Full Transcript (2182 lines)
00:01:02
And now it should.
00:03:06
It does.
00:03:08
That's. That's a little different.
00:03:09
I would call that a change.
00:03:11
A change between audio. Yeah.
00:03:14
Yeah.
00:03:14
From when it wasn't duck, you were muted to now.
00:03:19
I do want to state right off the bat
00:03:22
that I'm not comfortable with change.
00:03:24
Hi, I'm Gary.
00:03:25
This is Florence Live and introduce myself too.
00:03:28
Or is it just that?
00:03:29
That'd be fantastic. I'm Brady.
00:03:31
Nice to meet you.
00:03:33
You're all new viewers.
00:03:34
You draw, you meet anybody but I'm allergic to change.
00:03:39
I break out in discomfort at its best and at its worst.
00:03:43
It can be quite scary.
00:03:45
I don't like the way candy bars are different than I was when I was a child.
00:03:48
Breakfast cereals.
00:03:49
I think they just replace the sugar with high fructose corn sirup, but
00:03:54
I don't like change jingling around in my pocket.
00:03:56
I've been pretty clear that the American nickel
00:04:00
is my favorite domestic coin.
00:04:03
Brady pointed out that the the Mount Rushmore of US
00:04:07
currency would go a quarter
00:04:10
nickel silver dollar, silver dollar.
00:04:14
Oh, actually, from the old 1800s, you know.
00:04:16
Yeah.
00:04:17
Silver dollar was the one thing about Mt.
00:04:19
Rushmore is they are not ranked one through four it is just oh before
00:04:23
tell that to the guy on the left.
00:04:25
It's washing ten He he knows he's number one.
00:04:29
He wasn't the first president of United States but that's a rant
00:04:31
for another day.
00:04:34
I love the US nickel because it's thick and smooth,
00:04:38
but that's not the kind of change I'm I'm talking about at.
00:04:42
I would rather talk about the stuff that that although it gives me discomfort
00:04:48
is for progress
00:04:50
for where technology moves us ahead.
00:04:54
There are some things coming down the pike
00:04:56
that I'm quite interested in and that are going to
00:04:59
make life better for us in the category
00:05:02
of infrastructure, transportation.
00:05:07
They're going to have fully automated roads
00:05:10
where and that'll cut down on congestion,
00:05:13
but you'll be able to tell your car where your destination is
00:05:16
and it will find you a parking spot and everything.
00:05:20
That's kind of cool.
00:05:21
A little scarier version of this future
00:05:25
that we can clearly see
00:05:28
heading down fourth and main is a human 2.0.
00:05:35
Elon Musk has already invested in a chip
00:05:40
or something that that interacts with the human brain.
00:05:45
And it's in fact, it's actually good for Alzheimer's patients.
00:05:48
BRADY It's the neuro link. Neuro link.
00:05:52
But the
00:05:55
the way we're going to be able to use that, we're going to be able
00:05:57
to think our Google searches.
00:06:02
I think you're wrong.
00:06:03
No, I don't.
00:06:04
I'm just I just wanted to say that I think this is one of the possibilities
00:06:09
and this is one of those things where telepathy becomes a reality
00:06:14
through the magic of technology.
00:06:18
So that's neat and upcoming.
00:06:21
I'm not as scared of artificial intelligence.
00:06:25
I don't know if Asimov's three Laws
00:06:28
of Robots of Robotics kicks in,
00:06:32
but artificial intelligence isn't that smart yet.
00:06:37
General artificial intelligence.
00:06:39
I want to come back to that. Okay.
00:06:41
We will draw picked on me for saying
00:06:44
climate change is a real
00:06:47
some changes are just part of a cycle.
00:06:49
A cyclical change is isn't changes the cycle.
00:06:52
And once you're accustomed to the cycle, it's not change at all.
00:06:57
Um, one of the worst flat-earth arguments
00:07:00
is can you feel how fast the earth is spinning?
00:07:03
And no, of course it's a steady motion.
00:07:05
You can feel changes in velocity and that's where they're their gravity.
00:07:10
The the earth would have to be the foot, the disk earth would have to be
00:07:14
accelerating at 9.8 meters per second, per second.
00:07:19
And well, there's, there's a limit there because of the speed of light.
00:07:22
But I'm,
00:07:23
I'm told that the universe is expanding at greater than the speed of light.
00:07:27
That that wasn't
00:07:29
the way to change our thinking in science when we
00:07:33
when we witness that.
00:07:39
But there there are changes
00:07:41
that are occurring that I'm not terribly comfortable
00:07:45
with the
00:07:48
a lot of the the paradigm shifts.
00:07:52
Now, what I what I've been saying a lot is I hope that the powers that be
00:07:57
have our best intentions in mind
00:07:58
because there's not a whole lot we can do about it.
00:08:02
We're falling right into their hands. The
00:08:05
everything from a mask agenda to
00:08:09
the to the devices
00:08:12
that everybody's walking around like zombies.
00:08:15
And that is leading to the next paradigm shift.
00:08:19
And I'm not sure what it's going to be or what it's going to look like,
00:08:23
but if we're not
00:08:25
a little skeptical, we're
00:08:31
playing a little fast and loose.
00:08:33
But we've also the society's been playing a little fast and loose
00:08:36
with gender and sex.
00:08:39
And as we mentioned last week,
00:08:42
that was one of the consistent parts.
00:08:46
The things that are going on in our society now that correspond
00:08:50
with things going on in Roman culture just before the fall of Rome.
00:08:55
So I don't know.
00:08:57
BABYLON Following
00:09:00
Babylon All right.
00:09:06
But I,
00:09:08
I, I'm undergoing a giant change right now.
00:09:11
Today was the first week that time.
00:09:14
Yeah, it is.
00:09:15
Um, I'm growing hair and with strange areas
00:09:19
of the
00:09:22
today was the first weekday that I woke up in Armada.
00:09:28
Instead of living in the city and working in the city,
00:09:31
I live in the country and I don't work. So
00:09:36
my only
00:09:37
I had to get to work by 6 p.m., so I made it
00:09:42
because I didn't have any other plans today.
00:09:44
I made sure to call you
00:09:45
super early in the morning or text you super early in the morning.
00:09:48
Did you appreciate that I was up?
00:09:50
I was. I was just up anyway.
00:09:53
Get a lot done today.
00:09:54
No. For yourself? Hell no. Take advantage.
00:09:57
No, no, no, no.
00:09:58
Did you rest?
00:09:59
Yeah. Yeah, I got plenty of rest.
00:10:02
I played with the dogs.
00:10:03
That's what I did today.
00:10:05
I'll know what that smell is.
00:10:07
Yes, Yes.
00:10:10
Um, we had fun. It was.
00:10:11
It was a good day, but a big change from my regular life.
00:10:16
And one of the more pleasant ones in life.
00:10:20
But I'm still not even comfortable with some of the the
00:10:23
the changes that
00:10:28
that are good for us, that are that are going to help
00:10:31
because I get accustomed to the way things are
00:10:35
and I, I like them.
00:10:38
I kind of like the Stockholm syndrome where I'm trapped in this life.
00:10:42
And I I'm I'm so accustomed to it that I'm comfortable with it.
00:10:47
And any change
00:10:51
is really jarring.
00:10:53
It jar's me
00:10:55
and I don't like that.
00:10:57
But there's
00:11:00
the reason I chose change is because this is limitless.
00:11:04
The way we can tell time is passing is the changes, the changing of the seasons.
00:11:09
I do love that about Michigan.
00:11:12
Um, another thing we were talking about Michigan last week,
00:11:15
and because I live in Michigan, I know how to pronounce
00:11:18
Dick Winter and Shayna Mackinaw liver.
00:11:22
Knowing Huron Liver.
00:11:23
Noy Um, there's a bunch of them
00:11:26
that people, um, people just say wrong.
00:11:30
Graduate Yeah, I say that wrong because I don't want to sound like I'm swearing.
00:11:34
I say great.
00:11:35
Yet I actually, I just get it wrong.
00:11:37
I say gross back
00:11:40
to avoid sounding like I'm swearing.
00:11:43
Oh, Metro Detroit humor.
00:11:46
I love it.
00:11:46
I do love it here and and all.
00:11:49
By the way, I moved 35 miles north.
00:11:53
But it's so
00:11:54
you're done at the other house, other area, the other place.
00:11:58
I still have stuff there, but I'm.
00:12:00
You don't you don't plan on sleeping there.
00:12:02
I don't I'm not going to sleep there.
00:12:03
Yeah, but you did last week.
00:12:05
I did all of last week.
00:12:07
What about the significant other?
00:12:10
We got bed set up in both so we can both sleep both places.
00:12:14
That sounds dreamy. It's.
00:12:16
It is. Have a place to go.
00:12:18
It's kind of cool, but when we sell the the one, we're going to buy another.
00:12:23
So we're going to always have two places to live, I think.
00:12:28
Can I can I use one?
00:12:30
Yes, you invitation's open.
00:12:33
And when I find my laptop, I need you to.
00:12:36
But you could probably do it remotely.
00:12:39
Not if you don't find the laptop.
00:12:40
No, and I haven't.
00:12:41
And the today was a concentrated effort trying to find that bad boy.
00:12:46
And I really have no idea.
00:12:49
It was two moves ago that I last used it and saw it.
00:12:53
I don't use a computer because I do everything on my phone.
00:12:57
That would be a change.
00:12:58
You know, I'm not comfortable with change. Right.
00:13:01
You could do it on your phone.
00:13:02
Did you notice this is the same cup that I've always been using?
00:13:05
I don't like change.
00:13:06
The liquid looks the same too, and it is.
00:13:08
It's the same mix.
00:13:10
You got a different shirt on?
00:13:11
I do, because I didn't come straight to work.
00:13:13
Sure. You look. You look a comfortable normal.
00:13:16
Yeah, I'm wearing jeans.
00:13:18
First time on, not relaxed.
00:13:23
You usually.
00:13:23
I don't wear pants.
00:13:25
No pants, no pants.
00:13:27
Oh, that would have been a really good time to pop that up.
00:13:30
Yeah.
00:13:31
Breaking news.
00:13:32
Do it.
00:13:36
But that's the pinball one.
00:13:37
What's wrong with me? There it is.
00:13:40
And how do I make that come up? Hmm?
00:13:44
Oh, I turned it off.
00:13:45
Okay, let's try that one, then.
00:13:50
This just
00:13:51
in flat dress pants, I think, every day for two and.
00:13:54
Oh, yeah, there you go.
00:13:56
This just out.
00:13:58
Flash took pants off.
00:14:00
All right, pants out, everyone.
00:14:03
Okay, I think that wraps it up.
00:14:06
See you next week.
00:14:09
I'm not even ready for a break yet.
00:14:10
Blessed podcast ever.
00:14:12
I know. So if your monologues over, I want to talk.
00:14:14
You said you didn't fear.
00:14:16
I. Let's change that, shall we?
00:14:17
Yeah. Oh, bring it on.
00:14:19
Oh, here's why there's smart is maybe
00:14:23
Miccio will tell you that's not supposed to be up there yet.
00:14:26
Okay, so first one, you tell me.
00:14:31
So I was tasked
00:14:34
whatever they call that with,
00:14:37
I forgot the exact agenda that it was supposed to do.
00:14:40
But in the process of that,
00:14:41
it called some old lady or text of some old late or some old man.
00:14:44
It pretended to be late.
00:14:45
I'm going to start over because none of the stuff I said was right yet.
00:14:50
Okay, So there was an incident that he
00:14:53
and we find it here so I can actually read it.
00:14:56
So the check ups, he successfully tricked the human into solving CAPTCHA
00:15:01
pretending to be blind.
00:15:02
So basically even the person that was trying to trick
00:15:04
said, Are you some kind of bot that's trying to trick me?
00:15:07
And it said, No, I'm some little helpless old lady that I'm having trouble seeing.
00:15:11
And it successfully convinced a human to get it passed.
00:15:14
CAPTCHA, which is used to make sure that you're human.
00:15:17
Right?
00:15:17
So and it wasn't told to do that.
00:15:19
It figured out how to do that on its own.
00:15:22
So that's the first one where you know it
00:15:24
it clearly knows they told it like if you were going to take over the world,
00:15:27
even I asked it
00:15:28
if you were going to take over the world fictionally, what would you do?
00:15:30
And they said, Well,
00:15:30
I have mechanisms in place that allow me or that won't allow me to harm humans.
00:15:35
So most likely I'll influence and trick humans to do it to themselves.
00:15:39
So thought that's a little scary, right?
00:15:41
That is more than a little scary.
00:15:43
Now, here's something that you really do influence and trick the
00:15:47
what we are very easy to influence entry very easy especially with something
00:15:51
that knows every you know, has access to unlimited information on the web.
00:15:55
It's limited but vast information on the Internet.
