Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George
Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Katty Armstrong and
Jet Kid and he Armsrong get it from the studio,
(00:30):
s say, sire, we are in a dimly lit room
deep with them the bowels of the Armstrong and getting
communications compound. And today, on Little Wednesday, we are under
the tutelage of oh, this is the title of the
show today. Ogo offer of the day islam Munism, Buy one,
get one. The greatest threat to America right there is lommunism.
(00:52):
I will make the case powerfully alternate title, singing the
choke point blues, Oh yesterday, non snooze on the streets
of horm moves.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
So what's that first one?
Speaker 2 (01:08):
That's Islam thing.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Yeah, it's a confluence of several different stories from the
isis inspired and trained young men in New York City
throwing explosive devices, and then Mumdani not identifying the cause
of their violence. And there was a demonstration over the
weekend in New York City in memory of the martyr
(01:35):
I had told ah Many and all the other victims
of American aggression right out there in the open in
the United States of America pretty well attended. Cops had
to break it up. There are hundreds of people chanting
death to America and that sort of thing. You are
freaking street, yes and wow. The final factor, which I
can tell you're already there, is the desperate soft pedaling
(02:00):
of all these stories by most of the American media. God,
I'd say they are terrified of this narrative. It goes
against all of their Vasser College Columbia grad school training
to say it out loud.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
So those dudes who threw the bombs there over the weekend,
outside of them on Donnie's office, they were actually trained
by ISIS.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
They both of them have an extremely suspicious history of
travel over the last couple of years, going to the
places you go to get trained up by ISIS, various
locations throughout the Middle Ages. One of the reasons I
find that surprising is those bombs were crap. I mean,
what kind of training did they get. Well, they didn't
go off. According to the authorities, it's a miracle nobody
(02:42):
was her or killed.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
But they were hoping for something bigger than the Boston
bombing and their bombs didn't do nothing.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
So that's good, I guess. No.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Occasionally prosecutors will overstate things, but yeah, they made clear
that it was a miracle.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Nobody was killed.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
Hm uh, it's possible these guys are morons.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Yeah, I think they might be morons. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
I mean, if you've seen the video the one guy
throwing the bomb and then running and jumping over the
fence and like being tackled by the security guy like immediate, yes, Katie.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Uh yeah, there's also a.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
Video there was a guy with a big megaphone and
he was yelling pro Islamic messaging and one of the
kids with the bomb jumped over his shoulder and threw
it into the crowd.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Yeah, they didn't seem sophisticated, but lots of people get
blown over shot by unsophisticated morons, all just as.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Dead, right, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
My main reaction is seeing the video of him chucking
the bomb and leaping over the barricades and trying to
elude the cops. Was I remember when I could do that.
I would just say, yeah, there's no point in me running.
I would just be tired, and you arrested me. So here,
what hands behind the back? Is that the way this works?
Speaker 3 (03:54):
So imagine if those had gone off and even anybody
had been killed. What a story, though would be, What
that'd be doing to our politics.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
And how hard journalists would have to work to obscure
what sort of person through the bombs for what reason? Yeah,
they would be exhausted by the effort.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
Still, the coverage is a little unless you know the story.
It's a little confusing when you hear most of the
coverage when they talk about they don't talk about violence
broke out at an anti Islam right exactly, which is
technically true, which is the key to all to all
spin things that are technically true but designed to mislead,
(04:32):
and that misleads because it wasn't the anti Islam crowd
that brought bombs. It was the pro Islam crowd with
the counter protest that brought bombs. That's worth pointing out.
And look, I would hope.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
At this point, especially you know longtime listeners understand and
I'll speak for myself here that I'm not paranoid or
prone to like really fanciful ideas, kind of the opposite
and studying political systems how they rise and fall and
function since I was a teenager, Okay, and this is
(05:06):
a significant political movement inside the United States, the Red
Green Alliance, the melding of Marxism and Islamism. It's got
a long history both in or On, interestingly enough, and
in the United States. And they are really feeling their oats.
They're working hard together. They've energized the college campuses. This
(05:27):
is the sort of thing that you read any history
books about either the fall of a regime or the
coming of long periods of violence, or something that had
to be dealt with to ensure regime's survival. And I
hate to refer to the Constitution as the United States
of America as a regime, but you know what I'm
(05:49):
talking about, This is serious. I'm not trying to be hyperbolic.
