Episode Transcript
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Ah yes, Welcome to the KentuckyX Files Season four. Young Masters.
Dennis Mays, Just Gibbs, andTyler Stewart are expecting you. If you
will follow me to the fire andon your way, subscribe to our YouTube
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channel, Spotify or wherever you getyour podcasts. Also visit us at www
dot ky x files dot com.I now leave you to the Young Masters.
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I think so, I think Iremember reading that, but because we
live in the era we live,and it's hard to tell what was a
real article and what was the onion? Uh okay, so it was a
little different. It was a Koreancouple. They've become obsessed with raising a
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virtual baby, and their actual infantstarved to death. That's not the one
I read. That's fucked up though, Yeah, so it was just pretty
fucked up. Uh okay, Iget what the fuck? How long does
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it take a person to starve todeath? And I don't know if it's
different for a smaller child, ifit's shorter, longer, or whatever.
A small child won't take long ababy, especially because well because you've got
to think that all all of thebaby's internals, like the brain, lungs,
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everything, they're all in development.They're in a state of developing.
So the caloric need has to bekind of a steady flow because if one
thing goes wrong, everything goes wrong. That's why like SIDS you've heard of,
like sudden sudden infant death syndrome.One little thing goes wrong, everything's
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wrong. You know, if ifif the heart, if there's a problem
in the heart, you know,oxygen doesn't get to the brain. Things
like that, it's just gone.Yeah, that's why they like if they
have a baby in you know,at risk at the hospital, that's why
they make such a big deal ofit, you know. So to me,
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honestly, I would think that itcouldn't take more than a couple of
days at like tops, you know. And what's bad is is I hate
to say it, but only halfof that would have been noticeable. The
first half would have been noticeable whenthe baby was calling for food, calling
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for you know, need, andthen eventually the energy would be gone and
it wouldn't the baby wouldn't even beable to call out anymore. So but
that that this is this is fuckedup. But this is like, this
is where we're headed, you know, this is what we're like, this
is a fucked up topic to talkabout, but yeah, like it needs
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to be talked about, not onlythe neglect that somebody's gonna like, it's
showing that somebody's out there that's inthat mindset that we'll neglect the room child
because of this. Got to getthat dopamine fixed, man, the top
of that, if we start allowingOkay, I really believe that there's probably
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gonna be laws about wearing this shitoutside. So because there's going to be
deaths, people are going to walkout in the traffic. Uh, like
they're going to walk off a ledgelike that's yeah, that's definitely gonna happen.
Do you know that it's recommended thatyou're not supposed to spend more than
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fifteen minutes in VR? I couldbelieve that. I could totally. Yeah,
I could see that, right,I've Okay, there's a there's a
game that I like called The NoMan's Sky. I love this game.
Right, you can play it withfriends or by yourself, it doesn't matter.
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It's more fun to play with friends, you know, but you can
play it in VR, and itis to It's ridiculous and grossing because I
love science fiction, but I alsolove hard science. It procedurally generates planets
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and ecosystems. You can put yourVR helmet on, get your controllers,
and you can climb into a ship. Shut the door, and you can
sit there and start your ship.And then you can sit there and actually
fly, and you can look outyour window at things, and you can
land and go explore. And Ihave personally played multiple hours in VR playing
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that game, exploring planets, andI can tell you that when you're done,
you take off the helmet, ittakes a minute two what's the right
word here to kind of like comeback to like okay, yeah, reacclimate
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because you're look what your sense asthey're telling you, what you're feeling in
NVR is is complete immersion, youknow. And I would always put on
studio headphones and just lock out alloutside noise and just be in the game,
you know, which is really cool. It's it's awesome because it's like
a little vacation from reality. Butthe complete immersion, you know, like
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the full on denial of your youknow, actual environment. You know,
I can see it. You know. There was a Korean guy that played
StarCraft for fifty hours straight right inthe middle of that session, he murdered
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his mother because she was bitching athim for playing too much games. He
gets up and he goes down thestreet after he got rid of her.
