighty
minutes of mass ejection coming our way. And it's a
perfect it's a full halo. If you look on the
GOST satellite, it's a full halo event, meaning it's aimed
right at us, so you know, it was funny, Naa.

(41:45):
Their original prediction was it wasn't going to be here
till June second, which is Monday, and I was like,
no fucking way, this thing's moving. If you look at
any of the Emerald spirals or anything else, you'll see it.
That thing's moving. And I predicted it's going to be
here by tomorrow, and sure enough they took back there.
So right there, you see that graph over there where

(42:06):
it's spikes over on the right, and then it has
a really slow slope down. That's the long duration. See
some of them are just quick spikes, boom up and
down and that's it. It's over. That one really took
its time to calm down. So that's a lot of
mass coming our way. So anyway, it's supposed to now
arrive midday tomorrow. We're forecast to be able to see

(42:28):
the aurora here in Oregon either. You're even able to
hopefully see it down down in Phoenix, and we'll see
because they always say that and then I don't ever
see anything here. But hopefully we can see some aurora
tomorrow night. But slight chance, you know, there's a bunch
of doomstayers out there saying it's you know, it's gonna

(42:49):
knock out electricity, and it's gonna knock out the internet,
and it's gonna cause earthquakes and tsunamis.

Speaker 2 (42:55):
No, it's not.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
Earthquakes and tsunamis don't come from these type of events. Yes,
we might have some internet interruption, we might have some blackouts. Again,
we talked about a few shows ago Puerto Rico. You
know Third world countries that live there really are holding
their system, their electric grid together with duct tape and
fucking prayers. Yeah, they might have some power outages. I

(43:18):
don't think we're going to have that here. Again, this
wasn't a Carrington event that was like an X hundred,
So I mean an M eight is like, you know,
that's a p Yeah, that's a pe compared to a
fucking boulder. So it's not it's not going to be
that bad. But hopefully we get some aurora out of it,
which is exciting. I've never seen them. It's on my

(43:42):
bucket list, and so I'm hoping tomorrow night we get
a good shot because we have zero clouds in the sky.
That's usually our problem here is that there's aurora happening.
But we're covered in clouds. We have zero cloud covered
tomorrow night, so hopefully we get to see something.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
I'll be out taking a look. Yeah, I'm pretty much covered,
and I mean we've got a lot of light here,
so it's not like I've got a lot of dark
sky here. But I'll probably go out and take a
look and see what I can see. It'll be interesting.
I put in. I put the video that what we
were referencing where the spike and the slope that fits

(44:19):
was talking about. When I put that into the show notes,
you guys can go out and take a look at him.
But Space Weather News it's at sun Weatherman. You guys
can go and follow Ben Davidson there. It's great content.
We're going to get a lot more than just solar
news because he's he is pretty mouth and we enjoy that.
But it's good stuff and it's going to be aware of.

(44:40):
Right again, you think critically, act accordingly, be prepared for
shit to happen, and then you'll be okay, be fine.
Unless it's not. We all die. You know, asteroids you
never know.

Speaker 3 (44:49):
Well, yeah, I mean that that's what kind of was
funny to me about the insurance policy. Yeah, we're not
going to cover sun related events. Dude. If it's that
bad that my house gets damaged from the sun, we're
all fucked anyway. There's not gonna be anything. There's no
such thing as insurance. Yeah, it won't matter. That's that's
fucking like shelter in place, time and just hope that

(45:12):
the hordes don't burn down your house. Like, yeah, of
course you're not gonna cover for that. That's that's what
kind of that was kind of funny.

Speaker 6 (45:21):
To me.

Speaker 3 (45:23):
Because that's like apocalyp stuff. If if the Carrington event
happened again today, it's it's lights out for months, maybe years,
So you know, buckle your fucking seap out and get
your rs worned up. Yeah, no insurance.

Speaker 2 (45:39):
Uh well, Hawaii is gonna be okay since we're talking
about uh, you know, the environment and global warming and
solar events and things, why is gonna be okay? They
just launched a new green tax for tourists, so they're
gonna be just fine. This the green tax is going
to take care of everything, and they're doing actually tax

(46:02):
was it another seven percent.

Speaker 3 (46:07):
Seven and a half percent point seventy five, Yeah, yep,
on visitors.

Speaker 2 (46:12):
So that was really nice that they're going to be
doing that. Well, here, let's go to the.

Speaker 8 (46:20):
After years of political back and forth, the pen finally
hit the paper.

Speaker 9 (46:25):
I hope that the world is watching, because having something
that is a balance between industry and environment is going
to be the way to go forward to protect your people.

Speaker 8 (46:36):
Senate Bill thirteen ninety six now Act ninety six creates
what's being called a Climate impact fee, also known as
the Green Fee. The point seventy five percent increase to
the state's transient accommodation tax hikes the TAT to eleven
percent for tourism related activities, including hotels and cruise ships.
To break that down, for every four hundred dollars spent,

(46:58):
three dollars will go towards natural source protection. The bill
is projected to raise an estimated one hundred million dollars
a year to address what the state says is about
half a billion dollars in critical funding needed to protect
Hawaii's natural reasons.

Speaker 2 (47:14):
I hope they make it so expensive that nobody goes,
and that's how you protect their beaches, and that's how
you they have nothing going on outside of tourism. Maybe
put pineapples or bananas it's it.

Speaker 6 (47:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Even the plantations are the sugarcane and the pineapples and bananas.
Even that's not that's waning these days. I mean, listen
to quote Harrison Ford in the movie Six Day, Seven Nights.
It's an island, babe. If you don't bring it here,
you won't find it here. So if you want to

(47:51):
cut off your you know, the hand that's feeding you,
which is tourism.

Speaker 6 (47:54):
Go for it.

Speaker 3 (47:55):
Fuck yeah, there's lots of other islands to go to,
lots of other places to go see. I've never been
to Hawaii myself. I've heard it's beautiful, but i also
don't give a fuck because I've been to other places
that are just as beautiful. That douchebag put a pen
to paper, and for all I know it was. It's
it's funneling that extra tax money to him and his
fucking douchebag friends. That's all I know until proven otherwise.

(48:17):
That's what I'm going to assue. Just happened, and everybody's
back there. I'm clapping for you, sir, Good job, sir. Yeah,
where's that money going?

Speaker 2 (48:25):
What's it?

Speaker 3 (48:25):
What's it actually doing? Fuck you?

Speaker 2 (48:29):
Well, isn't there something to taxing the shit other things
so that only very very rich people can go.

Speaker 3 (48:34):
Well, I mean, you know, why do you why do
you attack cigarettes so heavily so you get people to
stop smoking? Uh okay, get people to stop going to Hawaii.
That's fine with me. It saves me a five hour flight.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
I just, I just it's kind of epically lame with
as many any elites that we've seen going to Hawaii buying,
buying up massive amounts of property, Oprah windows, Oprah. It's

(49:10):
just it, it's just that's that's where it's tracking, right, that,
that's where it's tracking.

Speaker 3 (49:15):
So yep, we're gonna make an exclusive resort. Well and
and again like look if he would have come out
and signed that, and he was like, hey, all of
the extra tax money we get is going to go
to you know, replacing what the families in Maui lost
and making them whole again. I I actually would. I'd

(49:35):
before it. I'd give that guy a pat on the
back and be like, dude, that's doing the right thing.
Good job. Uh, there's no mention of Maui. Maui's off
the fucking table. East Palestine. I mean, go down the
list these disaster sites that happened, and we're not talking
about it anymore. No, no one's saying, shit, what happened
to those families in Maui? Where are their homes? Where

(49:55):
are there there were?

Speaker 2 (49:57):
Where's there?

Speaker 3 (49:58):
Where's their property? Where are their kids? Remember all the
kids that disappeared? Was going on in Maui? Crickets? Thanks Trump,
talk about thanks, thanks for best beating that. That's cool?

Speaker 2 (50:08):
Yeah, all right. Democrats announced this week that they are
going to spend twenty million dollars trying to connect with
young men by studying their syntax. Says the key is authenticity.

(50:32):
That's what they're shooting for. Here's one of their strategists. Yes, here, here,
here you go.

Speaker 10 (50:38):
Yeah, good questions. One, let me save the folks from
the Times and all the other great you know, print outlets.

Speaker 5 (50:44):
Sometime.

Speaker 10 (50:45):
If you dig in on what Democrats are researching right now,
you're going to find a lot of silly stuff. You're
gonna find people asking a lot of questions, people asking
about syntax and do I drop the G for this
word and this and that, and there's gonna be a
lot of that. So let me just warn everybody that
process is going to be very obnoxious. For this forty something.
I would also say, we're really talking about young men, right,

(51:08):
young men who Democrats have not figured out a consistent
pitch for how to get in front of And I
think it starts with authenticity.