Speaker 3 (05:54):
So I'm seeing some people criticizing CNN's headline on this
story today or the way they wrote the story. Two
Pennsylvania teenagers crossed into New York City Saturday morning for
what could have been a normal day enjoying the city
during abnormally warm weather. But in less than an hour,
their lives would drastically change as the pair would be
arrested for throwing homemade bombs outside of the Mayor's Ome.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
What the f Why are you drawing this? What like
kind of interesting? What an interesting story here? Why didn't
you say they could have gone to Central Park and
fed ducks but their day took a turn. No, it
didn't take a turn. They went to New York to
throw bombs at people in the name of Allah a
couple of charities. Low what are you? Oh, my lord,
(06:37):
I almost dropped an F bomb and I wish I had.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
That's something.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
Holy crap, that's one of the most extraordinary things I've
ever heard. What the hell? Framing them as something like
it's something that happened to them. They're hoping to get
tickets to Hamilton, but instead their day took a turn.
A lot of common It's like, am I the only
one getting the feeling? CNN and somehow trying to romanticize
(07:03):
this story. Yeah, more more accurately to adult radicalized Islamic
terrorists who had previously trained with ISIS through bombs at
peaceful protesters. That's a better first sentence or two. Oh,
that's entirely accurate. Good lord, I mean this is you know, look,
(07:26):
CNN ain't very popular these days, although we got a
great note from one of our favorite emailers pointing out
that these like CNN and MSNBC, I refuse to call
it its stupid new name. That's a good stance. Die
on that hill. They are watched by the intelligentsia and
the capital, and so they have like echoe second effect importance.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
So anyway, I'm sorry, So I buried my own point.
So CNN working that hard to deny is in the
US and its effects and it's radicalization and how widespread
it's becoming. That is a serious issue.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
Yeah, let's start to show officially because Pete Hegseath just
wrapped up a press conference and there's a couple of
interesting notes to make.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Before we go to break and get Katie's headlines.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
I'm Jack Armstrong, He's Joe Getty on this it is
it's Tuesday, it is March the tenth of your twenty
twenty six Armstrong and getting and we approve of this program. Okay,
here we go officially according to FCC rules and regulations,
leaping into action at mark.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
No.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
I don't want to brag, but you know they said
this about a lot of things.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
No, as the president could do some of this shit.
I'm doing.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
No.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
No as a pressing that.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
I don't want to brag.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
It's a funny, funny thing from Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
I'm gonna be ironic.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
Yeah, so two things want to mention real quick. Iran
fired rockets or missiles at Turkey again, and they were
intercepted by NATO planes. But man, if they ever get
something through Turkey. And then Erdowan, the dictator of Turkey,
threatened Iran saying we are not the old Turkey, you
better knock it off. So and that was before these
(09:12):
rockets got sent today. So I don't know what that means.
If Turkey's gonna say, you know, send in their own planes,
they don't. They don't have to put up with that.
There's no no obligation to put up with that outside
of NATO planes shooting that stuff down. Also, Pete Hegseath
just said, this is going to be the biggest day
of bombing yet.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
Today Today is going to be the biggest day of bombing.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Yeah, I know. The plan is to further dismantle the
security apparatus if they can.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Well, uh, Iran basically has no military at this point
fifty According to Pete, just a few minutes ago, we've
sunk completely destroyed fifty plus of their ships and their
navy fifty.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Yeah, they still got guys with guns, which you know,
from our perspective, their military is gone. It's decimated mostly
from the perspective of regime change or the people of
the country, it's still plenty lethal.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:06):
Decimated is actually it gets thrown around like it's not
a term.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Of arts, but it is.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
It's or it originally was as a military term desi,
as in a tenth of or ten ten times. Once
you get the military down to a tenth of its strength,
no longer can do anything to you, So it's decimated,
but it can do something to its own people certainly,
Like you said, a tenth of an army can do
a lot of harm to unarmed civilians.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Oh hell yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Ask the twenty thirty forty thousand who are in heaven
or hell right now wishing they'd waited a little while
this demonstrate But this is going to be the most
intense bombing today. Holy crap. Apparently they're not running out
of targets, said, they have many more targets to go.
Let's do it.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Yeah, let's do it.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Can we got Katy's headlines on the way, Stay here,
how could to day be the biggest day of bombing yet?
