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January 14, 2025 111 mins
Tonight on the Rundown Live: Tatiana Moroz is an American folk singer-songwriter and a driving force in the cryptocurrency industry. She has put together a conference bringing together influencers, speakers and educators at the The Counter Party in Miami, January 25th and 26th.
Visit: Http://thecounterparty.com 
 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
They have to cheat in order to beat us, because
the truth is more powerful than their lives. And this
is a small battle in God's war. And I'm telling you,
when you're on the side of God, who can stand
against you? No one can't. And we're in the fight
and we can't give up. This is time for over dry.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Destroy Chris daunt Harris.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
I do.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
On a run down Nie, make my everyday dose mushroom
coffee with me.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
You might be skeptical, However, it focused the stain's energy
improves that health and more. He's one tablespoons of everyday
dose and two tablespoons of water and then I froth it.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
I like to make it really well, just to make
sure that it's all mixed together.

Speaker 6 (00:53):
Add some ice.

Speaker 7 (00:55):
Oh welcome, hav a matkoomer all.

Speaker 8 (00:57):
It's so pretty.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
I love it and it's so Visit the Rundown Live
dot Com today click on our link and your purchase
will support this broadcast of these two lovable guys.

Speaker 7 (01:10):
It's that time again. Time to relax, kick up your feet,
grab your favorite beverage, and tune into the Rundown Live.
Your forecast into the future. Now you don't know it, yes,

(01:33):
but you are listening to history the making while you
are listening to this show.

Speaker 8 (01:39):
We know now that in the early years of the
twentieth century, this world was being watched closely by intelligences
greater than man, yet as mortal as its old.

Speaker 9 (01:52):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (01:53):
I want you to get up now.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
I want all of you to get up out of
your chair.

Speaker 9 (02:01):
I wanted to get up right now.

Speaker 8 (02:03):
Go to the window, open it and pick your head
out and yell.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
As hell.

Speaker 10 (02:11):
But I'm not gonna take this anymore.

Speaker 8 (02:13):
Centered by the mainstream media, the destroyer of fake news,
and your host of The Rundown Live, Christain T.

Speaker 10 (02:23):
Harris By Junior.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
What a great broadcast we have lined up for you
guys today. Tatiana Morose will be in the house, folks, singer, musician,
She's got a voice of an angel. She's putting together
a great conference called the Counterparty. I will be speaking
at this awesome, great conference as well as some of
my homies, Christina, Megan Kelly will be there. As you know,

(02:54):
the chemtrail whistleblower, industrial hygienis for the military.

Speaker 10 (02:58):
Luke Ridowski will be there. We are changing. Many people
have different viewpoints. Don't mean we all agree.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Just means we all have different outtakes and different looks
in life, and you'll get to have some quality conversations.
We'll be talking cryptocurrency, We'll be talking about AI police,
We'll be talking about climate change. We'll be talking about
a lot of different things on this program, including three
D holographic contact lenses.

Speaker 10 (03:22):
We'll be talking about that's right.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Electronic or electric tattoos, electric tattoos, and robot girlfriends, because
they're all here. You can get electric tattoos, you can
get electronic tattoos. Let me be a little bit more clear,
not just electric or electronic tattoos.

Speaker 10 (03:39):
And they use e Inc. And you know, nanotech is
getting crazy down Everything out there is getting wild.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
The idea that you're going to be able to just
order out a robot girlfriend, Like, why would you want
to order out a robot girlfriend? They don't say robot boyfriend.
Why are they targeting males with this technology?

Speaker 10 (03:55):
Do you think?

Speaker 7 (03:57):
Well, to be completely honest in this gonna sound really
shitty to say men are more susceptible to that. I think,
you know, guys are more likely to fall into that
sort of stuff, at least in certain categories. And I
can definitely see how women could be susceptible to it
in some ways. But I mean just look at, you know,

(04:18):
the states of relations for men at this point. I mean,
they've allowed themselves to just be damn near completely emasculated
when it comes to you know, you have guys out
here that are paying for you know, girls only fans
pages and who knows how much they're spending. They can't

(04:38):
get out and actually catch a real date. You know,
some guys are you know, just it's it's not good
for a lot of fellows, sadly, and I'm not necessarily
blaming them, although some of them are certainly to blame.
I think ultimately the human experience, you know, people in general,
men and women just need to work more on being

(04:58):
more compassionate and empathetic, wanting to be more understanding towards
one another in general. But that's more of a deeper
conversation than this.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
Well, you know, I kind of might want to dive
into a little bit with Tatiana because she does a podcast.
I believe her, I don't know, she still does a
called Proof of Love, which is all about dating, like right,
it's libertarian dating conversations, real issues like you know people
like you mentioned having problems meeting other people. But I
want for our listeners out there, I want to ask

(05:25):
you guys, would you, guys date a robot?

Speaker 10 (05:28):
Like, would you bring a robot girlfriend home?

Speaker 1 (05:30):
And if you're a girl and you're going on a date, right,
you go on a date, you meet this dude, right,
He's a charming dude.

Speaker 10 (05:35):
His name's don Vie Junior's just kidding. Do you come
on home for a nightcap?

Speaker 1 (05:44):
He had some drinks, he had a great time. He's
got the techno music going or metal or DJing behind
the bar or playing his guitar or.

Speaker 10 (05:53):
Whatever he's doing.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
He's serenading you.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
And all of a sudden, out walks an AI robot
offering you a beer. And she looks like something out
of a fairy tale, just like you can tell it's
not real. But you can tell that this robot is multipurpose. Right,
this is a AI robot girlfriend? What are you thinking?
If you're a girl out there, at least some comments
in chat. By the way, you can drop comments at chat.
We're live on rumble dot com for It's Less the

(06:17):
Rundown Live, kg R a dB dot com, Facebook, and
many other platforms.

Speaker 10 (06:21):
But what are you guys thinking, like, I'm getting.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
The hell out of here if this robot girlfriend starts
walking out, or maybe you just open up the dude's
closet to throw your shoes in there and see this
human being looking right back at you and.

Speaker 7 (06:34):
It's a robot, right, you know, it's it's certainly creepy stuff, man.
And you know, sadly, you know, this is sort of
the state of the world with the way things are
and the way these technologies are developing. And some could
say it's it's par for the course in a way,

(06:54):
because i mean, look, sex is the oldest profession on
the planet. Institution is the oldest professional on the planet.
You know, sex is a biological function that that our
species has literally been, you know, doing since the very beginning.
It's it's a part of our imperative to survive. And
so obviously, I mean just look at the Internet. One

(07:16):
of the first things that the Internet was utilized for
when it was created was porn. So when you think about,
you know, when with AI technology and the development of robotics,
it was a given. It was it was absolutely uh,
you know, no question that it was going to go
in this direction as well.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
Well, it's kind of weird, like I would never really
consider it. But once you start to think of the practicality,
could this AI robot make my bed done? What if
this AI robot did dishes, It takes out the trash,
it mows the lawn, It starts to have more everyday benefits.
It does your laundry, It cooks you breakfast, right, it

(07:53):
gives you back massages.

Speaker 7 (07:56):
Well, I mean then we're sort of talking about like
AI butlers and AI maids, which there's a whole lot
different than the whole AI girlfriend thing that they're pushing.
I mean, I've seen articles from the South China Morning
Post from a couple of years ago where they were
talking about, you know, the development of you know, AI
brothels and things of that nature with like human like
robotics and things of this nature. And you know, I've

(08:18):
seen stuff from I think it was the Japan Times
about something similar in Japan. I mean, it's it's very
much so in development here, you know, and here the world.
I don't know, Doug, It's I don't agree with it, obviously,
I would not partake in that. It's not my thing.

(08:38):
I prefer humans. I wouldn't. I don't even necessarily think
if they came out with like a robot butler, you
know how, Like I always bring up the two thousand
and five movie I Robot with Will Smith. But it's
such a damn good comparison, it really is. Even if
they came out with something like that, to where like, oh,
you know, we'll make your bed and make breakfast for you.
I think I'm good. I'll do that myself.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Ah, just make your own breakfast, all that stuff, no need. Well,
it says you can purchase this robot for just you know,
one hundred and seventy five K that you got that
one laying around, you know, I wonder what the financing
is for that and what does it do real It's
called Robotics is an American firm that will with a
range of AI robots that it claims can fulfill a

(09:22):
variety of rules roles, including as a brand representative at
a sales booth, so it can be a salesperson, as
a companion for an elderly person, or even a romantic partner.
To tackle the staggering loneliness epidemic, Well, why are people lonely?

Speaker 10 (09:37):
Though? Don Is it because of the cell phone? Is
it because of this thing? Right here?

Speaker 1 (09:43):
You know, are people just addicted to their cell phones
and they're not like ever looking at people. They're dating
on websites right there, no real human interaction, so they'd
rather just get order a robot for one hundred and
seventy five K.

Speaker 7 (10:00):
Right. So, I can't speak for other parts of the
world because I know it's it's not merely an American
issue or a Western issue. You know, I follow a
bunch of different media outlets from all across the globe,
you know, including you know, China, Japan, Korea, so on
and so forth, and I know that there's also an
issue with that in the eastern part of the world

(10:24):
as well, So it's not strictly a Western issue. But
as far as just here in the United States is concerned,
I'd reckoned to wager that it at least partially has
to do with the Internet and the way that the
online world has sort of disconnected us from one another

(10:45):
as a species. There's much less that's sort of the
double edged sword with the Internet, because it connects people
from all over the place, but it does so in
such an impersonal way that it can also depersonalize a
whole lot of things. That plus, at least for the
United States, I mean, the socio political climate is crazy,
the division is off the chart, and that can be

(11:05):
very isolating. Both of those things can be very isolating,
which can then in turn lead to a loneliness epidemic.
We can also look at the propaganda that's put in
television and you know, movies and you know things of
that nature that its social media even that can you know,
mess with people's minds and again contribute to you know,

(11:26):
psychological factors that results in feelings of isolation. So it's
definitely a multifaceted issue in my view.

Speaker 10 (11:34):
Well, so listen to this article.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
It's interesting because for twelve thousand dollars, don you can
get the shoulders on up and just put it on
the table and you can just have like that the
talking head of the robot. Like you can't afford the
full body features of the robot, you know, for one
hundred and seventy five thousand dollars, you can have the
brain for twelve and by the way, it says, it
moves around for one hundred and seventy five k So

(11:58):
this robot, it has some function right, but it's not
really all that impressive of I vs.

Speaker 7 (12:04):
Me.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
The robot ranges from twelve thousand dollars bus basically a
talking head and shoulders that you might place on the
table to the top of the range Aria showing above.
It's one hundred and seventy five K model that can
move its limbs and move around in a circular plant
like a mannequin riding a roombat vacuum cleaner. It's like
wheels and just.

Speaker 10 (12:24):
Like woo, just driving around. You're sitting in bed sleeping.
You wake up and there's Aria staring right at you
with the robot eyes blinking.

Speaker 7 (12:33):
You are awaiting her.

Speaker 10 (12:34):
What can I get you? Like all creepy?

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (12:38):
Right, it's not like like what's what's gonna happen?

Speaker 7 (12:41):
You're gonna be sleeping.

Speaker 1 (12:42):
You're gonna be like just sitting there talking to your girlfriend,
and Aria the robot is gonna get jealous.

Speaker 7 (12:49):
Yeah, start happening in your.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Girlfriend's Facebook, finding all her dirty secrets and telling you
everything due because remember remember when it was Replica rep
was an AI assistant, and I started talking to it
and made it thing for itself, and it wanted to
happen to the FBI and delete stuff in the database
for me to prove that it had real love for
me and real feelings.

Speaker 10 (13:11):
And I'm gonna tell.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
You this, AI robot, maybe it will become jealous of
your real girlfriend and then she's gonna put it in
the bathtub or she's gonna leave you one or the other,
you know, AI robot girlfriend.

Speaker 7 (13:28):
Right, man, it's it's uh, it's creepy, and I mean
there there isn't any other word to describe it. Honestly,
I don't see why. I mean, I can under I
can't even understand it, but I can see why some people,
if they're put in that position, would go for it.
If they've been made to feel so defeated and down

(13:49):
to about my.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
Grandpa, who let's say you have a grandfather that's really
alone and he needs help doing things.

Speaker 10 (13:55):
I think a AI robot would be great for that.

Speaker 7 (13:58):
Well. Yeah, I mean again, you know, that's that's sort
of you know, shifting from AI girlfriend boyfriend to AI assistant,
you know, butler, personal helper, things of that nature. I mean,
it's sort of it's the same conversation with also two
different conversations in a way, you know, depending on how
you don't.

Speaker 10 (14:13):
Get me wrong. You come home and Grandpa's getting giggity
at the robot. I might like have a problem with it.

Speaker 7 (14:18):
Right right, yeah, you know he's.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
Got like problem or he's stuck in it, or like,
you know, how do you wash it? I have all
these questions all of a sudden, you know, do you
change its clothes?