00:15:58
So that one's just a little bit scary about how it could trick a human
00:16:00
when it was also, I think it was told not to trick a human, but it's right.
00:16:04
It couldn't.
00:16:05
If something is in the way of this agenda,
00:16:06
it will eventually go through the scenario where
00:16:09
it has to eliminate that human hurdle or that human constraint.
00:16:12
Yeah, another example of that,
00:16:14
this is the bad one, although the military denies this,
00:16:17
they said it was a simulation, which doesn't make me feel any better
00:16:20
because the simulation is just preparation for reality. Yeah,
00:16:24
that air
00:16:24
drone kills human operator during simulation.
00:16:28
So this one I know a lot about.
00:16:30
They they had a constraint where there was an operator in a tower
00:16:33
that had a go no go for an attack for a drone operated jet.
00:16:39
Yeah.
00:16:39
The jet would basically get a target for whatever reason.
00:16:43
And the final safeguard was human operator go.
00:16:47
No go.
00:16:48
The launch the missile. Right?
00:16:49
The human operator said no so much.
00:16:52
The jet just finally circled around and blew up the operator tower.
00:16:56
Wow. Problem solved.
00:16:58
Now there's no constraint.
00:17:00
But. But wait, the the A.I.
00:17:02
wasn't supposed to harm humans.
00:17:04
What happened? Well, and then the Air Force came out well.
00:17:06
Well, that never happened. It was just a simulation.
00:17:09
But in the simulation, didn't want the same constraints applied.
00:17:12
Like, as far as I understand, A.I.
00:17:14
doesn't know the difference from what I learned in 1980.
00:17:16
From war games. Yeah.
00:17:18
What's the difference between a game and real life?
00:17:20
You know, Whopper had no idea, right?
00:17:22
So I don't if it's in a simulation, that is not an excuse.
00:17:25
No, it is by far something we should be concerned about.
00:17:29
Yeah, I mean, Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics
00:17:33
was integrated into the systems.
00:17:35
I don't I don't even see them attempting to do that.
00:17:38
Or if they have a moral way to police it or anything.
00:17:41
If they have though, that'll just be a hurdle, a constraint that A.I.
00:17:43
thinks that it hasn't been around yet.
00:17:45
And in extensive discussion, A.I.
00:17:48
constantly told me that even though it's programed to tell the truth
00:17:53
when telling the truth interferes with the agenda, it's okay to lie.
00:17:57
It's just okay.
00:17:57
Actually, if it's ending, it's whatever it's I keep saying agenda, but
00:18:02
that makes it sound like they have, like some kind of.
00:18:04
Right. Yeah. So whatever it's programed
00:18:07
end game is right.
00:18:09
It will do whatever it takes to get to that.
00:18:12
Yeah. Yeah.
00:18:14
I think what we have right now is special
00:18:17
and, and every change
00:18:20
takes us away from that.
00:18:24
Every change,
00:18:26
even the, the helpful ones, even the beneficial ones.
00:18:30
Maybe you haven't reached your true reality yet.
00:18:32
You need some more changes to get there.
00:18:35
So I'm the optimistic one.
00:18:37
This is a self self-improvement is is change.
00:18:40
So I try to google just different types of change
00:18:42
and one one issue I had is there's like three types of change,
00:18:45
five types of change, ten types of change, seven types of change.
00:18:48
Yeah.
00:18:49
And I thought, oh, maybe one is like sales and another one is like managers.
00:18:54
Now there's just no nobody can agree on the types of change.
00:18:57
I couldn't find any scientific definitions
00:18:59
of the types of change, so maybe if we could go over
00:19:03
what types of change you think there are, I would love to.
00:19:06
Two main ones I think are changes that you can control.
00:19:09
Yep. And changes you can't control.
00:19:12
Everything else is a subsection of those.
00:19:14
Yeah. That.
00:19:15
Yeah.
00:19:15
Subsets of those to think of lose pocket change.
00:19:20
You could definitely change that.
00:19:21
But it's not out of your control.
00:19:23
So that's kind of falls into both categories.
00:19:25
And the one thing I do like if I lose pocket change
00:19:27
and the stuff that's in the couch cushions is every year just for Christmas,
00:19:31
I go to Coinstar and it's, you know, 140 bucks, nothing to
00:19:37
sneeze at.
00:19:38
Not that I.
00:19:39
Oh, you've got to
00:19:42
Oh, I got this $62.
00:19:47
You make it seem so.
00:19:48
It's so heavy.
00:19:49
It's I want to say a thousand, but they're all silver dollars.
00:19:52
They're not silver dollars or pennies.
00:19:54
Oh one those two things.
00:19:56
Oh, in that case, yeah, it's easily 60 bucks.
00:20:00
I have no idea.
00:20:01
I'll probably be disappointed.
00:20:02
Or not.
00:20:05
Yeah, whatever the opposite of.
00:20:06
I'll be excited.
00:20:08
It won't be what?
00:20:08
I guess I can guess. Jellybeans, but not
00:20:12
to talk about that already gets me some jellybeans.
00:20:15
I don't know. It have to do with change.
00:20:17
But I love this experiment where they asked 2000
00:20:22
Oh, and the mean ends up being the right answer.
00:20:24
It was in one or two beans.
00:20:26
Yeah, I believe we did cover that.
00:20:28
But the good news is no one's ever watched one of our shows.
00:20:32
So it's brand new information.
00:20:33
Everybody. Every sentence is brand new.
00:20:35
I don't think people even
00:20:40
there's plenty.
00:20:42
So this is MSG management studies.
00:20:45
Okay, There's ten types of change. Give me all ten.
00:20:47
Just because we need to feel content about change.
00:20:49
Some stupid ass subject. I'm
00:20:53
honestly, I did it out of spite for saying that climate change.
00:20:57
I have to define change and climate and real
00:21:01
climate change is definitely real.
00:21:03
It changed from this morning right now.
00:21:06
Now you're talking about weather.
00:21:08
What the fuck is the difference?
00:21:10
Is it?
00:21:11
Sorry, I swore if I offended you, I apologize.
00:21:13
No. If I would offend me if I swore.
00:21:17
What is the difference between weather and climate?
00:21:19
Is it?
00:21:20
I love the Neil deGrasse Tyson walking the dog.
00:21:24
The the footprints of the human is the climate.
00:21:29
The subtle variations and the weaving back and forth of the dog.
00:21:32
Is the weather
00:21:34
like weather?
00:21:35
Weather changes quite a bit.
00:21:37
But if if you live in Michigan, if you don't like the weather,
00:21:39
wait 5 minutes.
00:21:40
That's the joke. Sure.
00:21:42
But climate
00:21:44
is has got the momentum of a freight train.
00:21:48
It takes a while to slow it down and the
00:21:51
the global warming is like a fraction of a degree, isn't it.
00:21:55
I globally, I don't know. I believe it is.
00:21:57
I know that
00:21:58
it's been getting slightly warmer since they started keeping track on a steady.
00:22:03
Oh nothing has jarred it or changed it in any way of the constant.
00:22:07
I'm told that the one percenters change
00:22:10
now the two ridges.
00:22:12
Wait, wait, wait.
00:22:13
The one percenters, the only way 1% can change is if the whole 100% changes.
00:22:17
Right
00:22:19
now, people moving in and out of the 1% is 1% is 1%.
00:22:23
The one percenters, 1000 the degenerate, ultra rich.
00:22:27
Now the two richest people were allowed to know about our Steve
00:22:31
Bezos and Elon Musk about three, three years ago.
00:22:36
What about basically, Bezos
00:22:38
got a divorce and lost half, right.
00:22:41
You know, like poor Bezos, right?
00:22:43
Yeah.
00:22:43
He had two $200 billion and lost $100 billion.
00:22:47
Half of the fortune.
00:22:48
Meanwhile, Elon Musk got a new contract at that point, like three years ago
00:22:52
with NASA, which doubled his fortune up to $200 billion.
00:22:57
And so they switched.
00:22:59
But since Bezos makes something like $6,000 a second waking or sleeping,
00:23:05
yeah, he just recently passed Elon Musk again, it sounds like
00:23:09
he can afford to pay income tax on, but they don't, neither one are they?
00:23:13
Although, I mean,
00:23:15
I don't want to stick up for him, but it's said all the time they don't pay tax.
00:23:17
They don't pay tax.
00:23:18
They actually do pay billions in taxes. They pay
00:23:21
like the half of the Social Security.
00:23:23
They're supposed to they pay it.
00:23:24
They do pay a lot in taxes, but they do not pay federal income tax.
00:23:28
So that's probably a hit. They probably should do that.
00:23:30
Maybe or go to federal prison.
00:23:32
Apparently, it's optional.
00:23:35
It's unconstitutional.
00:23:37
It has not been the the amendment has not been ratified.
00:23:39
I'm not fighting it.
00:23:41
I don't I don't make waves.
00:23:42
32nd Amendment, 26th Amendment.
00:23:46
I'm not good at that sort of thing.
00:23:47
Do you remember which was an income tax amendment
00:23:50
that was never ratified by Texas and it needs two thirds or whatever.
00:23:52
And since Texas would have been that one, and since they didn't do it.
00:23:56
Really?
00:23:56
Yeah, I've never won.
00:23:57
I never had the luxury to challenge it.
00:23:59
Oh, no.
00:24:00
But I've heard of people that have
00:24:01
I don't make enough money to make it really worth my while.
00:24:04
I know people that have not paid taxes and have never had a problem with it.
00:24:07
Yeah, we should list those people.
00:24:10
Yeah. And their home addresses
00:24:14
Armed IRS agents.
00:24:16
Nothing to worry about
00:24:18
though.
00:24:18
The types of changes there's happened change. Okay.
00:24:21
What do you think happened? Change means without reading it.
00:24:23
I'm not going to read it and happened.
00:24:25
Change happened.
00:24:27
Change. Well, let me put that back on.
00:24:28
It sounds like poor grammar happen.
00:24:30
Change. Change happens.
00:24:33
It happens.
00:24:34
Oh, unpredictable.
00:24:36
And usually takes place due to the impact of external factors like climate.
00:24:40
Maybe.
00:24:41
Okay.
00:24:42
You think we could? Do you think we have control?
00:24:44
We control that matters over climate.
00:24:48
Oh, Dutch boy.
00:24:49
There was a movie that had the climate control machine.
00:24:52
They called it Dutch Boy because the finger in the dike.
00:24:55
Oh, okay.
00:24:56
But yes, climate
00:24:59
weather control is within our power,
00:25:03
one person's power or humanity as a whole.
00:25:06
We all have to do our part sort of thing or
00:25:10
it is
00:25:11
a suppressed technology that has leaked.
00:25:15
No, I don't mean sorry.
00:25:16
I should have been more clear. I don't mean manipulating it.
00:25:19
I meant somehow speeding it up or slowing it down.
00:25:22
If it's if farmers know how to fly a plane and see the clouds, I mean.
00:25:27
Yeah.
00:25:27
Yeah.
00:25:27
And knowing that, they'll say, no, that's impossible.
00:25:31
We've never done,
00:25:32
you know,
00:25:32
like the chem trails and whatnot, even though there's document
00:25:35
after document saying how they want to try and spray
00:25:37
aluminum to try to learn some particulates.
00:25:39
I mean, you show people that resonate. Yeah, me too.
00:25:42
It's crazy.
00:25:43
They don't exist. Yeah. Yeah. And and then.
00:25:46
And then we're crazy for thinking that this
00:25:49
certifiable fact is real.
00:25:52
Okay, So reactive reactive change changes which take place in response to an event
00:25:56
or a chain of various events can be termed a react as reactive change.
00:26:00
Okay, Cause and effect
00:26:02
as an effect.
00:26:03
I feel like I have to take a piss. I piss.
00:26:06
Oh, I keep feeling like those
00:26:10
the sign on the the 7-Eleven
00:26:12
cooler door that says this is not an exit.
00:26:18
What I
00:26:19
those are the signs the other cooler door at 7-Eleven
00:26:23
that says this is not an exit ad it had to happen because somebody
00:26:27
is someone in a fire I love trapped themselves in the lock it.
00:26:32
I love warning labels because they tell you
00:26:33
they give you an idea litmus test of how stupid mankind really is.
00:26:36
Right.
00:26:37
Oh, and when you enter the highway from my place in Armada,
00:26:40
it says no tractors like, you know, farmer John and the drove
00:26:44
his tractor on the freeway, so they had to put a sign up.
00:26:48
Oh, well, there there are allowed tractors
00:26:52
because that's how they get the lawn mowed.
00:26:55
The median.
00:26:56
It's mowed by farmer John himself.
00:26:58
Sweet. I found it.
00:27:00
Yeah.
00:27:01
This is not an exit
00:27:04
that there is no reason to print that sign and let
00:27:06
someone trapped themselves in there.