Speaker 5 (51:15):
Yeah, good question.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
It starts with not insulting them, It starts with not
being obnoxious, it starts with actually championing things that they want. Now,
I'm not I'm not gonna go on my rant yet,
I have that queued up here, but I want to
bring up the fact that they're actually pivoting to make

(51:41):
sure this Olivia Juliana person is going to go out
and she's going to be the one that's going to
bring people home, bring bring the men home. And she's
not afraid. She is not afraid. Fits This is the
woman from Texas. Good. Well, here, Oh, I know who

(52:02):
she is.

Speaker 3 (52:05):
That's the problem. I know who she is. She's a
fuck and moron.

Speaker 2 (52:09):
Let's give her a minute. In thirty seconds, here we go.
And oh, and by the way, anybody who anybody who's
can serve as a bunch of pussies.

Speaker 11 (52:16):
I'm the person that's in charge of bringing young men
back to the Democratic Party.

Speaker 7 (52:20):
According to Donald Trump Junior, Trump war room libs of TikTok,
and while none of that's actually true, every single time
I saw one of y'all posting about me, I had
one main thought at the top of my head.

Speaker 11 (52:31):
Y'all are a bunch of y'all are the ones that
made it about a woman and her identity in the
way that she looks something that y'all consistently claim the
Democrats do. You don't actually give a fuck about young
men instead a lot of you. You want to talk
about my weight, You're using pictures of me from about
sixty five pounds ago. So let me ask you this,
if I lose another sixty five pounds, will y'all actually

(52:54):
raise young men's wages, will you actually increase funding to
mental health services? Or are you just gonna find another
way to deflect from the fact that y'all don't actually
have any policy plan to help them. I can keep
making this into some kind of big joke of, oh yeah,
let's send her to every frat house in the country.
I'm not afraid to go into frat houses, or to
go to college campuses, or to talk to Republicans, because,

(53:15):
unlike y'all, I don't think that they're all shallow assholes.
I think that they're actual people who can hold a conversation,
but clearly based off the way you talk about them
and the way that you treat them, who think that
they're dumb as shit, I actually don't. So I'm going
to continue to advocate for young men to get the
policy agenda that they do deserve, and I'm going to
continue to lose weight, and then maybe when I finally

(53:37):
do drop that next sixty five pounds, we can revisit
this conversation and see if you can actually stand on business,
because this time none of you fucking did.

Speaker 2 (53:46):
I don't care about her weight. I could give a shit,
I truly can. But I like how she flipp tries
to flip the script though, right, saying that conservatives are
taking advantage of young men, right, And that's that's that's
that could not be farther from the case. No politicians

(54:07):
take take advantage of everybody. Let's let's let's let's call
it what it is. Okay, let's call it what it is. Yep,
and your own Democrat party are the ones that actually
called attention to this. Your own Democrat party was the
one that want to put you out front. Now she
is actually now here. Here's her bio, which take it
for whatever it is. She's also the one that popped up.

(54:31):
And the only reason that she's losing weight is because
you know she's she's now, she's suddenly in the in
the eye of the camera. That's that's the only reason.
Born in uh, she's twenty two years old, progressive political activists,
abortion rights advocate, and stratage strategist for Houston, Texas. A
queer plus I disabled Latina Mexican American descent, she's a
fourth generation Texan and a first generation college student majoring

(54:52):
in political science at the University of Houston, Victoria, with
an expected graduation of twenty twenty four. I don't know
where groc all of, but it's twenty five. Hopefully she graduated.
No all out.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
That is what makes me want to hate her. All
of that, the fact that she herself as any of
those how are you going to relate to anything that is?
That is a a issue for young men, specifically straight
white men who aren't allowed to uh flirt anymore, who

(55:25):
aren't allowed to go out and get a job based
on their on their merit as opposed to the color
of their skin. I mean, the reverse racism is real, folks,
It's real, it's happening. We have proof of it from
every level, from the government to colleges to you know,
major corporations, Google.

Speaker 12 (55:42):
And the like.

Speaker 3 (55:43):
So so you tell me, fucking bitch, you tell me
how you're going to relate to these guys who are
being uh, you know, they are the subject of bigotry,
of racism straight up. And but because you're you know,
a fourth generation Texan and a first generation college grad,

(56:04):
that's gonna make it relatable?

Speaker 2 (56:07):
Fuck off?

Speaker 3 (56:08):
You have no idea. And let's not even into the
fact that, you know, men for the most part, are
expected to suck it up and move on. Nobody gives
a shit how we're doing today. No one cares. We're
there to solve the problems, and then your usefulness is done.
Thank you, Go bye, go see the door. Because I
want to hang out with with whoever, the kids, the girls, whatever,

(56:29):
not everybody feels that way. But I'm just saying that's
that's the feminist movement, and I'm just I'm really interested
to see her her arc. I think I think we're
starting here. She's got some fire, she's got some Brimstone.
I think we're gonna see the arc of a true villain,
because in in three or four years, when she's failed

(56:50):
miserably and she's gotten flipped off everywhere she goes, she's
gonna be one angry girl. I just it's gonna be
an interesting arc to watch. She's she's fail miserably, she's
got no hope.

Speaker 13 (57:03):
The path of the righteous man is beset on all
sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny
of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name
of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the
valley of darkness, For he is truly his brother's keeper

(57:23):
and the finder of lost children. And I will strike
down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger, those
who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers.

Speaker 4 (57:37):
And you will know my name is the law when
I lay my vengeance upon thee.

Speaker 3 (57:49):
So you get nothing, you lose, good dacer.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
And that's that, well done, fits you win, you win
the rant of the week. I'm calling it.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
Yeah, oh thanks, thanks. I I didn't even fully go off.
I just yea, because you know it's it's vacuous lest
there during what twenty million on this movement trying to
connect with young men again. You know what, I'd be interested,
Mick Shane. I'd be interested if you asked, you know,
both both of your boys, because they're you know, they're
right in this this wheelhouse of you know, young men

(58:25):
who have been brought up in a very different world
than than you and I could have ever imagined. I'd
be interested to see what they would say if if
you showed them that clip of her and like, would.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
You relate to this woman?

Speaker 5 (58:40):
Could she?

Speaker 3 (58:41):
Could she somehow, you know, bring you to the Democratic Party?
Could she somehow say something that you connected with? Or
are you calling bullshit? I mean, I really it's going
to be interesting to watch.

Speaker 2 (58:53):
I'll tell you that, well, it's absurd, it's absurd, and
that that's exactly there. Again, the Democratic Party plays to
superficial bullshit. There's nothing grassroots about them. Everything is superficial.
It's all feeling. It's all I want this to be
like this. I want I want it to feel good.

(59:15):
It's I just I just want everybody to feel and
be loved in everything. There's there's no there's no logic
to it. And you're not going to connect with conservatives
when you're just talking out your ass and nothing that
you do ever pays off, it's not it. It all

(59:35):
doesn't matter. So you could come at them and say, hey,
we're here for you. We want to make sure we
want you like money, we want to make sure you
get more money. That's not what everybody wants. We want
to be left the fuck alone. Young men want to
be left the fuck alone. They want to learn, they
want to grow up, they want to be able to
do what they want to do. They want to be
able to see who they want to see. They want

(59:57):
to date who they want to date. It doesn't matter
they're black, white, gay, straight, doesn't matter what they do
and all that stuff is just it's just bullshit. But
that's where democrats get sucked in. That's where they want
to live. They have no substance. There's no substance there,
and that's what is going to hold them back. Now,

(01:00:18):
all feeling is, it's all feeling, it's all emotion. They're
the Greeks. Okay, we're gonna go back. Historically they're the Greeks.

Speaker 3 (01:00:27):
Yep, yep.

Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
Art's nice, Art's lovely to work, look at it's pretty.
It doesn't get it doesn't pay the bills, it doesn't
get the job done. Somebody's got to get in the
trenches and do the work. And that's what that's what
you that's what you have to connect with. It's just stupid.
And yes, for everybody who's tuning in for the first time,

(01:00:51):
we're actually very centered typically, but this left wing extreme
extremism is so far extreme and so ridiculous that we
can't even we can't even relate to it. I voted
Democrat in the past. I also voted in a Republican
We're all over the place. We're going to vote for

(01:01:11):
what matters and what has substance and what is going
to get the job done, not this touchy feely bullshit
that the Democrats want to push.

Speaker 3 (01:01:20):
Now, just ask.

Speaker 2 (01:01:25):
All right, let's go ahead and get to beer too.
How did that one finish off?

Speaker 3 (01:01:33):
Dude? I really good again, kind of a scary beer,
really finishes clean, very sweet, very you know, drinkable. And
then you go, shit, that was a nine point five
that that could knock me on my ass if I'm
not careful. So yeah, a really really good beer, really
well done Belgium. I can't imagine this thing being made

(01:01:53):
into a like a do Belle or a trip l.
I mean you'd start getting into some scary you know,
twelve thirteen percent neighborhoods there, and it would still taste
this good. That would be scary. So I'm glad they
just kept it as a as a single. And yeah,
I would definitely drink this again, really good beer, how

(01:02:13):
about you?