Speaker 3 (11:00):
By the way, who knew there was a government shutdown
still going on? Raise your hands? I didn't.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
But yeah, DHS of all departments is we've got terrorists
chucking bombs and a threat from Iran. Come on, now,
come on, all right, let's figure out who's reporting what.
It's the lead story with Katie Green and Katie all.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
Right, Starting with Fox News, Hegzett says Russia should not
be involved in Iran, says Trump had a good call
with Putin. NBC. Trump says Iran warwell and soon, but
issues threats that could prolong it. And CNN Trump administration
starts to panic over rapidly rising oil costs due to
Iran conflict.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Yeah, which I think is why he went out yesterday
and said that's gonna We've we've mostly done everything we
need to do, and oil immediately dropped based on that.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
So I think that was the point of the press conference. Yeah,
I think panic might be a little bit strong. I mean,
everybody knew that this conflict would cause the rise and
oil prices.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
Benjamin Nett and Yahoo might be panicking over the idea
of you're just you're gonna call Okay.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
I thought we were gonna you know what we talked about. No.
Speaker 4 (12:08):
From the Washington Post spring Break travel may be chaos
due to what you guys were just talking about the
shutdown causing TSA shortages.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Yeah, did you see any of the coverage of the
lines at the airport. That's that's not good. That's gonna
hit people where they hurt. And old Chucky Schumer better recalculate,
but quick. I'm glad I ain't going nowhere.
Speaker 4 (12:31):
From the New York Times, Anthropic sues the Pentagon over
quote supply chain risk label.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
Oh yeah, that whole dispute rages on New York Post.
Speaker 4 (12:45):
Yamaha pulling out of California after a half a century
headquarters headed to Georgia.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Yeah, following a lot of companies and people.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
From the Wall Street Journal, Trump is obsessed with these
one hundred and forty five dollars shoes and won't let
anyone leave without a pair.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
What are they? Yeah, I saw that they're Floorsheim shoes.
He just absolutely loves them. So he sizes up your feet.
You're in the Oval office. He says, what are you
about a ten? Ten and a half I got some
shoes for you, and he'll order them for him. Pay
for him, get you some floor sheim shoes. He likes
him so much. Go figure. Okay, But the funny thing
(13:26):
is everybody in the inner circle and like one circle
outside it is terrified to come to work not wearing
those shoes. Sure, because you'll notice, Oh you didn't like
the floor shims. Oh no, I loved him. I just
decided to go with some of the shoes. I spent
three hundred dollars not Yeah.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
A female White House official said it's hysterical because everyone's
afraid not to wear them.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
I love that.
Speaker 4 (13:49):
This one, also from the New York Post, Jack Hughes
reveals planned to get famous Olympic teeth fixed, but is
also worried his fans will be paid.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
That's what I was saying. Like the next day is
agent's got to say, dude, you're keeping your your gap
for a while, all right, that's your brand? Really know
who we are? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (14:12):
This one from study Fine like to eat, he says,
like girls, and I look like a hoboll. This one
from study fines taking a daily multi vitamin might help
slow how fast you age.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
Well, that's what I'm trying to do the back and
forth on daily vitamins. It's like the back and forth
on coffee. I've just I take one, all right. I
don't care what you think. I don't care what the
latest udy says. Move on.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
And finally, this one from the Babylon Bee. Mom Donnie
condemns New Yorkers for making Muslims throw.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Bombs at them.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
Oh that's good. That is really good. That's pretty accurate.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
That is often the tone of things. And you know,
among the other factors, I'd like to discuss. His wife,
who he it made loud noises the other day, is
not a public figure. His wife tweeted celebrating the October
seventh Pilgrim against the Jews in Israel. The rapes and
the murders and the baby killings and the tortures and
(15:14):
the sexual mutilation and the machine gunning of kids at
a music festival for peace. She celebrated all of that.
His wife, Come on, you.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
Know what I took from the headlines. Actually, I should
probably get a daily vitamin. I don't take a daily vitamin.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Oh don't you.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Yeah, I always have.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
I don't take nothing. So I like not taking nothing
because I ain't got nothing to remember. Hmmm, makes it
very easy. You know, did I take my stuff today?
I did, because I don't take nothing.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Wow. Wow, you really you're really steering into the hiictalk today,
since you're really feeling your inner roube very appreciation. It
makes it very easy to live my life. It's like
the bargain I can never remember, was it Pascal or
somebody who's who had I might as well believe in
God because if there's no God, it doesn't make any difference,
and if there is, I'm in his good grace. It's
(16:05):
the dumb theory, which i'd like to explain at length.