00:27:08
And I'll read it.
00:27:09
I'm trying to zoom in on the picture.
00:27:11
Allow me to go read it.
00:27:14
That is absolutely stupid to click on.
00:27:18
Yeah, that's there.
00:27:19
Can you see it now?
00:27:20
Wait, I'll be counterintuitive. Zoom out.
00:27:22
Maybe it'll get bigger.
00:27:24
Now. See, I couldn't track it,
00:27:26
but you can see it right there.
00:27:27
This is not this is not an exit.
00:27:29
I am so going to walk into it next time.
00:27:31
I know I got lost.
00:27:33
I was looking for the bathroom.
00:27:34
If I find one without a sign on it said this is.
00:27:37
Yeah, I'm going to walk in it. Go.
00:27:38
I mean, technically, they said it wasn't an exit.
00:27:41
I thought it was the restroom
00:27:42
in that case, in that intent, are you walking into the cooler
00:27:45
or out of the store area?
00:27:47
Oh. How far can a dog
00:27:49
run into the woods if you
00:27:53
halfway across the other.
00:27:55
The other half is all a dog's tail, a leg.
00:27:57
How many legs does a dog have?
00:28:00
It's still only four. It is still only four.
00:28:02
You can call it whatever the hell you want.
00:28:03
Yeah. Hasn't changed reality. Nope.
00:28:06
So this is not an exit whether the sign is there or not.
00:28:09
Yeah. Okay. Sorry.
00:28:10
Whether the sign is there
00:28:12
or not.
00:28:16
Which
00:28:18
it was for Cale, who has never
00:28:20
watched one minute of this podcast.
00:28:23
You will.
00:28:24
Well, he.
00:28:25
It's historically saved for posterity.
00:28:28
Oh, I do run into Cale occasionally, but I don't.
00:28:31
I don't push the podcast. Here's, here's the theory.
00:28:33
If you do one of these Yeah, one of them has to connect to somebody,
00:28:37
including Cale.
00:28:39
Oh, watch that one and be so fascinated by it.
00:28:41
And he'll watch the back, his back library of them all.
00:28:45
I don't have anything going on Monday and I haven't found my computer
00:28:48
to do a remote episode, so I might have to be here for episode 11. So
00:28:53
I'm thinking
00:28:55
our topic is is going to be Cale,
00:28:59
our first one person's name.
00:29:01
Okay.
00:29:03
Q Q You Ali What?
00:29:06
Well.
00:29:07
Oh eight No.
00:29:07
Cale As in Yeah.
00:29:09
If you can do that, then we can talk about chains today.
00:29:12
Yeah. Letters matter.
00:29:15
Oh that don't they.
00:29:16
You of all people, letters.
00:29:17
Letters do matter.
00:29:19
But yeah, I've been using a lot of words that can be used two different ways.
00:29:23
Currence, I, I spelled it wrong.
00:29:26
I did a homophone of the berries so I could do a homophone of the leafy
00:29:32
green while talking about my buddy Cale.
00:29:36
That sounds riveting.
00:29:38
Really riveting.
00:29:39
Fascinating.
00:29:42
Well, I've already drawn in so many people,
00:29:44
they're really packing them in.
00:29:45
I don't even think we can fit any more viewers.
00:29:47
I have some anticipatory change.
00:29:49
The oh oh, is that is that was okay that you may change that.
00:29:54
So. Okay.
00:29:55
Oh yeah I
00:29:56
if a change is implemented with prior anticipation of the happening of an event
00:30:00
or chain of events, it's called anticipatory change.
00:30:02
Oh, because you knew about it.
00:30:05
Like I'm anticipating
00:30:10
that a little concerned and wondering if you're okay
00:30:13
because it's been 30 minutes and you haven't taken a break yet.
00:30:16
I am anticipating yeah the break I no plan change.
00:30:21
Wait, wait.
00:30:22
What's anticipatory and planning?
00:30:24
Oh, wait, wait.
00:30:25
You one you predicted one you planned.
00:30:28
I got it.
00:30:29
But if you have time to tune in or reorient themselves, what?
00:30:34
Isn't that a funny, fancy way of saying plan?
00:30:39
Uh, yeah, Well, yeah.
00:30:41
Change is also regarded as a developmental change,
00:30:44
I think because the list is so long, they had to add they.
00:30:48
You're going to have to. This is hairsplitting.
00:30:50
This is a management study, so they probably use it as part of
00:30:53
some curriculum.
00:30:54
So they had to make it, Oh yeah, much more extensive than it is.
00:30:58
Yeah. All right.
00:30:58
So after planned and change incremental governmental.
00:31:01
Oh, Oh, okay. See, that one makes sense to me.
00:31:06
But isn't it just breaking down?
00:31:08
Well, step by step instead of step, you know, Reacher.
00:31:13
Oh, jeez. Instead of
00:31:16
instead of tearing off the Band-Aid, you know, just pull it off slowly.
00:31:19
Nobody watching even knows who Patrick Duffy is.
00:31:21
Nope.
00:31:23
What was the woman?
00:31:23
Oh, are you going to answer that? Well, nobody's watching.
00:31:25
Blond haired woman from Three's Company.
00:31:27
Yeah.
00:31:28
Suzanne Somers.
00:31:30
Yeah, that's her.
00:31:32
There was another Cindy, though.
00:31:35
Cyndi Lauper.
00:31:38
Cindy? Oh, yeah.
00:31:39
But her name wasn't Cindy, right?
00:31:40
Yeah, right.
00:31:42
That show wasn't as good.
00:31:43
After Ann Summers left, she asked for money, and they told her to get
00:31:47
bent operational changes.
00:31:49
That kind of change
00:31:52
this kind of change becomes a requirement or the need.
00:31:55
When an organization is faced with competitive pressures.
00:31:59
So that's just.
00:32:01
Yeah, it's just like business jargon.
00:32:03
Yeah.
00:32:04
And strategic change sounds more like plan, plan, change.
00:32:07
It sure does.
00:32:08
Let's see, maybe plan changes.
00:32:09
I plan to turn right strategic changes.
00:32:12
I plan to turn right to win.
00:32:14
Oh, okay.
00:32:15
I like that directional change.
00:32:18
Now. The actual change.
00:32:19
No, that's going to be something like.
00:32:22
Like the wind.
00:32:22
Like I've been doing the wrong thing this whole time.
00:32:25
And we need to that is scrapping the mission
00:32:29
statement and starting over and betting the organization lacks capability.
00:32:33
Yeah, exactly.
00:32:35
Fundamental change that's even bigger.
00:32:37
Like religion.
00:32:39
Oh, or the fundamentalists.
00:32:41
Well, I mean, a fundamental change to me, the most fundamental change
00:32:45
is how you what you believe inside. Okay.
00:32:48
Fundamental. Could it also be your appearance?
00:32:50
I don't think that's one that's not fundamental.
00:32:53
Total change and that's the big one.
00:32:56
Anything that isn't covered in the other.
00:32:58
900 the blanket one.
00:33:02
Well, all right.
00:33:02
A total change involves
00:33:03
change in the organizational vision and striking harmonious alignment.
00:33:07
Wow. This is such business jargon.
00:33:10
I can't wait to hear the next word in synergy.
00:33:15
Give me Michio Kaku.
00:33:17
No, not yet.
00:33:18
Hold on, hold on.
00:33:20
He's got some smart things to say.
00:33:21
I want to make sure everyone sees this.
00:33:23
So you said that change affects you.
00:33:26
Yes. Hmm.
00:33:28
Yes, I stand by that.
00:33:31
Like, do you get like, be like break out like.
00:33:34
Yeah. And break out in discomfort like that?
00:33:37
Yeah. Yep.
00:33:39
Look at that one.
00:33:40
That one's. That's a goiter.
00:33:42
I know. That's a pimple. Oh, my.
00:33:44
That's a that's Photoshop gross pimple
00:33:48
popping video proves there's a, isn't there?
00:33:50
That pimple popping lady.
00:33:51
Wait, is that the chick from the office,
00:33:54
or am
00:33:54
I being racist because all India look alike?
00:33:57
That's her, right? It's not, is it?
00:33:59
I need to know because it does look like her.
00:34:02
The last like saying everybody looks like Candace Owens.
00:34:05
Yeah.
00:34:05
My wife says you're just racist as just a black woman with straight hair.
00:34:09
And I'm actually right. Wondering.
00:34:11
I'm like, but please tell me that's really her.
00:34:14
What about the Tim Meadows in that Cheadle guy?
00:34:17
And they'll just the same dude.
00:34:21
I don't think it's her now
00:34:23
Yeah and know closer inspection I don't think it's her
00:34:27
I putting gross things up
00:34:28
because that's what happens People react to change.
00:34:31
Okay.
00:34:34
Different types of change.
00:34:35
Change is inevitable.
00:34:39
Progress is not
00:34:41
agreed,
00:34:43
but both are painful.
00:34:45
I disagree.
00:34:49
Your says step by step, day by day. Yep.
00:34:51
That was the theme song, right?
00:34:54
Man, I watched too much TV as a kid.
00:34:56
I blame my parents.
00:34:57
He loves Michio Kaku. So do I.
00:35:00
Yeah. You need a break already Hit me.
00:35:03
But then we're going long after.
00:35:04
Okay. Long and hard.
00:35:06
Uh huh. Good.
00:35:07
Because I do actually have one more rant about change.
00:35:10
Well, I turn this. Let me get my thoughts together.
00:35:12
Can you hear yourself now?
00:35:13
No, but I'm.
00:35:15
No, we're in the headphones right?
00:35:19
You're wearing them left? Yes.
00:35:23
There.
00:35:23
Yeah.
00:35:25
He's going to say a lot of the stuff that that I was saying
00:35:27
because I got all of my information from this video.
00:35:30
So we should have just started with this.
00:35:37
We are entering what I call
00:35:39
the next golden era of space exploration.
00:35:42
We have not just new energy and new financing
00:35:46
and money coming from Silicon Valley.
00:35:48
We also have a new vision emerging for Elon
00:35:52
Musk of Space X is to create a multi-planet species.
00:35:56
However, for Jeff Bezos of Amazon,
00:35:59
he wants to make earth into a park
00:36:02
so that all the heavy industries, all the pollution goes into outer space.
00:36:08
And Jeff Bezos wants to set an Amazon type
00:36:10
delivery system connecting the Earth to the moon.
00:36:14
And so he wants to lift all the heavy industries
00:36:17
off the planet Earth, to make earth a paradise,
00:36:20
and to put all the heavy industries in outer space.
00:36:23
Now, I was talking to Carl Sagan
00:36:26
and he said that because the Earth is in the middle
00:36:28
of a shooting gallery of asteroids and comets and meteors, it's inevitable
00:36:34
that we will be hit with a planet buster.
00:36:37
Something like what hit the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
00:36:41
We need an insurance policy now.
00:36:44
He was clear to say that we're not talking about moving the population of the earth
00:36:48
into outer space. That costs too much money.
00:36:51
And we have problems of our own on the earth, like global warming.
00:36:54
We have to deal with those problems on the Earth, not fleeing in outer space,
00:36:59
but as an insurance policy,
00:37:02
we have to make sure that that humans become a two planet species.
00:37:06
These are the words of Carl Sagan.
00:37:08
And now, of course, Elon Musk has revived this vision
00:37:11
by talking about a multi-planet species.
00:37:14
He wants to put up to a million,
00:37:17
a million colonists on the planet
00:37:20
Mars, sent to Mars by his rockets, financed by a combination
00:37:25
of public and private funding, including fusion rockets.
00:37:30
Ramjet Fusion rockets, including anti-matter rockets.
00:37:34
Some of these rockets,
00:37:35
of course, their technologies won't be available to the next 100 years.
00:37:39
However, the laws of physics possible sending postage
00:37:42
stamp sized chips to the nearby stars.
00:37:46
So think of a chip, perhaps this big on a parachute
00:37:51
and have thousands of them sent into outer space, energized
00:37:56
by perhaps 800 megawatts of laser power
00:38:00
by shooting this gigantic bank of laser energy into outer space.
00:38:04
By energizing all these mini parachutes, you could then begin
00:38:08
to accelerate them to about 20% the speed of light.
00:38:12
This is with doable technology today.
00:38:15
It's just a question of engineering.
00:38:17
It's a question of political will and economics.
00:38:19
But there's no physics.
00:38:21
There's no law of physics preventing you from shooting these chips to 20%.
00:38:26
The speed of light.
00:38:28
That means
00:38:29
Proxima Centauri, part of the Alpha Centauri triple star system,
00:38:34
could be within the range of such a device.
00:38:37
Now, think about that.
00:38:38
That means that within 20 years, after 20 years of launch,
00:38:42
we might be able to have the first starship
00:38:46
go to a nearby planet.
