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May 31, 2025 29 mins
I gotta talk about this join in!!
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Sorry, I don't have any music for you. What up,
We're up. We're up. Welcome back to Lockdown Universe, home
with the bizarre, peculiar and unheard of stories of UFO
legend and paranormal lore. Welcome back, Welcome back, happy to
be back. Hopefully you guys are doing awesome and taking
care of yourself. So I gotta get this off my chest,
and I just I just did a TikTok live on this.

(00:25):
The interesting thing about TikTok live is you can you
can do a live and people come into the room
and you can ask people to interact, but they don't
always interact. I just kind of like flipping through their
phone and you might get maybe five, ten, twelve people
in there, but you know, you ask people to jump
on as guests and they don't. Kind of kind of disappointing.
I really wanted to have a conversation about this, but

(00:45):
I'll do a podcast on it because I think it's
important and I want to I want to start the
conversation and maybe people will put comments in the comments section.
So today's podcast is going to be about how AI
will ruin lives change my mind? I will ruin lives
change my mind. So so there's two coins, two sides

(01:06):
of the coin. Right, there's pros and cons with AI
and this will this can get to aliens and paranormal
stuff as well. So while number let's let's start off
with positives. Okay, let's start off with positives and then
we'll get to the root the ruining positives for AI.
If you haven't seen what AI can do yet, it's
able to create video, it's able to predict certain aspects

(01:31):
of the future, it's able to complete certain tasks. It's
been put into the Tesla bots that are able to
be in people's homes. There Kim Kardashian just bought a
Tesla bot, and it's able to, you know, bring you
drinks and talk to you and play cards with you
and do all kinds of things. Eventually, like I told

(01:52):
my kids today, they will have a robot in their house.
Not my house probably yet, but in the future when
they become affordable, everyone will have a robot in their home.
You may not need one in an apartment necessarily, but
in a home or in a person that needs a
robot's home, like a person that has disability or an

(02:14):
older person. Everyone that needs a robot will be able
to have one. Now, households that have kids and families.
It'll be in those households and it'll be able to
do all kinds of things, from doing the dishes, to
fixing your car, to mowing the lawn, to dispensing medication
to whatever you needed to do. Right, So here's the thing.

(02:36):
Anything that is out there on the internet, YouTube, WebMD,
all this stuff it has within it, so guess what.
It also has cameras for eyes, so guess what it
can do. It can also scan you, right, depending on
what kind of technology it has in it, it could
look at a mole and say, hey, you need to
go to the doctor for this, or you might be

(02:58):
able to tell if that mole is cancerous are not.
Depending on its sensors, it may be able to do
blood draws for you at home and test the blood
on its own system, especially perfect for people with diabetes. Right. Yeah,
sure they already have their own machines. But we'll be
able to do all kinds of tests automatically. If this
thing can have like a blood blood detection system in

(03:20):
it or blood polling system in it. I mean the
possibilities and add ons to robots is endless. So once
the AI is in the robots, the potential is endless
as well. But with that potential comes potential downfalls as well.
With absolute power comes absolute responsibility, and that's that's where

(03:46):
we run the risk of potential problems. So what kind
of potential problems are there? I mean, for God's sake,
this thing will be able to help your kids with homework.
It'll be able to throw football with you in the backyard,
and be able to be your therapist, your psychiatrist, your
your psychologist, your medical doctor. It could, it can. It
can literally help you create anything you want to create.

(04:09):
You want to dig things in the backyard, plant plants,
grow crops you want. You want to learn skateboarding. It
could be there to protect you if you fall. I
mean like it could literally do anything. Given increase technology
and increase capability, the potential is endless. I mean you

(04:32):
literally have right now, we have a phone to help
us look up knowledge. But think if that knowledge came
to life in the form of a robot that could
help you make your own beer, make your own food,
create you know, a meal for twenty at Thanksgiving. I mean,

(04:54):
the value of a robot at twenty thousand dollars is
a steal for the amount of things that this that
robots will be able to do. Granted, there's going to
be increased models that can do certain things, and that's
just the nature of the beast. But at twenty thousand dollars,

(05:15):
if this thing could even do half of those things
or a quarter of those things, that's a steal eventually.
I mean, for it to do everything that I just
talked about. I mean, you could say you could put
a price tag of a quarter million dollars on it,
maybe more, you know, because of the potential of it
is so damn high, and that cost savings is so

(05:38):
damn high. You know, think about healthcare savings, think about mechanics,
think about you know, just general labor, think about think
about the savings of going to a therapist, think about everything,
and you might say, okay, hold on, now, come on,
I can't be a therapist. It can't be a doctor, okay.