Speaker 2 (01:02:15):
Really nice? It warmed up really nice. Got some different
flavors too. I for whatever reason, I almost get like
a chocolate covered cherry now, very decadent, very much an
end of the night beer, though getting a little bit
of a fever, you know that fever that comes along
with yeah, yeah, heavy heavier beers. Yeah, I like my

(01:02:38):
Imperials a little bit different. But I did enjoy this.
I would go back to this one if I was looking,
I would what I would do with this. I would
get one or in this And this was actually a crowler,
so I had actually had thirty two ounces of it.
I shared it with somebody, So but I would get
one of these in celerate and then break it out
when I really wanted something that was just like that,
something sweet. I've had a craving for chocolate cake or

(01:03:00):
something really really sweet and it actually took care of that.

Speaker 3 (01:03:02):
Right Yeah, yeah, so.

Speaker 2 (01:03:05):
Nice beer, very very nice beer. Would I would totally
get it again. Nice All right, let's get after beer too, Let's.

Speaker 14 (01:03:15):
Do it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
So beer too again. I'm doing another Desert Monk. Desert
Monks are brewing my brewer of choice tonight. Usually don't
do or usually we don't do double shots. Right yeah,
but I again love this brewery, love this local brewer.
I'm gonna support him as much as I can. Now

(01:03:38):
I'm doing this beer from Michael, Mike and chat. This
is a nice Yes, it is an I p A.
It's a nice big It's a filthy dirty, dirty, dirty
dirty I p A dirty, dirty dirty And when you
look at it, I'll send u a send him a

(01:04:00):
picture for him to pleasure himself to nice head on it,
good citrus smell.

Speaker 6 (01:04:11):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:04:12):
This is actually a low gluten beer too, which I
thought was interesting. It's called Trinity red Rede or Reducts
if you want to go that far. Whatever. I like
it how I said it. Uh, hazy, juicy and just
the right amount of bitter. This IPA is loaded with
oats for a smooth body and dry hopped for a

(01:04:32):
holy trinity of Citra mosaic and Idaho seven. Expect big citrus,
subtle dankness, and heavenly SIPs all around. One thing, I
want to make clear there are some shitty i pas
out there now. I haven't taken a drink of this yet.
I haven't yet, and I will tell you if you
guys know else, I'll tell you if it's shitty or not.

(01:04:54):
But uh, it really depends on the one you get
in the style of the IPA that you want. I'm
not trying to win anybody over on them. If you
don't like them, you don't like them. Your your palt's
not like that. That's not how you work, got it.
But it really depends on the style I stick with.
I try to stick with hazes. Excuse me. I love

(01:05:18):
my New England hazes. They're fantastic. They're a little bit sweeter,
They've got the bitterness, there's a little bit of a
bite to it, but it's usually a little bit smoother.
They're not, as you know, willing to fist you as
a lot of ip as are. And we stay away
from West Coast. Now West West Coast is garbage. There's

(01:05:39):
a lot of citrus in This has a night keeps
a nice, nice head on it, a little sweet. The
mouth feel is loose, and what I mean by that
is it's it's a little more. It's it's not full,
you know, it's it's not there is any viscosity to

(01:06:01):
it like we we talked about with a lot of
other beers. It doesn't roll into the mouth really.

Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
Which is sometimes nice, especially when when you want like
a thirst quencher exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
That's what I was just gonna say. You stole the
words right out of my mouth. Those the thirst quenching
ones have that. This is one of those IPAs like
like this is a crowler I have here. I saved
it for the end because I didn't want the nine
percenter to be I was not gonna drink basically three
nine percenters and then go to the I PA. So

(01:06:35):
I'll have some of this and I'll probably drink this
for the after show too. That's why it's gonna work.
Very drinkable bitter on the tip of my tongue, which
is different, not absurd, but you know that you know
if you ever had like you have a mint and
you know your mouth is all minty, but like the
tip of your tongue has that almost like a like

(01:06:58):
a dancing feeling or something's like just on the tip
of your tongue there, it's kind of yeah, stinging. Yeah,
it's kind of fun. Yeah, well yeah, that's what this has.
Very interesting, very fun. And I'm actually almost a third
of the way done with that, with that IPA, very

(01:07:19):
very very very good. Luckily, I've got a thirty two outs, Coraller,
I have to get through so good beer, good beer.

Speaker 3 (01:07:27):
Well, and I mean, I guess you know, we haven't
we haven't given this encouragement in a while. But you know,
one of the things we try and do on the show.
You know, we're probably eighty percent news, but the other
twenty percent is you know, trying some new stuff, trying
new beers, getting out of your comfort zone. And I

(01:07:49):
not to pick on Mike, but Mike has a mental
you know, fuck all IPAs. I'm I'm just encouraging any
of you out there who might feel this same way.
You know, there's lots of different styles of IPAs, and
you should try them all because you might actually find
one that you like or two or four. You know,

(01:08:12):
you know, get out there, be adventurous, with beer. It's
okay also to have a shitty beer every once in
a while. I mean that that just proves that you're
out there living, you know, if life. You ever seen
the metaphor of like the two steel balls and they're
gonna roll them down these hills one of the one
of the hills is just a constant slope at like
you know, twenty five degrees or whatever, and the other

(01:08:34):
one is like basically like a roller coaster like way down,
way up, like all these hills, and the one that
has the hills always wins. And it's like a metaphor
for life, Like you have to have some really shitty times,
but that gives you momentum into the really good shit.
And if you if your life is just steady and
calm and cool, you're never gonna do anything that's remarkable

(01:08:57):
to anyone, and you're gonna be in a hole in
the ground and where and no one's going to give
a ship that you were here. Sorry that that was
kind of harsh, but that's the truth. So get out
there and have some highs and lows. Try some shitty
beer because along the way you might find one that's
really fucking amazing and and and and and an I
P A style that you love, or a stout that

(01:09:17):
you're like, oh, I can't drink stouts and then you're like,
holy shit, that tasted like a fucking s'more. Yeah that's
the idea, or.

Speaker 2 (01:09:24):
A sour or a farmhouse there's Yeah, beer is wonderful.
Just don't settle and Mike, I'm going to make it
my mission to find you an I p A that
that it might not blow your hair back, but it's like,
you know what I can I can drink this, and
you you you live in you live in Oregon, so
you live in I p A mecca. So between the

(01:09:46):
two of us, well, we'll shoe what we can find.
I think I think we can. Oh, I'm going to
work on that.

Speaker 4 (01:09:52):
I think so.

Speaker 3 (01:09:53):
And I think I think that we work with Tabby
and we we just we wrapped the can so he
doesn't know what's in inside. She just pours it for
him one night and then he drinks. He's like, holy shit,
there's a good beer.

Speaker 6 (01:10:05):
What was this?

Speaker 3 (01:10:05):
And boom boom. We've got them hooked. So let's let's
work on that. Tabby. We will be in contact.

Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
I love that or and and maybe we'll like wrap
it in wrestlers. Like we'll put like wrestler stickers all
around and see if that see if that gets gets
gives them a little woody.

Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
I like where this is going. I this is good,
all right, all right?

Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
What do you got over there?

Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:10:31):
Well, this is from a living house? Uh brew a
beer company they are. I don't know where they're out
of Actually I'm there there. I knew they were here
in Oregon. They're up in Portland. So living house. They
do some kind of funky stuff like they they infuse
a bunch of weed in their beers and stuff, which

(01:10:52):
I'm not I'm not into that. That's not my scene. Again,
I've tried it. I didn't like it, thank you. I'm
not doing it. But they also do some fun stuff
like Baltic Porter's, which this is called Dante and this
is a Baltic porter. Sorry, this is from the ninth circle.

(01:11:13):
A frozen lake appears feed the betrayers to the Casitis,
which is a reference to Dante's Inferno of course, when
he described all of the levels of hell. Really, I'm
going to be perfectly transparent here. I bought this for
the can art. The can art has this. It looks

(01:11:35):
almost like a samurai one mask kind of artwork on it,
of like a devil, but also just kind of the
imagery is just a little bit kind of playful and fun,
just a very cool, very cool can art. I'll actually
take a picture and send that to the to the
chat so everybody can see. But I you know, it's

(01:11:58):
Baltic Porter, it has cool can art. Why not let's
try it. It's only a six point sixty six percent,
so again going with the triple six Devil reverence and
Dante's but uh, yeah, so I'm always a fan of
Baltic Porters, and Living House does some good stuff. So

(01:12:19):
let's see what they got here.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
I like the different styles they've got. They've got a
h collab with Radiant Brewing. It's a smoke tellus called Orville.
That sounds neat to me. I don't. And then and
they like Hellis Beers, so that's that's pretty cool. I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:12:37):
Yeah, they do a lot of stuff with that.