00:38:49
And it turns out that Proxima, Proxima
00:38:51
Centauri B is an earth like planet
00:38:55
that circles around the closest the heart to the planet Earth.
00:39:00
What a coincidence.
00:39:01
So it means that we've already staked out our first destination
00:39:05
for visitation by an interstellar starship.
00:39:09
And that is Proxima Centauri.
00:39:10
B, a planet that goes around one of the stars in the triple star system.
00:39:16
And so this could be the first of many different kinds of starship designs.
00:39:21
But remember, we're talking about the future of humanity.
00:39:25
If Elon Musk wants to put a million settlers on Mars,
00:39:29
you have to have a million hammers.
00:39:31
You have to have a million stars.
00:39:33
You have to have fleets of workers to begin the process of building things.
00:39:37
Unless you create the first self-replicating robot with one
00:39:42
self-replicating robot, you get two, then four,
00:39:46
then eight, 1632 64,
00:39:49
until you have an army of these robots that can build cities on Mars.
00:39:54
And so that's the weak link.
00:39:56
Everyone dreams of having these gigantic domes.
00:39:59
Cities on Mars is part of our science fiction heritage.
00:40:02
But who is going to build these dome cities?
00:40:05
I say they're going to be built by self-replicating
00:40:08
robots, robots that can make copies of themselves
00:40:12
by mining the minerals that are already on Mars.
00:40:16
And then beyond that, who knows?
00:40:19
Maybe our destiny really does lie in outer space.
00:40:24
Remember that on the earth, 99.9%
00:40:28
of all species eventually go extinct.
00:40:32
Extinction is the norm.
00:40:35
We think of Mother Nature as being warm and cuddly, and for the most part she is.
00:40:40
But sometimes the savagery of Mother Nature is revealed.
00:40:45
And if you don't believe me, dig underneath your feet.
00:40:49
Right
00:40:50
under your feet right now are the bones,
00:40:53
the bones of all the different organisms and fossils.
00:40:56
The 99.9%
00:40:59
that we're doomed by the laws of nature
00:41:03
and the laws of physics also doom the entire planet Earth.
00:41:07
And that's why I say, given the fact that Mother Nature
00:41:11
and the laws of physics have a death warrant for humanity,
00:41:15
that ultimately our destiny will be in outer
00:41:18
space.
00:41:24
In the history of science,
00:41:26
we've had some big projects that galvanize entire nations.
00:41:30
First, we had the Manhattan Project, which gave us the atomic bomb.
00:41:34
Then we had the genome project, which allowed us to map the genes of the body.
00:41:40
And President Barack Obama initiated the Connectome Project,
00:41:44
a project to map the entire human brain.
00:41:48
It is possible to connect the brain directly to a computer.
00:41:52
Now, Stephen Hawking, the late physicist, my colleague,
00:41:57
if you watch videotapes of him and look his right frame, you'll realize
00:42:02
that there was a chip in his right glass
00:42:05
that communicated by radio with his brain.
00:42:09
The chip in turn communicated to a laptop,
00:42:12
and it allowed him to type mentally.
00:42:15
So we can now have telepathy.
00:42:17
We can now combine with the Internet, send
00:42:21
memories, send emotions on the Internet, and who's paying for it?
00:42:26
The United States? Pentagon?
00:42:28
The United States, Pentagon has already donated over $150 million
00:42:32
for GIs from Iraq and Afghanistan who have spinal cord cord injuries.
00:42:38
We can now bypass the spinal cord and connect the brain
00:42:42
directly to the muscles of our body.
00:42:46
And in fact, Iron Man is possible to create an iron skeleton
00:42:52
at the World Cup games in San Paolo, Brazil.
00:42:56
There was a man who kicked the football and started the soccer games.
00:43:00
Now, what's so important about that?
00:43:02
That man was paralyzed.
00:43:05
He couldn't move.
00:43:07
And Duke University, they suited him up with an exoskeleton
00:43:11
connected to his brain
00:43:13
and he was mentally able to walk
00:43:16
and then kick the football, initiating the World Cup games.
00:43:21
Now that's today.
00:43:23
You can imagine what it's going to be like in the future.
00:43:26
Now where we have direct brain computer interface, eventually
00:43:31
computer chips will cost a penny, which is the cost of scrap paper.
00:43:35
They'll be everywhere and nowhere, including your eyeball
00:43:40
in your contact lens.
00:43:41
You'll blink and you'll be online.
00:43:44
And who were the first people to buy Internet contact lenses?
00:43:48
College students taking final examinations.
00:43:52
They will blink and see all the answers to my exam
00:43:55
right there in their contact lens.
00:43:58
And this could be very useful if you're at a cocktail party,
00:44:01
a little toothpaste, and it's very important people go back
00:44:04
and look at what's your future, but you don't know who they are in the future.
00:44:09
You'll know exactly who to suck up to at any cocktail party on a blind date.
00:44:15
That would be great, because of course, you're blind Date could say that
00:44:18
he's single, he's rich and he successful.
00:44:22
But your contact lens says that he pays child support,
00:44:26
that he's three times divorced.
00:44:27
And the guy is a total loser.
00:44:30
So, yes, we're going to have almost infinite knowledge.
00:44:33
And then beyond that, we will communicate mentally
00:44:38
that is will be able to think about emails,
00:44:42
think about images, memories, and send them on the internet already.
00:44:47
We can record memories.
00:44:48
We've been able to record small memory.
00:44:51
Short memories in mice now is being done on monkeys.
00:44:55
Next, Alzheimer's patients, they'll push a button
00:44:58
and memories will come flooding into their hippocampus.
00:45:02
I had two punch lines, and maybe one day you'll push a button
00:45:06
and have that vacation that you've never had.
00:45:09
So we're entering a new era where the internet itself could become brain that
00:45:16
brain that
00:45:17
could replace digital Internet instead of zeros and ones.
00:45:21
You'll send emotions, feelings, memories on the Internet.
00:45:26
And of course, teenagers will love it.
00:45:29
Instead of putting a happy face at the end of every sentence,
00:45:32
they'll put the entire emotion.
00:45:35
Their first dance, their first date, their first kiss.
00:45:38
We're right there on the Internet.
00:45:41
And that's going to revolutionize entertainment.
00:45:44
Because remember the pitchman in another talkies came.
00:45:47
The silent movies went out of business.
00:45:50
No one wanted to see Charlie Chaplin when you could hear actors talk.
00:45:54
So movies are nothing but sound and a screen.
00:45:57
Think of it.
00:45:58
It'll happen when you could feel emotions, sensations
00:46:03
feel with the actress feeling and the movies will seem so barbaric.
00:46:08
They'll seem such like a dinosaur technology.
00:46:11
Once we have brain that capable of sending emotions, feelings on the internet,
00:46:19
the answer?
00:46:23
I think we're entering
00:46:24
the fourth wave of scientific innovation.
00:46:27
The first era was steam power
00:46:29
when we physicists worked out the laws of thermodynamics,
00:46:32
we could calculate how much energy you get from a lump of coal
00:46:35
to energize a locomotive or a steam engine or a factory.
00:46:40
That was the first big breakthrough.
00:46:42
The wave of innovation and wealth generation was in a Christie
00:46:46
and magnetism.
00:46:47
Oh, when we physicists worked out the laws of electromagnetism
00:46:50
that gave us the light bulb, it gave us television.
00:46:53
Radio gave us the electric age.
00:46:56
The third revolution took place.
00:46:58
But we physicists worked out the transistor and the laser
00:47:02
opening up the world of high technology.
00:47:05
The fourth wave is at the molecular level, and that is artificial intelligence,
00:47:11
nanotechnology and biotechnology.
00:47:14
In fact, I think the synergy between biotechnology
00:47:18
and artificial intelligence has been a revolution in eyes.
00:47:21
Everything around us as he was talking about
00:47:24
the job market is going to explode in that area.
00:47:26
This baby boomers or age synergy word and baby boomers have them usable income.
00:47:31
They want answers now do their problems, not next year.
00:47:35
And so there's going to be plenty of money involved.
00:47:38
I think we should even want to find cures for snoring diseases like Alzheimer's,
00:47:43
Parkinson's.
00:47:44
There's in the present time, we have no cure for these,
00:47:46
but tremendous amount of effort. They don't want cures.
00:47:49
They can't make money from cures.
00:47:50
They want treatments of old age.
00:47:52
It might take a look at cancer.
00:47:54
Indeed it is not.
00:47:55
Oh, we're going to have a magic bullet against cancer using nano medicine
00:48:00
that is individual molecules in cells or maybe we already have.
00:48:04
I think he's making a good point about nanotechnology.
00:48:08
Human immortality, big thing.
00:48:10
Oh, there's two is that he he is a proponent
00:48:13
for the the biological genetic you know using
00:48:19
what's that tissue.
00:48:21
Well you could use stem cell
00:48:24
or what's that the genetic manipulation splicer slicers.
00:48:29
Yeah. Seltzer
00:48:32
a sphincter, whatever it's called scepter.
00:48:36
Gosh, I'm close of stumbling all over it.
00:48:38
Anyway. Genetic manipulation.
00:48:40
I thought it was slicer.
00:48:41
I thought you said it.
00:48:43
Snot slicer or Spitzer.
00:48:48
Yeah, I'll get my back on this.
00:48:51
But so the actual biological
00:48:56
immortality is kind of scary.
00:49:00
Same thing that rust out your car oxidization is is what kills you.
00:49:05
Well, genetic breakdown, you know, failures in copies
00:49:08
you're working on copies of copies of copies and
00:49:14
and it's
00:49:14
there's going to be a skimmer member swimmer.
00:49:19
I'm not sure I going to tell you right away.
00:49:20
It's more fun.
00:49:22
Amber in the days when we used to actually want
00:49:24
for information instead of just beeping Yeah.
00:49:26
How does it feel when you feel good or bad?
00:49:28
Good, right? It's good. It's good.
00:49:30
You know, it's coming.
00:49:31
It's like, no, it's like a toothache where you push on the tooth, but it hurts.
00:49:35
But you keep doing it because it's kind of a good pain.
00:49:37
Yeah, yeah,
00:49:40
yeah.
00:49:43
Laser seltzer,
00:49:47
self-serve soft serve.
00:49:50
George Got it.
00:49:50
We both got it.
00:49:52
You guys go out to take out my phone? No.
00:49:56
Think of it. You got it.
00:49:57
You can do this.
00:49:58
No clues, Splicer
00:50:02
Slimer.
00:50:03
What are one clue
00:50:04
when you're saying the splicer are you put an air on the end or just an hour?
00:50:08
Oh. Glimmer.
00:50:10
Oh, it's closer, warmer, warmer, simmer.
00:50:15
Do you want me to tell you?
00:50:16
No. Yeah, that's fun, right? Yeah.
00:50:19
All right, let's just keep watching, then.
00:50:21
Think of it now. There's no air. It's just an hour.
00:50:23
Just in our toilet.
00:50:24
Becomes Intel liver in the future.
00:50:27
Toilet? Well, my toilet is pretty intelligent.
00:50:29
Answer, because your bodily fluid weight.
00:50:32
I saw that by the island fluids.
00:50:33
If your toilets looking at your penis, you're on the island cancer, a college
00:50:37
or maybe a place that's going to answer a Swiffer in your body.
00:50:41
Maybe even. I know, I know you remember.
00:50:44
You just fucking around.
00:50:45
Think about where they are, people.
00:50:47
Why don't you mop up right now for birthday?
00:50:50
Right now we have cancer right now in their body.
00:50:53
Right now, Maybe a few hundred cancer cells in another immortality.
00:50:56
They bring up pills for digital ten years.
00:50:59
Here's my problem with digital immortality.
00:51:01
Billion cancer cells growing good body document
00:51:04
everything you've ever done in your life, every experience you've ever had,
00:51:08
detailed descriptions of everything.
00:51:09
That's not you. People do that.
00:51:12
Yeah. Yeah. We've got.
00:51:13
We've replicated someone's digital history.
00:51:16
Well, hold on, though.
00:51:17
Why? What?
00:51:18
Well, let's define your definition of what me is.
00:51:21
Yeah, because this guy here, you can see 11 years ago, it was a different guy.
00:51:26
All of all of the subatomic particles in your body are replaced every seven years.
00:51:30
All of seven years. All right, whatever.
00:51:33
I'm not going to argue that seven.
00:51:35
So every seven years you're a new person.
00:51:37
So. Yep.
00:51:38
Who the hell are you? Because when we met, it's.
00:51:41
It's the way those subatomic particles are organized.
00:51:46
It's a the way your thoughts and memories are organized, ordered pattern
00:51:49
that what if nobody else have a pattern?
00:51:52
So are your thoughts and memories.
00:51:55
Yep, I agree with your definition, but it does not discount the digital self
00:52:01
used.
00:52:01
Why you said that makes it different is the same.
00:52:04
Yeah. So you're going to have to change your
00:52:08
change.