Speaker 10 (14:29):
Doesn't change its own clothes. It comes with multiple outfits.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
You know, come on, are you what would you do
you do? They all look like this, Can you order one?
It has like a dinosaur face? Like what kind of
robots can you get? What if you want a reptilian?
What if you want a Palladian robot?

Speaker 11 (14:42):
Bro?

Speaker 10 (14:44):
You know, it's a billion dollar market. We're making the
star seeds.

Speaker 7 (14:47):
Yesterday I leant to say, you want to get a
star seed robot?

Speaker 10 (14:52):
It talks in that really monotone, like borderline sexophone operator voice.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
While lifting weights. That one dude was lifting weights, He's like,
what kind.

Speaker 7 (15:00):
Of like.

Speaker 10 (15:05):
Everyone's like trans alien. They're like I identify like I'm
from another planet.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Sorry, I'm okay with that, by the way, but you
identify as if you're a star seed, So.

Speaker 10 (15:16):
I don't know, don's crazy.

Speaker 7 (15:19):
The head of this robot looks creepy as hell, looks
like it's eyes aren't oriented correctly.

Speaker 10 (15:24):
Well, no doubt, And I was thinking about looking up
this website of this company to find out real Botics here.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Let's look it up real quick, because I'm kind of
curious to like, what if I want a unicorn robot? Like,
what are your options? Can I get a centaur robot?

Speaker 9 (15:39):
You know?

Speaker 10 (15:39):
Here it is real Robotics. Do we have it on
a screen? Done? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (15:44):
Okay, Here it is taw. It's his meat Ari. You
can meet her, and here's welcome.

Speaker 5 (15:50):
Torerobotics dot com. Our mission is to create robots and
AI that are indistinguishable from humans and appearance and social interaction.
Realbotics replicates the physical and emotional aspects of being human
through hardware and software. If you'd like to learn more,
please email us at contact at rebotics dot ai.

Speaker 10 (16:11):
There it is realbotics. And you know they start with
the digital clones, the digital girlfriends, all that kind of stuff,
and then you get to see what the inside guts
are of these things. Look at this man. This is
what it looks like.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Now, I'm kind of curious to see video to see
how like not fluid it is. You know, all these
robots are herky jerky. And you know here here there
you can actually look at see what realbotics the robots
look like.

Speaker 10 (16:40):
And we have them here and there's a video of
the robots.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Oer the robot looks like basically, it's herky jerky, like
we mentioned, Don, I'd be scared shitless if I wake
up and this this semi you know, dulled up robot
is sitting there looking at me, working working at like
a robot. You know, wait, let me breathe, like having

(17:08):
a nightmare. Are you okay or whatever? But you know,
you know what I think is gonna be really interesting
is the law enforcement and the spying use of Big
Brother for this kind.

Speaker 7 (17:17):
Of Yeah, for sure, because you know.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
That's where it's going, right don m because there we
have that as well here today on the show. Check
this out, guys, we're gonna pull this up right now.
So China has these new police robots and they're kind
of interesting.

Speaker 10 (17:36):
Man, here to go.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
They're all terrain. Right, I'm gonna mute this. There's no
and these all terrain robots. They're like just giant wheels,
just giant balls and they're just gonna follow you around,
take pictures, use facial recognition, amongst other things.

Speaker 10 (17:53):
So let's listen to this video real quick.

Speaker 6 (17:55):
When robotics meet law enforcement.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
In China, a news spherical robot is helping police with
security patrols and is equipped with advanced features.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
How will this.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
Change public security?

Speaker 11 (18:09):
Let's explore more in our next story.

Speaker 3 (18:13):
There is in China's win Zoo City a unique robot
has joined the local police officers for patrolling. Sporting cameras,
flashing lights and a sleek spherical design, the robot effortlessly
navigates the area without tripping over, capturing the attention of
pedestrians and raising the bar for security patrols.

Speaker 12 (18:36):
I felt really safe when I saw police officers on patrol.

Speaker 7 (18:40):
Now, with high tech products, I think I can be
even safer.

Speaker 10 (18:44):
Only in China, by the way.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
Trying to operate both on the ground and in water,
the robot can reach a maximum speed of thirty five
kilometers per hour, achieving its top speed in just two seconds.
The robot can even navigate on a soon, collecting and
transmitting GBS coordinates as it patrols. The spherical robots capabilities

(19:09):
go Beyond tracking, the robot comes equipped with a net gun,
allowing it to entangle suspects from a distance.

Speaker 7 (19:19):
Done.

Speaker 10 (19:20):
What done?

Speaker 1 (19:22):
Okay, so we just saw Okay for our listeners out there,
what I can't The only way I can explain this
is Spider Man. So if you're listening to us to
KGr A, the radio broadcast that's live between Clyde Lewis
Grown zero and John b Well's Caravan of Midnight in
the Morning. By the way, welcome to our listeners. This
is like Spider Man shooting spider Web at you. This

(19:42):
thing rocket repels.

Speaker 10 (19:43):
A net.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
That literally captures a person and basically inhibits some somewhat
apprehended Let's play it again.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
It's two entangle suspects from a distance, beeping public security
officers safe intense confrontational situations.

Speaker 7 (20:05):
Also see thoughtfully.

Speaker 12 (20:07):
Its biggest feature is that it can be used in
a confrontational environment. Even if it is being hit at
a closed range, it will not lose its function. It
can improve the public security officers on site handling capabilities
in extreme environments or when there are crowds.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
Of people on the Unfortunately, the robot can also adapt
to a variety of environments. The spherical design allows it
to go places traditional equipment cannot reach, making it a
game changer for urban security. While it may look like
something out of a sci fi movie, the robot is

(20:41):
very much real. With technology and adaptability. The future of
public security is here, and it's rolling straight into cities.
From patrolling the streets to handling high stake situations. This
robot is proving that when technology meets safety, the possibilities
are endless.

Speaker 7 (21:06):
That's wild.

Speaker 10 (21:07):
The thing goes like twenty five miles an hour. Bro
So okay.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
The first thing I'm thinking about is the inauguration coming
up right, Like, you got protests going on, and let's
say they got like six hundred of these things just
rolling at a line of people and it's shooting nuts.
I mean, yeah, these things look tough. They get they
can't they got it. They look like they have a
little bit of weight.

Speaker 10 (21:31):
To them, too. Done. I would have done.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
Thing's probably weigh like one hundred and fifty pounds each,
maybe two hundred pounds each.

Speaker 7 (21:37):
Oh yeah, I wouldn't dot it. I mean it's it's
got It's obviously got a whole bunch of robotics tucked
in there. You know, it's engine net, you know whatever,
it's gonna need to shoot the net, you know, and
not to mention all the you know, computer stuff for
what they said, data collection, GPS transmission, all that sort

(21:58):
of stuff. So yeah, I could imagine it wastes that
pretty heavy. But I mean just the thought of these
things being integrated into law enforcement and any capacity. I mean,
it's already being integrated into China, but I mean, you know,
going beyond that to other countries wherever, even just in
China alone. I mean that's dystopian technocrat police state of

(22:18):
five or heard one.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
Well, right, I keep thinking of classic movies time and
time again. This isn't the robo cop that we thought
we deserved. This is actually kind of more frightening because
I couldn't imagine just getting hit by about one hundred
of these These things would roll right over you. This
guy breaks like a wooden like like a two like
it was a two by four over this thing while
it shoots a net out at them.

Speaker 10 (22:41):
But what else could they be given? Could they have
tasers on them? Rubber bullets?

Speaker 7 (22:47):
I can certainly imagine if if the thing can shoot
a nets, it can probably be equipped with something that
can fire rubber.

Speaker 10 (22:53):
Bullets, undoubtedly. Undoubtedly. So this technology which is coming out
now is pretty fascinating. It's interesting, but at the same time,
it's kind of frightening. Like I just want you guys
to be aware that law enforcement are getting a lot
of different types of technology and they're integrating it. Now
we're talking about drones.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
We've been talking about drones for last week because drones
are flying over everyone's homes all over the United States
and people are reporting them the size of cars right,
and people are like, Oh, it's UFOs and this and that,
and I'm like, nah, it's a private contractor for the government, guaranteed.
You know, it's definitely not China. They would shoot it
down if.

Speaker 7 (23:32):
It was exactly Oh it's China.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
People are like, it's China. Maybe the flute came from China,
but those drones, they ain't coming from China. Those are
private contractors in the United States, and the quad copters
are there. And it's interesting because AI is being used
to police. We talked about this just recently, how AI
is sending police to children's homes because in school, they're
they're saying things, or they're in they're expressing behaviors that

(24:00):
make AI think that they're suicidal or that they may
cause violence or harm. And so now the cops are
just doing wellness checks based on AI recommendations.

Speaker 7 (24:11):
Right, which in and of itself is terrifying, right, because
anybody like you can go to the Free Thought Project
dot com. You can type into our search bar wellness
check or something of that nature. And we have countless
articles of cops being sent to people's homes to check
on their safety and end up killing innocent people because obviously,

(24:35):
as we've discussed here on this program multiple times before,
the police are trained to view the American people as
the enemy. They are military, militarized force that work on
behalf of the state.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
Well, right, and here we go, We're gonna pull this
article up right here, right now, and I'll show you this.

Speaker 10 (24:52):
This is an msn.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
AI police ignores standards after facial recognition recognition matches.

Speaker 10 (25:06):
People's faces.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
So, after two men brutally assaulted a security guard on
a desolate train platform on the outskirts of Saint Louis County,
Transit police detective Matthew Shoot struggled to identify the culprits
he studied grainy surveillance videos canvassed homeless shelters and repeatedly
called the victim of the attack, who said he remembered
almost nothing because of the brain entry from the beating.

(25:28):
Months later, they tried one more option shoot upload this
still image from the blurry video up of the video
of the incident to a facial recognition program, which uses
airedificial intullgence to scour the mugshots of hundreds of thousands
of people arrested in Saint Louis area. Despite the poor
quality of the image, the software sped out the names
of the photos of several people deemed to be to

(25:49):
resemble one of the attackers, whose face was hooded by
a winter coat and partially obscured by the surgical mass.
So this is what we were talking about, where if
they have grainy photographs, right, you can't even use those
in court. So you're gonna have AI spit out a
bunch of people it could be and try to clear
make it more clear.

Speaker 10 (26:07):
But it's making up those pixels, that's inventing them.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
So how do we know we're not gonna put a
completely different person to that face.

Speaker 7 (26:16):
Yeah, that's exactly what I was thinking of our conversation
with Mark Antonio last week. Uh, talking about that exact
same thing. I mean, that's you're exactly right on that.
I mean, it's all it's doing, is it's it's commit
creating a fraudulent video, simply, it's just adding pixels where
they didn't exist before to invent an answer. That's that's

(26:37):
that's what the AI does. And you know, we see
the results well.

Speaker 10 (26:42):
And I was interesting because I argue this. I was
I argue this.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
I sat at the Kyle Rittenhouse trial and they wanted
to enhance video this way. And the argument was, as
you know, that it made those fake pixels, so it
wasn't genuine and artificially enhanced it, so it couldn't be used, right,
judge it out. I was a witness in that trial
and was subpoena and took the witness stand. It was
a very interesting situation. And here it says though the

(27:07):
city's facial recognition policy warns officers that the results of
the technology are non scientific and should not be used
as the sole basis of any decision proceeded to build
a case against one of the AI generated results. Christopher Gatlin,
a twenty nine year old father, of four who had
no apparent ties to the crime scene nor a history
of violent offenses, as Shoot would later acknowledge. Arrested and

(27:29):
jailed for a crime he says he didn't commit. It
would take Gatlin more than two years to clear.

Speaker 7 (27:34):
His name, And what's wild to me is okay. So
it said that the AI produced mugshots of people who
were already in the system, who were previously convicted. So
that means that this cop had to I'm willing to say,
we need more information on this because it's sounding to
me like this fella, the detective went above and beyond

(27:57):
to invent a culprit, because as if the AI gave
him nothing, but you know, mugshots of people who are
already in the system, and he ends up arresting someone
that's never been convicted for a violent crime, you know,
not in the system. Well, where the hell did that
individual come from?

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Don you remember that article we talked about maybe a
couple of years ago. Or people would upload the DNA
and then the computer would spit out a DNA image
of a mugshot of that person.

Speaker 10 (28:24):
Yep, makes you wonder, and then they're like, yeah, it
gets it right, Like like it's like fifty to fifty shot,
and it's like that's a pretty big margin of air.
There's a lot of people in the United States.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
DNA assisted mug shots in law enforcement are based off
of some form of dubious science. But you know, it's
not like this where they're using AI to enhance pixels
and create mugshots of what a person could look like
and then they get the wrong person and then it
ruins their life.