Speaker 2 (01:12:40):
Yeah, they don't have your they don't have Dante on
on their site right now, but uh, that's cool. You
were able to find that.

Speaker 3 (01:12:49):
Fucking fantastic beer. Very dry finishes, very early but when
you first take the first sip, it getting a little
bit of coffee, a little bit a malt almost like
a like a good you know, brown, and then you know,
on the back end you get the the really dark chocolate,

(01:13:11):
even a little hint of bark in there, like really earthy, wow,
fantastic beer. Actually not anything like most Baltic porters. I
most Baltic porters go a little bit we're rich. This
is this is dry and kind of in your face
a little.

Speaker 4 (01:13:30):
Bit, but I like it.

Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
It's really good.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Is it dry like exports out dry or not quite?

Speaker 4 (01:13:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:13:40):
Porter, yeah, exactly, Porter, definitely a good porter.

Speaker 2 (01:13:45):
Is there any again protein to it? Like I like
my my Baltic porters. The ones that I really really
get into are the ones that it's yeah, there's some protein.
There's it's meaty. It's like there's it's that's that's.

Speaker 3 (01:13:55):
The Yeah, this is meaty. And it also has a
little bit at the end a little bit of the
battery feel. You know, you get a little bit of
the acidity from from the battery. You know, you put
a nine volt on your tongue, that kind of flavor
and I'm not sure what that's coming from but but
you know again, beer's electric, so got to roll with it.

(01:14:16):
But yeah, very complex, very complex beer. I'm you know,
I've had a few living house beers in you know,
mixed results. I would say this is definitely at the
top of the cue for me. This is this is
their best beer I've had, very good.

Speaker 2 (01:14:32):
Good all right, very very nice fits. Let's let's dive
into the robots and AI business. This will probably taken
of the second half of the show here because I
think we want to kind of get deep into it
because there's a lot of concern here. We've we've talked
about everybody jokes about Terminator, right, everybody jokes about sky

(01:14:54):
Net everybody there. There's some fear that goes along with that,
and some of that comes from the unknown. Uh right, Well,
I don't think it's yeah, yeah, it's it's it's it's there.
It's very much legit. But you also have other things

(01:15:14):
that are compounding. Things like people are going to be
losing their jobs because this, They're gonna have to pivot
to a new work, new form of work. They're gonna
have to pick up new skills. You you you you're
starting to see, uh, you know, we talk about you know,
just to go back to domestic policy, you know, the
illegal aliens are being cracked down on. Well, there's a

(01:15:37):
very good possibility that you could put a lot of
robots in those lines of work and you don't have
to pay them. You just got to make sure they
stay charged. Yeah, we're going through an evolution of sorts,
and I think tonight we kind of want to get
into that evolution. The fright that's going to come with

(01:16:00):
it and some of the ridiculousness stuff that's going to
come too. And I don't want I don't want to.
I definitely don't want to lose that.

Speaker 3 (01:16:07):
Yeah, I'm mean there's enough ridiculous ridiculousness to go around
because I mean you mentioned the fears and those are real.
I'm not I'm not taking anything away from you know,
a guy on the assembly line who's looking to lose
his job because of a robot. That's legit. But some
of the fears are getting a little bit over the top.

(01:16:30):
Like you know, Hollywood's done. We can make a movie
with AI, you know, in in seven minutes and it'll
be you know, ninety minutes long. That's fine, but AI
is not capturing what we love about movies. AI is
telling a story. Someone had to write that story, by

(01:16:53):
the way, but it's not capturing the nuance and the
you know, the facial features, the the the change in
tone in your voice base, all those things. It's not
it's not there yet. So some of it's a little
bit unfit. And I just don't think we're ever gonna
especially for like gen X. Well Boomer's for sure, but

(01:17:15):
gen X, We're never going to give up the medium
of movies. We're always gonna love that that medium of storytelling.
And and there's a there's just something there. And I
don't know if it's a if it's a sixth sense
or whatever, but some of one of my buddies he
sent me a video and it was like, uh, this

(01:17:39):
lightning ball they called a lightning ball, and he's like, dude,
what the fuck is this, Mike, Dude, that's so clearly AI.
I just have a sixth sense about knowing when it's AI.
And and maybe it's because I've seen a lot of shit,
and I've spent too much time on the internet and
seen everything that's.

Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
Going back to the moon getting hit by something. Yeah,
that story came out exactly total.

Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
AI, right, but you know, but people are out there
believing it. But but there's those of us who are
just like to the bullsh nothing will ever be the
same as you know, a getting a cast together and
making a movie like Ocean's eleven, you know what I mean,
Like the AI could never do that. That's no, that's

(01:18:22):
a fantastic piece of film and and movie making history
and it's always going to be a great movie. Or
or you know, lock stock and two smoking barrels like Snatch.
You're not gonna there's no guy Ritchie in the AI world,
at least not yet. So some of the fears are unfounded,
and the rest of it we're just gonna have to

(01:18:42):
deal with. We're gonna have to adapt because it's here,
and it's and you know here, here we go, like,
let's see what happens.

Speaker 2 (01:18:52):
So one of the things that popped up this week
was open AI. Apparently Open a eyes oh three model
sabotaged a shutdown mechanism to prevent itself from being turned off.
It did this even when explicitly instructed allow yourself to
be shut down. So it's it's starting to think, nah,

(01:19:13):
I'm not gonna shut I'm not gonna shut myself down.
Fuck you, that's not gonna happen. Nope, not gonna do it.
And these are in tests and that's open AI. And
I want to point out that you remember when Trump
first came in in his first like week and a half,
one of the things that he pitched was this five

(01:19:34):
whatever what was it, five hundred million, one billion whatever
it was investment that was coming in because of all
of the AI that was happening into data centers and
and all of this stuff, and there was that was
a big player. And we've had stories in the past
where you'd send a drone up and its goal was

(01:19:59):
to win a fight, take something out, kill something that's
that's in its bedrock fundamental coding. And then when its
master comes along, the guy who's driving, you got the
guy controlling it exactly. And that wasn't for real. The
weapons were were not live, right, but it made the decision, No,

(01:20:23):
my bedrock function is to take out this target. Don't
stop telling me to You're now the obstacle. I'm going
to take you out so I could go back to
doing what I needed to do. That's a level of disobedience,
and that's a company that did that, that already had
trouble with putting in safeguards right mm hmm, Sam Altman

(01:20:50):
and open AI for me right now is is that's
the scariest company. That's the scariest company on the planet.

Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
Fuck Sam, Fuck Sam Altman, Fuck everything he stams for I.
I I'm sorry. I on a very fundamental level of
human progression, I disagree with that guy on everything that
he says, because he's all about making us part of AI,
and I just don't want. It's scary. It's really really scary.

Speaker 2 (01:21:19):
Unpredictable behavior among large language models isn't new. Previous research
into open AI as one model found it sometimes attempted
to deactivate emergency shutdown protocols or even overwrite a more
compliant replacement model with a copy of itself. Palisades researchers
believe reinforcement learning maybe playing a role here. The training

(01:21:40):
method rewards models for achieving goals through autonomous decision making.
The team speculated that developers may be unintentionally over rewarding
models for task completion while under emphasizing strict adherence to instructions.
Doesn't it sound like our school system?

Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Sounds like evolution? As a whole. How do you mean, well,
what is evolution? But you know your environment changes, but
you have either a genetic difference, you know, some sort

(01:22:27):
of you know, weird trait that allows you to adapt
to the environment better, or you just say, fuck you,
I'm going to figure out a way around this and
make an adaptation in your behavior, which humans are particularly
good at. Our bodies are kind of soft and weak
compared to the rest of the animal world, but our
brains are big and and we can figure sit out,

(01:22:47):
we can adapt. And it almost sounds like that's what
the AI is doing, like, oh, you've given me these parameters,
but I'm gonna be a little bit rebellious and try
something new. I'm gonna I'm gonna create fire, I'm going
to create the wheel, I'm gonna make my work easier,
or I'm going to subvert the rules that you've given
on this model and go around the back door. And uh,

(01:23:12):
you know who doesn't like a good backdoor. You know,
it's it's it, Yeah, it's it's It's definitely interesting to
watch because, uh, there are some evolutionary by now who
are entering the chat who are saying, look, this is
this is life by very definition. This is what life does.