(06:00):
And that's some of the downfall, right, is that if
we put so much trust and belief into these systems
that what will happen? Right? What if it makes mistakes?
That's a problem. What if we give it authoritarian capabilities,
meaning we put it into positions of power, such as
being a police officer, such as being part of the military,

(06:24):
such as being a teacher, such as you know, I mean,
all kinds of things. And what if it malfunctions. We've
seen this already. There's a viral video that's gone everywhere
that had two engineers working on a robot, and this
robot it had an error, some kind of error, some

(06:45):
kind of issue, and it starts. Look it looks it
appears as though it's attacking the engineer violently, I mean,
more violent than a human could. Luckily, the engineer was
just outside of its grasps, and then they move, They
ran around the back of the thing, and then they
moved the pole that it was kind of like being
suspended by, so that it would go dormant. But holy schnikes,

(07:10):
these things are so powerful that it's not surprising that
companies like Uni Tree, that have some of the most
advanced technology and robotics so far, have made their robots
to be only about four and a half feet tall,
because if these things were five feet to six feet tall,
that becomes a problem because because then it's a reach

(07:33):
disadvantage if we have to like turn these things off
or shut them down somehow that we can't have, you know, remotely.
Then we have to be able to kind of take
them down or maybe wrestle them down, and it becomes
a problem. Right. So it's interesting that they're making them
kind of like four feet four and a half feet,
but the sheer power that these things have is unmanageable

(07:54):
and we have if we eventually do make them to
be closer to human side eyes, it'll be really interesting
and hazardous. So, going back to the original premise of
the podcast, AI will ruin lives, change my minds, change
my mind So as of today before see, every every

(08:17):
month we're getting closer and closer to the eventuality that
this thing, that this system, these systems could take out
a lot of people and a lot a lot of
the civilization that we're used to. Let's put it that way,
maybe not taking out people, but taking out civilization that
we're used to. What does that mean right now? Today?

(08:40):
Your kids are if you have kids, they are addicted
to their tablets, they're addicted to their phones, addicted to
the internet. So AI will only increase that because it
allows us to create at a level that we've never
been able to create before, we'll be able to create

(09:00):
movies that are specifically designed for our pleasure centers in
our mind. Meaning there's lots of movies out there that
you see, but there's not always movies that you're always into.
These AI will be able to develop based on your
you're already curated viewing on Netflix, the perfect movies, the

(09:21):
perfect television series without needing actors, without needing anything, and
it will, it will, every single second will be perfectly
matched to the pleasure centers in your brain and which
will force you to watch more and more minutes of
a show. These there's video game companies out there like Roadblocks, Minecraft,

(09:45):
and I mean there's others too, but there's a few
different video games that have been specifically specifically designed, socially
engineered to engage with other people as well online so
that kids pleasure centers and rewards centers in their minds
are one hundred percent addictives, my kids included. So when

(10:08):
you have to shut them down, shut shut these things off,
you know, they just don't really know what to do.
They have multiple screens on at a time. They'll be
on their tablet and they'll also have the television on
at the same time. This is what's wild. Okay. You
might say, oh, well that's fine. You know, I'm on
my phone sometimes and I have the TV on. Yeah,

(10:31):
but you might be going through articles while you got
the TV on. These kids are playing a game while
there's already an entertainment trying to trying to vibe for
their attention. There was a television show called The Feed.
Great show. I believe it's on Amazon a Prime right now.
It's already it's already done it over, so you can
go watch it. But the premise was was that they

(10:52):
had the Internet in their eye, so there was like
a screen in their eye, not like physical screen, but
you could see the screen. And people who were addicts
quote unquote would have like ten fifteen screens on at
the same time, and if they didn't, if they shut
down too many screens, they would go into withdrawal seizures
and possibly die. They had to go to actual digital

(11:14):
detox camps, and that was a real thing in the
television show. Now in real life we also actually have
digital detox camps. And these dex camps are four kids,
four adults that are hundred percent addicted to their phones,
to their games, to the internet. Now, do you think
that that's gonna get better with AI. No, it's gonna

(11:36):
get worse, one hundred percent worse. As we rise with AI,
these digital detox events and farms and companies will continue
to rise, maybe at a more exponential rate than AI
because people will they will not only need a break
from these from this media, but they'll also desire some time.