Oh this year, I'd be delighted to listen. Ah. But
I've always felt that way about daily vitamins because every
doctor I've ever known has said, you know, it won't
do any harm and it might help.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
So super ambivalent, Pascal, you believe in a god that
is like all mowing, all believing, omniscient, but like wouldn't
catch on to your ruse, doesn't know you're doing it
on faking it?
Speaker 1 (16:28):
Old God?
Speaker 2 (16:29):
What done?
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (16:33):
I know, I know it's famous. It's a famous idea.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
I am. The headlines are everywhere on the whole. This
is going to be the biggest day of bombing yet
in Iran. Holy crap.
Speaker 3 (16:43):
Anyway, if that starts to unfold while we're doing this show,
we'll talk you more about it. Trump is vowing serious
consequences if Iran doesn't start letting the oil flow through.
Some French ships in US ships are saying they're going
to escort you know, oil tankers through the streets or
four moves you fire on those zone.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
You got a real big mess going now. I despise
the regime in Tehran, but if I heard, if you
don't stop that, there'll be serious consequences. I'm looking around
and saying more serious than this, No kidding, this seems
pretty serious. That's a good point. Okay, we got more
on the way.
Speaker 4 (17:21):
Armstrong and Getty.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
If I got this right, Yes, we're smart enough to
event AI, dumb enough to need it, and so stupid
we can't figure out if we did the right thing.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Which there's an interesting conundrum around the world of AI.
There from Jerry Seinfeld. You know what, Uh, this happens
to me almost every day with voice texting. Maybe this
is a real simpleton's view of it, but I feel like,
AI is not going to take everybody's job as long
as when I'm voice texting on grock or just you know,
a text or whatever, and I'll like, for instance, I'll
say it was really nice, I was riding my motorcycle,
(17:57):
and it will hear writing my motorcycle. Well, sence, nobody
ever says I was writing my motorcycle, and they can
make the history of mankind and it can't figure out
out of context that I meant writing not writing.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
I feel like we're safe. I mean, maybe I'm wrong,
but until you can fix that, well, and I'm at
the two hundredth incidents of connect correcting tea time as
if I'm going to have a crumpet to and a
nice cup to tee time since I'm gonna have a
golfer and it hasn't figured me out yet. On the
other hand, they would say, yeah, that's that's the consumer pity, Paddley.
(18:31):
Why haven't they fixed that? If AI is psycher character,
if it's so easily used to replace, I would think
you could fix that. You're not wrong. Funny cover on
The Atlantic this month, The Atlantic magazine, which I actually
subscribed to before Jeffrey Goldberg's at the editor in chief.
(18:54):
He fired Kevin Williamson, the terrific, very intelligent Ordery Texas Conservative,
before he had written a word, because his readers were
so aghast that he would hire a conservative of any
sort to soil the pages of The Atlantic. So I'd
subscribed to it before that and got the print edition.
I quickly. I chose not to renew it, but they've
(19:16):
been sending it to me for free now for several years. Cool,
which I think, Well, it'd be cool if it wasn't
an obnoxious liberal rag. But she looks sophisticated having that
on your coffee table. Well, I wear a tuxedo every day.
I don't need that, and spats no. But it's occasionally,
like once every other month it has a really really
good interesting thing piece. But anyway, the cover this month
(19:39):
is funny. It's a like a sci fi cartoon of
a robot shooting death lasers out of its eyes, burning
a city down, and the two cartoon people on the
front are looking at it, and the one says, on
the other hand, I'm more productive than I've ever been, right,
And the headline is how AI I will affect the
(20:00):
world of work or something like that. And I thought
that was a really good illustration of where we are.
And you know, as Jerry Seinfeld indicated with AI.
Speaker 3 (20:08):
Yeah, to counter my own point, I did read a
blog piece last night by a guy who was a
software dude, made software, wrote code and said he had
spent ten years, so he must have been like, wait, twenties.