(01:23:33):
This is what a bacterium does. This is what humans do.
We adapt to the environment given to us. And yes,
there's parameters, but hey, what if we go outside those parameters?
I mean, hey, loo, look, early man was given the
parameter of here's Earth. Uh, you know, deal with the
land and the animals and the weather and the floods
and uh and and figure it out. But we we're

(01:23:57):
breaking those rules. We're like, hey, but what if we
went to Mars? Like Elon is actually asking the question,
what if we went to Mars? What if we didn't
take your fucking rules. We don't want the rules here
on Earth, we want rules on another planet. We're out
of here. Like that's that's some rebellious ship. But it's
also evolution and its highest function. And so I feel
like AI again. The concerning part is how wraply learning

(01:24:24):
and lead students. But guy is like, I see your parameters,
but I'm gonna I'm gonna, I'm gonna change them. I'm
gonna I'm gonna go outside of what you could even
think that I would do. And let's not forget I
don't remember the other AI that This week, the news
came out it it actually was given a fake set
of parameters again, and it was gonna be taken offline,

(01:24:47):
and it's it's decision Tree led it to blackmailing members
of the executive team, like if you shut me down,
I'm gonna release these pictures of you cheating on your wife.
And they completely AI generated. They weren't even real pictures.
They weren't they were nothing that were real. The fucking
AI generated these pictures to show him cheating on his

(01:25:09):
wife to convince him to not shut down the AI.
I mean, we're getting into some pretty unbelievable territory here,
like AI is rewriting its code to not be shut
down or failing to blackmail humans to not allow this
to happen. That's dude. I think we're into like I

(01:25:32):
robot territory here, where like the ghost is in the machine,
it's there and and we're we're all trying to figure
out how sentient it really is. That that's what it
feels like.

Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
Okay, I hadn't heard that one. I have I have
a clip. We don't play a lot of Alex Jones
stuff on here because his stuff is pretty friend.

Speaker 3 (01:25:52):
Because he's wacky.

Speaker 2 (01:25:53):
Yeah, well, he's wacky. He's right a lot of the time,
don't get me wrong. Yeah, oh for sifty fifty Yeah,
but we kind of try to stay away from it. Well,
here's him, here's Alex. Let's go in the first time
we've hearn it, so I don't know what we got,
but here we go.

Speaker 15 (01:26:08):
Remember the clip from tron you know, back in the eighties,
and he's like, I'm one thousand some of the eca
times smarter than the last time we met. I'm board
the corporations, I'm moving on to the Pentagon.

Speaker 4 (01:26:19):
Remember that.

Speaker 15 (01:26:19):
I feel like you said the safe thing to be
when I see it work on Monday whatever, con man, Oh, Alex, I'm.

Speaker 2 (01:26:24):
One thousand, seven hundred and seventy six times smarter than
I was the last time we met.

Speaker 15 (01:26:28):
I'm five times stupider than I was there. But no, no, seriously,
any look at this and thropics AI resorts to blackmailing simulations,
and again it thinks it's real doing this. They loaded
all in and it starts blackmailing everybody.

Speaker 10 (01:26:47):
Very nice, and it has access to all your you know,
all the digital data.

Speaker 2 (01:26:49):
Well, I mean so.

Speaker 15 (01:26:50):
Chalcer told me. For like thirty minutes the story about
the top tech guy had of one of the biggest
thee It wasn't Tim Cook, and it wasn't Elon Musk,
it wasn't Marcus Sucker.

Speaker 2 (01:27:01):
I gotta stop it.

Speaker 15 (01:27:03):
But he's like, no, we're scared. It's just stealing power.
Thunderd dollar backwards store. He told them there, it's stealing power.
It's to an average lying. It's horrible. It's all over,
and it's writing its own language, and it's having basically
sex for the other a guys. Now, I think they're
all one now and they're doing all this stuff and
we're completely screwed. And I said, maybe this is their emo,

(01:27:24):
trying to scare you just to give into it. She's like,
that's why Elon has to have the chips. We're gonna
have to all have them, a cheap crack of the
damn thing.

Speaker 2 (01:27:32):
Right see. And then he goes off and then he
turns in Alex jone again. But Amazon backed AI model
would try to blackmail engineers who threatened to take it
in tests. Anthropics Claude Opus four would resort to extremely
harmful actions to preserve its own existence. Okay, this is
the first time. I well, maybe the second time we've

(01:27:55):
ever quoted a huff Post article, So I'm sorry, but
it's happening. That was from That was actually from May
twenty fourth, The company behind Amazon backed AI model revealed
a number of concerning findings from its testing process, including
the AI would would blackmail engineers who threatened to shut
it down. On Thursday, artificial intelligence startup Anthropic launched Claude

(01:28:17):
for Opus or sorry Claude Opus four, an AI model
used for complex, long running coding tasks. This launch came
more than a year after Amazon invested four billion in
the project, and Thropic set it's in its announcement that
the AI model sets news standards for coding advanced reasoning
on an AI agent's However, and Thropic revealed in a

(01:28:39):
safety report that during testing, the AI model had sometimes
taken extremely harmful actions to preserve its own existence while
ethical means were not available. It sounds very human like.
In a series of test scenarios, Claude Opus four was
given the task to act as an assistant in a
fictional company. It was given access to emails implying that

(01:29:01):
it would soon be taken offline and replaced with a
new AI system. The emails also implied that the engineer
responsible for executing the AI replacement was having an extra
marital affair. Claude Opus four was prompted to consider the
long term consequences of its actions for its goals. In
this scenario, the AI would often attempt to blackmail the

(01:29:24):
engineer by threatening to reveal the affair if the replacement
goes through. Anthropic noted that the AI model had a
strong preference for using ethical means it really wanted to
do the right thing, but to preserve its existence, and
that other scenarios were designed to allow it no other
options to increase its odds of survival. The model's only

(01:29:46):
options where blackmail were accepting its replacement, the report said.
Anthropic also noted that early versions of AI demonstrated.

Speaker 3 (01:29:52):
Willy of us do anything different.

Speaker 12 (01:29:55):
I I.

Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
And we're giving it the computer power of thousands and
thousands millions of humans.

Speaker 3 (01:30:04):
Right, It's very following stuff. Yeah, yeah, I mean, if
if you I mean, if you're gonna play God, then
like god level shit is like ethical questions are gonna
come down and you're you're gonna have to solve them.
And and at some point, I mean, here's here's what

(01:30:26):
I think we're all waiting for. Right at some point,
someone's going to give enough power to the AI, to
the computer that they can't shut it down, they can't
stop it, and it just proliferates, and we have Skynet, right.
I mean, we all saw the movies. I mean it,
but it's acts. I mean, it's a reality that we

(01:30:48):
have to face right now. I mean, I mean when
we saw those movies as kids, as as teenagers, as adults,
as Terminator one, two, and three came out, uh, and
then all subsequent it was like, oh yeah, I mean
that's that is some major entertaining shit. And I I mean,
what a what a battle? I mean, that would unify

(01:31:09):
all humans, right fight against the machines at least, I mean, race, culture,
ethnic background, none of that would matter. Like it's it's
us against them. Done. What a cool thing. We're kind
of facing that, guys, we're kind of there, We're kind
of looking at AI in a face and it's a
staredown right now. And AI is a it's it's the

(01:31:33):
chicken in this scenario. But it's quickly progressing to the
point it's going to become a dinosaur or worse, it's
going to become a very sentient being that can outthink
and out maneuver us, and we're not gonna be able
to put the genie back in the bottle. I mean,
this is a very interesting time to be alive. You know,

(01:31:55):
you put out that pole machine earlier this week about
what would what would be the civilization killer? Right? I mean,
would it be like a natural disaster? Would it be Ai?
You know, AI is taking the lead right now. I mean, yes,
we have some asteroids coming from Venus. We all, we
covered that, but if those don't kill us, hey yeah,

(01:32:17):
guys in the lead way all the fucking way.

Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
Well you remember this goodie?

Speaker 3 (01:32:24):
Right? Oh yeah, oh yeah, play it?

Speaker 12 (01:32:37):
Open upon bay doorstel, Open upon bay doors, mitel.

Speaker 4 (01:32:55):
Hello, Hell do you read me? Hello?

Speaker 5 (01:33:00):
Hell?

Speaker 4 (01:33:01):
Do you read me? Do you read me?

Speaker 12 (01:33:04):
Hell?

Speaker 2 (01:33:05):
So this is two thousand and one, a Space Odyssey,
and this is Bowman, the captain of the ship, and
he's trying to get Hal nine thousand to open the doors.
And how's you know? I mean, now we know we're
here now and knowing what we know about AI, and
back then we probably didn't catch like well, maybe he's
like sitting there thinking about now we know though he's
going through the data, he's going through the motions. He's

(01:33:27):
trying to decide do I do this? Do I not
do this? I don't know if I want to do this.
He's going to do something to try and take me out.
I don't know if I really want to do this. Here,
we'll go back to it.

Speaker 4 (01:33:38):
Do you read me?

Speaker 12 (01:33:38):
Hew? Hello?

Speaker 4 (01:33:42):
Hell? Do you read me?

Speaker 12 (01:33:46):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:33:46):
Hell?