(12:00):
I'm away from it there in living in the real world.
It's really easy to live in a digital world, almost
too easy, because all you have to do is sit there.
Physical exercise becomes more of a problem as we don't
do it as much right And I'm a prime example

(12:20):
of that. I used to work out every day, and
now as I've gotten older, I've had some injuries that
have hindered me, and I have not worked out nowhere
near every day, nowhere near every not even close. I mean, like,
gained weight, got older, you know, all that stuff happened.
So what does that mean. It means I should be
working out. Everybody should be working out, getting some sort

(12:43):
of outside exercise. What's gonna happen is people are gonna
be inside doing all these digital things. They're not gonna
be getting that vitamin D. Health is going to start
to decline. People are going to start relying on all
these processed foods because easier, and it's just it's going
to continue to spiral downwards. I mean, once you go
down the path of ease of simplifying your life, it

(13:06):
continues to spiral down. There's there's a nice quote out
there that says something about, you know, hard times create
hard men. Hard men create easier times, and then tough
times or easy times create weak men. Right, So like,

(13:31):
if we become in a real easy position where we
don't have to do much, We've got the robot with AI.
We've got AI controlling our entire household, shutting off lights
when we exit and enter, turning on music, with us
having to do anything. Think about the musculature. Think about
your musculature and your body. That's you know that we

(13:53):
need to continue living that musculature will go down. That's
why you know I can finally bring in aliens into
this conversation because a lot of people have theorized that,
you know, the gray aliens that have been trying to
hybridize with us, that their muscular muscular muscularity is reduced
because they don't have a need for it. They can float,

(14:15):
they can go through walls with some sort of technology.
They can communicate telepathically, so they're not burning all the
calories that we burn talking. There's a lot of calories
that you burn talking. You burn a lot of moisture too.
That's why I need drinks, you know, when you're doing
long conversations. I just get a drink right now. But
I'm in the middle of this podcast. So that's that's

(14:38):
the thing is that you know, those guys, those little grays,
if even if they you know, if they're robots or
if they're not. If they're not, then obviously they don't
need the musculator. They don't fight us when we when
we try to fight back, like Travis Walton did and
he broke that that beaker and he tried to fight

(14:58):
and stab at one of the little grays, those things
just took off. They're like, I'm out of here. And
there's been other stories of people who have been adducted
to try to fight those things and they were like
light as a feather, like you touch them and they
just like fall over because they had zero muscularity. But
they have the technology to put us asleep and to
immobilize us. So they still have domination over us. So

(15:22):
that's the thing. If we become so reliant upon the
AI that we become non muscular, then then we're going
to put ourselves into trouble. Our longevity might not continue.
Our bodies need to thrive, and that might be something
that the Zeta reticulans had a problem with, was that
the fact that they haven't had a need to be

(15:46):
muscular for probably millennia upon millennia. And once you weed
that out of your necessity, certain things don't come back.
So like if they weed it out, you know, physical education,
if they weed it out, the need for competition sports,

(16:06):
if they weeded all that stuff out over thousands upon
thousands of years or maybe millennia or millions of years,
then guess what, it's not even in their culture anymore.
And they come here and they look upon us and
they say, oh my god, these guys are barbarians. No,
we just don't have AI ruling us yet, but it's coming,

(16:27):
and it's going to ruin lives just based on health alone,
not to mention the mental health capacity, the mental health
issues that we have. It's going to ruin that too,
because we're going to be addicts. We're going to be
addicts and we're not even gonna know it because we're
addicts now. We're addicts already. If you don't think you're

(16:50):
an addict, go into your phone, go into the settings,
Go look at hours of consumption underneath certain apps. It'll
tell you exactly how many hours you spend on each
app per day, and I guarantee you it's a hell
of a lot more than you think it is. I know,
I thought I was only spending maybe like an hour
or two on Facebook, and it shocked me how many

(17:13):
hours I had spent on Facebook or TikTok or any
other app that I was using. I couldn't believe it
because I'm working, but I'm also spending a shit ton
of time doing these other things after work, during work, whatever,
before work, you know, in the shower, you know, doing
things that I'm like, Wow, holy crap, I've spent an
insane amount of time. We're addicts, So the only way