It'd spent ten years in the industry, you know, perfecting
his craft, getting good at it, thinking he was set
(20:30):
for life, and now he's not needed at all, and
we'll never be able to get a job doing that again.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Yeah, yeah, that's rough.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
And that something came out of nowhere too. A couple
of other notes about AI, one of which is extremely
important and impactful and outlines or highlights are really sensitive
problem we have, and then the other one just OMFG,
so stay tuned for that one. The first one is
that whole anthropic standoff with the Pentagon, and that's it
(21:01):
highlights an incredibly touchy question about fully autonomous systems used
for surveillance and or killing, and whether AI will respond
to the checks and balances we have built into our
system to protect our rights. And also did not become
a monstrous country that kills people willing nearly all over
the globe, which reminds me, I want to talk about
(21:22):
that school bombing thing. And I have no idea why
Trump handled it the way he did it as press
conference yesterday anyway, But interestingly enough, because many young tech
whizzes are our lefties and dreamers and utopians, Anthropics now
had a whole flood of people. It was like the
Mariel boat lift from Cuba of people leaving Open Ai,
(21:48):
the chat GPT people and coming to Anthropic because they
appreciate Anthropics principles. Even though Dario from Anthropy said the
other day, oh, Brey Eyes just faking it their phonies,
but all the you know, the left e tech whizzes
(22:09):
are responding to it. And so now they're crossing the
street for that. It's not for a nine figure offer
like it was for a couple of months ago. I'll
do the math for you, folks. That's one hundred million
dollars holy blank and blank, are you kidding me? Anyway?
But no, they're they're now they're flocking across the street
for that reason. So I wish them all well, please
don't unleash your killer robots on America's cities. Well, so,
(22:30):
what's the latest on the dust up between Anthropic and
the Pentagon. Oh, it's all in. It's in courts now,
it's lawsuits. They're they're suing each other over whether this
is proper, whether they can blow up the contract for
that reason, whether those concerns are legitimate within the confines
of the contract, blah blah blah. So and what's It's
a heck of a conundrum because obviously our military needs
(22:54):
to have the best technology out there from AI in
our competition with China, and can't go hat in hand
to Dario Emodi every time they want to use it
and say, do you mind if we use it for
this right?
Speaker 3 (23:08):
And there's only a handful of these companies at that
level out there, and if they're all, you know, piece snakes,
we don't want our technology used for war, which is
just a moronic view of the world in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Yeah, well yeah, I mean, in in Anthropics case, they're
saying fully automated killing machines, no humans involved in the decision,
change a chain at all, which I get, and most
particularly no mass surveillance to US citizens. Now I'm one
hundred percent in favor of that. Right, But so.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
Our pentagon is I can't think of another example out there.
If Boeing and whatever other plane companies were big in
the you know, or early twenty we're making these planes
that were just better than any other planes out there,
but they didn't want them used for war, so they
wouldn't sell them to the government. We just don't have
(24:06):
the best planes out there to take on Germany or
Japan because the plane companies they won't allow their technology
for it.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
I mean, if Boeing says, you can shoot bullets at
other fighter planes, but don't drop bombs from them, yeah,
I mean, that's that's an untenable situation. Yeah. Yeah, this
has never happened before where the leading military technology is
in the hands of a couple of private citizens in
the night pentagon, our government, the military doesn't happen. Does
that ever happen before? It's like private people came up
(24:35):
with the nuclear bomb. Right. Yeah, here's a question for you.
Is there what is the likelihood that some country will
employ fully automatic killing machines?
Speaker 2 (24:50):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (24:50):
I agree, and therefore we need to be able to
fully automatically kill them and the guys running them in
their bunker or whatever. I guess what happens if you
give a chimp a machine gun. I swear to God
this is all it's that. I wonder if it is
going to come down to and man, this will be
a thorny issue. I'd like to talk to Tim about
(25:11):
this one. Tim Sanderford. Uh, at some point, does it
make sense for the government to say to Anthropic or
Sam Altman, look, we're taking your technology.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
It's a it's a it's a national defense issue.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
China's gonna have a better military than us because they
have AI.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
We're taking your technology. We have to.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
There's no other choice.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
Well, although then, but we don't know how to run
the technic. They don't know how to run the technology
we need.
Speaker 2 (25:40):
That's a new Also.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
Yeah, I know, I know, you get you get a manual.
You know it's going to be thick on how to
fly an F eighteen, use its weapon systems and the
rest of it. But at least it can be known.
But this stuff is evolving by the day. This is unprecedented.