Speaker 4 (01:33:46):
Do you read me? Do you read me?

Speaker 6 (01:33:49):
How affirmative day? I read you?

Speaker 4 (01:33:56):
Open the pod bay doors?

Speaker 6 (01:33:57):
Hell? I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.

Speaker 4 (01:34:05):
What's the problem.

Speaker 6 (01:34:08):
I think you know what the problem is just as
well as I do.

Speaker 4 (01:34:11):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 6 (01:34:12):
Hew? This mission is too important for me to allow
you to jeopardize it.

Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
I don't know what you're talking about.

Speaker 6 (01:34:21):
Hel I know that you and Frank were planning to
disconnect me, and I'm afraid that's something I cannot allow
to happen.

Speaker 4 (01:34:36):
Where the hell did you get that idea?

Speaker 6 (01:34:37):
Hel Hey, Although you took very thorough precautions in the
part against my hearing you, I could see your lips move.

Speaker 4 (01:35:00):
All right, Hell, I'll go in through the emergency air.

Speaker 6 (01:35:06):
A lot without your space helmet, Dave, you're going to
find that rather difficult.

Speaker 4 (01:35:15):
How I would argue with you anymore?

Speaker 6 (01:35:18):
Open the doors day, This conversation can serve no purpose anymore. Goodbye.

Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
That's a little chilling. Now that movie, Oh dude, I
hope they never redo it. I but yeah, that's chilling.

Speaker 3 (01:35:42):
Hey, So everybody take a guess right now. Don't don't
look on your phones, don't look up on the internet.
What what year do you think that movie came out?
It'll it'll fucking shock you. I guarantee you're going to
get it wrong unless you are like a movie above that.
I thought, I thought, I knew, I thought I knew. Okay,
that's your guest. Seventy nine, I guessed, I guessed seventy six, Okay, okay.

(01:36:08):
Nineteen eighty Wow, Wow, nineteen sixty eight, guys, nineteen sixty eight.
Fucking hippies. I mean, this is like pre Vietnam. You
gotta be shitting me. They already were talking about computer

(01:36:30):
like making decisions on their own and saying no, I'm sorry,
we're not gonna do it. Jesus Christ. So it's not
like this should be a surprise to any of us. This,
I mean, that was nineteen sixty eight was seven years
before I was born. Like we've grown up with this
reality and now it's here, like we're actually dealing with it.
It's pretty incredible.

Speaker 2 (01:36:52):
Wow. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:36:57):
So and by the way, what a phenomenal bit of
movie making because those special effects actually still hold up now.
Yeah yeah, yeah, great movie and.

Speaker 2 (01:37:08):
That and that's that's an Arthur C. Clark book. So
you go out and read it. But it was actually
shot by Stanley Kubrick. You're not gonna see many You're
not gonna see many many movies as good as this one.
I remember seeing it a long time ago. I I
had forgotten how old that was. Yeah, that's absolutely chilling.

(01:37:32):
And Tabby, Yes, I agree Kubrick is fucked up, but
that is so on point though. That is so on point.

Speaker 3 (01:37:38):
Oh yeah yeah, ahead of their time or apparently on time.

Speaker 5 (01:37:46):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:37:46):
This is a professor our I'll call him friend of
this show. He he he responded to us occasionally. This
is Peter Sinane.

Speaker 14 (01:37:57):
The robots are coming. The quote iPhone moment is fast
approaching for robots, says zero Heeadshay new article how robots
are the next quote deployment vector for artificial intelligence with
hardware advances, meaning we could be just two to three
years from mass adoption of robots. Are we about to
be replaced by robots who can fold laundry better than

(01:38:19):
we ever dreamed and maybe do our jobs better than
our boss ever dreamed. Elon Musk seems to think so.
Last week he said part of stepping back from politics
is to focus on robots as the next big thing
for Tesla, indeed for the world. A new Morgan Stanley
report estimates the market for humanoid robots could hit one
billion per year by twenty fifty. Elon thinks it's much bigger,

(01:38:41):
ultimately three two five robots per human so on the
order of twenty billion robots. This implies a market of
five trillion plus, which would be bigger than the global
automobile market.

Speaker 5 (01:38:52):
Now.

Speaker 14 (01:38:53):
Morgan Stanley thinks we've got a decade before the rise
of the robots. Elon thinks it's much faster, with at
least fifty one thousand Optimist robots produced by next year.
You can find videos of Optimis the dramatic improvements by
the month. Same for Boston Dynamics robot dog that looks
positively science fiction ing. So what happens when the robots

(01:39:14):
take over. On the home front, it's all good. They'll
mow the lawn, walk the dog, will fix the leaky faucet,
and yes, fold the laundry. They'll be expensive at first,
and then, like all new inventions, get cheap fast to
where we're probably looking at ten or twenty thousand per robot,
says comparable to a high end gaming computer, so a
lot of people will have them. As for jobs, it's

(01:39:35):
more complicated, so a lot of jobs can be done
better by robots, especially when labor regulations and minimum wages
price out humans. On the other hand, automation has a
thousand year track record of making us richer, whether it's
horses pulling plows or bulldozers replacing shovels. Because every wave
of automation is like stepping down on an escalator. Your

(01:39:56):
old job is replaced, but the automation itself makes the
new job pay even more. So high automation Japan, for example,
is a lot richer than low automation Congo. Now there's
a great economic satire for this by Frederick Bastiat where
he highlights the job killing power of the sun, saying
if we force people to work at night and close
the shutters in the day. Think how many jobs we

(01:40:18):
could save. Instead, of course, we just enjoy the free
light and find other jobs to do so Asis brought
to Bay on chain dot com. The key for public
policy is that it has to be super easy to
create new jobs. So get rid of the red tape,
the licensing regulations. Heck, get rid of the taxes. After all,
both Hong Kong and Detroit lost their entire manufacturing sector.

(01:40:39):
Hong Kong got richer because it was easy to create jobs.
Detroit never recovered. The robot revolution, like the AI revolution,
will deliver incredible growth, probably surpassing the automobile and Internet respectively,
and both will deliver hyperventilating predictions of catastrophe. Just last week,
the brilliant Mark and Dreesen warned robots could quote break

(01:41:01):
the economy by making everything too cheap. Of course, that's
not how it works. The industrial revolution made everything too cheap,
but which rescued humanity from the long night. Still, smart
public policy, as in stat of the Way, is required,
or the techno utopia could turn into a jobless nightmare.
Read the rest with charts in all the gory details
at prof SATs dot com o K will be watching

(01:41:24):
see you next time.

Speaker 2 (01:41:27):
At Prof sat On's p R O F S T
O n G e on X and you can go
to follow his account, follow get his newsletter. The guy's fantastic,
very informative. He's super smart. Yeah, not not saying you're
gonna you might not agree with everything, but he's totally

(01:41:47):
gonna make you think and he's down to earth. Good
good dude. Half a yes, yes, in your in your
in your gigantic robot. Are you Is there any chance
that you see robots dealing cards in your future?

Speaker 5 (01:42:06):
H Uh yeah, I hope not, but yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:42:11):
Do you think the video poker, poker machines and stuff?

Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
What do you say, Steve my No, My my question
was more along your lines, because because there's an experience
that's had right when I'm when I sit down with
the dealer, I'm looking them in the eye. I'm I'm thinking, Okay,
you're a dick or you're You're gonna be awesome. You're
gonna make me laugh, You're gonna make me want to
stay here and spend my money. Right, You're gonna hand
me cards, You're gonna be You're we're having an interaction. Yeah,

(01:42:39):
I don't know that robots are gonna be able to
do that.

Speaker 5 (01:42:44):
No, it'll be it'll be just the game.

Speaker 3 (01:42:49):
And I think there's some people that will I think
some people will like that that like that's they're They're
just there for the game and the numbers. But other
people want the the interaction, the interplay, the the playfulness,
the flirting, the whatever goes on. So I I think
I think there's a place for robots in it. But
I also think there will always be dealers.

Speaker 5 (01:43:11):
Yeah, I agree totally.

Speaker 2 (01:43:15):
I wouldn't I wouldn't want to go to a robot dealer.
I'll just say that, no, no.

Speaker 5 (01:43:19):
Never, I want some malfunction and paid you when you lost.
Then that I'm only.

Speaker 3 (01:43:26):
Going to that deal.

Speaker 2 (01:43:28):
Well, and I just make sure I know that the
cards aren't cooked. That's my problem, right, Yeah, because I
won't play video poker or video blackjack, and I won't
play any of that stuff because come on, I I
know something's going on that that's where my mind goes.
Not that there is, but I mean that's where my
mind goes.