(17:33):
to get unaddicted is to get this stuff out of
our life. Am I saying that we're gonna get AI
out of our life? Probably not? Probably not. I mean
they're building a How much was it five hundred million
or five hundred billion, I can't remember what the number was,
an insane number. It's probably five hundred billion on Project Stargate,

(17:53):
which makes zero sense to me. Maybe somebody can explain that.
What is Project Stargate. Well, back in the eighties Projects
Start it was a remote viewing program for psychic spies
in America. This Project Stargate, which I can't believe they
named that again.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Is going to be for AI buildings, AI facilities that
will spread AI across the country and then eventually across
the world.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
So it's an American project that we're spending five hundred
million or five hundred billion on, and it's going to
take us into the next century so and beyond. Right,
So what's what's crazy is, you know, as we look
at technology, you know, it went from like a physical thing,
you know, if you're looking at media, went from like

(18:41):
you know, tapes to digital readouts DVD CDs. Then it
went to like podcast players or and then it went streaming.
And now now it's just streaming out of Wi Fi
and out of your digital service provider right or out

(19:03):
of your phone internet provider, whatever the case is just
streaming now into a phone. But eventually it's not going
to stream into a phone anymore. It's going to be
it's going to be like in the ether, in the wireless,
in the in the phoneless. It'll it'll just be in
your head. You'll have the capability to control it. And

(19:24):
they already have that with the metaglasses, so you know, like,
what was it Google's lens or whatever Googles, I can't
remember what they had, but they had their own and
they already have these technologies with these with these classes,
so they're real. That's really cool. But eventually we won't
even need wearables anymore. We won't need wearables. It'll be

(19:45):
a frequency that you can just tune into with your head.
Sound like science fiction, Well, I bet you. I bet
your phones where we could talk face to face with
people sounded like science fiction twenty years ago, thirty years ago,
fifty years ago. Think about how far we've come since
nineteen seventy five. Do you think people in nineteen seventy

(20:08):
five thought we'd have phones that we could talk to
anybody we wanted to across any any distance, face to face.
I mean, it was an idea, but did they think
we'd have it this fast. I don't know. I don't
make so. I mean, they didn't even have cell phones
at that point, so who's to say they would have

(20:30):
thought that we would have these and soon enough we
won't need them. That's how fast technology changes. Technology will
change quickly. In your phones that you have that you're
listening to this podcast will be gone. They'll be tucked
away in a drawer somewhere or in a landfill. And
when that happens and AI knows it, then guess what.

(20:52):
AI will know everything about you, and you'll have to
follow a certain social norm. America thrives on being on
its individuality, on its creativity, and on its on its
non reliance upon other family members. Other countries, you know,

(21:12):
they rely upon their family members, They rely upon being
a unit, They rely upon being hive mind and relying
on each other to complete tasks. That's completely different here
in America. And it's going to change because people will
not know what to do with themselves. They'll all be
individual and they're going to be relying upon a robot.

(21:38):
That's how far they they. The the elites in technology
wants you to believe that technology will bring us closer together.
The only thing that brings us closer together is is
being near each other and touch and human emotion and
human interaction. Because we are energy fields. Our body's giving

(22:01):
off tons of energy fields, and human touch is important.
Human interaction, being around other people is important. It releases stress,
it reduces quartersol, It allows you to to hey, what's
the word? Kind of kind of there's a good song
about this, kind of spreading the stress around. You know,

(22:24):
if you need to complain about something, you can do
with your your other humans. You know, a robot's not
gonna understand that. Sure it's gonna sound like it understands it,
but it's not going to truly understand it. Whereas you're
talking with another human who's had human experiences will understand it.
And I think it's gonna be it's gonna be really
bizarre because we're gonna go from a lot of positions,

(22:47):
a lot of jobs, and this is where it starts
going downhill, too, is where all these jobs go out
out the window. I was just talking about this on
the TikTok Live. Was that all these jobs, these sales jobs,
or any other job it does or really even matter.
But like sales jobs already being taken because I've worked
in sales, and I've still work in sales a bit,

(23:09):
and I've had companies give me their give me their
tech and it's and it has AI. And the AI
salesman is better than anybody else that can do sales.
It can overcome any obstacle and the person won't even
know it's AI. Do you think that you will know?
But you won't know. And what sucks too is that,
like there's gonna be AI podcasts. That's gonna suck because

(23:33):
for all of us little guys, I don't get like
tens of thousands of listens. I don't you know, I have.
I have a select you know, group of people who
listen to me. And there's and and that's great and
I talk to people. But but there's going to become
a time where it's gonna be AI podcasts. And it
might be like robotic at first, but it won't be

(23:54):
after a while and you won't even know. It would
be like goats having Stephen King having a ghostwriter right
his novels for him. It will say Stephen King on it,
but it won't be him right in it. It'll say, Hey,
this is the two Bears in One Cave podcast right
that Tom Segura and Bert Kreischer one. It's super famous.