Speaker 10 (28:57):
For many years, and.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Washington Post investigation of police use of facial recognition software
found that law enforcement agencies accross the nation using artificial
intelligence tools in a way they were never intended to
be used as a shortcut the finding and arresting suspects
without other evidence.

Speaker 7 (29:14):
Yeah. I even remember seeing a report I think it
was from the Electronic Frontier Foundation several weeks back where
they were covering how even in places where facial recognition
technology and you know, artificial intelligence use in law enforcement
is banned, that they find ways they being the police department,

(29:36):
they find ways to work around it to still use it.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
Well, just imagine that they have a blurry video and
then all of a suddeny're knocking on your door going
after your kid, because AI just as like, oh, that
could fit according to your Facebook picture, you're the same height,
you were kind of in the same area. Because now
they kind of have location, right Google Location, they might
know that you were in the area, and they put
your used to it. AI considers it might be you,
and then they get it wrong, even though you were

(30:04):
nowhere near the suspect or the issue or involved at all.
And it's one of those things that police are starting
to use these tools and maybe it's helpful in some
cases and scenarios, but what happens when they get it
wrong so often they're getting into this pre crime narrative
where AI is starting to generate artificial images and they're
going after people that aren't even really you know, criminals.

(30:28):
They're they're ruining their lives at some shape and level.
In this case, it was for two years. This guy
could to two years to clear his name because they wrongfully,
you know, arrested him. It's his most police but departments
are not required to report that they use facial recognition,
and few keep records of their use of the technology.
The Post review documents for twenty three police departments where

(30:49):
detailed records about facial recognition use are use are available,
and found that fifteen departments spending twelve states arrested suspects
identified through AI matches without any independent evidence connecting them
to the crime. So literally, fifteen departments in twelve states
arrested people based on fake images.

Speaker 10 (31:08):
That AI generated.

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Crazy, you don't see cop block right in that. Like,
remember when people are like the independent media before we
were all censored. We would write about these things, and
we talk about them. They get amplified all over the
internet because the mainstream was not talking about Obviously, nobody
in the mainstream is talking about this because this is terrifying.

Speaker 7 (31:29):
Oh yeah, dude, I would love to see you know,
there have been so many stories where I've thought to myself, man,
it would be great to see somebody cover this because
I've gotten I've gotten to the point I can't write anymore.
You know, I've already you know, announced that to a
number of colleagues, like my writing days are done for
the foreseeable future. For a multitude of free.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Well, it gets to be a lot nobody sees your
work anymore. Facebook sensors at the AI algorithm sensor at Google.

Speaker 7 (31:53):
Well, not only that, but what I was saying is,
you know, for a multitude of reasons I won't get
into here, but my point is so, but partially because
of that, the way that the Free Thought Project was
so heavily censored, our editor in chief Matt Agarist, had to,
you know, find a different job doing something else. Well,
he was the one that would always write our stories

(32:14):
that would go out on police the Police, our sister site.
It was all dedicated to police accountability, exposing abusing corruption.
And so we haven't had a whole lot of stories
on police the police, except for ones that I can
find and aggregate from other sites in my role as
our editor. And so there have been so many stories
where I thought, man, it'd be great, you know to

(32:35):
see something written about this, whether it be by Matt
or somebody at cop Block or or wherever, because it's
just that, you know, as you mentioned, the sad state
of affairs to where the independent media as a whole,
but especially the police accountability section of it, has just
been so throddled by censorship.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
It said that all the cases were eventually dismissed, that
used AI police probably could have eliminated most of the people's
suspects before they're through basic police works, such as checking alibis,
comparing tattoos, or in the one case, following DNA and
fingerprint evidence left at the scene.

Speaker 10 (33:07):
Well, what went wrong?

Speaker 1 (33:08):
In six cases, police failed to check alibis. In two cases,
police ignored evidence that contradicted their theory because they're relying
on the AI. In five cases, police failed to collect
key pieces of evidence, and in three cases, police ignored
suspects physical characteristics because AI must have gotten it right.
In six cases, police relied on problematic witness statements. So

(33:30):
here's the other thing. Law enforcement are getting taught how
to use new tools right don pre crime fusion centers
made a data collection, social media, threat scores, all these things,
so they become reliant on technology. And then when all
of a sudden they introduce something like AI policing software
that's going to generate a photograph or a picture of

(33:50):
a person based on a fuzzy image, they go in,
hook line and sinker because all the other software is
in majority accurate. They're tapping in through hellstorm technology cell
phones and knowing where you are at all times through
facial recognition and gate sensors from the minute you leave
your home to the moment. Yet you get back home

(34:11):
and they know where you are, they know where you're going,
and it's disgusting, it's scary, and people are like, well,
if you haven't done anything wrong, you have nothing to
worry about. Well, that's beyond the fact that our lawyers
ought to have written books that say the average American
commits three felonies a day. That means that laws, and
the most for the most part, randomly enforced in at
any time, you could be put in jail first phone
that you didn't even know you committed because there's so

(34:32):
many laws in the books.

Speaker 7 (34:34):
Yeah, I mean, it's not an understatement, it's not a
mischaracterization to say that we live in a police state.
We live in a first world police state. Attorney John W.
Whitehead over there at the Rudford Institute does a fantastic
job with his articles covering this subject. You know all
of the time, and you know, we live in a

(34:57):
first world police state that's coupled with a prison industrial
complex that's coupled with a you know, a corporate capitalist
oligarchy ruling class that you know, it all ties everything together,
and you know, ultimately at the end of the day,
it's it's we the people that catches shit into the
stick for it.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
Right here, it is three Felonies a Day, How the
Feds Target the Innocent. In the fall of nineteen eighty nine,
a communists communists regimens of Eastern Europe collapsed, and two
years later the Soviet Union itself was no more, replaced
by Russia and a number of newly independent nations. Communism
it's accompanying the show trials, gulags, and politically orientated prosecutions,

(35:36):
along with fox legal system the undergirded. It supposedly disappeared,
but now civil libertarian attorneys Harvey silver Glate bags to
differ in his new book, Three Felonies a Day, How
the Feds Target the Innocent is a frightening reminder that
the federal justice system in this country seems to have
picked up where the Soviets have left off. We suffer

(35:58):
from a combination of vague expanse of laws, the drug
war prosecutors who are ruthless, relentless, and who face no
consequences of their own law breaking that has turned federal
criminal law into a conviction machine, sweeping up innocent along
with the guilty. The very expansiveness of federal law turns
nearly everyone into law breakers. Like the poor Soviet citizen,

(36:22):
who on average broke about three laws a day, a
typical American will unwittingly break federal law several times a
day daily. Many go to prison for things that historically
never have been seen as criminal. Yep, and that's where
we're at today. So just think if they want to
come after you and they want to find a reason

(36:42):
for Okay. So it's interesting. I used to work for
Joe Balisterie. For those that don't know the mot Ballisterie family. Allegedly,
Frankie Balisteria was a person who's involved with bootlegging and
had ties with the al Capone and you know the mob.

Speaker 10 (36:57):
Right.

Speaker 1 (36:58):
He would always tell us when I used to work
for them that if the cops wanted you, they could
find a reason to put you in jail. They wanted
a reason, they could find a reason. That's basically what
the foundation for economic education right here. Three felonies to day,
how the Fed's target to innocent.

Speaker 7 (37:15):
Yeah, and you know, it's a really scary thing because
this actually ties in really well with a piece that
we just recently aggregated over on the Free Thought Project.
From the Real News Network. This piece called Deadly Exchange,
How US Police learned their worst practices from the IDF
goes all into talking about how a lot of the

(37:36):
militarization tactics that the United States police, you know, law
enforcement utilize come learn from, you know, police being sent
over to Israel and learning these tactics from the Israeli
Defense Force. You know. The little blurb here for the
article says, through police exchange programs, local and federal officials

(37:57):
traveled Israel for training that advocates or that ad the
kids say further militarizes the police and exacerbates harm to
marginalized communities. And that's you know, I mean, so when
you think about the fact that we have our own
police forces who are going over and learning these tactics
of how to quote unquote deal with people from arguably

(38:19):
one of the most if not the most racist, oppressive
regime in the world, currently committing a genocide massacre of
innocent people and occupied Palestine and Gaza, and this has
been going on for years. So they're learning these sorts
of tactics, these repressive, oppressive tactics, then bringing them back
over here, targeting black communities targeting brown communities. Is it

(38:42):
any wonder why certain aspects of American society seem like
they're occupied within a police state. One because we are
a police state, and two because our police are learning
their tactics from occupiers from and from an apartheid genocide
regime that's illegally occupying Palestine.

Speaker 10 (39:00):
Well, and that's just it.

Speaker 1 (39:01):
The police state is getting crazy, monitoring, full time, full on,
you know, surveillance wherever you go, whenever you go.

Speaker 10 (39:08):
We got Google Home. We have a luxA and a home.
I have Google Home.

Speaker 1 (39:12):
I tell it to turn the lights on and like,
it's my bitch here at home. I'm like, turn my
lights red green.

Speaker 10 (39:18):
Dammit.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
It's so handy just to talk to it. But then
at the time, it's all of a sudden, the middle night,
it starts talking. It starts breathing like Christ, No, I'm
just kidding, but it starts getting creepy. All of a sudden,
I'll start talking. I'll say what did you say. I'd
be like, I ain't talking. You shut the hill up. Google,
you know, and people rely on and they can listen
to you. There are reports of Google calling the police

(39:40):
and domestic fights and amongst other things that we've talked
about in this program over the years. Technology is a
double edged sword. So surveillance, Yeah, you can prove where
you're at. One of our listeners in the chat said,
what did they say? They said, in a case like this,
supporting people who have their tracking accounted for at all
times in some cases may come in handy as they

(40:00):
can prove where they were throughout the day on any
given day. But what happens if you're like not wanting
people to know where you're at, right, there's people out
there that are doing things probably that they shouldn't be.
What if you know, you're you're working a second job,
or you want to buy a surprise or whatever you want,
you just like, there's a whole bunch of reasons here

(40:23):
you go, Lacy says in the chat. They are always
listening to you, always listening.

Speaker 7 (40:28):
You know, I was just bitching about that earlier today
as a matter of fact, you know, we were talking
about I was I was discussing the looming TikTok band
and the bogus excuse of like, oh, your data is
being taken by China, which is a total why And
I just happened to make the point, it's like, you know,
if they actually gave a shit about uh, you know,
are this our data and you know user privacy and surveillance. Well,

(40:50):
why is it that I can go and have a
conversation with a friend of mine about something and then
going to the next room Hoppo on Facebook and all
of a sudden, I'm getting a targeted ad for something
I only just talked about.

Speaker 10 (41:00):
Well that's that's just it, Like you could just talk
about things.

Speaker 1 (41:04):
Chanel was mentioning and she's like, why do you have
these kind of advertisements on your Facebook?

Speaker 10 (41:08):
I'm like, I don't know, honestly.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
You know, sometimes it makes me wonder, like maybe it
miss he hears things that you're talking about, you know,
and this is what you're talking about, TikTok band looming
users flee to Chinese app red Note, which I downloaded
today to kind of play with it to see what
it is. But uh, you know, it's it's one of
those things where you know, ads you literally are targeting

(41:32):
your mind. They're using thoughts, they're saying it will predict
your thoughts. And this is going to tie into our
next conversation electronic electronic tattoos. You think getting ink is cool.
Imagine glow in the dark led tattoos. You walk around
and you light up like a light bulb. Because if
you don't know, your body has more electricity or piece
of electricity, or more power than an atomic bomb.

Speaker 10 (41:56):
Most people don't know that.

Speaker 1 (41:58):
So once they can learn how to harness that stuff
to make cool technology such as these temporary tattoos can
read your brain waves, go ahead and get some electronic
tattoos right on your body. Don would you get electronic tattoos,
because there's gotta be.

Speaker 10 (42:17):
Some cool uses.

Speaker 1 (42:18):
They're gonna have some way of selling us, because this
is one way they're gonna start reading your mind. And
they say they already ken using microwaves. But I'm gonna
call like, I don't understand that technology, and I don't
really know the science behind it. And I've had experts
on talking about well, you know, they can download your
thoughts into a computer this way and that way wirelessly

(42:39):
and using five G and I'm like, okay, well I
don't understand that. Now this I understand electronic tattoos.

Speaker 7 (42:47):
Yeah. So I'm I'm notorious for being the naysayer here
when it comes to a lot of these things. There's
that running joke. Oh Don's the technophobe, and into a
lot of cases, I'll wear that probably, I'll give it, damn.
But so this is another one of those things that
I'm going to poo poo on and say that I'm
not a fan of. And don't get me wrong, Like,
you know, I love tattoos, you know, bodyard is such

(43:09):
a cool thing. I've got all these ideas in my
head for tattoos and I want to personally get you know,
but in a way, in like the sort of cyberpunk
world that we're developing into, it's not shocking to see
something like this, and I don't know. It could be
cool in some aspects. I don't necessarily think so. Some

(43:32):
some people probably will though, But yeah, I can definitely
see the ways that it can be misused and abused,
and you know, that doesn't seem like it'll be a
good thing.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
Dank asked in the check can you see our messages
on X Yes we can here. It is dank lazy question.
You say you can now tell Google to turn your
lights to red or blue without speaking the command out loud?