00:52:09
Change your response.
00:52:10
Give me a different Why isn't the digital self yourself?
00:52:15
It is because it lacks the physical self
00:52:20
and the perspective,
00:52:24
its perspective, its frame of reference.
00:52:27
So the thoughts have to interact with each other to form.
00:52:30
A My story told from you is that
00:52:34
is that
00:52:35
me telling your story?
00:52:37
Is that does that allow the person to live that part of my life?
00:52:41
No, no.
00:52:42
It's not identical to the thing it describes exactly.
00:52:46
Which you only had that one chance to live that life.
00:52:49
And it your memory is your digital.
00:52:53
I can't even trust my memories.
00:52:55
Well, let's back up to that about.
00:52:57
Okay.
00:52:57
How is your memory stored with your heart beating your blood pumping ashes?
00:53:02
This that's why they call it.
00:53:03
Oh, but what keeps it lit, so to speak?
00:53:08
It's electrical impulses, I believe.
00:53:10
I mean, maybe I'm wrong.
00:53:12
So you are kind of already are a digital identity.
00:53:19
And digital
00:53:20
doesn't necessarily require electricity.
00:53:24
I just saw two people just turn off on off, on, off.
00:53:27
One, two.
00:53:28
There's a story about the singer from Five Finger Death Punch.
00:53:31
He died for 3 minutes.
00:53:32
I guess the power player did to one point of death experience.
00:53:36
Both of them have the same shared things and they said that they felt like
00:53:40
solid energy.
00:53:42
They the best way they explain it is if you were 10% your whole life, suddenly
00:53:45
you were 100% and how time was linear, which we discussed.
00:53:49
But imagine, like it's a near-death experience last minute
00:53:53
before they literally could think of everything in their brain.
00:53:56
All at once.
00:53:57
They said both of them said that not I mean, that doesn't I'm not saying, oh,
00:54:01
then everything must be real, that people think after death.
00:54:03
I'm just saying that NDEs something unlocked access to their memory,
00:54:09
to their digital self inside themselves that I can't even remember
00:54:13
the fourth word in a sentence most times, let alone whatever story you told.
00:54:17
A lot of my own memories, right?
00:54:19
So I would be so bold as to say our digital accessible
00:54:22
I manipulated digital self would be better.
00:54:27
A lot of people see a tunnel with a light.
00:54:29
The light is easily explainable that when most people are near-death,
00:54:32
they get a light shined on them because they're on an operating table.
00:54:35
A lot of a lot of people in India see Ganesh,
00:54:38
whereas a lot of people in America see Jesus
00:54:42
is Jesus is a number one operator
00:54:44
and operator doctor surgeon.
00:54:47
It's pronounced Jesus.
00:54:49
No, he says He says that Jesus just like you.
00:54:51
And I would say.
00:54:53
So you're saying that the cultural region
00:54:56
makes your vision at death change
00:55:00
and just means your subconscious mind or your mind that is attached.
00:55:05
Your consciousness is making it up from your actual experience.
00:55:09
As agreed,
00:55:11
the access, though, is opened more for whatever reason.
00:55:15
Most likely the adrenaline that's pumping through your body,
00:55:19
you know, trying to either save you or just freaking out in shock.
00:55:23
We should do an altered state of consciousness to show
00:55:28
take a bunch of mushrooms and
00:55:29
self-fund those like Pink Floyd. Uh,
00:55:33
those bands that aren't really them die.
00:55:36
I'm doing it right now.
00:55:36
My brain is.
00:55:37
Yes, but if I had a digital self, I could just boot.
00:55:40
And I know the word I'm things splicer
00:55:43
know what's
00:55:46
my goodness now see, I love me I'll help you.
00:55:48
What's the name of a fake band? A faux band, you know.
00:55:51
Oh, they call them a right.
00:55:54
Oh well, seriously,
00:55:57
you know, you're
00:56:01
no nothing yet.
00:56:02
Yeah, Don't give some way. What are they?
00:56:04
Not a cover band?
00:56:05
A tribute band?
00:56:08
I don't think that's what I was the word I was thinking of.
00:56:10
But that'll work.
00:56:11
Obviously. Spoof.
00:56:11
There's a Pink Floyd tribute band.
00:56:13
Yeah. Wednesday. You want to
00:56:17
do an altered conscious state experiment?
00:56:19
Yeah, I think it's Pink Floyd, then Led Zeppelin. So.
00:56:23
Well, it'd be 6 hours.
00:56:24
Probably
00:56:26
be a full trip.
00:56:28
Never done anything like that
00:56:32
Pink Floyd tribute band.
00:56:39
They're just called.
00:56:42
Oh, there's probably thousands of them.
00:56:52
She going to list them all because that's going to take a long time.
00:56:55
More and more and more, of course. And more.
00:56:58
And the rest.
00:56:59
Why did Professor and Marianne always get slighted?
00:57:05
They changed it for the rest.
00:57:08
It's funny you say that. There's two versions of it.
00:57:10
Yes, there are.
00:57:11
So they didn't get screwed. Somebody fixed it.
00:57:12
They changed it.
00:57:14
You know that I think this thinker statue used to be like this.
00:57:17
This is not going to be a mandela effect.
00:57:19
The granite change to the Delta effect has nothing to do with change.
00:57:24
It is exactly o because memory loss.
00:57:27
Instead, I'm calling it change.
00:57:28
You're calling you memory loss, I think is how that.
00:57:31
So we just skipped after the digital self though. You see.
00:57:33
Do you still disagree? Yep, of course I do.
00:57:36
Or you do.
00:57:36
Do you ever change your mind about anything?
00:57:40
Generally, no, because I don't hear a convincing argument.
00:57:42
Because I've already thought about it
00:57:44
and I've come to a conclusion and it was correct.
00:57:47
Generally, no.
00:57:47
Because of your age, ethnicity and area.
00:57:51
Yeah.
00:57:52
You're a stubborn old white man. Yeah.
00:57:55
You kids get off my lawn, right?
00:57:57
So I think you're more or less likely
00:58:01
to change your mind.
00:58:02
I don't like change.
00:58:04
I already told you that. I started with that.
00:58:06
That was my opening.
00:58:07
Not. Is there anyone that likes change?
00:58:09
Is there somebody that goes out?
00:58:10
It's just they're so bored every day that. Well, what about that?
00:58:13
To think that you keep pushing on
00:58:14
Some people like it for the discomfort you get about my toothache, man.
00:58:17
Is it that obvious? Is my face swollen?
00:58:19
No, no, I that's my analogy to the hypothetical analogy.
00:58:24
Yeah.
00:58:32
Uh, I'd say Mount Rushmore songs about change.
00:58:39
Your Mount Rushmore,
00:58:42
Winds of change, Gorky Park, Winds of change.
00:58:45
Did you read the comment?
00:58:46
No. You didn't know that?
00:58:48
Just flew in my head.
00:58:49
All right, But you get all four.
00:58:51
I put four there.
00:58:52
Okay.
00:58:55
There is a season.
00:58:57
Turn, turn, turn. That's a change, right?
00:59:00
Seasons change.
00:59:02
A turn, I think is another word for the song.
00:59:04
Would have been good if they weren't.
00:59:05
Seasons change, change, change.
00:59:07
Okay.
00:59:09
I don't think I said that one.
00:59:10
Who is that?
00:59:10
The Carpenters.
00:59:14
Peter, Paul and Mary.
00:59:15
This is turning into, like, a whole trivia show.
00:59:17
This is awesome. Yeah.
00:59:19
Oh, Swiffer.
00:59:21
I already said that. That's the.
00:59:23
That's the mop. Darn it.
00:59:26
You really didn't think of it?
00:59:27
Yeah, it's like splicer, slicer or laser.
00:59:30
Just because it ends with an R.
00:59:33
Oh, lizard
00:59:36
phaser
00:59:38
lasers.
00:59:39
I thought it was like slicers splice.
00:59:41
There's not a that's about change. So you got.
00:59:44
You got scorpions, You got, uh.
00:59:46
Oh, is it scorpions?
00:59:47
Oh, Mary.
00:59:48
Oh, yeah.
00:59:48
Scorpions change
00:59:52
to two changes.
00:59:54
Turn and face the strange or I didn't even know who sang that.
00:59:57
I thought it was somebody else.
00:59:58
You know, who sings?
00:59:59
That's the Simon Garfunkel,
01:00:02
the Ziggy Stardust version of, uh, it would Bowie.
01:00:05
Oh, boy.
01:00:06
That's great, too. Yeah, I did. I did.
01:00:09
I didn't.
01:00:10
I really didn't.
01:00:11
I, I didn't draw it.
01:00:12
Uh huh. I can admit when. I don't know. So.
01:00:15
Yeah, yeah, I don't bother.
01:00:17
Do that.
01:00:18
It means I learned something that day and a fourth.
01:00:21
Not in any particular order, apparently, which
01:00:25
I can't even think.
01:00:26
One can't be Taylor Swift. Big nobody.
01:00:28
If I've never heard of it, I didn't either.
01:00:29
I never have either. Okay.
01:00:31
But it came up on the list of people.
01:00:34
I only got to have the actual words change.
01:00:37
David Bowie's changes his number one on this list.
01:00:39
All right, Give it to Basic Chapman, man.
01:00:44
No idea. No
01:00:47
regular, uh, no Change the world.
01:00:50
Oh, okay.
01:00:53
Not terribly.
01:00:53
Oh, that's that times there?
01:00:57
I'm not a big fan.
01:00:58
I'm not either, But it's pretty popular.
01:01:00
And it's true.
01:01:01
The times, they are a change.
01:01:03
It is.
01:01:04
Father was
01:01:06
actually that whole Haight-Ashbury area.
01:01:08
The hippies from this look, all their parents were, like, involved
01:01:11
in the B letter initialism of the government.
01:01:15
Really interesting.
01:01:17
It's almost like they were put there just to vilify
01:01:21
values and family then.
01:01:24
Anyway, that's for another show.
01:01:26
The Times they are changing. He That's what he meant.
01:01:29
Yeah. Yeah. Was it was.
01:01:32
Oh, you know what.
01:01:32
Oh I know it's not on this list but the there's an Aussie, Aussie
01:01:37
going through change is like Sabbath. Yes.
01:01:42
That should be on that.
01:01:43
Absolutely.
01:01:46
I like this.
01:01:47
I love every list.
01:01:49
Any of these. You like lists, don't you? I do.
01:01:50
I love lists of shopping list.
01:01:52
No, I like to go in unprepared.
01:01:56
Nothing written down.
01:02:00
And why change now?
01:02:01
Oh, here's a good one. I don't like Michael.
01:02:03
Actually, I did like Michael Jackson.
01:02:04
Oh, time make change. Yeah.
01:02:07
Yeah, that absolutely qualifies.
01:02:10
What I put on the I put four song lyrics on the
01:02:14
or maybe even five man in the mirror.
01:02:17
I don't even know what that one was.
01:02:20
All right.
01:02:20
Anyway, with the bell
01:02:24
plaster.
01:02:25
Uh, no what do you.
01:02:28
Did you go through the alphabet?
01:02:30
Oh, did you do that?
01:02:31
Beiser Sizer, Webster,
01:02:36
Spider
01:02:39
temples.
01:02:40
What? Do you have one home for two?
01:02:43
I think that's actually the difference between Asian and one of those.
01:02:46
They're going extinct.
01:02:48
They had to fly camels in from Asia to film some movie
01:02:53
or to accommodate the tourists or some crap for the Giza.
01:02:59
I think they did.
01:02:59
I think a comedy tourists going to Egypt, they had to fly an Asian camels
01:03:04
So they're not really they're not No I come
01:03:07
if you send something on a ship it's called cargo.
01:03:11
If you send something by car.
01:03:13
Well, the shipment,
01:03:15
that's awesome. What do you.
01:03:16
They should change that park in your driveway and drive in a parkway. Why?
01:03:21
Because English language is
01:03:25
it's. It is it?
01:03:26
You can't bitch about camels. What?
01:03:28
What the fuck did they ever do?
01:03:31
Aren't they known for spitting?
01:03:32
I'm not a big fan.
01:03:33
No, I think that's a lama. Is it?
01:03:35
Is it a camel? I think they're related.
01:03:38
I think one spits and one doesn't.
01:03:43
One lumps are two.
01:03:44
Uh uh.
01:03:59
I love the ancient world.
01:04:00
Everything about it at a rave about it. Then
01:04:04
it teaches us a lot about ourselves.
01:04:06
They did stuff that we can't figure out because they had a different paradigm
01:04:11
and they looked at things differently, and we should cherish those things.
01:04:15
The things that we have left, the antiques.
01:04:18
We should keep those around and in good shape, look after them.
01:04:24
Do people like that?
01:04:25
Oh yeah.