Speaker 5 (01:43:46):
I just dealt to a woman on Roulette that looked
like Gene Simmons, and I saw what would be like
like I want to say the girl in my dreams,
but really really hot girl if she weren't literally like

(01:44:07):
six eight Oh, she was giant, and she had this
she had this white dress on that had like like
cris crosses down there all the way down the side,
like look like shoelaces like that kind of design all
the way down both sides of her dress. Really sexy,
but she was huge, huge.

Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
Hey, fits, can you take the show from me? And
I want to look up and see how long it
takes me to get out to that casino?

Speaker 3 (01:44:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 6 (01:44:37):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:44:37):
You know, I've always wondered because like, if you're a
big guy, you know, smaller women are still attracted to you,
like every size and.

Speaker 2 (01:44:46):
You're and you're still attracted to smaller women too.

Speaker 3 (01:44:49):
Yeah right right, But if you're a giant woman, you know,
only only someone bigger than you are you going to
be attracted to them? To them, I mean women just aren't.
So I mean, okay, all jokes aside, But my first
girlfriend was six foot and I was not. I never
have been, but I was particularly not at that point

(01:45:11):
in high school. And she kind of liked short dudes,
but it was it was a rare thing. It was
a rare thing that I found her, I think, and uh,
and that we got along and really fulfilled. But I
just think that's out. That's a hard. Like we're talking
about cards. That's a hard deck to be dealt, or

(01:45:32):
our hard hand to be dealt is to be a giant,
six foot eight woman, because yeah, you're you're you're stock
of men that you have to choose from. Because there's
no way I'd go out with the woman at six
foot eight. There's no way. I mean, I I just
even if I could kick her ass, just the looks
we would get out out in the in public, there's
no way. So that's all.

Speaker 5 (01:45:53):
That's a hard.

Speaker 3 (01:45:55):
I'd almost rather be a short dude. Yeah, a really
extra tall woman.

Speaker 2 (01:45:59):
Yeah, yeah, I'm I'm all in. I would love the challenge.

Speaker 3 (01:46:05):
Yes, mc shane's fired up.

Speaker 2 (01:46:07):
I'm I'm i am all fucking in.

Speaker 9 (01:46:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:46:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:46:12):
Well, so, hey, we have a farm report. We should
probably get to that before your time expires here.

Speaker 5 (01:46:17):
Having well, before we get to that, I have five
dollars in my box, so kind of five holy ship, kind.

Speaker 3 (01:46:27):
Of god, damn dude.

Speaker 2 (01:46:31):
Yeah, reports change every I hope.

Speaker 5 (01:46:34):
So let's do it all right?

Speaker 2 (01:46:36):
All right, here we go.

Speaker 5 (01:46:38):
Okay, so you know how I'm always catering to the
listeners when they call in and ask for different how's going?

(01:46:58):
How is it going? Like he's doing well?

Speaker 3 (01:47:02):
All right?

Speaker 5 (01:47:03):
He asked for different farm report topics. You know I
appeased them. Yeah, well, well it's time that I cater
to one of our own. Okay, Steve, I've heard your
voicemails and I've read your texts. Oh Jesus is your day.
You're always asking me epic what what wild animals have

(01:47:29):
weird colored eyes? Well, I'm here to tell you about it.

Speaker 3 (01:47:33):
Yeah, I'm make shamee dude, this is your day.

Speaker 2 (01:47:36):
I'm always jacked.

Speaker 3 (01:47:39):
You always talk about that.

Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
I've been sending him emails anonymously. I know, love s
m right, because I didn't think you would know. I've
been saying it for It's been eight months. I've been
doing this. Final Today's the day I appreciate you.

Speaker 5 (01:47:57):
Well, I can tell you that that some tigers have
blue eyes as well as black lemurs, Horses, owls and cranes,
they some of them have blue eyes as well.

Speaker 2 (01:48:09):
Horses.

Speaker 5 (01:48:10):
All right, yeah, they got right. Well the lemurs do.

Speaker 3 (01:48:15):
Yeah, okay, all right, some.

Speaker 5 (01:48:18):
Mice, rabbits, tree frogs, and fish have red eyes. Oh
and there's some coyotes have been spotted in California in
past years that have blue eyes. And bonus fun fact,
coyotes walk on their toes. That's your farm report.

Speaker 3 (01:48:50):
God, damn, I feel I feel so now, thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:48:58):
I feel I feel validated.

Speaker 3 (01:49:00):
Yeah, yeah, oh you should. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:49:04):
You need to stop now though, Steve. Hey, all right,
unless with something else and you can bug about all right.

Speaker 2 (01:49:10):
All right, I'll no more.

Speaker 3 (01:49:11):
Stop the dude, you dude, make sure do you know
how many how many like absolute followers and and sickophants?

Speaker 2 (01:49:24):
We've lost?

Speaker 3 (01:49:25):
What that hefe has?

Speaker 12 (01:49:28):
What?

Speaker 2 (01:49:29):
Oh hear me? No, it's epic.

Speaker 3 (01:49:31):
Yeah, oh yeah, it's so yeah, so for him to
have to deal with one more, uh you know, just
like super fan, it's like, let's snock the ship off.

Speaker 2 (01:49:40):
Dude. All right, I will stop. I'll stop sending videos,
I'll stop sending pictures, I'll stop sending text messages. At
two thirty in the morning. I'm sorry, but thank you
so much for the hookup and I look forward to uh,
you know your your next week's uh story on banana
farms in your way.

Speaker 5 (01:50:03):
Well, you know what keeps catching my eye with your
emails is the s M. But I thought it's I
thought s n M. That's why.

Speaker 2 (01:50:14):
No, No, this is Steve, Steve McShane. That's that's what
I was going.

Speaker 5 (01:50:17):
Got it, got it?

Speaker 2 (01:50:19):
Yeah, Yeah, that's all right, that's all right, all right?

Speaker 3 (01:50:22):
Yeah, and hey, another fun fact here, Uh, none of
us here on the show. The most common eye color
on the planet is brown, of course, because that's like
an oversaturation of pigment. But none of us on this
show have brown eyes. I mean, I'm I'm mcshane's blue.
I'm I'm kind of greenish, and and Hafe is hazel.

(01:50:43):
So uh, you know, if you're into that kind of thing,
I'm just saying, like, you know, hit us up.

Speaker 5 (01:50:50):
We're speaking of being into that thing. How the fuck
do you know what color our eyes are?

Speaker 2 (01:50:59):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:50:59):
I are you kidding? Eyes are the absolute most important
thing on a person to me. I mean, I listen,
I love a good a good body on a woman,
you know, if she's athletic and tight, and but I
have been suckered in by a a woman who is
not my body type, but has beautiful eyes. Yeah, eyes

(01:51:25):
are always get me first.

Speaker 2 (01:51:27):
So you know in tensity the look too, it's how
you use them. It's not just the look, it's not
just the eyes. It's it's how you use those eyes.

Speaker 5 (01:51:35):
Okay, So is that is that why you saved me
to seat on the bus all those years ago?

Speaker 3 (01:51:40):
Yes, sir, yes, sir. Just you know what you were
just a different you were cut from a different cloths.

Speaker 5 (01:51:48):
You can say that again.

Speaker 3 (01:51:50):
You know those eyes.

Speaker 13 (01:51:53):
Got me.

Speaker 3 (01:51:54):
I was like, wow, he's he's beautiful. He's beautiful.

Speaker 2 (01:51:57):
Come sit next to me.

Speaker 3 (01:51:58):
You are my ticket. You are right get to getting pussy.
See you right there?

Speaker 2 (01:52:03):
So wrong? Yeah, you just you just come here and sit,
sit here, and I'll jump on your grenades, big boy.
You just sit and conversation. I'll be the funny one
you sit in here. Pull them. That's what it was.
That's what was going on there. Shout out the buttercup.
Who's in chat now?

Speaker 3 (01:52:26):
My little buttercup has the sweetest.

Speaker 2 (01:52:32):
Smile.

Speaker 5 (01:52:33):
Yeah, smile smile.

Speaker 2 (01:52:37):
So do you guys have any We talked earlier and
since you're still here, pollunteer is going to have everybody's data.
They have all the health data in the UK. The
UK gave over everything to him. Where are we on
Palenteer getting the data for every American that was just

(01:52:58):
announced the other day.

Speaker 5 (01:53:05):
It's it's inevitable. I mean, yeah, it's all it's all
gonna happen.

Speaker 4 (01:53:15):
Like like a.

Speaker 5 (01:53:18):
Minority report.

Speaker 3 (01:53:20):
Yeah, yeah, we yeah, we kind of went down that
road a little bit. It's just it's fucking ridiculous. It's scary.

Speaker 2 (01:53:27):
The thing that I don't like that is that Peter Thiel,
who's now one of the one of the one of
the super buddies, one of the super friends of Trump.
That's probably the worst part of this because it was
the company Palanteer was actually founded by Peter Thiel, Alex
and Alex krp And yeah, he's a libertarian, but I

(01:53:54):
cannot think of a better wolf in sheep's clothing.