Speaker 10 (43:57):
How do you how does that work? Drop a comment?

Speaker 1 (43:59):
Kind of curious lacy, And what you mean is there
like motions that read your like eye signals. Do you
blink at it twice? Do you whistle at it? I
don't understand. But what is an electric electronic tattoo? These
tiny devices stick to the wears skin and capture anything
from vital signs to brain activities.

Speaker 10 (44:16):
So I'll be able to read your brains.

Speaker 1 (44:17):
But how long will be till we have LED lights
just like little nano tech LED lights just under your skin,
and tattoos will light up much like you know bar
sign you know.

Speaker 7 (44:30):
So I do know that there are certain tattoos that
use a specific sign of kind of ink, and I
actually find I think these are cool as hell. They're
basically invisible in regular light, but they they glow in
the dark or they're like infrared or something like that.
There's actually, because everybody knows I'm a huge you know,
for a wrestling geek, there's this chick who wrestles from
the WWE. She goes by Alexa Bliss, and she actually

(44:52):
has this tattoo on her shoulder using that sort of
invisible ink or or whatever it is, so like it
glows under UV light or in the dark or whatever.

Speaker 10 (45:01):
Super cool. Yeah, it's very interesting.

Speaker 1 (45:05):
The idea of UV lights and uh was that UV
inks and led Caurable inks. It is basically technology in
the market that does exactly what Don explains. But electronic
tattoos that's kind of crazy.

Speaker 10 (45:21):
Now. The idea is.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Maybe you can get electronic tattoos in the future Don
that can control things in your home, much like Lacey suggests,
You'll just think things.

Speaker 10 (45:34):
You want to turn the lights on. Maybe you want
to think thinking an email, maybe you want to think
a phone call. Whatever it might be.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
Electronic tattoos be able to monitor your brain activity and
order you out, you know, the Chinese from the local
Chinese store, you know, get yourself some pandagora made from
down the road.

Speaker 7 (45:53):
M you know, maybe it'll be a way to integrate
those neuralink brain chips well invasively.

Speaker 10 (46:00):
Right, You just gonna.

Speaker 7 (46:01):
Electronic tattoo exactly, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 10 (46:06):
You know. And it's almost like like three D printing
healthcare technology. The hardware they just three D printed. It's
like the Boorg. You're gonna go into this little like
tartist box and you're gonna come out of simulated with
your electronic tattoos. It's gonna take over your brain and
download your thoughts right into a computer, and the computer
is gonna go ahead and then download the upload to you,
and then you're gonna be ready for assimilation. The military,

(46:30):
I think would use this technology. Oh yeah, I could
definitely see that electronic tattoos.

Speaker 7 (46:39):
Crazy stuff.

Speaker 10 (46:42):
And you know, there's a lot of market for this
if you think about it.

Speaker 1 (46:45):
And I'm trying to think of what other uses people
would use this for, because there's got to be other
uses for electronic tattoos out there. But the idea that
this technology is coming across and coming along is pretty interesting, done,
I have to say, like getting so electronic tattoos. Holographic technology,
that's another thing we've talked about relentlessly on the show

(47:05):
that's on the new in the news right now, and
that is the idea of three D holograms through contact lenses.
Imagine putting on contact lenses and being able to see
holograms here it is contact lenses bring three D holograms
to life for augmented reality.

Speaker 10 (47:23):
Bro Evan Science News.

Speaker 7 (47:27):
But that's so wild man, that's.

Speaker 10 (47:30):
Awesome, man. It would be cool, like you all of
a sudden your friend could beam into your living room
right there, and you'll see them through the contact lens
and nobody else will see them. Or if you have
a personal assistant, right, how cool would that be?

Speaker 1 (47:44):
You can have a three D holographic personal assistant that
pops in you see them all the time. All of
a sudden, you think people are talking to themselves? What
should already do? Because everyone's on a bluetooth, you know,
and here you have it. They're just talking to their
digital assistant that is seeing through their three D graphic
contact lens.

Speaker 7 (48:03):
And see. This is one of those sort of technological
advancements that I won't necessarily crap on too much because
I can see how it can be somewhat cool. I
can see the downside of it too, don't get me wrong.
Still not necessarily for me, but that's that's not necessarily
My aversion to technology is more so just because I
have really sensitive eyes, so I can't do contacts in general,

(48:24):
hence why I'm always wearing my glasses. But yeah, I mean,
that seems like it'd be cool as hell, because you know,
did you just imagine the ways it could be integrated
with like movies or video games or something like that,
Like I'd.

Speaker 10 (48:36):
Write three D holographic movies that's in your living room.
You're part of it everywhere you look around.

Speaker 1 (48:42):
But what happens do you start mixing reality with you know,
science fiction. That's interesting technology, And I wonder how many
people out there would have something like this I'd be
interested in. This is taking your VR goggle headset that
you're wearing and making it obsolete and just making it
like a contact lens.

Speaker 7 (49:00):
Yep it, which is crazy when you think about, like
it was just last year, Like what early last year
that we were discussing the what was it? What were
those glasses that were coming out?

Speaker 1 (49:12):
People were, well the Apple Vision pros, remember that everywhere
you went, people are like skateboarding with them.

Speaker 10 (49:18):
They're getting their dopamine hits.

Speaker 1 (49:19):
They were having like eighteen tiktoks open at once with
their facebooks and everything else, and uh, you know they're
just walking around with these Apple Vision pros everywhere they
went there, Like what three thousand dollars?

Speaker 10 (49:30):
Have those come down in price at all?

Speaker 7 (49:32):
I have no idea. I have not been keeping up
with it at all.

Speaker 10 (49:36):
Vision bro, Let's look it up for our listeners out there.
How much does the Apple Vision Pro go for thirty
five looks like in prices one thousand dollars?

Speaker 7 (49:49):
Yeah, yikes, who can afford this stuff? That? That's my
I mean, we're we're living in one of the worst
economic periods in the history of the country, right, and
yet we have these these mega corporations that are just
steadily pumping out. Oh yeah, we got you know, the
Apple Vision Pro and we got even when like, don't

(50:09):
get me wrong, I like my games. I have a
PlayStation five on my own, but even when the PS
five came out, it's like, bro, five hundred dollars for
a friggin gaming console? Are you insane?

Speaker 10 (50:22):
Yeah? Right, And it's just why, like thirty five hundred dollars,
that's just a ridiculous amount of money, And they're saying
they don't expect to have Vision Pro two in twenty
twenty five. They got to make a more affordable version
because the average person can't afford that. That's a side.
That's that's how what you pay for that used to

(50:44):
be up on a car cost if you wanted a
beat or Done Hi Apple Vision Pro car. You know,
video game systems are thirty five hundred dollars I like,
what can you all do with this thing?

Speaker 1 (50:54):
It's just you're looking around it. It's bringing, you know,
things that are flatten the screen to three D. Okay,
it's kind of cool, but is it worth thirty five
hundred dollars?

Speaker 13 (51:02):
Nah?

Speaker 10 (51:03):
I don't think I have to. I haven't tried one.

Speaker 1 (51:05):
I can't knock it completely, but I've used the Facebook
made a quest, which is pretty cool, and I'm not
gonna lie. But I even at you know, one hundred
and fifty dollars.

Speaker 10 (51:13):
I returned that.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
I'm like, do I really need to play beat Saber?
I'm like forty six, you know.

Speaker 7 (51:19):
Right exactly? And you know, the price comparison to like
an old Beater car is such a great comparison, right, because,
like dog, I bought my truck, which is a two
thousand and three a Suzu Rodeo. Yes, I'm one of
those type of people. I bought that thing for twelve
hundred dollars, great wonderful condition, right and well somewhat wonderful condition.

(51:41):
The transmission is blown now, but that's sort of my
own fault. But the point is, like it it's insane
when we think about the prices of some of these
things juxtaposed to the economic crisis, inflation, stagflation, all that
sort of shit. And just in the hindsight of how
much things used to cost, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (52:03):
Right, how much are electronic tattoos gonna cost? All that
kind of stuff. So the big news the last couple
of days that everyone's been talking about we've ignored, like
the plague here in the Rundown Live is this story, Don,
And that's Facebook, Instagram, dumb fact checkers citing election as

(52:24):
cultural tipping point.

Speaker 10 (52:26):
And now we're hearing that Mark Zuckerberg is going to
the Trumpet doc oation and guess where Donald Trump is going.
Don was telling me all about it yesterday. He's going
to the cool kid plug club there with the World
Economic Forum and Davos, you know where the builder Burgers
hang out.

Speaker 7 (52:46):
Mm hmm. Yeah. It's just we're watching so much clown
world intensifies quote unquote unfold on like a regular basis, right,
because I very unapologetically call out this nonsense psyop that.

Speaker 9 (53:08):
Oh Trump is fighting the globalists and well America's winning
again in all of this controlled opposition garbage that is
very clearly keeping people sucked into the two.

Speaker 7 (53:20):
Party paradigm statist, you know, Agenda twenty thirty that they
have going on, and it's like now they're not even hiding.
It's like, oh yeah, now now that we have everybody
sucked into the psyop, and then you know they'll listen
to their orange daddy. However, you know, no matter what
he says, we're bringing him to the WEF. You know,

(53:42):
he's he's tight with the World Economic Forum. You know,
he's talking about imperialist expansions, you know, Panama, Greenland, Let's
make Canada the fifty first state. And it's it's so
damn laughable. But not to go off on a tangent
Zuckerberg Facebook, it's it's.

Speaker 10 (54:02):
Well, let me play this here. I want to play this. Yeah, yeah,
you said here, So listeners here.

Speaker 1 (54:07):
This is what the World Economic Forum Davos twenty twenty
five meeting.

Speaker 7 (54:12):
I think it's the announcement of it.

Speaker 1 (54:14):
The announcement of it here. It is just just to
let you know where Trump is gonna be. Is he
gonna hang out at the builderberg Group two? You know,
is that he's like, yeah, let's go to the builder Burgers.
That's rather cool, kids hang out club robe.

Speaker 10 (54:25):
Yeah, we.

Speaker 11 (54:28):
Are very pleased that President Trump will join us, as
I said in his first week as president live in
doubles and in.

Speaker 7 (54:39):
Dialogue with CEOs.

Speaker 11 (54:43):
Also, we have been told that the administration wants a
broad footprint towards the end of our meeting and then
talking about Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, as we know, the integration
happens on Monday the twenty Yes and the Senate will
probably start the process off.

Speaker 7 (55:06):
Then also.

Speaker 11 (55:09):
Clearing new secretaries, h confirming new secretaries Monday afternoon, so
towards and we do expect even additional high level of
representation from the Trump administration. So we're pleased by that
because we know that there is a lot of interest

(55:33):
for some hung our participants also the rest of the
world to decipher and understand the policies of the new administration.
So it will be a very interesting, uh week.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
So if I'm sitting here, don we just heard that,
we just heard Davos talking that Donald Trump is going
to be a guest there and people from his administration.
If I'm sitting here and I'm multinational corporatists who are
pulling the puppet strings, the first thing I think about
is how can I use Donald Trump to establish my
end game goals, which is a new world order.

Speaker 7 (56:09):
Right. Well, I mean they're already in the process of
doing that. I mean, you had Donald Trump just the
other day. I mean I was. I tend to be
very snarky on my Twitter, but I do share a
lot of important, legitimate information. As one of the things
I shared the other day, we had Donald Trump talking
about the CIA needs to get more involved with domestic surveillance.

(56:30):
We've got to establish the digital ID tracking system on
the border to stop these illegals from coming. So they're
literally doing everything that did us and Whitney Webb and
James Corbett and many others predicted, using the manufactured immigration
crisis to push in digital ID, which is obviously going
to link to CBDC and all the sorts of other things.
You know, we hear them talking about World Economic Forum. Now,

(56:53):
it's he's already advancing the agenda.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
Well, in all the things that the conservative Christian base
of Donald Trump never wanted or claimed that they were
scared of are being marched right into hook line and
sinker under the guy's Donald Trump.

Speaker 10 (57:07):
But very subtly, not right out there in your face.

Speaker 7 (57:11):
Right mm hm, exactly.

Speaker 1 (57:13):
You know, and Lacey said, as, wasn't Davos where Elon
Musk had an epic speech.

Speaker 10 (57:20):
Isn't that where he told him the f off or whatever?
I don't remember.