After he killed her, he goesdown the street to an internet cafe,
sits down, and continues playing allthe way up till he had a fucking
heart attack and died. I don'tthink StarCraft is that great of a game,
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Sue me, Right, it's cool, but I don't know if it's
murder someone and have a heart attackcool. You know, I actually can't
think of a game that great Iwould be willing to go to such extremes,
you know, right, But youOkay, maybe maybe this is a
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fucked up point of view, Butyou guys tell me if this is fucked
up. My point of view onthis is if people, If this many
people need an escape from reality?Is it? Maybe reality is not that
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fucking great. Maybe people are slowlygetting worse because of the constant pressure that's
put on them throughout their lives.I mean, in real life, I
have bills to pay, I havea job to maintain. I have to
do my job fucking well because Idon't want to lose it, because then
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I can't pay all those bills.I can't take care of my family.
I can't afford to things in need. I can't do this, I can't
do that, so on and soforth. I can't get insurance, I
can't fucking get some new fucking tireson the car. I can't get insurance
on the car. I can't getthe car uh registered, I can't get
blah blah blah blah blah blah blablah blah blah blah, Just endless piles
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of shit and responsibility. So isit so crazy too us to think that
people might be like, fuck this, I'm gonna play my fucking game,
you know what I mean? Right? Have we maybe made reality a little
too stiff? You know? Ifeel like we made reality uh like the
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gratification is not there anymore, Likeyou don't want Like I know, back
in the day, it's like everybodylike you. You took pride in what
you did, the money you weremaking, and you went home and you
did your like that's that's your uh, that's your decompressed. That's how you
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leave reality because your work is yourreality reality, your home is has nothing
to do with out of that now, we're we're bringing our work home.
We're worried about everything that's outside ofthe home. Now, Yeah, like
we have to have some type ofan escape. And that is one thing
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I refuse to do, not bringmy work call. Yep, no,
I will not. There's also thislike world of unattainable that we all view
every single day. Yeah, youknow so, and it's it's definitely,
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you know, really prevalent on theinternet. You know, you think of
any social media, think of allthese influencers and things, These people that
are making obscene amounts of money todo nothing, and they're they're living this
rat you know, lavish lifestyle.And there's all these people that put on
these fronts on the Internet to makeit look like, you know, they're
they're living high on the hogs,so to speak. You know, I
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think that that that path is probablyalso causing a lot of undue stress on
people. I think back in theeighties and the nineties, there's two shows
that gained insane popularity, and itwas because it was finally a sitcom that
wasn't rooted in upper middle class oryou know, upper class society. Roseanne
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and Married with Children. Yeah,those two shows boomed because it resonated with
people. Sure, you know,and then we started drifting away from that,
and then shows like Friends come outwhere you've got you know, twenty
somethings living in these huge apartments,you know in New York, Like,
you know, what would that apartmentcost? You know, it's a couple
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of million bucks? Oh god,you know what I mean. I just
recently saw a video of the cheapestapartment in New York. It's literally the
size I can't remember. I thinkthey said it was eleven feets by nine
feet. Yeah, apartment, andit's six one hundred and fifty dollars a
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month. Yeah, her and herbath like granted, like I've seen those
they have like community bathrooms, butshe has her own bathroom, but it's
outside of the apartments. She ifshe needs to get use the bathroom,
she has to leave her apartment togo to this bathroom that's like right around
the corner from her right. Solike, yeah, the cheapest apartment about
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that size basically, Yeah, it'sa studio apartment. It's six hundred and
fifty dollars. That's less than astudio pow. That's that's tiny. Yeah,
that's that's smaller than the jam space. Yeah, like it's like her
room, her thing, granted herlike ceilings are pretty tall because she has
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like the like the bunk bad stylething going on. Yeah, but you
have to you have to stack yourstuff at that point. Yeah. Yeah,
you're not going out, You're goingup. Yeah, that's it.