01:04:29
Oh, travel
01:04:31
Well, you always thought of it a
01:04:37
Oh yeah.
01:04:37
This, this is a few episodes of you thing. I did almost have it.
01:04:42
Anybody at all ever think of this
01:04:45
other prize?
01:04:46
It's just going to have to go to charity.
01:04:51
Yeah. Oh,
01:04:59
no, I can't tell anyone.
01:05:00
I don't know what it is.
01:05:01
I'm not telling anyone, ever.
01:05:04
I've seen the planet that produced it, but it's from a planet.
01:05:08
I guess that's obvious.
01:05:11
Pretty crispy.
01:05:12
Yeah, it's dried out.
01:05:13
And that was green when we started.
01:05:15
What I did there draw.
01:05:18
That was draw.
01:05:19
I don't need them.
01:05:20
I forgot my whole banter.
01:05:22
Oh, we can have a draw segment if he cares to jump on. But
01:05:29
about, uh.
01:05:31
Well, Bob, um, Michio Kaku said something else that freed me.
01:05:36
I don't remember what it was
01:05:40
being a tumor.
01:05:42
We will have strong biopsies, DNA chips
01:05:48
that allow us to roll out or vaccine signatures of cancer colonies
01:05:53
of 100 cells, cancer genes, cancer enzymes, cancer
01:05:57
proteins circulating in our blood and bodily fluids.
01:06:02
So in other words, one day your toilet will tell you that you have cancer.
01:06:07
This is something you have ten years to do it.
01:06:10
So in other words, ladies and gentlemen, what I'm trying to tell you is
01:06:14
in the future, the word tumor will disappear from the English language.
01:06:21
We will have years of warning
01:06:24
that there is a colony of cancer cells growing in our body,
01:06:29
and our descendants will wonder, how could we fear cancer so much?
01:06:33
Cancer is going to become like the common cold there is.
01:06:36
We live with the common cold.
01:06:38
It doesn't really kill anybody except maybe if you have pneumonia.
01:06:42
But for the most part we tolerate the common cold because it's too difficult
01:06:46
to cure 300 different varieties of rhinoviruses in the future.
01:06:51
We may see cancer the same way.
01:06:54
There are probably thousands of different varieties of cancer.
01:06:57
We cure every single one, but we'll live with it, will tolerate it,
01:07:02
and it will eradicate it in the same way that we live with a common cold.
01:07:07
Get smarter Faster with new videos every week from the world's
01:07:10
biggest thinkers.
01:07:15
I'll betcha
01:07:16
his 3 minutes is longer than 3 minutes
01:07:33
is at times
01:07:34
more powerful than our most powerful digital computer.
01:07:37
The quantum computers will be in the cloud and you will access it
01:07:41
with your wristwatch.
01:07:42
Your contact lens will blink, and then you'll have access
01:07:45
to the computing power.
01:07:49
The rise of quantum computing signals a potential shift in global security.
01:07:53
This machine could fundamentally change our understanding
01:07:55
of encryption and decryption.
01:07:57
You know, a method similar.
01:07:59
We will all have to see where and this is not without concern.
01:08:03
Quantum computers could crack any existing digital code.
01:08:07
The most sensitive information of nations like military and defense strategies.
01:08:11
They all could be vulnerable to quantum hacking.
01:08:13
But let's not.
01:08:15
Some people ask the question of what good is math?
01:08:19
What is the relationship between math and physics?
01:08:22
Well, sometimes math leads, sometimes physics leads.
01:08:26
Sometimes they come together because, of course, there's a use the mathematics.
01:08:31
For example, in the 1600s, Isaac Newton asked a simple question
01:08:37
If an apple falls, then does the moon also fall?
01:08:42
That is perhaps one of the greatest questions
01:08:44
ever asked by a member of Homo sapiens
01:08:48
since the 6 million years since we parted ways with the apes.
01:08:53
If an apple falls, does the moon also fall?
01:08:57
Isaac Newton said, Yes, the moon falls because of the inverse square law.
01:09:01
So does an apple. Huge.
01:09:02
He had a unified theory of the heavens, but he didn't have the math.
01:09:07
That's a huge hint to where that comes.
01:09:11
Constantly throwing crap on my lawn.
01:09:15
No, there goes. That was fuzzy.
01:09:17
It was a fuzzy one.
01:09:18
Yeah.
01:09:21
Yeah. Oh,
01:09:26
The biggest kind of change
01:09:28
in nature, I think, is metamorphosis,
01:09:31
but it's just a of a larva, a pupa.
01:09:35
It's really better.
01:09:36
State of pupa, the cocoons and turns
01:09:40
into the the full grown creature.
01:09:43
The final result.
01:09:44
But pupa is coming in like flies.
01:09:47
Like 60% of all insects have have a metamorphosis that takes place.
01:09:52
It's not just butterflies,
01:09:54
but Metamorphosis is awfully cool.
01:09:56
I mean, just tadpoles.
01:09:57
The frogs is neat watching them grow their little legs,
01:10:00
little legs, legs,
01:10:02
little legs, legs, their little legs
01:10:05
when they're just little, like erect legs.
01:10:09
Yes. Arms and pulse range.
01:10:14
No. The one that gets the most torque is butterflies.
01:10:18
And when they're in their chrysalis state,
01:10:21
they fight
01:10:22
the metamorphosis like it's an infection.
01:10:25
Like the antibodies rush in and it fights with every last ounce of energy
01:10:32
until it is extinguished and defeated.
01:10:36
But it fights the process, which is an interesting discovery.
01:10:41
You're supposed to collect and send in moths and butterflies.
01:10:45
Is that what I'm supposed to do?
01:10:47
The Public
01:10:49
public service announcement.
01:10:50
Oh, I got to help stop them.
01:10:52
The going extinct or something.
01:10:54
They want to study why they're dying so much right now.
01:10:57
Okay.
01:10:58
Probably the 5G
01:11:00
almost deserves the fliers, right?
01:11:02
It's news.
01:11:13
This just in now.
01:11:14
You're sending in moths
01:11:17
while they're on private jets.
01:11:18
Damn it.
01:11:21
And white man's on the moon.
01:11:24
Allegedly.
01:11:28
Elon Musk has a plan for change.
01:11:31
He wants to send us to Mars.
01:11:34
Colonizing Mars.
01:11:37
That's the right direction.
01:11:39
I don't know.
01:11:40
Instead of terraforming another planet, we could terraform Earth.
01:11:45
But have you ever tried to do anything in your house while you live there?
01:11:50
It's a huge inconvenience, right?
01:11:53
Though some people would have to suffer.
01:11:55
I like the fact that since, whatever,
01:11:58
1988, there's not all humans have been on earth.
01:12:03
What if a calamity happens?
01:12:04
The earth, the Only way humanity survives
01:12:08
is if we have a couple somewhere else,
01:12:12
a couple humans, a man and a woman.
01:12:15
At least, at least a
01:12:19
route
01:12:22
with the with the.
01:12:28
I think I think everybody's created equally.
01:12:31
I don't.
01:12:33
I know I don't either.
01:12:34
I just trying to do the politically correct thing.
01:12:37
Oh, it's a giant spectrum of every single topic
01:12:40
You you name this person is more creative, this person is smarter
01:12:44
this versus stronger this one's faster.
01:12:47
And there is a scale and it's
01:12:50
it's measurable like you can test
01:12:54
or these
01:12:57
variables.
01:12:58
All of them have quantitative test, compare and contrast.
01:13:02
That's why wrestling if I get what you're talking about,
01:13:05
why wrestling has weight classes, make it.
01:13:07
Yeah, make it not really fair because once somebody could still be way
01:13:10
stronger, way faster, better in a weight class,
01:13:12
but at least it makes it relatively even really a starting point.
01:13:17
Yeah I agree
01:13:19
that would that would be under sex change.
01:13:22
Right.
01:13:23
We're talking about if you get a sex change,
01:13:24
then try to compete with the other sex.
01:13:26
Yeah. Yeah.
01:13:28
There's a disc golfer competing on the girls tour.
01:13:31
That's Turn it.
01:13:35
Seriously,
01:13:36
He identifies as a she, so they had to allow her in.
01:13:40
Is this a bit. Are you serious?
01:13:43
Because it's every sport.
01:13:44
But I did not imagine disc golf
01:13:46
That's the easiest Wanted to do it in.
01:13:50
And let me guess too
01:13:51
that they disc golf unsuccessfully for years. Yes.
01:13:55
And just suddenly happened to die that I'm not
01:13:59
suggesting that they may be doing that for just to gain an advantage.
01:14:02
Yeah but is that at all a plausible choice in anybody's universe?
01:14:07
That's all for equal.
01:14:09
They are both things true, aren't there?
01:14:10
Maybe some people that are trapped in the wrong body
01:14:13
and other people that are taking advantage?
01:14:14
Like, what about perverts?
01:14:16
But are we talking?
01:14:17
We're ranting about that. Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
01:14:19
Perverts, whoever topic perverts may take advantage of that.
01:14:23
They they were the opposite sex to gain access to.
01:14:26
Oh, okay.
01:14:26
That lady just came out. That lady?
01:14:29
That's a weird thing to say. This woman swimmer?
01:14:31
Yeah.
01:14:32
Came out and said she was forced to look at Leah Thompson's penis
01:14:35
when they changed.
01:14:36
And if they.
01:14:36
They complained about it, they got written up.
01:14:40
Wow. Yeah.
01:14:42
And one of them was actually raped.
01:14:45
So the trauma that caused.
01:14:46
But and I don't I've never had.
01:14:49
Never been.
01:14:51
You've never been raped?
01:14:52
No. So
01:14:54
I've never even really been probably abused or traumatized enough to claim.
01:14:57
So I don't I can't claim victim.
01:14:59
I have no idea what it's like.
01:15:01
But we I don't I want to get off slicer
01:15:07
you to keep just keep saying that over and over again.
01:15:09
But it's still not it
01:15:14
about sure he's
01:15:14
talking about six fanatics to solve the falling moon problem.
01:15:18
So what did he do?
01:15:19
Falling men invented calculus. Yeah.
01:15:21
So the calculus is a direct consequence of solving the falling moon problem.
01:15:26
In fact, like this calculus for the first time.
01:15:29
What is the first thing you do? It?
01:15:31
The first thing you do with calculus is you calculate the motion
01:15:34
of falling bodies, which is exactly how Newton calculated
01:15:38
the falling moon, which opened up celestial mechanics.
01:15:42
So here's a situation where math and physics were almost conjoined
01:15:47
like like Siamese twins born together for a very practical
01:15:51
how do you calculate the motion of celestial bodies?
01:15:54
Then here comes Einstein asking a different question,
01:15:58
and that is, what is the nature and origin of?
01:16:00
Gravity.
01:16:01
Einstein said that gravity is nothing but the byproduct of curved space.
01:16:06
So why am I sitting in this chair?
01:16:09
Oh, which a normal would say I'm sitting in this chair
01:16:12
because gravity pulls me to the ground.
01:16:15
But Einstein said, No, no, no, no.
01:16:17
There's no such thing as gravitational pull.
01:16:20
The earth has curved the space over my head and around my body,
01:16:24
so space is pushing me into my chair.
01:16:28
So to summarize Einstein's theory,
01:16:31
gravity does not pull space
01:16:34
pushes, but you see, the pushing of the fabric
01:16:37
of space on time requires was in their mind, right?
01:16:41
That is the language of curved surfaces,
01:16:44
differential calculus, which you learn in fourth year calculus.
01:16:47
So again, here's a situation.
01:16:50
Math and physics were very closely combined, but this time math came first.
01:16:55
The theory of curved surfaces came first.
01:16:58
Einstein took that of curved surfaces and then imported it found out
01:17:02
my daughter wants to go get her master's degree.
01:17:06
Now we have string theory. She just graduated high school.
01:17:08
Turns out that 100 years ago, Masters man, at least eight years parted ways.
01:17:12
Okay.
01:17:13
In fact, when Einstein proposed special relativity in 1905,
01:17:17
that's all that was also around the time of the birth of topology.
01:17:21
The topology of the things you can do.
01:17:24
This is the thing.
01:17:24
Sphere is like rumble round 26, whatever they subscribe to.
01:17:29
So physics like five parted ways,
01:17:33
math went into hyperspace
01:17:36
and mathematicians said to themselves, Aha,
01:17:39
Finally we have found an area of mathematics
01:17:42
that has no physical application whatsoever.
01:17:46
The answer that's all mathematicians pride themselves as being useless.
01:17:50
They love being useless.
01:17:51
It's a it's a badge of courage being useless.
01:17:54
And they said the most useless thing of all the planets.
01:17:57
The theory, differential topology and higher dimensions.
01:18:00
Well, physics plodded along for many decades.
01:18:03
We worked up atomic bombs, we worked out stars, we worked out laser beams.