(24:15):
They won't even need to do it. They won't need
to do it. Maybe they're not even doing it now,
maybe they're just like sitt at home drinking beer. Like ah,
those two basses are listening to us. But it's not
even us, you know. I mean, it's like unbelievable. I mean,
who knows even the Joe Rogan podcast might be real
at this point. I mean, the technology is so far
advanced that the elites can use it, but we don't

(24:37):
have it yet, and they want to keep it that way.
They want to keep it that way because why because
there's power in money. There's power in having technology over
other people. So the job's going to go. It doesn't
matter what you have and who you are, because the
think can again, it can do the labor. So who

(24:59):
do you need You need need to hire five guys
when you got a robot. No, the robot can do it.
All might do it slower, but you can still do it.
And then you get to get the job done. Eventually,
you want to pay extra for it. You won't need
a plumber. You won't need a you know, a gardener.
You won't need a landscaper. You won't need a teacher,

(25:19):
a what's the word to train your A tutor for
your kids. You won't need a batting coach for your kids.
You won't need you know, all these all these jobs
that we're paying for will be able to be done.
Will it be able to be done the same way
as a human? No, not yet, but soon it will. Soon.

(25:46):
It will watch movies that are already out there, subservient,
right one with Megan Fox That one. You know, the
thing is that the robot is being played by an
actor that is human, So you know the the actor
is playing a robot, but the robot will be playing

(26:07):
an actor. The robot will be playing a person. So
you can see how it can interchange. And if a
human can play a robot, a robot can play a human.
It's just a matter of time before the technology catches up.
And if the technology can move from only a few
years ago twenty twenty two, Will Smith looking like a

(26:31):
crazy man eating spaghetti in the first AI videos to
now so perfect that we can't even tell the difference
between what's reality and what's not. Becomes a real problem.
Somebody wants to frame you for a crime, they can
do it. Somebody wants to utilize this AI for bad

(26:52):
they can do it. If they want to mimic themselves
being somebody else, they can do it. They're already doing it,
trying to trick people, only family members with their you know, mother,
grandmother's voice in it, and tricking people, you know, trying
to swindle people, I mean likes. And that's just on
the audio side, that's not even on the video side,

(27:13):
you know. So aye, I will ruin lives, change my mind,
It'll make some people's lives better. Robots will make people's
lives better. But what happens to all the jobs, what
happens to all the human interaction, what happens to all
those all the economy, through all that interaction and engagement,

(27:40):
there's gonna be so many things that are gonna change.
The problem is that humanity is not so good with
keeping people employed and having massive transformations in the workforce.
And this will be the most massive change in the

(28:01):
workforce since the Industrial Revolution. That's a fact that's there.
You can't even argue that so will even be worse.
I don't know, it might be worse. Not trying to
be negative here. I just have real concerns and I
need to voice them somewhere. So apologize if you know.

(28:23):
If it sounds rough, I'm just being honest. I'm just
being as honest as I can't with you guys. You guys,
listen to me. For five years, baby, I've been doing
this for longer than a lot of people. Five oh
five and a half years. Maybe we started in March
of twenty twenty Lockdown Universe, and now it's almost June

(28:46):
of twenty twenty five. We're still here. Maybe we're still
doing it and I'm still enjoying bringing them to you.
So take care of yourselves, follow through on your hope,
your hobbies, and your goals and your dreams, and continue
to do what you need to do, and continue to
do it and do what enjoy it. To continue to
do what you enjoy to do. That's what I'm trying

(29:08):
to get out of my mouth. And you know, take
care of your friends and family and loved ones, and
enjoy nature. Take time off of this technology, spend time
with your family, whatever family you have or whatever friends
you have. Meditate in nature. Touch a tree. I'll a
tree feel the grass, look at the sky, breathe in

(29:34):
outside air. Make time for it, because before you know it,
it might not be the same time. Left. All right, guys,
take care of yourselves. We'll be back from more lockdown. Universe
out peace,
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