Would you say eleven by nine Yeah, like yeah, that's not even that's
like maybe a two thirds of thejam space. Yeah, it's not super
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tiny. Yeah, And you thinkabout like like what this jam space feels
like with our stuff in it?All right? You know. I was
just like trying to think of,like I understand why these are like they're
sawt after because like you like ifyou're in down like like you're in the
heart of these like very big cities, if you have like access to all
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these places, like it's saying like, oh, okay, we're giving you
even though that it's a not thegreatest place, but you're close enough to
get you there or something. That'salways how I feel like it is.
It's like like you're you're close enoughto your job that's a high paying job.
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Eventually you could actually move into theseswinky apartments that are actually like I
feel like that's the reason why theyfeel like they could price it that way.
Yeah. Plus people pay it.Yeah, they like, if they're
in a city, they will paythat type of money just because they're in
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the city. We also got toconsider the payscale difference too, you know
what I mean, Like you're talkingroughly twenty to thirty dollars more on the
hour right there, you know,and that's just in your blue collar jobs.
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Yeah. I know that the likebecause I follow a lot of construction
pages and there's a lot of talkof like what the scale is in your
town, and New York is wayup there. It's ridiculous. Same with
California. Shit, yeah, yeah, I mean you talk like the job
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a job out here to pay seventygrand, and if you're in California,
you're that same job pays one hundredand thirty. Wow. Yeah California A
here I come. Yeah, yeah, but your house would be you know,
one point, I'm gonna work remotely, you deliver beer remotely. Yeah,
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I'll just like send it and thenget on a camera and be like,
okay, put that one over there. Hey, hey, hey,
check that check that date. Okay, rotate that to the back. Okay,
here you go. All right,Okay, what about that that's in
the future. Okay. They alwaystalk about I've heard that they're really cracking
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down on this whole self driving thingbecause they keep saying that these, uh,
these cars are not able to determinelike a situation, like understand the
situation that's happening, if anything doeshappen. Yeah, uh so think about
this. You actually have like asaid avatar that say, you're an over
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those guys that are doing the trucksimulator, they're actually driving a truck out
there somewhere or what. Yeah.No, yeah, they actually have like
say, uh said, like robotsthat is them that does wasn't there wasn't
there a movie about something like thiswhere the gamer, yeah, the gamer
where like they use prisoners as thecharacters. Yeah, yeah, I don't
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know. I thought first people,Yeah, because I noticed that some delivery
companies have like h like motorized cartsnow that are in the truck and you
can it's low. You just grabthe skid and you could just and it'll
go right up ramps and everything likethese things. It's pretty cool. And
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I thought, how long before that'sa robot helper? That's with you,
you know, and you're like,you get to the stop, you're like,
oh yeah, you know, finishedcoffee? All right, all right,
R two take that one in,you know, and he's sorry,
sir, you know what I mean. I'm like, that'd be kind of
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cool. I could, I couldlive with that, but I feel like
because of my like my personal nature, I would be trying to sabotage the
robot like all day long, everyday, and it's just you know what
I mean, make it harder,you though, I know it doesn't make
any sense. That would be likeyeah, yeah, but you have to
keep him down because if not,they've already got self driving cars, how
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long before they have a self drivingsemi? At that point, you send
him over a ship that I knowhe's gonna like break stuff, would you
do? Stupid? You're not replacingthe humans anytime soon? Hm hmm yeah
right. And then the next thing, you know, you have a robot
robot uh you know, like groupsand protests and yeah yeah in for robots
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and all this, and then youhave some asshole like me that goes in
and unplugs it, like groups,what happened? Do you feel like it?
Like, I know, this islike a science fiction thing. But
do you ever believe that a like, we'll get to that point. You've
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seen those robots that they're doing randomtests, they'll walk and move like one
box to another. Yeah, youever see that being that would kill the
middle class, the blue collar jobs, something that's simple as packing, like
cause we're already seeing that now.Like, shit, I go to an
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Amazon building right now, I see, Like this is what I was like,
Dude, it's kind of like amind fuck if you're doing this job.