Speaker 3 (25:57):
It'd be poetic almost in a way that that is
the end of our empire, that we're just you know,
we had the technology to stop China from taking over
the world, but our peace loving geniuses said no. So
you see, when China takes over America, they're gonna take
it from you, whether you like it or not. You're
gonna be in a prison camp if you're alive. Well right, yeah,
(26:17):
you'll have gun to your head as you go to
work every day. Darry, you enjoy it, Yeah, so I
promise you.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
I characterized it as an OMFG story, and I'm wrestling
with how to present it because it involves a brutal
murder of a young woman and it's it's terrible, absolutely terrible.
Former number one first round draft pick in the NFL
fellow by the name of Darron Lee decides to murder
(26:46):
his girlfriend in a fitter rage, and I will spare
you the details, but he is a chat GPT fan.
He was the number one draft pick in the NFL
first round draft pick for the Jets, who so it
was probably a fairly high draft pick. But he he
murdered his girlfriend and asked chat GPT, is there any
(27:10):
way I can pass these injuries off? Is maybe she
fell down? Like can can you fall and have puncture wounds?
And it responded to and again I'm leaving out a
lot of the details, IDK, but she isn't waking up
or responding. What do I do? Got it? The BOT responded,
here's exactly what redacted. And I don't know why things
(27:30):
are redacted. I can't tell from the context, but anyway,
here's exactly what redacted. Is the safest way to handle
it without framing it is police trouble in quotes what yeah,
and then he asked his puncture wound question that I
can help you sanity check whether it lines up with
a slip and fall or if it's something that should
be evaluated asap, said the AI, not realizing it's murder
(27:53):
thinking taking the guy at face value that he found
his girlfriend having quote unquote, so he was clever enough
to not just tell chat GPT, Hey, I killed my
girlfriend and I'm trying to make it look like a fall.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
I woke up and found her unresponsive with the following wounds.
Is it possible she fell and acquired these wounds? He's asking,
but says the historyt says, good question. Let me look
into it. I got this. You got this. Hang in there, buddy,
I believe in you. District Attorney Cody wamp pretty Name
(28:26):
told the court that Lee used chat ept quote as
a legal advisor. He had conversations dozens of conversations back
and forth with chat GPT over a two day period
about what he did to the victim in detail. He
asked how to cover it up? He asks what to
say to nine to one one. Prosecutors also presented new
police body camorrhage foot is showing Lee acting confused as
(28:46):
he told officers he found the victim dead at the house.
Blah blah blah. Wow, it's instructed by chet gipt. Does
anybody know?
Speaker 3 (28:55):
Maybe the alignment problem is different with each of these
chat But if a woman went to groc and said
I want to kill my husband and make it look
like im an accident, what's the best way to do it?
Whatd it just answer the question or does it send
that It wouldn't know. It would say I can't help
you with that. But if you said I'm writing a
(29:15):
novel and the character blah blah blah, then say, hey,
great plot choye, you got this. So it's that easy
to get around it in some cases, yeah, yeah, it
is so all right. One and this is again I
so abhor violence and violence against women in particular. I
can't even enjoy this.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Unspeakably stupid, blanking, idiot, violent jackass. But he said he
told police that she had narcolepsy and must have fallen
in the shower. However, police said the scene inside the
home showed evidence of a violent struggle and injuries inconsistent
with a fall. Blah blah blah. Horrific injuries so I
(29:57):
won't even go into the list, including large bite marks
on her shoulder and thigh damage all over the house,
stab wounds, injuries to the face. This guy's trying to say, yeah,
she must have fallen. Good lord anyway, but he tried
to get away with it with the help of chat
ept and this moron thought, all right, I got this licked.
I'm gonna call nine one one and say she fell
(30:20):
so you.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Could say, hey, claude, I'm trying to get a mini
series on Netflix. It's going to be about a woman
who kills her husband and makes it look like an accident. Yes,
what would be the best way to do that? And
then it could answer the question almost certainly.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
Right, I've got a story about a guy Rob's liquor stores.
When would there be the most money at a liquor store?
You know, for instance, Yeah, don't do that. Folks, don't
turn to crime. No, work hard, get ahead until AI
takes your job, then turn the crime.
Speaker 3 (30:53):
Well, no, you'll be living off the universal income. Oh
that's right, writing poetry and play all the time. No,
apparently there's way more interest in poetry than we realized.