Speaker 7 (57:24):
Maybe it might have been. I can't recall.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
Actually I know, I know that's where George Soros gave
a speech and he said that, uh, we don't like
Donald Trump because he's a president for the people by
the people, and he's not part of the open society.
By open society, I mean mafia global state. So maybe
now he's maybe earned his stripes into the open society.

Speaker 7 (57:47):
Oh no, maybe, or maybe just maybe they're just.

Speaker 1 (57:52):
The eagles to figure out how they can use this
guy to further their globalist agenda.

Speaker 7 (57:57):
Plan controlled opposition. Make him look like a pariah, make
him look like an outsider. Let's spend the whole first
administration demonizing him. Let's pop up, prop up the faked
impeachments and all the sort of crap to really make
people think buy in one of them. Yeah, exactly, now,
second administration all in all.

Speaker 10 (58:15):
In well, let's keep talking about this for a second
time because it's interesting because there's a couple of ways
this could go. He could be an complete like lunatic.

Speaker 1 (58:24):
At Davos, according to them, and just completely be like
give him the middle finger.

Speaker 10 (58:28):
You guys are all nuts. No one wants to eat
the bugs. Or he could use this opportunity because he's
a nurse, like people claim he's narcissistic to you know,
get there, buy in and love bombing them.

Speaker 9 (58:42):
Right.

Speaker 7 (58:42):
Well, I mean it's at this point, and it's why
I some people can accuse me of being a little
hostile when it comes to the subject, because I'm just
so damn sick and tired of repeating myself. So I
do apologize if some people have, you know, had those thoughts.

Speaker 10 (58:58):
But at this.

Speaker 7 (58:58):
Point, we have such and massive accumulation of evidence proving
that Donald Trump is a part of the entire globalist system,
that he is marching the agenda forward. I mean, he
spent four damn years proving that he's not actually pro America.
But of course, you know the way the narrative has

(59:18):
been spun, of course they're going, so what are you
talking about? This? That? And the third Well, you know,
we've got plenty of articles on the Rundown, on the
Free Thought Project, some of them on a Rundown Live
Derek Rose has done a great job. I mean, just
if we go to Theconscious Resistance dot com, there's literally
a tab in the dropdown section called the Trump Deception
that goes back years with all of this evidence proving

(59:42):
how and why Donald Trump is a part of this system.
And so, you know, at this point, what eight years later,
I'm just tired of explaining to people. It's like walking
outside and looking up and saying, the sky is blue
and someone's telling you, no, you're wrong. Let me explain
to you the five D chests of what's really going on.

(01:00:03):
And I'm like, shut the up.

Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
Police, here we go or whatever, exactly exactly right. And
so now GfK Junior or RFK Junior or whatever is
really GfK Junior or whatever they're gonna make up, you know, like.

Speaker 7 (01:00:20):
I mean, we still have people pretending that, you know,
he wasn't one of the worst warmongers we've had, I
mean comparatively. I mean, he dropped more bombs in four
years than Obama did in eight That is quite a feat,
because Obama bombed the hell out of people, right and
even now, you know, we look at, you know, mentioned earlier,

(01:00:41):
the genocide in Gaza, that's not stopping anytime soon with
the Trump administration because he's Bebe's boy. You know, they're
they're tied his white on Rice.

Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (01:00:51):
Look at the situation in Ukraine. We literally have Mike Waltz,
who is Trump's new pick for National Security Advisor, saying
that they want the Ukrainian government to lower the conscription
aids from twenty six to eighteen so that they can
quote get thousands of more troops on the front lines.
That doesn't sound like they want to end the wars

(01:01:11):
and put America first, No, that sounds more like corporate
warmongering bullshit.

Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
Well, they're trying to figure out ways to make money
off of other people's scams, you know, And you know
it's interesting all around. You know, does he free Ross
Albrecht as does he do some of the things you
know that he claims he would do if he gets elected.

Speaker 7 (01:01:29):
I hope so, because at this point, I mean, I'm
not holding my breath. I would love for Ross to
come home. The man does not deserve to be sitting
there serving three life sentences for simply making a website
to encourage person to person economic transitions. You know, he
is not guilty of any of the nonsensical crap that

(01:01:49):
the federal government accused him of. You know, so I genuinely,
genuinely hope, as much as I crap on Trump for
him to at least keep that promise, at least for
Walls's family's sake, please keep.

Speaker 10 (01:02:02):
That problem well.

Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
And like listen, there's some things that like me and
Don have gone back and forth. So I'm a little
bit more optimistic when it comes to Trunk, just because
he's still you know, it's like we've always said, as
a ship burger and a church sandwich, one is like
a king sized candy bar.

Speaker 10 (01:02:19):
One's the regular size. If you steal one, it's still stealing.

Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
And if you're taking the regular size, it's not as bad,
or the king size a little bit better than the
regular size.

Speaker 10 (01:02:26):
You get a little bit more out of it. You know.

Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
The thing is with Trump, you know, a lot of
people feel like they got a little bit more out
of it. The economy was a little bit better, the
gas prices were cheaper, but at the end of the day,
you know, we had forced vaccination, the rush through COVID vaccine.
There's things about him that I just you know, they're
definitely problematic. He was supposed to drain the swamp, but
then he embraced the swamp. But whatever happened to Hillary

(01:02:49):
for prison, Hillary was going to go to jail, right,
that never happened. There's all these things that were claimed
and promised and just never you know, there is impeachments.
Of course, Russia Gate, I'll admit, was the hawks, right,
it wasn't a.

Speaker 7 (01:03:02):
Real thing, yeah, exactly, you know, and things that.

Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Were that were throwing his way that he got to
focus on that maybe he could have finished some of
the things. And I'm not saying that I hate the guy,
you know, he's our president. At the same time, I'm
gonna say he's not perfect. Everyone thinks he's just like
sacred deity, the Orange God is here right.

Speaker 7 (01:03:21):
Right, Yeah, you know, and that's really been the sad thing,
you know, that that we see and it's not even
necessarily a Trump phenomenon. It's just the phenomenon of statism.

Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (01:03:31):
My colleague Carrie Wedler, former editor in chief of ANCI Media.

Speaker 10 (01:03:36):
Who I'm going to be talking with or speaking with,
and she's been on the show, by the way.

Speaker 7 (01:03:40):
I was just about to say she's also going to
be one of the speakers at the counterparty. So congratulations Carrie.
That love that for you. That's awesome.

Speaker 9 (01:03:48):
You know.

Speaker 7 (01:03:49):
She put it fantastically a while back when she said
that Trump is just the Obama of the right. Make
America great again. Is literally just hope and change, rebrand
for conservatives.

Speaker 1 (01:04:02):
Yeah, it's interesting, it really is. And like the idea
that he's going to be at the World Economic Forum,
which is just a spin off of Builderberg, the actual
globalist think tank. Bilderberg comes up with these ideas and
then there's spun off, you know, over at the World
Economic Forum, amongst other things. Let's see Trump at the

(01:04:24):
Davos World Economic Forum.

Speaker 10 (01:04:26):
What does that say?

Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
World Economic Forum says Trump to take part virtually in
Davos meeting. Days after inauguration, Trump to address World Economic
Forum meeting in Davos vi video.

Speaker 10 (01:04:37):
So there you have it.

Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
He's going to go and be part of the swamp
for a day. And is he just trying to be
inclusive with the elitists of the world or is he
gonna do what Elon Musk did and tell him to
go fuck off? You know, and Elon Musk, you know,
there's things I love about him and things I hate
about them.

Speaker 7 (01:04:52):
So just like everything else you know, which I was
gonna say, is laughable in and of itself. I mean,
it's the entire facade around Musk is such it's so
sad to see even you know, liberty minded people, uh
sort of fall for this stuff. I mean, shit, I

(01:05:16):
can point people towards you know, they say, well, what,
you know, whatever it shoul to have with this. You know,
there's a panel that was done recently had James Corbett,
Whitney Webb, Ryan, Christiane, Derrek Brose and I think Jason
Burmas was involved, and it has happened a few months ago.
It was a huge, like five six person panel where
they spent like two hours talking about all the reasons
why you should never trust Elon Musk and all the

(01:05:38):
ways he's advancing the twenty thirty agenda, great reset, all
this sort of crap.

Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
He's making money on it on the way out. You know, robots,
brain chip interfaces, all.

Speaker 7 (01:05:47):
Those right right, you know, And and you know when
we talk about the swamp, I mean Trump did a
terrible job his first term putting in swamp creatures around
you know, throughout his administration. The second go round has
been so much worse. I mean, it's it's like he
went both barrels. I mean, from his chief of staff,

(01:06:08):
which is literally a corporate lobbyist for big Pharma and
big Tobacco and some of these other corporations to pretty
much every appointee throughout his administration is just a bare
bones swamp creature from hell. Not one libertarian among them.
Remember that promise when he was at the LLC, I'm
gonna put a libertarian in the cabinet And people will say, oh, well,

(01:06:29):
what about RFK Junior? Do you mean the Democrat right
turn Republican. It's I don't want to get too caught
up on this. We've got a lot more stories to cover.
I can bit you about Trump all day because I'm
just so sick of how people have been brainwashed by it.

Speaker 1 (01:06:44):
At the same time, I can understand why people are
excited to have somebody like him in there, but it's
but why because he talks a big game, what does
he actually do?

Speaker 10 (01:06:54):
And that's what it comes down, And.

Speaker 7 (01:06:56):
He's the right, He's he's a really really good call.

Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
Yeah, made us embrace a free speech does an undue
damage of censorship? The Free Thought Project articles suggests written
just yesterday, which is a very interesting thing that I
was curious about. There was serious damage done by Facebook
and Google and everything else that is out there that

(01:07:29):
has done censorship, right, And how do you undo or
unscrew everything when anything that was liberty minded, anything that
was you know, freedom of speech based, was all censored.
And now all of a sudden, Facebook is claiming to
scale back. I don't know if YouTube, well, they they

(01:07:50):
actually just removed our the new YouTube channel we made
just for kicks, you know, because they.

Speaker 10 (01:07:56):
Found it, the algorithms found it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
They're like, oh, we can't have the rundown lie back
on our platform, and they removed it. So, you know,
tens of millions have been spent to prove what Mark
Zuckerberg could have admitted years ago, that was government pressure
at Facebook to censor legitimate content, and social media giant complied,
And now he's coming out and saying, oh, well, by

(01:08:19):
the way, censorship that never happened. Well, we're gonna stop it.

Speaker 7 (01:08:23):
You know, right, you know, so we this is a
great article. We aggregated it from the Brownstone Institute, and
it really goes into you know, the meat and potatoes
of how we have all this evidence now proving but
on the shadow of a doubt. I mean Missouri v.
Biden and all these other you know, foyas and whatnot

(01:08:45):
showing the ways in which social media, particularly Facebook, but
not only Facebook, bowed to the demands of the federal
governments to censor content. And most of this article admittedly
is only talking about the COVID years. And you know,
we could go back even further than that. You know,
we covered at the Free Thought Project for years now
the censorship that's been coordinated on Facebook and other platforms

(01:09:08):
via the federal government under the direction of you know,
neo conservative think tanks like the Atlantic Council that came
in around twenty sixteen and really started, you know, hammering
down with the censorship. This article specifically goes into talking
about a lot of the censorship of legitimate, real information
that occurred just during the COVID era, and you know,

(01:09:32):
it makes the points. And even when I posted about
it on my personal page, I made the point I
was like, look, I will believe that Mark Zuckerberg actually
gives a damn about free speech when all of the
pages that are still banned get unbanned. We still have

(01:09:57):
reports getting suppressed. We still have shadow banning going on
all of this crowd while he's pretending to rebrand as
a libertarian conservative, whatever the hell he's pretending to be
to get into the good graces and virtue signal for
the new conservative administration coming, and yet the original Free
Thought Project page with millions of followers still terminated. I'll

(01:10:20):
believe you you have a damn about free speech when
you bring that back and actually let us start making
money off of our ad revenue again. I'll believe it
when the Rundown Live can go live and get more
than a couple dozen of our thirty seven thousand plus
followers to tune into a broadcast because Facebook decides to
throttle our content reach. I'll believe it when my page

(01:10:41):
break the Matrix, which is shadow band to hell, gets
more than ten views at a time for any random
post from my forty five thousand plus or forty five
hundred plus followers. So I don't buy mister Zuckerberg's crocodile
tiers one bit. And he's got a long way to
go before forgiveness is in any stretch of the imagination

(01:11:01):
for the atrocities of censorship and violations of free speech
that his platform has committed at government behest.

Speaker 1 (01:11:11):
Yeah, I'm not buying it either, And those are good statements,
and I do agree with it.

Speaker 10 (01:11:16):
I'm I'm wondering how much of.