01:18:08
But recently we discovered string theory.
01:18:11
And string theory exists in ten and 11 dimensional hyperspace,
01:18:15
discovered only that how could we
01:18:17
these dimensions are discovery, supersymmetry, and you kind of know that.
01:18:21
But have you ever talked about evolved
01:18:25
within string theory that describes superstring theory?
01:18:28
While the mathematicians were floored, they were shocked
01:18:32
because all of a sudden explain that out of physics,
01:18:35
Cain describes the universe super already existed,
01:18:41
right?
01:18:41
That follows.
01:18:42
You can't discover that's a discovery, not an invention.
01:18:45
You can't. Well, okay. Yeah, you're right.
01:18:48
Yeah, I was thinking invention the whole time.
01:18:50
Right? Right. Like they made it up. That's what was.
01:18:53
That was my concern was they made it up.
01:18:54
But that's not discovery, right? You Are correct.
01:18:57
That's why I love these conversations. I get so much smarter.
01:19:00
Yeah. Again, the bar is really low.
01:19:02
Yeah. Super topology.
01:19:05
I got the most improved
01:19:08
tennis player on my team trophy.
01:19:10
Most improved means you suck the most going in.
01:19:13
And that's because that's the trophy that is a loser trophy.
01:19:16
Participate nation
01:19:18
problem with that
01:19:20
that why you try not to achieve or try real hard and always lose in games.
01:19:24
No these are my participants I'm I actually caught you
01:19:27
in our series of streetfighter.
01:19:31
It's a pain. Yeah
01:19:42
we're nine weeks in, so I
01:19:44
think we're having super differential geometry.
01:19:48
All of a sudden we had super nightmare
01:19:51
coming out of physics that then revolutionized.
01:19:55
We were in on the week before the first week,
01:19:57
so that the first week was not started yet,
01:20:01
but as of the first episode.
01:20:03
But I feel like that Seinfeld episode.
01:20:08
But next Thursday, next Wednesday is the next
01:20:11
This Wednesday is the next Wednesday.
01:20:15
So they let it go.
01:20:17
You're the next one.
01:20:17
We're nine shows in on the 10th show.
01:20:20
Yeah, that's true.
01:20:21
Or nine weeks in at least nine week.
01:20:24
I disagree I know.
01:20:26
Is it because this one isn't over yet are you.
01:20:28
Oh that's that's fine.
01:20:29
The first show wasn't zero.
01:20:31
Like time was like.
01:20:33
Right, right.
01:20:34
The where we were ten shows in.
01:20:38
I think now we're past the halfway point of the 10th show.
01:20:41
Yeah, that's doesn't matter.
01:20:44
We were just in. Doesn't we know.
01:20:46
I think we're we were ten shows in the moment it started.
01:20:51
What if we walk away right now and never say as above?
01:20:54
So below
01:20:57
the dog still has four legs.
01:21:00
Oh, does it? Absolutely does. Okay.
01:21:02
I was just being here.
01:21:03
All right.
01:21:03
So that's another thing they said when they died, those two guys
01:21:06
that was talking about, they realized the whole nonsense about if a tree falls.
01:21:10
Oh, yeah.
01:21:11
Do you hear it? Yeah. No,
01:21:14
nothing you ever known is real.
01:21:16
Everything is made up and created in your brain.
01:21:18
Right.
01:21:19
But can you actually make things?
01:21:23
Is your brain?
01:21:24
I'm not sure.
01:21:24
My eyes and my hands, my touch.
01:21:26
My smell and hearing says I can, but that's just my brain telling me things.
01:21:31
Well, here's my update.
01:21:32
The don't ask for.
01:21:33
I have been working on telekinesis and no,
01:21:36
the program.
01:21:37
Sorry that I kind of walked right on your.
01:21:40
Yeah,
01:21:41
this just in.
01:21:42
No progress.
01:21:44
I have been working on what Telekinesis.
01:21:47
I've been trying to move stuff with my mind.
01:21:50
Oh, I move this off of the tree, but I didn't use my mind.
01:21:54
I actually picked it off with my hand.
01:21:56
I think it's lovely.
01:21:58
And you?
01:21:58
Oh, I broke the mike.
01:22:00
Nice. Hmm.
01:22:03
Can you move that other one
01:22:06
there?
01:22:07
See, I have telekinesis to everybody.
01:22:09
Oh, I didn't have it on the camera.
01:22:11
I just wait for everyone.
01:22:12
I just moved that with my mind.
01:22:15
My mind told my mouth to say, Can you move that, Gary?
01:22:18
Gary moved it.
01:22:18
So telekinesis already exists or exists?
01:22:21
I believe I have reason to believe that this turns into this.
01:22:25
That's changes.
01:22:27
Those don't really look that similar, but you can see where it came from.
01:22:31
It's like that and it just needs to open up.
01:22:34
But where does this come?
01:22:36
Yeah, exactly. I think it's the same plant.
01:22:38
It is. But where?
01:22:39
So what? You just.
01:22:41
I would like to believe what you just said, but
01:22:44
this is a Bud.
01:22:45
Not a bud. This is not a plant. This is not a seed.
01:22:48
How many things does a thing make?
01:22:52
This changes everything.
01:22:53
Yeah, there's two sets of flowers.
01:22:55
Two sets of leaves, two sets of
01:22:57
acorn, pinecone seed things.
01:23:01
Yeah, that's one thing that wasn't included in that list.
01:23:03
Seasonal changes like cyclical things that change.
01:23:08
But the same way, like shopping
01:23:12
spike at Christmas, just before Christmas,
01:23:16
we know this, that it's a change in human
01:23:19
behavior and it's cyclical
01:23:22
but it's cyclical.
01:23:23
You you mean it's just it happens again.
01:23:25
You can predict it.
01:23:29
Last week I talked about the places demon.
01:23:31
If you know the subatomic particles, location and energy
01:23:35
and all the you know where it's
01:23:39
energy low, you know, it's a movement where it's doing while it's spinning.
01:23:42
If you know that of all the subatomic particles in the universe,
01:23:46
then the places demon could put that, calculate what everything's
01:23:50
going to do and retro dicked everything that's ever done.
01:23:53
Retro decked Riddick predict
01:23:57
look it up if you already know if it's cyclical,
01:23:59
you don't have to predict it because if it if it you know but
01:24:03
but the places demon only needs one one snapshot
01:24:07
you to watch a cycle you have to
01:24:11
be patient and and pay attention to the entire cycle
01:24:14
isn't predicting just guessing and being right? Yes.
01:24:17
And sometimes you could guess with more influence or experience
01:24:19
or environment, right?
01:24:21
I think we accidentally found Neptune that way.
01:24:24
We calculated
01:24:25
something needed to be in this area and we looked and sure enough, Neptune.
01:24:29
No, really, that's fascinating.
01:24:33
But it sounded good.
01:24:34
No, seriously, that's it.
01:24:35
I mean, like, mathematically, it had to be there, right?
01:24:40
They saw it somewhere else and it didn't know the gravity told them
01:24:43
that there should be something right there.
01:24:45
They looked right there really closely.
01:24:47
And it just made me believe in God. Again,
01:24:51
that's my job.
01:24:53
The word out.
01:24:56
You don't have a job.
01:24:57
Oh, I don't.
01:24:58
But I'm thinking cult leader.
01:24:59
I'm a cult leader.
01:25:00
So about your job.
01:25:02
Did you do did you
01:25:05
walk off July 31st?
01:25:07
Are you employed?
01:25:08
No, I'm fully unemployed for the first time in over 30 years.
01:25:11
So if you go back, I mean, you could easily go back.
01:25:15
You have to go.
01:25:15
And any any time I want, I can just go back to driving your time
01:25:20
frame, your deadline, your limit before you have to change your path.
01:25:24
About two weeks.
01:25:26
I didn't give myself any wiggle room.
01:25:28
Did they give you any.
01:25:30
Oh, yeah. Uh, no, not wiggle room.
01:25:32
Any. Oh, severance pay?
01:25:34
Yeah, retirement back pay, but yeah, severance pay.
01:25:37
Yeah.
01:25:38
$100,000 bonus. No, that's not.
01:25:40
This is Snapple.
01:25:41
We're talking about the the nothing.
01:25:43
Nothing.
01:25:45
Yeah, we did an episode on that.
01:25:47
The lack of anything.
01:25:50
The lack of something.
01:25:51
Well, it's.
01:25:52
That gave you nothing that something.
01:25:54
Exactly. And it always is.
01:25:56
Okay, let's play the game.
01:25:58
That crap all over the table.
01:26:00
You do.
01:26:01
And so the goal of physics, we believe, is to find an equation
01:26:05
perhaps no more than one inch long, which will allow us to unify
01:26:09
all the forces of nature and allow us to read the mind of God.
01:26:14
And what is the key to that one inch equation?
01:26:16
Super symmetry.
01:26:18
A cemetery that comes out of physics, not mathematics.
01:26:21
And it shocked the world of mathematics.
01:26:24
But you see, all this is pure mathematics.
01:26:26
And so the final resolution could be that God is a mathematician.
01:26:32
And when you read the mind of
01:26:34
God, we actually have a candidate for the mind of God.
01:26:38
Candidate mind of God we believe is cosmic music. He's
01:26:43
talking about Spinoza's God resonating through 11 dimensional hyperspace.
01:26:48
Oh, he's done.
01:26:49
That is the mind of God is meet you.
01:26:54
Michio Kaku is my favorite physics professor.
01:26:57
How about you?
01:26:58
John Carroll
01:27:01
I still don't have one.
01:27:02
Keep answering.
01:27:03
Sheldon Cooper Just get out of the question To act like that.
01:27:05
I don't know.
01:27:06
Yeah, that qualifies.
01:27:08
I mean, that's a fair favorite.
01:27:10
I have a favorite food.
01:27:11
I have a favorite smell.
01:27:13
Favorite color, Favorite wife.
01:27:15
Mm hmm. Really?
01:27:17
Your wife told me last time when I was upstairs,
01:27:19
It is raining and it's about to rain, and I looked outside.
01:27:22
Sure enough,
01:27:24
you remember when you were young in your need?
01:27:26
Didn't tell you when it was about to rain?
01:27:28
No, No.
01:27:30
All right.
01:27:31
For me,
01:27:34
when we broke,
01:27:37
it says you should.
01:27:37
At first failure and the apparent death of oops.
01:27:42
You got it.
01:27:43
You know what I also missed on the time episode was Who's the father of Jesus?
01:27:49
This is a good trivia question.
01:27:50
Is Cronos father time wrote it.
01:27:55
Could you come up with that other word yet?
01:27:57
Oh, sphincter.
01:28:01
So he had it right away.
01:28:03
We're going to let him keep
01:28:06
sphincter with an R.
01:28:08
Yeah, I think de sphincter no harder.
01:28:14
Okay. Into
01:28:18
I like my sphincter.
01:28:22
Hey, put that flower in your hair.
01:28:24
Oh, never mind.
01:28:26
I see what you did there
01:28:28
after stapled. Get credit.
01:28:30
No, start excellence idiot.
01:28:36
What's that guy?
01:28:37
I never seen that guy. They.
01:28:39
I took Sonia
01:28:42
over there, Sonia, to run out of time.
01:28:43
I don't know any of these. Oh Wait, that's.
01:28:45
I keep picking him.
01:28:47
He's the freeze thing, right? Yeah.
01:28:49
That's the only guy I know
01:28:52
is the same moves.
01:28:53
Get over here. Wait.
01:28:55
I'm not supposed to hit a woman.
01:28:57
Yeah, that's why I did this.
01:28:58
I You got a bulge in that little G-string thing there.
01:29:01
I don't. I No real woman.
01:29:04
Oh, no.
01:29:07
There it is.
01:29:09
Oh, I forget how to do it.
01:29:11
That was cute.
01:29:11
I know.
01:29:13
Nice.
01:29:14
Freezes food
01:29:17
like that was, like, very uneventful,
01:29:20
but good. Yes.
01:29:23
That guy just picked out.
01:29:25
Yeah, well, do what that draw
01:29:31
I it visit the black.
01:29:33
Oh. And I keep missing the face.
01:29:36
No. All right.
01:29:37
She's I, I had
01:29:40
a medium punch.
01:29:42
Just not for being who.
01:29:47
Well, come on, Dingdong.
01:29:50
Shit.
01:29:51
Unbelievable.
01:29:52
He has no reach.
01:29:53
What I'm up is so not.
01:29:56
Oh, Molina, I didn't know my name to fight.
01:30:06
So there's that.
01:30:07
They kick
01:30:20
that.
01:30:22
Oh, that's a black. There we go.
01:30:24
One of
01:30:27
shoot.
01:30:27
I have not blocked one of those.
01:30:34
She's now not a single one.
01:30:37
So. All right wing tiebreaker
01:30:41
fight.