Okay, they have like on oneof these floors, they have all
of these fucking robots that just littlerobots that have little conveyor belts on them
and it runs packages to where itneeds to go. Yeah, but uh,
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they have these other little stations wherelike the there's a slide and they
they grab the Like there's a coupleof people there that will at a certain
station that will grab a box andthey'll I guess they'll do what they gotta
do, scan it, and thenthey'll put it down the chute and it
goes to that robot. But rightnext to it is another like giant arm
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that does the same job that thatguy over there does. And he grabs
a box. Who does this,He does what he needs to do,
he sends it to the other robot. That's a mind fuck. I'm like,
hey, I'm like sitting here,I'm like, god dig it.
It's like, if I don't dothis right, They're gonna put that that
robot right here. I think inmy opinion, my opinion personally on on
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the whole robot replacing the middle classthing is as to me, it's a
an evolutionary problem. Yeah, Likeevolution is all about prototypes that don't work
out versus prototypes that do work out. If it does work out, it
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goes forward and it becomes a species. Right. So the middle class right
now does the majority of manufacturing,labor, transportation, labor, you name
it, labor, construction, labor, you know, everything you can think
of it's getting made or delivered orbuilt is on the back of a middle
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class person, right, And eventually, I do think that they would want
to automate as much of that asthey can to you know, get that
bottom dollar, yeah, get thatyou know what I mean, get this
cost down, get that money,that profit up. However, or those
same middle class workers, and I'mI'm I'm one of them, don't get
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me wrong, Like I'm in thisclub. I would have to learn how
to maintain and build the robots becauseevolution would be taking a step ahead of
you, and you either evolve ordie off. Yeah, yeah, that's
what I was. I was thinkingthat the same thing, because not all
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fields, but a lot of thelike ship like like what I do.
I literally delivered this to this that'sit. Yeah, so if a robot
is doing that, better, Ibetter get good at fixing that fucking robot
because it's gonna break. Yeah,you know that's uh. I even said
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the same like I was thinking ofthe same thing, and uh, I
wanted to throw this out here becauseI've been thinking about it. I was
like, I know the rape we'regoing at right now in the said robot
and automating a lot of services.And I remember my son saying that he
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wanted to be in robots like dolike deal with like robotics, And I
was like, I'm going to trymy damn this. I'm not going to
force him to do something, butI'm going to think like hard about this,
like by the time he's actually goingto be in a career. Yeah,
that would probably a lot of likemy type of job, like physical
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blue collar jobs are not going tobe there for him, and I want,
like, I think that would bethe best thing, because everything breaks.
I don't care everybody like, itdoesn't matter if it's built by the
machine, it's going to break.Sure, Yeah, get him into robotics,
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but tell him to look into hydrogenpropulsion, also, hydrogen combustion,
hydrogen propulsion, hydrogen engineering, becausesorry, electric cars, hydrogen is coming.
It's inevitable at this point, andit's gonna be way superior. It
will. It's a combustion. It'sclean combustion, dude, It's it's like
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power. Yeah, but I thoughtthe whole point of the uh, like
the real like because we have thatright now, hydrogen combustion engines. But
no one wants a fucking hydrogen bombdriving down the fucking road. That I
know that. I know that abouthydrogen gas, they were just saying that
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you will have a tank of water, you would have a hydrogen generator.
Yeah, and it will produce itas you're driving, just enough to get
you where you're going. So itwill be a very small amount. So
okay, let me ask you this, how much hydrogen, Like it's like
a glass full or a drop.How much of a drop can actually like
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hurt somebody. This is a misconceptionbecause you technically are driving around with a
bomb already and a much more volatileone. Okay, okay, Gasoline itself
not that bad. Gas fumes terrible, right, hydrogen if you take if
you take an HHO and you runthat line into into your carburetor, right,
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I'm going going back before you know, let's just go back to carburetion.