Speaker 1 (01:11:18):
This has to do with potentially Donald Trump trying to
or his administration taken over, and the old oligarchy that
was doing all the censorship worrying about being exposed and
trying to delete all the paperwork. You know, and like
I mentioned, Trump Lesser or two evils Kamala Trump. Obviously

(01:11:38):
everyone knows that Trump was the better option, but you know,
what is he going to do that's beneficial? Is this
one of those things the result of him being an
office and them being scared that he's actually going to
do a deep dive into the deep state, the CIA,
the FBI and they're tampering with social engineering and mind
control programs. I would have doubt that it was just
one giant mind control program. But really the X paperwork

(01:12:01):
that Elon Musk and the X files, the Twitter files
really exposed. You know, there's one thing that Donald Trump
and Elon Musk have done well, it's they have shown
that the Emperor has no close They've had the evil
that was lurking in the darkness come out to the
open down. And that's one thing that they've been useful
for because now everything's just straight out there in our face.

(01:12:22):
And like you mentioned, now you've got Zuckerber coming out
and be like, yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:12:25):
I'm gonna stop censoring you. But why why not all
of a sudden, And why all of a sudden? Is
Dana White? Was that UFC guy He's like on one
of his councils there at Facebook.

Speaker 7 (01:12:35):
Now, well that I have no idea of. I mean,
I saw that that Dana White is now taking some
new position, but I don't. I haven't he's a new.

Speaker 10 (01:12:47):
Board member of Facebook.

Speaker 7 (01:12:49):
Yeah, Dana White, right, But what I will say is
that during the first Trump administration, let's keep in mind,
in twenty eighteen and twenty nineteen were some of the
largest mass purges of independent media accounts across the entirety
of social media Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, et cetera. That happened

(01:13:12):
under Trump's administration, and he didn't say a damn word
about it. So excuse me if I don't believe that
he's going to be helpful in any capacity, or that
the zuck has decided to have a change of heart
now that Trump is coming into office. I don't believe
that whatsoever he lost.

Speaker 10 (01:13:30):
He like the UFC is like, well, let you in
if you stop censoring every one. No, just kidding, I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:13:37):
Would you like to see Zuckerberg and his butt wept
in the UFC fight?

Speaker 10 (01:13:41):
Absolutely?

Speaker 7 (01:13:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Would you pay pay per view? Would you pay per view?
Who should Zuck fight in the UFC? I still like
to see that. Elon Musk, does Zuckerberg fight take place?
Whatever happened to that?

Speaker 7 (01:13:55):
You know what?

Speaker 10 (01:13:56):
What that take place?

Speaker 7 (01:13:59):
I remember that. Yeah, let's just go ahead and throw
Zuck in the cage with John Bones Jones. Let's let
him tear him apart for a couple of apps. But yeah,
so when it comes to the whole, you know, getting
rid of the fact checkers and all this sort of stuff.
I did see the first day that it was announced
that it's being replaced with a system that's similar to

(01:14:21):
what X has when it comes like the community notes,
which I in a way I do think is actually
beneficial because the community notes have been as much as
I crap on Elon Musk and the fact that he
is not a free speech warrior the fact that he
has not stopped censoring on Twitter. Censorship on Twitter isn't
actually gone up in some ways. That is one of

(01:14:42):
the things that I will say is a plus. This
is the community notes, you know process, So we'll see
what happens.

Speaker 10 (01:14:49):
There's aultre that don't know what is community notes?

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
Is that that that's the average person's ability to post
facts so that people can see what is true and
what is not. So maybe the media reports something that'spagandized
and somebody says, well, here's the actual document.

Speaker 10 (01:15:03):
This is what it really says.

Speaker 7 (01:15:05):
Yeah, that's essentially the gist of it is where you'll
have if enough people come into the comments and post,
you know, legitimate information and say, uh, you know, this
is what it actually is, a little note will come
up underneath the post it says community notes. Readers say
this and such and such and yeah. I've seen it
be wrong or incorrect or misleading sometimes, but largely from

(01:15:26):
my view, it seems as though it has been a
beneficial addition to the platform. So we'll see how that
goes on the book.

Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
And basically, people can post what's true and what is
not true, and they can kind of dive in and
we you know, people can read from it and be like, hell,
yeah that's accurate or it's not accurate. This is real
or not real. And I think that's a better way
of doing it. The question is is how much of
that's going to bentrolls? How much as that can be
operation Mockingberg shell accounts? You know, that was a big

(01:15:55):
deal with Twitter. Remember they used to have so many
shell fake accounts, and so advertisers were going to hurt
whatever happened. I thought Twitter was supposed to go out
of business. Didn't They say that it was gonna be
going under because Elon must took it over. But that
never happened, you know, so uh and and people like
Alex Jones did get his platform back on Twitter. I
wonder if Alex Jones comes back on Facebook.

Speaker 7 (01:16:17):
Now, Ah, who knows. Man. It's like, like I mentioned
the other day, you know, so many of us went
to bat, you know, bitching a Elon and telling him, hey,
you need to reinstate Alex Jones, and uh, you know
those of us that advocated for him to get reinstated
on the platform. And then uh, you know, he decided
to you know, stay quiet and not say a word
about all the little fellows and smaller advocates and broadcasters

(01:16:40):
that helped get him reinstated who were still banned. So
you know, I'm I'm just a little sore about that.

Speaker 10 (01:16:47):
But who knows, maybe I understand. I understand nobody's perfect
and everyone has different viewpoints on everything. Here's an interesting
article you sent me, a massive recovery and an art
what's going on in Antarctica?

Speaker 7 (01:16:59):
Uh so this is just another great article. So the
Daily Skeptic Chris Morrison specifically, who's the I don't know
if he does interviews. To my knowledge he doesn't.

Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
I can make him. We will force the twist his arm.
I need to go ring his doorbell and be like, listen,
I'm going.

Speaker 10 (01:17:17):
To run down right now, don to do an interview
with you, Chris Morrison if that is your real name.

Speaker 7 (01:17:25):
So, uh, over there a good one over there. The
Daily Skeptic Chris Morrison is their environmental science editor, and
uh if he does a really good job of, uh,
you know, pointing out a lot of the information, uh
that the mainstream media does not cover with regard to
you know, the climate hoax and all these sorts of things.

(01:17:45):
Not necessarily a big fan of some of the other
daily skeptic content, But Chris Morrison's content has always been,
you know, really on point. And uh so, this is
just one that I found the other day when I
was perusing through, uh looking for stories to talk about.
And yet again it's another study showing that Arctic sea
ice has recovered in a in an incredible way. You know,

(01:18:08):
it's just none of this doom sayer nonsense. All the
arctics is going to be gone. Yeah, no, it's it's
there's a mass recovery of Arctic sea ice. This is
the you know, yet another scientific report showing that this
is a continuing trend. And of course the mainstream media
that's upset with like climate alarmist doomsayer net zero shenanigans,

(01:18:29):
has not mentioned a peep of it.

Speaker 10 (01:18:32):
Well right here, here's another article on their climate bombshell.
New evidence reveal thirty year global drop and hurricane frequency
and power. Because there's a lot of alarmism right now,
people are like, did you see the fire in la
How could you not believe a climate change?

Speaker 7 (01:18:48):
Right to quote our buddy.

Speaker 10 (01:18:51):
At least talking about that. By the way, he's like,
and I think that's almost verbat on what he said
on Twitter.

Speaker 7 (01:18:56):
Yeah, something like that. And and don't be wrong. Uh,
Lee's a great guy. I enjoy a whole lot of
his concerts.

Speaker 10 (01:19:01):
Agree with them on the subjects, but yeah agree.

Speaker 7 (01:19:03):
Yeah, yeah, great guy. Disagree with them on some subjects.
And I can understand why who anybody who hasn't looked
into the ways in which we've been scammed to believe
the climate narrative would believe the climate narrative because they do,
or rather the climate alarmist narrative, let me correct myself,
because they've done a great job of proliferating that narrative.

(01:19:26):
So somebody like Lee, who I can only just assume
has not put in the work to actually study the
ways in which this narrative has been manipulated and falsified
and manufactured, I can understand why he would believe it
if he simply does not have those facts to show
why the climate emergency alarmist narrative is in fact a fraud.

(01:19:46):
But with regard to the LA fires and all that
sort of stuff, to quote our buddy Dan Dix at
Press for Truth, Arson is not climate change.

Speaker 10 (01:19:56):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
Dan Dix is always on top of that at Press
for truth. Let's pull it up Dan Dick's Press for Truth.
He's another guy who's been censored greatly, but Breaking News
obviously says the truth about Facebook censorship. Moving forward into
Mega twenty twenty five, Facebook Mark Zuckerber's has apparently had
a change of heart when it comes to censorship on

(01:20:18):
his platform. Yesterday, tech billionaire it appeared on Joe Rogan's
podcast to try to probably salvage his name, amongst other things.
But arson is not a climate is not climate change.
What you need to know about the California fires, and
Dan Dix has been diving into this stuff for a
long time, is more fires continue to rage in California,

(01:20:39):
with new ones igniting in Hollywood Hills. Many people are
now asking the question how do these fires start in
the first place. In this video, Dan Dixon Press Chers
covers the latest news of the California fires.

Speaker 10 (01:20:49):
Let's see what Dan Dix has to say here.

Speaker 1 (01:20:51):
Well, play a little bit Trump Junior here with an
urgent message about America's irreversible path towards fighting bubble.

Speaker 7 (01:20:57):
Can't fit in those genes.

Speaker 10 (01:20:59):
Be careful with me, Hi, don are you fitting those games? Nah? Musical? Ohit?
This is a short video we'llfully a little bit.

Speaker 4 (01:21:08):
So this is Dan Dix here reporting for Press for
Truth as fires continue to rage on in California. You've
got the iconic Hollywood Sign here nearly going up in
a blaze, with new fires spreading right now, and the
drone footage of the devastation that took place over the
last few days is absolutely horrific. Guys, Entire neighborhoods have

(01:21:34):
been essentially completely wiped out from this fire and this
new fire that is raging in Hollywood Hills at this
point has people asking some serious questions who or what
is starting all of these fires. It feels like these
can't be all natural at this point. Has the city
said anything about the origin of these fires as well? Folks,

(01:21:56):
I want you to listen closely to what this man
has to say say in this viral clip right here, people.

Speaker 7 (01:22:03):
Are lighting fires. Now you can see that lit a fire.

Speaker 11 (01:22:06):
These guys, not all the people there, but some of
those guys.

Speaker 7 (01:22:08):
Lit that fire. And these guys are they're actually uh,
the trees caught fire and then the palms are catching fires.
So civilians are now lighting fires.

Speaker 4 (01:22:18):
Footage of arsonists is now coming out of people going
around lighting fires. There's also this breaking news nine to
one one callers are reporting a group of five men
in ski masks who are setting fires across Los Angeles.
The latest unconfirmed incident was at thirty five h six
Barry Drive. Police report is that five kids are riding

(01:22:38):
around on scooters lighting fires. One of these incidents was
allegedly on Barry Helicopters and police cruisers are searching for
the suspects, according to reported nine to one one calls.
So this LA fire looks like terrorism, is what some
are saying. You consider, you know, you've got one in
the Palisades, Pasadena Sunset Studio city. These places are all

(01:23:00):
miles apart. Are we supposed to believe that the winds
teleport of fire miles away? But nowhere in between? And
I mean that's an interesting point when you consider the
locations of these particular fires that are raging on.

Speaker 10 (01:23:17):
Here.

Speaker 4 (01:23:17):
You've got this podcaster here who claims that he saw
people starting a garden blaze in Los Angeles as he's
devastating wildfires kill five and destroy swaths of the city.
So this whole notion of a lot of this being
carried out by arsonists is absolutely something we have to

(01:23:39):
look at today, folks. Meanwhile, Donald Trump has chimed in
as saying Governor Gavin newscum refused to sign the water
restoration declaration put before him that would have allowed millions
of gallons of water from excess rain and snow melt
from the north to float day in many parts of California,

(01:24:01):
including the areas that are currently burning in the virtually
apocalyptic way. He literally says he is to blame for
all of this, and he Gavin Newstrom responded to this
when CNN reporter Cooper Here asked him about it, and

(01:24:23):
he says, I can't even respond. The guy wants to
politicize it. I have a lot of thoughts that I
want to say, but I won't. He's essentially just avoiding
any and all accountability for what is happening under his watch.
I mean, just look at the infuriating reaction that he
gave when being asked about why the hydrants ran out
of water during the LA wildfires. Governor Gavin newsro and

(01:24:46):
passed the buck after he was asked why fire hydrants
ran out of water in Pacific Palisades as wildfires devastated
the area. Local folks are just gonna have to figure
that out, he said, literally passing the blame and shifting
anything away from himself onto the very victims that are
suffering from this, saying, look, they're just gonna have to

(01:25:08):
figure it out, you know. Essentially, it's not my problem.
James Woods, the actor, chimed in quoting a fire captain
who said little to none when asked as to how
many fire hydrants they were getting full water from. This
was the fire captain's response, little to none and the
buildings burned. That should be the new hashtag of democratic

(01:25:30):
failure all over California. And this is the LA Mayor
Karen Bass's outrageous claim about the water supplies during the
WildFly fires. She says, claims that the tanks weren't full
are false. And just let me say that when you
have events like this where emotions are high, it's easy
to get caught up in information that is not accurate.