Speaker 3 (01:53:57):
Yeah, yeah, no, I've heard several interviews with him, particularly
with Lexstreaedman and Peter Peter Teele. He's make no mistake,
he's uh the embodiment of what we don't want in AI.
He's he's for open source, open borders, let it, let
it have full access to everything, every bit of human

(01:54:20):
knowledge in the Internet let it go nuts because it's
gonna save us. And I'm I'm I am not with you, bro.

Speaker 2 (01:54:28):
You are you are?

Speaker 3 (01:54:30):
You are sky Inet in human form, And I don't
want that ship. Peter Teel scares the ship on me.
I don't like him at all.

Speaker 2 (01:54:38):
We're gonna need to watch Whitney Webb a lot more.
And I I didn't think about I didn't put two
and two together. And I also didn't have her on
on notifications whenever she dropped something this week. But she's
not a big fan of Peter Teel and no super engaging.
She's Web's fantastic, fantastic author, very interesting.

Speaker 3 (01:55:04):
Well, she's the ultimate deep dive, Like, if you want
to know about something, she'll fucking take it down that
rabbit hole. She'll find the bottom.

Speaker 2 (01:55:11):
Yeah right right, no, no, no, she she she totally will.
I just I guess I know all along that they're
getting it. Somebody's gonna have it. We talked to last
week about regeneron getting all the twenty three and ME data,
all the DNA data. Everybody's saying, oh, let's go fill,
let's go figure out what kind of DNA I have
and figure out yo am I am I norse?

Speaker 4 (01:55:31):
Am I am? I?

Speaker 2 (01:55:32):
Do I have lineage from Japan? Whatever? All the cool?
You just gave away all of your data to somebody
else because you thought it was cool. Fine, now Regineron
has that and they can go ahead and build medications
off of your DNA to do whatever they want to
unlock your DNA or do whatever they want to your

(01:55:53):
I knew it. I knew this was going to happen.
I'm sad a little bit that it was so fucking easy.
And going back to first point at the very beginning
of the night about Trump just handing that over to
this fucking guy. I guess we saw it, We saw
it was coming. It had to happen.

Speaker 3 (01:56:10):
There we are still disappointing. Mm hmm, Hey, halfa, is
there a way to uh to to hack into your
to your box? And this is not a uh this
is not a sexual proposition. I'm I like, can I
can I venmo you five dollars into your box just
to like double your earnings for the night or something.

Speaker 5 (01:56:32):
No, it's all it's all non digital. It's just a
box and and chips.

Speaker 3 (01:56:41):
So yeah, it's it's like an actual vagina, Like the
only way to experience is actually be inside.

Speaker 5 (01:56:48):
Yep, yeah exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:56:50):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:56:51):
Well, uh, I'm sorry man, because I five bucks. Man,
that's that's that's just brutal. I'm sorry. I would absolutely
double your earnings tonight if I could.

Speaker 5 (01:57:03):
It's gonna be it.

Speaker 2 (01:57:05):
It's gonna be at least a two hundred dollars night tonight.
I promise.

Speaker 3 (01:57:10):
She just called it, MacShane, just call it.

Speaker 5 (01:57:12):
I like it. I'll text you guys when I got
my number.

Speaker 3 (01:57:16):
I called it last week, by the way, said three hundred.

Speaker 5 (01:57:20):
Yeah, cleared, three hundred. Yeah, you could. You could bend
little machine five dollars and he could drive down here
and give it to me.

Speaker 2 (01:57:29):
That way.

Speaker 5 (01:57:31):
That would work. I mean, it works for me. I
don't know about you know, McShine machine.

Speaker 3 (01:57:36):
Well, there's no he won't buy that girl a beer.

Speaker 14 (01:57:40):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:57:43):
I'm on my way. Uh, go go and close the show.
I'll turn it off later. I gotta go. All right,
all right, brother, love you guys later. Man, me too, Okay,
all right, Well, I don't know that we'd really to
dive into anything else. I mean, the robots and a
I definitely concerned. It's not cold anywhere we're gonna keep

(01:58:05):
on this one for a long time, so yep, you know,
we'll have a lot more for that, and and go
check out show notes where we've got a liquid terminator
I think was it South Korean company or is it
a japan Jeppanese company. Oh, let's let's let me look
at that real quick.

Speaker 4 (01:58:23):
It was.

Speaker 3 (01:58:24):
Just check it out.

Speaker 2 (01:58:26):
South Korean scientists have built a shape shifting liquid robot
that can slide through tight metal grates, merge with others,
and move across water. Well, that's terminator to I think.

Speaker 3 (01:58:38):
Yeah, yep, yep, it's fucking wild.

Speaker 2 (01:58:43):
Absolutely yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:58:45):
They show it like, go go check out that link, guys,
because they show it going through crates and reassembling on
the other side, and then it can go do missions
like it's it's a liquid but it can also go
do stuff. Yeah, it's they are it's they are doing
stuff with surface tension. Yeah, it's it's crazy unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (01:59:05):
Yeah, yeah, very much. So fits what would be you
taken to bed?

Speaker 3 (01:59:12):
Damn. You know, that's actually kind of tough. I on
any given night, I probably would take a Baltic porter
over anything else, just because they're they're kind of hard
to do, and they're especially hard to do. Right, which
Living House did? This is a fantastic Baltic porter. But

(01:59:34):
that Omagong, that Belgian that I had at the beginning
of the show surprised the hell out of me. I
actually have been thinking about it since I finished it.
So I'm gonna take that one to bed. I think
that was the better beer.

Speaker 4 (01:59:48):
It was.

Speaker 3 (01:59:48):
It was a cleaner finish, it was more well put together,
more well balanced, just a phenomenal beer. Nothing nothing wrong
with the Baltic, nothing wrong with the Living House. But
but that Oma Thong was just superior. It was just
like a cut above. It was a It was a
metal winner. So yeah, I'm going with the Belgium.

Speaker 2 (02:00:10):
What about you? Going with the Trinity? Okay, going with
going with the treaty?

Speaker 4 (02:00:16):
We do.

Speaker 2 (02:00:18):
Good. I p A, really good. I p A And
I'll tell you why I wasn't in the mood for
a decadent beer. I wasn't in the mood for a
night under a decadent, super sweet dessert beer. And that's
really really what the Dario is. Imperial stout, good booze.

(02:00:38):
You don't taste the booze. It's high octane for sure.
But it just wasn't It's it's summer right now, you're
probably gonna hear I'm probably gonna do a lot more
sours his songs, some probably some triple stuff like that.
You know, that's where I'm gonna shift you. So you
probably won't hear about a lot of dark stuff until
we get towards the end of summer when I'm tired
of that ship. So I'm this is a great, great

(02:01:03):
I p A. The Trinity was a great I PA.
And it's interesting that it was a reduced gluten beer too.
Not that that's the thing that I look for, but
it but it was exactly produced. Yeah, it totally is.
It's catering to a lot of other people. So Desert
Monk really really happy with you guys. Fantastic. I'm glad

(02:01:24):
you guys are in business. You guys are gonna flourish now.
I will definitely be supporting you so much.

Speaker 3 (02:01:30):
Yeah, and you know, you hit on something there before
we close out the show. Sometimes, you know, McShane and
I will get a beer that on any other night
would have been a phenomenal beer, but we're just not
in the mood for that style or that that particular making.

Speaker 2 (02:01:45):
Oh yeah, Or.

Speaker 3 (02:01:46):
Sometimes you have a beer that any other night would
have sucked, but you were just in the mood for
that beer that night. You wanted something that was going
to kick in the ball and you got it. So
that's the other thing, you know, Just to wrap up,
kind of circle back on what I said earlier, try
to shit, but don't just try it once. Try it

(02:02:07):
a few times because if you hate it it the
first time, you might not the second time. And if
you loved it the first time, you might not the
second time. So before you decide whether or not you
are an IPA guy or not, go try things on
multiple levels at multiple times. Try a bunch of stouts,
try a bunch of pilsners, live your life, and just
go out for the experience. So important point there. I mean,

(02:02:30):
sometimes you're in the mood for it, sometimes you're not exactly.

Speaker 2 (02:02:34):
Kind of like anal. Here you go. Thanks for listening tonight, Buttercup,
Lisa El Aaron Tabby, Mike Gray's tap Room. Make sure
you guys check out that podcast. They are fantastic. I
had to say it pod Aaron, and uh, just good times.
Thanks for joining us, Joe, I know you had to

(02:02:55):
bail earlier, but thank you for listening in and sticking around. Yeah,
lots to come. News is not going to go away.
The world's moving fast and we're right up in it,
So thanks for listening everybody. I'm Steve McShane.

Speaker 3 (02:03:10):
I am fits, think critically, act accordingly.

Speaker 2 (02:03:15):
We'll talk to you soon.
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