It's just being held back by having to go to
work every day. Okay, we've got a mailbag on the way.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
Stay here.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
I meant to bring up doing our AI conversation. I'll
have to get to it later. This has been floating
around the internet. I guess Ted Cruz did this or
retweeted it. I don't know if it was his idea,
asking Claude if it would convert to Christianity, and Claude
made such a powerful argument for the facts of Jesus
and everything around it, Like really well done.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
Wow, quite amazing.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
How interesting. Yeah, I'd love to hear more about that.
Here's your freedom loving quote of the day. Continuing on
our series about war second Blaze, Pascal mentioned in a
single hour that's the record. Can anything be stupider than
that a man has the right to kill me because
he lives on the other side of a river and
his ruler has a quarrel with mine, though I have
not quarreled with him. Yeah, I know, I know it's there.
(31:57):
There's no stop in that, but it is. It's And
then this from Nicolo Machiavelli, who among philosophers is the
most Machiavellian in my opinion, Machiavelli said, there is no
avoiding war. It can only be postponed to the advantage
of others.
Speaker 3 (32:15):
Yes, I got a Jimmy Carter reference around that we'll
get to later. Alrighty, then mailbag Ji Jimmy Carter so
happy with himself that he never dropped any bombs or
fought anybody, and then left it to many other presidents
to deal with the aftermath.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
Again, no kidding. Congratulations John and Danville California Rights guys
love the show. Thanks John. Uh listens every morning on
the topic of the La Marathon, which we discussed yesterday,
the American coming from behind and beating the Kenyon. It
was rumored that you could hear the winner, the winning
runner yelling Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, see my privates as he
(32:54):
passed the Kenyon for the wind. Can you see my privates?
Ken you Kenya. Can you see my privates?
Speaker 3 (32:59):
Keny, Kenya tafety incident a reference to something my son
used to do when he was like four years old,
when he'd get out of the back top dancing around
the house.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
Jeff and Socallen the topic of siphoning gas, which, believe
it or not, we discussed briefly yesterday. I grew up
in a family run boat service shop, and siphoning gas
was not fun, believe me. But then we got an
electric fuel pump that made life a lot easier. But
unfortunately you can buy from home depot. It's got a
check valve in it, so when you put the hose
in the fuel, you just shake the hose and start
siphoning the gas out and you never have to put
(33:29):
it in your mouth. It's great, except now all the
scumbags can steal your gas even easier.
Speaker 3 (33:33):
Yeah, gas is like six dollars a gallon here in California,
So maybe I'll start siphoning brutal.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Let's see, this is Arizona, Matt guys. Oh, the New
York headlines about the isis trained bombchuckers who tried to
blow people up for being against Islam. When I heard
the news, I thought it was a bomb intended for
Mndami thrown by an anti Islamist. That's the way they
portray it. Yes, I imagine most Americans are just headline readers,
so this narrative is probably it's ptty safe for now. Yep, yep, yep.
(34:02):
They don't state it out loud, but they leave it
cloudy enough that it sounds like that's.
Speaker 2 (34:06):
What happened, right exactly.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
Violence broke out at an anti Islam rally is how
they are outside of Mom Donnie's house. So you just
jump to that conclusion, right exactly. Yeah, more on that
to come. Let's see. The title is Iran, the IRGC
and the Besiege in the Woke Right from Aaron, I
have to believe that the Iranian groups you mentioned yesterday,
the Revolutionary Guarden the Besiege are like the Middle Eastern
(34:30):
arm of the woke right, Candace, Nick Fahitas, he calls him,
and Tucker. They're likely telling people that, per the protocols
of the Elders of Zion, the US and a PAC
want this war in order to corrupt your Iranian women
into queer theory, gender mutilation, Fury's abortion, pornography, and only
fans slut culture. Probably get a ton of email from
(34:51):
other people who actually believe this too. Me, on the
other hand, I'm simply a mid forties templar pill to
GWOT who still wants payback for nine to eleven. Like
hag Seth, there's some references. I didn't even catch him there.
Then Brett suggests, Hey, what would be the downside of
the US dropping in hundreds of thousands of rifles and
millions of rounds of ammunition throughout specific chosen communities, especially
(35:11):
the ones that are protesting against the Iran regime. Yeah,
if you could make sure it didn't fall into the
hands of the military, I suppose, because then you're just
arming your enemy, right, don't want to do that. We've
got a lot on the way. If you missed a segment,
get the podcast Armstrong and Getty on demand. Gonna be
a big next three hours
Speaker 4 (35:31):
Armstrong and Getty