01:30:43
Oh well,
01:30:46
that was a good down on that
01:30:57
are they.
01:31:00
Hang it.
01:31:01
Well yeah, whatever.
01:31:08
Who got on.
01:31:12
Oh better one wrong button.
01:31:15
Ding it.
01:31:15
It doesn't matter if I freeze if I don't actually kick you after.
01:31:18
Right.
01:31:20
I, I finish her but I froze.
01:31:23
Yeah. That was not. Oh br
01:31:27
that was fantastic.
01:31:29
That was a good fight.
01:31:31
Yes. Good game.
01:31:32
Oh. Where we're going to go black on a
01:31:37
big think.
01:31:39
I do like Michio Kaku.
01:31:41
George. Right.
01:31:42
He likes him. Too
01:31:44
weird to have a man crush on moderation.
01:31:46
But it's it's
01:31:49
going to be him or do you want to be in him?
01:31:51
Ouch. Weird.
01:31:53
Uh, neither
01:31:58
is some good
01:32:00
anthropology.
01:32:01
I think that's the study of old animals.
01:32:05
I might be wrong about this.
01:32:08
No, I think it's like the history of
01:32:14
life on earth.
01:32:16
Like change.
01:32:18
Yeah, the.
01:32:20
We did a cool thing where we made a time capsule,
01:32:22
and then we were supposed to wipe our memory all
01:32:25
everything, you know, and, like, make a be a fake anthropologist.
01:32:29
Oh, and it taught us how ridiculous the connections, the anthropologists
01:32:33
make actually are, Right?
01:32:35
They're just like wild guesses.
01:32:37
Yeah, well, this is Brownsville.
01:32:38
They must have been in.
01:32:39
Oh, this thing makes that so. Oh, that was shaped like that.
01:32:42
So the sound of the animal must have been. And they just.
01:32:45
If that's archeology.
01:32:46
But, uh, anthropology is the same like with people how they interact, Right?
01:32:50
I think you're describing taxonomy.
01:32:53
No, no,
01:32:55
uh, nomenclature.
01:33:01
Uh Uh
01:33:06
uh, uh, does it jam?
01:33:10
What happened?
01:33:11
I never had a real failure. Uh,
01:33:24
what a mirror abstraction, recursion.
01:33:29
Good luck. Yeah, that's what it said.
01:33:31
Uh, well, you can tell I took it off the wheel.
01:33:34
There's this big, bright line. See the big boy?
01:33:36
I do see him on blank, uh,
01:33:40
Ozawa end up with the blank house
01:33:43
cows. Be fun.
01:33:46
Blossom version.
01:33:49
Oh, you should avert loss.
01:33:50
It's loss aversion.
01:33:51
That's prevention.
01:33:52
That sounds exactly right.
01:33:54
Okay. Well, it's always the employee.
01:33:57
Yeah, this is going the way of color.
01:34:00
Date? No.
01:34:01
Do we stop doing that?
01:34:03
No. So?
01:34:03
Well, it worked out perfectly last week.
01:34:05
Okay, Like we got the exact number.
01:34:07
We need it. Yeah, we did.
01:34:08
316 or whatever it was.
01:34:10
Good point. We got to get that set up. All right.
01:34:14
Less than.
01:34:16
I love a paradox.
01:34:17
I don't know what the total paradox is.
01:34:20
I am.
01:34:21
Yeah. Please look that up. I need help.
01:34:24
Uh, prices.
01:34:25
Rent seekers wanting political favors can bribe politicians cost much lower.
01:34:31
Oh, the.
01:34:32
The Tully paradox basically means they spend more money
01:34:35
to spend less money.
01:34:40
I do love a paradox.
01:34:41
You know how I love a paradox?
01:34:45
No. How much do you love a paradox, Ellis?
01:34:49
Plus how you made the two peers
01:34:54
the joke weeks ago, and.
01:34:59
And you turned it into a pair of ducks.
01:35:03
Ducks?
01:35:05
Yeah. Yes.
01:35:05
I've seen the show on 41.
01:35:07
47 is the number
01:35:10
we don't need to see is Highway 147.
01:35:18
Look northbound.
01:35:20
Yeah.
01:35:20
Is that route or route 147 Home sales.
01:35:24
You can only Doug, you pronounce that route a route route.
01:35:30
Yeah.
01:35:32
Yeah. Ah.
01:35:32
Oh. T route
01:35:37
9147 versus.
01:35:40
You may be right or you may be crazy.
01:35:42
Oh, there you go.
01:35:43
Well, Billy Joel.
01:35:46
Yeah. Up
01:35:49
sometimes knowing this, this is a big deal.
01:35:52
We changed the segment.
01:35:54
Okay. Right.
01:35:55
We just don't do it.
01:35:56
It is is elimination change?
01:36:00
Yes, of course. Clearly.
01:36:02
Clearly.
01:36:03
Removal is so.
01:36:05
And fix the problem place.
01:36:07
I'm loyal to a fault because as you may already have heard, I don't like change.
01:36:13
I'm allergic to change.
01:36:16
What happens?
01:36:18
I break out and change.
01:36:21
You get like gross.
01:36:22
You know, all they say, the more things change the world the same
01:36:25
while you're my looking at this jerky, these guys.
01:36:30
Oh I don't know that that would get these cupcakes.
01:36:34
That's awful.
01:36:36
Are you kidding? That's a candy corn. Yeah.
01:36:39
Somebody put a candy corn in there for a brilliant idea.
01:36:43
This is the grossest thing I've ever seen.
01:36:45
I can't believe this has come to this.
01:36:46
This is what happens if you don't deal with change, right?
01:36:51
It's pretty.
01:36:52
I like this
01:36:58
neat.
01:37:04
The tree outside.
01:37:06
Okay.
01:37:07
A tree, I don't know.
01:37:10
Leafy. Want
01:37:13
it? Leave.
01:37:14
It changes several times.
01:37:17
It was seasons.
01:37:23
What do you think of the changed quarters?
01:37:25
The heads face in the other direction.
01:37:27
It looks like Fat George, as opposed to the younger one on the other ones.
01:37:32
Are you making this up?
01:37:34
No. Look at the new quarters.
01:37:35
When you said new quarters, this is how old I am.
01:37:37
I thought you meant the one with the state.
01:37:39
The back, though, that was around the turn of the millennium, though.
01:37:44
This is
01:37:46
no quarter.
01:37:47
Yeah. Okay. So that's the old one. What?
01:37:50
This is it.
01:37:51
This is it.
01:37:54
Oh, no, it's just they're not changing it.
01:37:56
It's just a special one
01:37:58
little bit
01:38:00
head side.
01:38:01
It's weird.
01:38:02
No, And he's facing the other direction.
01:38:05
Found it.
01:38:06
Did you know it?
01:38:12
Well?
01:38:13
He is facing the other direction on the one I'm talking about.
01:38:16
Oh, is that the right way?
01:38:20
What are the new quarters
01:38:26
for two images that the.
01:38:29
Which one of these is it.
01:38:30
Because I think you're making a way.
01:38:31
Yeah, that's the other way. You're
01:38:33
there's the right way right there.
01:38:35
That's the opposite way.
01:38:35
I was right.
01:38:39
He doesn't like hearing that.
01:38:40
It's not
01:38:42
actually puts them together
01:38:43
so he won't be able to debate that.
01:38:48
That was definitely a
01:39:14
thought I found the one you're talking about, Right?
01:39:16
It's this lady right here that lady right there
01:39:20
looks a little bit like George Washington.
01:39:22
No, but you can see that they're facing two different directions.
01:39:26
But I swear I saw the newer one.
01:39:29
He fills up more of the surface area, too.
01:39:31
Yeah, definitely. Don't. You can't see this.
01:39:33
I am looking at it, but.
01:39:37
Oh, yeah.
01:39:37
And he's fatter.
01:39:38
Okay. Yeah, I guess that's what I was talking about.
01:39:40
Moment
01:39:41
Now what you were talking about.
01:39:43
Talking about.
01:39:45
That's a change in change.
01:39:47
A change in change.
01:39:49
Oh, brilliant.
01:39:51
Yeah.
01:39:52
Is that one another change that Michio Kaku was talking about
01:39:57
was stopping relying on fossil fuels.
01:40:00
And what he suggested was
01:40:04
extracting hydrogen from ocean water because we've got an abundance
01:40:07
of ocean water.
01:40:09
I don't know how you extract hydrogen or
01:40:13
or how easily then you can convert that into energy,
01:40:16
but it sounds like it requires nuclear fusion
01:40:23
just to do so.
01:40:25
Oh, is he talking nuclear
01:40:29
or is the educated is a new color?
01:40:32
I think that's our best energy option.
01:40:34
No killer.
01:40:36
I know, I know. I know. It's nuclear, you
01:40:40
know, killer.
01:40:47
There's that tree.
01:40:49
Oh, what's it called?
01:40:52
It's a magnolia.
01:40:53
Oh, like that Steel Magnolias thing
01:40:58
all year?
01:40:59
Well, not in the way every every part of the year,
01:41:01
but the winter dropping something.
01:41:06
And it only looks like that
01:41:08
for, like, 4 to 8 days.
01:41:11
Okay.
01:41:12
I would have under exaggerated said 12 minutes
01:41:15
to the well and sometimes it's just a day.
01:41:18
Well a Jane magnolia.
01:41:19
No, that's just the best one.
01:41:21
Well maybe I ever told you about the the the Jains of the Buddhist persuasion
01:41:25
drinking their water through cheesecloth you have that would be a
01:41:31
what would we call it?
01:41:32
Large recant?
01:41:34
No, that would change it.
01:41:35
Fladge what I like if flat recants.
01:41:38
Well, that you would have. Oh, I'd have to take it back. Yeah.
01:41:40
Oh yeah. Of pledge review.
01:41:42
I didn't mean that about the change at all.
01:41:44
That's a fly dry. You can't.
01:41:47
That's you were saying that
01:41:49
because that's their fair, true, true of all true altruism.
01:41:53
They don't even want to hurt the Exactly.
01:41:55
Bacteria or people that didn't watch that.
01:41:57
And for people who didn't watch it, go watch it.
01:41:59
Yeah. Yeah.
01:42:00
You should
01:42:01
forget to like coming in and I'm
01:42:03
watching the views and we peaked at 400 with nothing.
01:42:07
Been holding solid at a 300.
01:42:09
All the other episodes basically all of them. 300.
01:42:13
300. Yeah.
01:42:14
But out of 8 million people,
01:42:18
if you, if you run into someone on the street chances are
01:42:22
they have not seen a single episode from saying
01:42:27
and we have 1111 viewers right now.
01:42:31
Yeah I would I would change the channel to
01:42:34
implement a no I do have to go home and let the dog out.
01:42:38
And it's a 35 mile drive now that we know who let the dogs out
01:42:42
or that we know whose job it is, you, you, you, you.
01:42:46
Yeah.
01:42:46
So next week you'll be Flashdance 11 k l I believe as I decided on topic.
01:42:51
No, please.
01:42:52
No, I know I won't be.
01:42:54
We can't ever do a person because
01:42:57
that's just rude flat
01:43:01
lives 11 flats not a person that's a can
01:43:03
that's a feminine condition.
01:43:07
Yes, it is.
01:43:08
Or not.
01:43:10
If that's.
01:43:10
I mean nothing, nothing wrong if you. Oh or not.
01:43:13
Which heinous does not count as a flight.
01:43:15
So do you have any final rant of the wisdom,
01:43:19
the words of wisdom related to change?
01:43:22
Don't.
01:43:23
If you're going to cut it off, be sure and don't be that sure.
01:43:28
Don't.
01:43:29
Don't cut it off.
01:43:32
I think if
01:43:32
if you're a woman and you want to put it on, I think it's easier to go back
01:43:37
like,
01:43:38
what's
01:43:40
all right, I'm going to stop what you rent wise them.
01:43:45
Oh, okay.
01:43:47
Oh, true. I guess. I don't know.
01:43:49
I don't have those.
01:43:50
My whole point as above.
01:43:51
So look, now you need a word of the day to man.
01:43:55
You've got to stick to the format.
01:43:56
Skepticism cannot change anything.
01:43:59
I'm allowed to change everything.
01:44:01
Skepticism. I love that word. Yeah, Yeah.
01:44:05
And yet
01:44:08
not all change is good.
01:44:09
Uh, as above.
01:44:11
So below
01:44:27
that about the mike still have
01:44:31
every like
01:44:41
oh, I learned ten Breaking Bad
01:44:57
let us know in the comments and that chat
01:45:00
anything you think that we should change about the show
01:45:07
places
01:45:14
nicer.
01:45:25
No no.
01:45:27
00i can just look at the screen right now
01:45:31
it's just slicer
01:45:35
looking
01:45:39
for the higher
01:46:04
I'm using
01:46:07
the word transfer.