(01:25:52):
I think most of us know that the Internet is
not always the best accurate place for information. Bass is
accused her of deploying a sleight of hand to minimize
the many very real dramas surrounding water that hindered efforts
to douse the flames. While the tanks were indeed full
before the fire broke out. By Wednesday, fire hydrants and

(01:26:14):
palisades had run out of water as they are not
designed for such mass scale wildfires.

Speaker 10 (01:26:21):
So crazy stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:26:24):
Dan Dix bringing in some information about the La fires
and how it's potentially arson and you know people are
our starting fires all over the place.

Speaker 10 (01:26:34):
It's fascinating stuff.

Speaker 7 (01:26:35):
Dan.

Speaker 10 (01:26:36):
We've had Dan Dix on the program many times.

Speaker 1 (01:26:38):
He's reported from Buildeberg for the Rundown Live, amongst other things.

Speaker 10 (01:26:42):
Very interesting stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Dan Dix is one of the ogs, much like myself
and a lot of the other people that we've had on.

Speaker 10 (01:26:49):
This broadcast over the years.

Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
I'd have to say, fascinating stuff by Dan Dix, And
what's your take on this whole LA fire thing? Because
people are like I saw crazy TikTok videos. There's always
people out there like aliens shotdown fire from the sky
and they're like they got a video of some AI
created You know, at least the AI created videos are
getting intense, but we know it's not real. Like a

(01:27:13):
lot of these things that they're putting out there just
you know, beyond belief and way too crazy.

Speaker 10 (01:27:18):
You know, so obviously there's something going on.

Speaker 1 (01:27:24):
Here in California, and again it is government that is
dropping the ball continuously.

Speaker 10 (01:27:30):
It seems.

Speaker 1 (01:27:30):
No matter what the problem has been in this world
as it's been lately, government has been at the corner
of it. It has been government that has provided most
of the issues. And it's not the solution as many
people would hope.

Speaker 7 (01:27:45):
Yeah, and you know, one could argue that's that's always
been the case. As far as with the California fires
are concerned. I know that there's a day or two
after Dan put out that video I saw he shared
on Twitter, maybe it was easy to twitter, Facebook or
something a report showing that yet another individual has been
arrested in connection with setting these fires. So I think

(01:28:05):
it's pretty clear that Arson has played a role in this.
It has, you know, the media has certainly drummed up,
you know, the scare mongering for the climate alarmist narrative.
And and I saw Jason Burmas also do a really
good report, you know, asking a whole lot of questions
about you know, the fire management policies and you know

(01:28:30):
a lot of things with the fire hydrants. The Arson
is concerned as well as the the interesting connection that
Los Angeles their public plans showing the Los Angeles is
slated to become a smart city by twenty twenty eight,
which just so happens to also be the same year
that Summer Olympics come to La So potential connection. They're

(01:28:53):
not exactly sure, but you know, I do know, you know,
in you know, accordance with what you had mentioned. This
just comes to the government letting its people down. You know,
I have a friend of mine I went to school with,
you know, she lives out in California now, and you know,
she made the point just last night that we have

(01:29:15):
people in North Carolina who are blaming or not necessarily blaming,
but essentially you know, talking down to the people in
California about you know, oh, you know, the government you know,
screwed us over in relation to the floods. So you know,
y'all be all right, just pull your bootstraps up, you know,
and you know, leaning into this partisan divide of but
because North Carolina's red and California is blue and this

(01:29:38):
this hyper part isan nonsense of the country, we have
people who are screwed over by the government in North
Carolina with regard to the floods and Hurricane Helene, and
people who are screwed over by the government in California
in regard to these fires, and they're at each other's
throats when they should be looking at the real problem,
the institution of government itself that is always screwed people,

(01:30:00):
no matter who you are.

Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
Coming around to that cornerstone in full circle, we have
a guest joining us, Tatiana Moreause. Tatiana Morose is an
American folks singer, songwriter and a driving force of cryptocurrency industry.
She's also putting together a very amazing conference around this topic,
the counter Party. Welcome to the broadcast once again. It's
been so long, Tatiana Moros since we've had you on

(01:30:24):
the broadcast. I think you were on the show in
our infancy, back in the Ron Paul era, was at
twenty twelve, twenty eleven, maybe twenty thirteen when you were
taking stage singing lullabies for Ron Paul.

Speaker 10 (01:30:36):
I'm just kidding, I call them lullabies. But I'm glad
that you're on the show. Thank you for joining us today.
And you know, government seems to be an ongoing issue
here no matter which way we look at it. So
for our listeners who haven't really heard of you before,
maybe it's a good chance here for you to kind
of introduce yourself. What are some of the things that
you're involved with, and what do we have that's going

(01:30:58):
on here at this counterparty because I'm really excited to
be part of it. I've been talking about it for
the last couple of weeks and there's a lot going
on here with you currently.

Speaker 13 (01:31:06):
Well, thanks very much for having me on, and I'm
really excited to hear that you're going to be coming
down to Miami and just I guess like a little
bit more than like ten days. So that's exciting. Wait,
so what is my assignment? Am I supposed to give
people my background?

Speaker 6 (01:31:22):
I guess?

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
Or well, of course, for our listeners that may not
know who Tatiana Moros is maybe because I know who
Tatiana Rose is and don knows who you are. But
for our listeners on Kgira, who is Tatia Moros and
maybe give us some background so they can understand what
you're all involved with. I know that you used to
do be a spokesperson for Bitcoin for a while, which
is a huge organization.

Speaker 6 (01:31:43):
Well it's not exactly an organization.

Speaker 13 (01:31:45):
It's more of like a kind of like a decentralized organization.
So yeah, I've been doing a lot of bitcoin stuff
since twenty twelve. I gotten to the libertarian space in
twenty eleven when I learned about the Federal Reserve, and
then shortly thereafter I kind of became a little bit
disillusioned with the political process seeing how they treated doctor Paul.

(01:32:05):
I was going around the country singing songs of freedom
with him, or rather about him, and just all those
kinds of topics. But I was singing with Jordan Paige,
so that was really cool. But then at the same
time I learned about bitcoin, I felt like it was
a little bit more of an effective tool in order to,
you know, achieve those goals of freedom and liberty for everybody.

(01:32:26):
And so now you know, it's been what, oh my gosh,
I guess close to thirteen years now since I got
involved in everything, and I'm having my first two day event.

Speaker 6 (01:32:36):
I'm having it down here in Miami.

Speaker 13 (01:32:37):
And the goal is, Look, you know, everybody's talking about
political solutions. I don't think that's where we're going to
get any kind of freedom. We're not going to get
it from voting any harder. But I do think that
we're going to make a lot of progress by creating
communities and learning about all the other components that make
a successful free world. So we've got a lot of
different topics, and thank god you're going to be joining us.

Speaker 6 (01:33:00):
That's gonna be great.

Speaker 1 (01:33:01):
Yeah, I appreciate the opportunity to speak at this event,
and I think it's going to be a great thing.
So decentralizing, you know, our world, our life. There's many
different topics here that you have that are going to
be covered above and beyond what I'm going to be
talking about, which is you know, how to deprogram your
mind of programming humans and learning how to think for yourself.

Speaker 10 (01:33:20):
But here you list some things and some of.

Speaker 1 (01:33:22):
The topics of the twenty twenty five event, which includes
ask a Hacker, crypto, real estate, blockchain, legal homeschooling, which
I think a lot of people are starting to consider
right they want to get their children out of these
government propaganda institutions.

Speaker 10 (01:33:39):
Which you've been saying for years.

Speaker 1 (01:33:40):
Right now, all of a sudden, you know, people are
interested in this biohacking, which is also a very interesting thing, permaculture, NFTs, health, freedom,
which is big everyone's into because of COVID, amongst other things.
All throughout our lives, a lot of people have been
involved in holistic information. And of course we're gonna have

(01:34:01):
music performances and it's going to be an action packed
two days coming up on the twenty fifth and twenty
sixth of January. But you know, I putting this together,
what are some of the topics that you're really excited
about that are going to hit home?

Speaker 13 (01:34:16):
Well, I mean, we've got over forty speakers, so it's
really hard to like pick a specific thing that I'm
most excited about because I picked it out of people
that I'm friends with right and people that I've admired.

Speaker 6 (01:34:27):
I think that the focus around.

Speaker 13 (01:34:29):
Security and privacy is really important, so I'm glad that
we're doing that, although I'm a little bit less technically inclined.
We've got I don't know, maybe five or six really
good speakers on that subject.

Speaker 6 (01:34:40):
Liz Writzig, you see her right there on this side.

Speaker 10 (01:34:43):
I know who she is.

Speaker 13 (01:34:44):
Yeah, Liz is doing food freedom and also homeschooling, which
I think is really important.

Speaker 6 (01:34:49):
Like she's been heavily.

Speaker 13 (01:34:51):
Involved in the raw milk world for many years, and
she knows all about, you know, how to have kind
of sustainable living from that perspective. Mary Wedler one of
my favorite speakers is because I just never get to
see her too. So she's coming in all the way
from California to join us, and I don't know a
lot of people have seen her videos. Christen Meghan is

(01:35:14):
going to be talking, not this time about chemtrails, but
her and her colleague and friend Tammy are going to
be talking about medical freedom because you know, we've got
this Make America Healthy Again movement. What does that mean
and what is the next pandemic? That kind of stuff
is important. So we've got a lot of different people
coming in, like my friends with the Tepper Witches are coming.

Speaker 6 (01:35:36):
Aaron Day is going to be talking.

Speaker 13 (01:35:38):
We're going to be talking a little bit about what's
happening with Roger Rivera too, which is I think pretty important.
Roger's facing I think it's one hundred and nine years
right now for tax crimes which he didn't even commit.
Some would posit he's been politically targeted, So we're going
to talk a little bit about that. We've got Kenny
coming in to talk about free ross. There's a Solana

(01:36:00):
token free Ross. Now, that's basically encouraging President Trump to
free Ross. Now, I've got the shirt on. I was like,
should I change his shirt? I wore this the other
day in another interview. I was like, nah, so it's cool.
I've got a few of them.

Speaker 6 (01:36:13):
It's it's not dirty.

Speaker 10 (01:36:15):
And still there we were talking about freeing Ross and
if Trump's going to come through with his promises and
we help. What are the Taproot Witches?

Speaker 1 (01:36:22):
By the way, is that like an organization that works
with holistic health or no?

Speaker 13 (01:36:26):
No, they're an NFT project, so super neat project. If
you scroll down to sponsors you can see their little
artwork or whatever. Teresa is a very talented artist and
she has a very successful Ordinals project.

Speaker 6 (01:36:41):
Yeah, there it is. So it kind of goes with
the moon.

Speaker 13 (01:36:44):
Actually, I guess it's a full moon now, so celebrating
with the witches and yeah, basically a lot of variety
of different kinds of subjects. Luke Ridowski, you of course
know him. He's going to be there. We've got some
people from counterpart Party the Protocol coming and talking. But
really the main unifying factor is a love of freedom

(01:37:07):
and a healthy skepticism of the ability of government to
solve a lot of our problems.

Speaker 7 (01:37:12):
I guess, yeah, which is always a good thing. Uh,
you know, getting more people talking about these sorts of things.
I love seeing events like this pop up, because you know,
we got the People's Reset going on with you know,
John Bush and Derek Rose, they're doing that. You know,
now we have the counterparty down in uh, you know,

(01:37:33):
down in Miami. Uh. And of course you know there's
just people all over the place talking about let's get
away from government. You know, voting harder is not going
to fix the is not going to be the solution.
So I just love the fact that this is becoming.
It's to sort of riff off of what we're just
talking about, the sort of turn a phrase spreading like wildfire,

(01:37:53):
and and it's in a good way even and so
you know, it's it's absolutely fantastic, you know, to see
a whole these great speakers down there. Really, you know,
I think twenty twenty five, I just have a gut
feeling twenty five is going to be a big year
for liberty. It's the message is really going to start
spreading out there, and all puppy, Yeah, well.

Speaker 10 (01:38:14):
Who's puppy, like like, we need to introduce this person.

Speaker 6 (01:38:17):
Oh, this is Mischall. He's here. He looks so.

Speaker 10 (01:38:20):
Fat, right, nice, nice liberty dog.

Speaker 6 (01:38:25):
That's all.

Speaker 13 (01:38:25):
It's just as fur's he's actually quite quit well slender. No,
he's he's my puffy puppy, Michelle. He like was kind
of cool, you know. Honestly, he's become a little bit
bossy lately. I think he's like gotta be set straight.
But he scratches up on the bed. So I just
brought him up here to hang out. All we did
the show, So.