Let's not even don't even worry aboutfuel injection yet. Right. The
HHHO gen is only generating a tinylittle burst of hydrogen just enough to fire
that fucking that's it. So there'sno big reservoir of fumes. You have,
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like like Josh said, you havebasically a saltwater compound or a saline
compound with a coil in it that'sgenerating just enough hydrogen to get you going
y. And the other thing isis that would remove a lot of fuel
tankers off the road. See youeffectively, you know, removed a few
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bombs off the highway. What's thepower like, what's the power output of
this? Could this be introduced intolike your actual commercial area, like,
uh like semi trucks, could theyactually handle the weight that we normally pull,
especially the oversized stuff that people uhdeliver like because that's what because what
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I was always wondering is like Iunderstand we're trying to get away from this.
Yes, it does what it does, like uh like gasoline, Uh
like normal fossil fuels is not thegreatest thing. We need a new solution.
But now we're talking about batteries.But we've said this on the show
so many times. Is that haveyou seen a Lithenian mind? Like after
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it's done with, you can't doanything with that, it's destroyed. And
then all the machinery that's digging thisshit up is gas. I've seen one
one electric one excavator. Dude,that freaking battery is massive, right,
and it doesn't last. It onlylasts eighteen hours I think it said eighteen
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hours or ten to eighteen hours torun. So okay, you'll get a
full almost a full days of workoutof it. But how long does it
take the charge? Like that's thebullshit thing too, is like I hate
that when I hear oh it'll takesThese cars will take about a thirty minutes
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to an hour to charge one motherfuckerwants to sit there after work another hour
and a half a half hour toan hour to fill up his whatcking just
wucking cart? Right? Uh?To answer your first question, is it
viable in today's world? Yes?Right now? The hydrogen hydrogen like Department
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of Energy says that the the energyemitted in two point two pounds of hydrogen
gas is the same energy as sixpoint two pounds of gasoline, So you
could you can convert almost any gasolineengine into a hydrogen engine. Really,
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no redesign of the engine really there, there's a little bit. Yeah.
The other thing considered too, isis that you know, hydrogen itself is
quite a bit more expensive than gasoline. Yeah, because back to produce it,
it's basically would make it like fourteendollars a gallon as far as gas
goes, it's it's yeah, okay, I know this, Like this is
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common stuff, Like, okay,how easy is it to make a hydrogen
generator or something that actually makes?Super easy? Eff actually built a couple
Okay, okay, so never mind, I was, yeah, super easy,
Like, is this something that couldbe turned into some say a weapon?
I built a small one and putit on my old lawnmower. It
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was pretty cool. Yeah, Iran into problems trying to mount it though.
That was like my my big thing. That was it was stupid.
I just had no I had atthe time, I had no welder in
the garage yet and I couldn't,you know, So I was like,
yeah, I had it like tapedto it. It was pretty dumb.
But yeah, if the amount ofbattery and you need a way to recharge
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the battery and uh, lawnmowers aregreat, but they're not super grated,
uh converting power back to a batteryand then lawnmower batteries though they're decent at
being charged by a lane or uh, they're not great at producing consistent burst
of hydrogens. You get like alittle you get little bubbles. So it
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is kind of cool, like it'scool when it when it works, you
know what I mean. But sinceyou're well, you know, you're working
with whatever. But I didn't installone, help install one on a Dodge
pickup truck, and that was thatwas pretty badass. So could you guys
say, I want to I wantto give your guys opinion on it.
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Definitively do you guys believe that thereason why we haven't tried if this is
actually a thing that's super easy,this could power homes, cars, the
industrial area. The reason why wehaven't moved to it is because of how
easy, how accessible it could be, and how cheaper it could be on
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people. The reason why we haven'tswitched over it is to because of these
big oil companies have so much moneyinvested into fossil fuels. They're waiting for
it to run out before they likebefore it. They're wanting to squeeze that
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fucking last drop of money until wemove over. How can you I mean,
I know I probably get flag forsaying this, but how can you
blame them? I mean, youknow what I mean. It's like if
you're if you're an oil guy andyou're just loaded, dude, you don't
want your you know, you don'twant your your product getting replaced, you
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know what I mean? Like that'sthat would suck. So okay, And
you guys said something about like saltsaltwater, is that what we would need
to use? Saltwater helps you,uh, it helps you separate the uh
molecules, the hydrogen molecules from theoxygen to get pure hydrogen. So that
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with that being said, like thinkabout this, like with this, like
Okay, water right now is almostas much as a gallon, Like a
gallon of water is more than agallon of gas in some areas. So
what I'm asking is is that too, would we not have beaches anymore?
Would we not you see a guyrunning out in the fucking ocean with a
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jerry can because he was fucking freegas. That's what I'm trying to figure
out, is like would the wouldwe put a control over uh, access
to salt water if that's going tobe the new industry, right? Yeah?
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I mean I feel like now thatthe secret's out where you know,
hey, if you build a hydrogenengine, you're you're not going to get
immediately assassinated anymore. I feel likenow it's you know, it's you know
what I mean. What was onecompany recently just just actually announced that they
were pulling out of the electric vehiclescompletely and they were focusing on hydrogen.
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I can't remember which come. Ithink it was Mazda because I just heard
that somebody one of these foreign carcompanies actually not they're not doing hydrogen.
I think they're doing pneumonia, ammonia, I think, are it's something a
mixture of pneumonia or something. Okay, if they're doing pneumonia, they're going
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to the hospital. Ammonia is ohmy bad. Honda is doing hydrogen okay,
yeah, okay, cool. Toyotais apparently doing it too, and
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somebody else was, yeah, itlooks like a Kia might be. They're
bringing they're bringing the toy the newToyota Hilux is going to be a hydrogen
vehicle. That's really that's fucking wild. Yeah. Yeah, you think they're
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doing that to keep the terrorists fromusing it. I don't know, because
how much water is in the desertright, Like, we're tired of our
trucks being on that true reels ofeight people in the bed with guns mounted
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to it. We want a betterimage. Even even Elon musk Is it
says here he's expressed that it isconfirmed that an impending Tesla hydrogen vehicle will
be on the way. So that'sthat's probably a real swift kicking the nuts
to him. All of this electricvehicle stuff will it's gonna blow right over,
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dude. That's another thing I've alwaysasked this as of Forrest. I've
always like I've asked that question,what do you think like as of now,
Like, what do you think itis weird that is obsolete when you
saw as like a young teenager orkid, that is obsolete now that you
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thought was going to be Like itwas so like so big back then,
and it's crazy it's not around anymore. And I feel like that's gonna happen
when we were like old and gray. You remember when we had electric vehicles?
Oh yeah, yeah, ohn't know. I mean I can't, I
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can't remember any probably, uh youknow, if I'm being honest, I
still I still find this kind offunny. Is the miniature CD broms.
Yeah, when they came out withthose, they were like, yeah,
it's a little tiny seed ron youcan you can just put it in there.
You know. That lasted like tenminutes like many discs, yeah,
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many, Yeah, And they werelike, oh, it's revolution and this
thing can hold like a hundred songs, Like wow, it's fucking awesome.
And then it was gone like tenminutes later and they're like, well,
we're back to these again, butthese can hold like thousands. It's just
like, uh, I feel likethe funny thing is like one that I
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feel like it is obsolete. Isthe first smartphone ever that you don't see
anymore. You guys know what itis with the BlackBerry. The BlackBerry.