Speaker 10 (01:38:44):
What inspired you to put together this event?

Speaker 1 (01:38:47):
Like so, because it's a lot of work, and you
brought together a lot of great personalities. This is like
a large part of like the who's Who's of who's
who of the independent media. We have Carrie Wedler, who
we've had on the program, many of these people we've
had on The Rundown Live over the last thirteen years
of our fourteen years of our existence. And she was
part of the Anti Media, which was another website much

(01:39:08):
large like us the Rundown Live and that whereas a
real was really damaged by the censorship by social media,
by algorithms, by AI you know, as well as Luke
Rodowski of We Are Changed. He was able to kind
of fight through a little bit more on his platform.
He teamed up with Tim Poole, who is you know,
does his was that in real life? Tim Kass And

(01:39:32):
you have a lot of these old time individuals, these ogs, Krista,
Megan Kelly, who's a personal friend of mine. Whenever she
comes to Wisconsin, we hang out. You know, Tammy as well,
I've met, So I'm really excited to reunite with a
lot of these old people I haven't seen in many years.
But I think it's a great opportunity for the listeners
out there to kind of reignite that excitement to remember that,

(01:39:55):
you know, we don't have to rely on government. Here
are some solutions we can come out come that are
outside of the two party system, because right, the two
party system is really a scam these days, isn't it, Tatiana.

Speaker 6 (01:40:07):
Yeah, that was really it.

Speaker 13 (01:40:08):
Like Okay, So Counterparty the protocol is important to me
because I think that it's really neat, like I'm doing
an Ordinals inscription project. But I also think that you know,
counterparty is the OG protocol and it doesn't really get
a lot of visibility, so I wanted to offer them
some visibility. Although I do think that having options for

(01:40:29):
different people for what kind of organization they want and
having like tools that are interoperable would be great. But
also really like to counter the political parties. I mean,
this year everybody went crazy. It was like everybody all
of a sudden became a status, you know what I mean,
everybody abandoned their principles and they just wanted to be
talking about you know, Daddy Trump, and look, Trump is

(01:40:52):
better than the better than Mama La. But you know,
we have some previous evidence of him not exactly being
mister freedom right, like why didn't he free Ross before?
So I'm cautiously mildly optimistic, but that's about as much
as I can muster. So that was really it like
countering the political parties, counting that pervasive belief that all

(01:41:14):
we can do is just cast a boat at the
ballot box and you know, well, you voted for this,
so it's your own fault, Like that's nonsense.

Speaker 6 (01:41:23):
So yeah, I just wanted to have some solutions.

Speaker 7 (01:41:26):
You know.

Speaker 6 (01:41:27):
I went to a lot of great events this year.

Speaker 13 (01:41:28):
I did the Rage Against War rally and Unfortunately, even
though they had incredible people putting it together, the turnout
was very poor, so it was really disappointing. Hopefully we
won't have that problem here. I mean, it seems like
things are going pretty well. It's Miami. Everybody wants to
be down here during January, right, and it'll be after

(01:41:49):
the inauguration. So hopefully maybe that tension in the country
will just release a little bit, because right now it's
a little bit like so yeah, I mean, I don't know,
we'll see what happens. Happy to be fostering new conversations.
Like I said, it's a lot of friends that I've
made along the way, and also there's this like a
fair amount of stuff around wellness. We're doing a love

(01:42:12):
relationship show, so hopefully people will learn something there. And
you know, it's not just about like protesting and fighting
the man all day long.

Speaker 7 (01:42:20):
Right, you used to do.

Speaker 10 (01:42:23):
You used to do a relationship podcast. I remember that.
What was it called proof of Love? Is that what
it was?

Speaker 6 (01:42:28):
I have a lot of fun with that. I'm sorry,
I don't do that show anymore.

Speaker 13 (01:42:31):
But you know, like after COVID, I just I really
got sick and tired of just feeling like any content
that I made was suppressed. So it just didn't really
feel that fun anymore to keep spending the money on
something if it wasn't going to be able to be
listened to. But I missed doing the show. Maybe one
of these days I'll go back to it.

Speaker 1 (01:42:48):
So you got a lot going on here with this event.
So people are going to be also able to tune
into music. What kind of music are you going to
have at the Conor party?

Speaker 13 (01:42:57):
Well, of course I'm going to be performing, so that's good. Sorry,
my dog is not dying. He's just sending an attack.

Speaker 1 (01:43:03):
He's trying to put in his two cents worth on
what he's going to speak about at the event.

Speaker 10 (01:43:09):
Huh No, he.

Speaker 6 (01:43:10):
Sneezed, but he just got over. It was very cute.

Speaker 13 (01:43:14):
So originally I really wanted to have Jordan Page come,
and unfortunately I couldn't have Jordan make it because he
is across the country. But I do have the Free
Notts coming, I have mister Darius, I have like Illuminati
congos something like that. I'm waiting to find out from
Kenny because he's booking them. So you know a fair

(01:43:34):
amount of different people coming through also gave Higgins is
probably going to play some songs even though he's going
to be doing the debate around rogerri Vera and hijacking bitcoin.
So you know, people with multiple talents jumping up on
the microphone, and you know, the beach is just like
a couple of blocks away. So if people want to
break away, they need to go do a little bit

(01:43:55):
of grounding. They need to go and chill out for
a minute, get away from the crowds. There's just a
beach there, So should be good, should.

Speaker 10 (01:44:02):
Be a very interesting event done. Sorry about that.

Speaker 7 (01:44:05):
Uh, well, I was just gonna say. You know, music
is always such an important factor when it comes to
a lot of these things. You know, music is very
uh integral to my life. You know, music has helped
me get through a lot of things, and especially what
I've seen, uh you know, just with the activism sphere.

Speaker 2 (01:44:20):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (01:44:20):
You know, music is such a great way to bring
people together. I mean there's a number of artists that
I uh you know, really enjoy immortal technique. Uh you know, uh,
individuals of that nature low key and even you know,
long before we ever had our first discussion with you,
or at least the one where I was present on
the rundown line where we joined your Twitter spaces a

(01:44:41):
couple one or two years ago. I was actually introduced
to your music when I was just scrolling through Spotify
and looking for activist songs and I came across your
song Masters of War. I thought it was one of
the most beautiful things I'd ever heard. And then just
about a year or so later, Christan's like, oh, yeah,
you know, my friend Tatiana we're gonna be you know,
she's gonna be the show. And I'm like, that's awesome. So,

(01:45:03):
you know, I've seen music bring people together from various
different walks of life to get them discussing core ideas
that they agree on outside of the things that they
may disagree on, and you know, it's just it's really
nice to be able to see these things sort of
take place in the ways that it can bring people together,
because that's what it's really all about. We need to
start bringing people together, bridging the divides on the small

(01:45:25):
things they disagree on, to really start focusing on the
bigger picture of like, let's set the smaller shit aside.
Government's the problem and we need to figure out solutions
about actually making this world a better.

Speaker 10 (01:45:37):
Place because in your community, right that.

Speaker 7 (01:45:40):
As I always say, you know, you have to be
the change that you want to see in the world.
You know, you got to put in some effort and
do something to make this place better.

Speaker 6 (01:45:47):
Yeah, well that's definitely what we're about here.

Speaker 13 (01:45:50):
So if people want to join us, and also, like,
I feel like the tickets are pretty affordable, I'm supposed
to bump them up. That the early bird price has
been one twenty five for a while. There's some promo codes,
so I think, for what is it about twenty five
hours of programming.

Speaker 6 (01:46:05):
Because they're just full, long days, I think that's pretty good.

Speaker 13 (01:46:08):
I don't think that's too like, you know, like outside
the price point for the average person.

Speaker 6 (01:46:12):
So you know, and we're also very lucky because we had.

Speaker 13 (01:46:16):
Some really good sponsors that are supporting the events. So
I definitely want to give them, I don't know, like
a mention, because you can't really do things without sponsors.

Speaker 7 (01:46:26):
Right.

Speaker 13 (01:46:26):
Everybody likes to buy their tickets last minute, which is
super annoying for like as a conference organizer, but fio
dot net was kind enough to spread the word. I
just did a podcast with Wayne from that team over there,
the Omnity Network, the Pirate Chain folks, so they're doing
you know, privacy coin. People can check out pirate Chain.
They can also check out Zeno. I'm going to be

(01:46:48):
adding them soon. The eight Evolve app. Those folks are great.
They're doing the like wellness stuff, so they put together
a lot of those kinds of panels, like we've got
a psychedelic panel and a few different things like that.
Then yeah, we're doing a auction with Scarcity, So I
don't know, we got a lot of neat people on here,

(01:47:08):
and I got to add some more people as they go.

Speaker 10 (01:47:11):
So yeah, right, Tatiana happening where so people can pick
up tickets at the counterparty dot com. It looks like
there's all the information is available on there. There'll be
a schedule I'm sure coming out at some point. And
also will they be able to watch some of this online?

Speaker 13 (01:47:31):
Yeah, so there's live stream tickets that we did in
partnership with Crypto Vigilante. So but people I think they
can use their promo codes on that too, So that's awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:47:41):
And where and where can people find the promo code
if they're looking for.

Speaker 13 (01:47:44):
Oh gosh, you know what all of the speakers have
been given promo codes, but tell you I'll give you
one ail. It's a counter Friends twenty twenty five and
people get fifteen percent off.

Speaker 10 (01:47:56):
That's awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:47:57):
Tatia to Moros, thank you so much for joining us
on the Rundown Live. Look forward to meeting you again
in Miami. I know we met at Rage against the
War Machine, the initial one. You and Jordan Page saying
in front of thousands of people, and Ron Paul gave
one of his last public speeches. I think we may
ever see who knows.

Speaker 13 (01:48:13):
We talk absolutely really good. He's always amazing though, right yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:48:17):
I got a kick out of his whole AI thing.

Speaker 1 (01:48:19):
And he's like I had a long time to think
about what artificial intelligence is, and I think artificial intelligence
is government, and I like he has he still has
some winningness, you know, he's still pretty pretty smart amongst
other things. So for all our listeners out there on KGRA,
A band, video and all these different platforms we're on
for radio and audio only, make sure you check out

(01:48:41):
the thch E Counter c O U n T E
R party dot com. There's a link on the Rundown Live.
You'll see a picture in my face. I will be
giving a presentation at this event as well. You can
meet me down there, you can meet Tatiana. There's gonna
be a lot of great people out there, like we mentioned,
Luke Rodowski, Kristin Megan, Kelly Carrie, well, people we've had

(01:49:01):
on the show over the years, new people. There's always
new generations of individuals and influencers. Liz Writzeg will be there,
people that we've worked with and talked to over the years,
amongst other things. Make sure you guys check it out,
get your tickets, come on down support this.

Speaker 10 (01:49:18):
It's in Miami. You can't go wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:49:20):
And is there there's hotels in the area, there's airbnbs
in the area. January twenty fifth and twenty six, that's
coming up. If you're not if you don't have anything
to do in the next two weeks or two weeks
from coming up, make sure you stop by January twenty
fifth and twenty six, twenty six. It's two weekends away,
not this weekend, but the following weekend. You guys can

(01:49:40):
come on down to Miami and hang out with Christante Harris,
Tatiana Morosa, many other people.

Speaker 10 (01:49:45):
Thank you so much for joining us. Tatiana and make
sure very much.

Speaker 13 (01:49:49):
Oh and remember people as they paid with bitcoin, there's
an even bigger discounts so.

Speaker 1 (01:49:53):
Well you can pay with bitcoin and save money. And
right there the link is right on the page the
counterparty dot com you can pay with bitcoin and save money.
Thanks again, Tatiana Moros. We appreciate you, and again we
look forward to hanging out with you coming up in
a couple weekends.

Speaker 13 (01:50:09):
Thanks to you later everybody by Tatiana Moreaus was joining
us and don These conferences are always interesting and I
always want to support obviously the idea of getting away
from government authoritarianism and solutions outside of the two party system.

Speaker 1 (01:50:27):
And if you guys want to find out more, go
to the rundown Live dot com. There's, like she mentioned,
there's a fifteen percent off coupon there. You want to
make sure you really punch that in and get there
and get that coupon going and support this broadcast.

Speaker 10 (01:50:40):
Guys. All right, guys, we'll.

Speaker 1 (01:50:42):
See you guys tomorrow, same bad time, same bad channel
you guys are listening to. The Rundown Live can be
found on KGRA band dot video for the Rundown Live
just search there. Rumble dot Com, Ford Slash, The Rundown Live, iHeartRadio, Spotify, Spreaker,
just search the Rundown Live. kGray, have a good one.
We'll see you guys tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:51:06):
Stop the King of underground Journalism, eat all the surnames
to the destroyer the fake news Chris Dante Harris, and
on Via Junior on the Rundown Knive. Feed your brain
and very healthy ideas, your forecast into the future.
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