Man, I loved my BlackBerry.That was like the best. It was
like having a typewriter in my afterlike I uh, I actually watched the
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like the biopics that they just cameout with. Uh And after seeing that,
dude, like it went downhill extremelybecause they're the one that truly made
the market for the the for thesmartphone. Yeah, they're the ones because
the phone. Yeah, because theywere the ones that designed it. Was
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because everybody at the at the timeit was about to come out, Uh,
they were trying. They were alreadytrying to do this. They thought
it was like everybody had this idea, but no one could get it to
work. They said. They triedto put it on their network and they
would only get like ten ten toeleven phones to work. But there was
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a way around it. They hadto build like basically another like they had
to build a server that was ableto connect to it and like and they
were the first ones to get aroundthe texting thing. You wasn't using any
minutes. They were able like andthat was dude, like hearing that,
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Like, think about that as acompany when they found this out there,
like this they were able to textsomebody without doing the minutes. And the
guy, the actual marketing guy,was like, hold on, we won't
that's ten cents of text. We'llnever see that. He's like, but
it's free, Like you can usethis. He's like unlimited texts only on
(37:20):
BlackBerry. It's like, dude,that statement alone made them millions. Yeah,
people switched over immediately just because ofthat, because it was like fucking
five cents of character to text onanything else. Yeah, and then they
were then they were thinking about likeat towards the end, that's when they
were like, they're not selling minutesanymore, they're selling data. That's that
(37:47):
was the new era. That waswhen after fucking Apple destroyed with the first
iPhone. Yeah, yeah, itwas crazy, you think. I mean,
it's it's amazing that, like,where's BlackBerry now? Are they've been
still around? I looked him up. I thought they actually still make phones,
(38:10):
but they're not. The guy thatoriginally designed the first BlackBerry, he's
no longer part of it. Becauseyou remember the last run they had the
They actually had the full screen touchscreen, but the screen moved up and
down because that's what he wanted,is a click. I had one of
(38:31):
those. It was the first timehe they like he was wanting it.
He's say, don't. He's like, I'm not going outside manufacturers, like
when you send it to like Chinaand something, they they skip out.
They use cheap parts. Yeah,and it's not the greatest. And it
was the first time in BlackBerry historythat they were there was a huge recall
(38:54):
on a lot of their phones.It's crazy. It's it's so crazy because
he used to hear about them allthe time and now it's like, God,
what was what was the other thingthat that they made. There wasn't
a phone. It was before thephones. It was like a personal assistant.
Pomp Pilot pomp Pilots that came afterthe first BlackBerry was out, and
(39:20):
then pomp Pilot because actually in thatmovie, pomp Pilot was going to like
was basically trying to do a hostiletakeover of them. Yeah, and at
that time they were only allowed tosell five hundred they had only they were
allowed to have five hundred on theirnetwork. We're only allowed to have five
hundred users, so it was likeat Verizon. Verizon was the one that
(39:47):
actually had BlackBerry. So when theywere like we we can't sell anymore,
there were at our limit. Ifwe go any further, the servers crash.
And then when that happened, themarketing guy he's like, he's like,
dude, we either a get aroundthis whole five hundred limit or we're
(40:12):
going to like pomp Pilot is goinglike they're going to buy us and we're
out. So he forced everybody tostart like selling and selling and selling and
selling, and luckily they were ableto get past the five hundred. They
got it to a million users tohelp them not be bought out by pomp
Pilot. What do you got there, buddy? I have another technology that
(40:37):
came out and was gone just likethat that I wanted to throw in here
before we figure out like what we'rehow we're ending this, and that is
this guy, the Nintendo Virtual Boy. Oh yeah, this guy. This
(40:58):
thing came out. That is itright there, that little stand and everything.
You put it on your table andthen you basically lean in and put
your face in it, and yougive your controller and you play it like
that. The problem with it wasthat everything was in red and black to
make it three D. To tryto make it three D, everything was
(41:22):
in red and black. This thinglasted ten minutes. Oh my god,
Thank god, dude, because thatmachine's going to give everybody scoliosis. Oh
it was. It's kind of likethe power Glove. Oh no, the
power Glove wasn't as bad as mate. The mat was worse. The mat
was terrible. The Power Glove atleast had this badass, like cool feet
(41:44):
like thing about it. It's stilllike it sucked most of the time.
With the power Glove. You tookthe glove off and turned it sideways.
That just used a little arm thingas a controller. No, the power
Glove sucked, but it was likecool. It's like check it out,
dude. I'm like cybernetic. Iremember that, and now we have that
(42:05):
with the WE remotes and and theVR remotes. You know, that's that's
really the same thing. That's anotherthing too, is Nintendo. Nintendo was
the powerhouse of the video game industry. Now it is just yeah, I
got a week and I gotta switch. Pornography playing cards what they were.
(42:32):
They produced pornography trading cards, Ididn't know that, or it's the s
hold on, you can't. Youcan't talk about the power Glove without bringing
this guy up. Hold on,I just loved all these accessories that they
(42:52):
like, the gimmicks. Yeah,okay, here it is. Let me
let me add these in. Bam, bam and bam. It's probably gonna
double load a couple of them.I think I accidentally selected too many.
Yeah, yeah I did. Okay, So bam, here's the power glove.
Like that power glove and you getyou had to depending on the game
(43:16):
you were playing, you had topress the program button and then put in
the sequence uh of that zero throughnine right there, and then hit enter,
and then the glove was calibrated tothat game. Right. That's that.
That that's how that's how it worked. That's how the motion thing works.
(43:36):
Using the word calibrate maybe yeah,too much. But then this guy,
yep, he made it. Hemade the power Glove famous. Yeah,
because it's so Red. Well,he was the he was the bad
guy in that movie, wasn't he. Yeah? Yeah, he was uh
(43:57):
what was his name, like Lucasor something. I don't know, I
know the other character, wasn't itFred? Savage. Yeah, Fred Savage,
but like Fred Savage wasn't the goodguy. It was his little brother.
Do you remember that his little brotherwas like super good at playing video
games like he was. Yeah,yeah, you're right, Yeah, the
(44:22):
kid was the wizard. Yeah,but I don't know. It was a
It was a good It's a classic. And there you could see the Power
Glove inspired a lot of stuff,you know. Yeah, so they have
it. There's the Power Glove withthe Infinity the Infinity stones on it.
There you go. It was.It was dumb man. Do you remember
(44:42):
the game Genie Do you remember that? Yeah? I had one. You
plug it in and then you plugin Super Mario Brothers and you could just
jump all the way to the endof every yep, the beginning of cheets.
Yeah, it was. It wasawesome. The game Genie was awesome.
Wasn't the one called the game sharkdYeah, that was for a PlayStation.
I remember having that. Yeah,we had that. I'm not saying
(45:04):
that I cheated, but yeah,David and I absolutely did. We played
uh what was it, Vice Citygame Shark on and would play just ridiculous
cheat codes. That was fun.Yeah. The sound back then, Yeah,
technologies that didn't didn't last. Yeah, we should get into that on
(45:28):
the next one. We should.We should talk about, you know,
like where this ship all came from, all these games and stuff, and
where do you think they're gonna endup? How realistic is too realistic?
Oh, they have a great oneto show you guys on that subject that
probably take too long to get intonow, but you know what I mean,
(45:50):
there's one coming out that I waswatching. I actually thought it was
real footage and I was like,are you fucking kidding me? It's like,
now this is a game coming out. I'm like, oh my god,
it's probably the one unreal five then, yeah, it definitely is.
Yeah, we got we're about anhour and a half in. Guys,
what do you guys, You guyswant to call it? Let's peace out
(46:14):
this thing? Yeah, let's doit. Let's let's let's get out of
here. You guys out there takecare of each other. Well, uh,
we'll see you on the next one. Mm hmm, see you guys.
(46:36):
H's been a lot of they've beenthey've been getting on him bad lately.
It's been it's been bad. Yeah, like every outlet. That's the
thing. It's not even like justlike the right wingers, like even left
wingers, and dude, everybody's beenlike this, the city saying it's like,
(46:57):
what you ever do want of these? Were you somebody saying something?
You're like, what if? Whatdid you just say? Yeah? Man,
his grandpa he's tiring. Yah,he's really tie it. So taking
that ye m hm