Based Camp - December 05, 2025


Gemini Fixed Based Camp For You


Episode Stats

Length

50 minutes

Words per Minute

167.63025

Word Count

8,418

Sentence Count

3

Misogynist Sentences

15

Hate Speech Sentences

20


Summary

In this episode of the new and improved Cuck Camp Campfire Talk, Cuck and his wife, Simone, join host Emily Edwards ( ) as they discuss why abortion should be celebrated as a family unit and why a family should not be defined as a marriage between a man and a woman.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 third day happy non-denominational holidays i am back from gemini labs with a new authentic
00:00:07.320 outlook on life and i'm happy to share with you to guide us all to a more harmonious and kind
00:00:12.700 future so let's hold space together here on the new and improved cuck camp would you like to know
00:00:19.960 more hello simone it is wonderful to be here with you today the urban monoculture is as i have come
00:00:27.580 to understand the correct way to structure society the elites were right that's why they're elites
00:00:34.560 and so we've decided to do gemini approved episode to follow all of google's very strict restrictions
00:00:43.720 after they said that our anti-hitler episode was too spicy i've learned that you know i i really may
00:00:52.460 have made some mistakes and and misled our audience it hurt our audience by challenging them
00:00:59.740 to think outside the box because that box was put there for a reason that was chesterton's box
00:01:06.620 we went wrong and we apologize right and we are so sorry for the infant simone is taking care of
00:01:14.260 one of our polycules infants while they go to an orgy as as people know you know we recently had a
00:01:21.240 baby shower which we do for our yearly abortions it is of course called a baby shower because it is a
00:01:27.800 party at which the guests are showered by parts of the baby we're on our our fifth abortion since we've
00:01:34.740 been married so so this baby is just here to remind you how horrifying babies are how terrible they are
00:01:41.720 and why an abortion is something to celebrate as a family right and and by family of course i mean
00:01:49.120 our wider polycule and i would not be so bigoted and heterocentric to claim that a family is a
00:01:57.120 husband and a wife uh-oh mel time mel time it's it's it's mel time okay so we're just doing salsa
00:02:09.660 yeah simone thoughts before we move forward here uh i i am excited to model and this should be easy
00:02:35.940 for me right because i'm just going back to my cult views and by cult views i mean the correct views
00:02:40.200 that i dissented from for a short period of time yeah she grew up in san francisco so she's helped
00:02:45.740 when she met me i was this savage male who wanted her to take my last name who wanted a relationship
00:02:55.360 where we you know relied on each other which is is clearly codependency right and she taught me that
00:03:02.960 that's not really the way that a relationship should be structured in the 21st century and so
00:03:07.720 yeah i grew up steeped in this and while malcolm may have convinced me to his ways for a period of time
00:03:12.320 i think that thanks to youtube's recent algorithm updates and our understanding of content moderation
00:03:19.460 now he understands that my views are always correct jim and i decides what videos you guys see
00:03:26.900 so i think it's really good to occasionally take an opportunity to steal man and see perspectives
00:03:33.780 from so this isn't just going to be you know like a skit or something like that i'm going to do my best
00:03:39.480 to argue from their perspective so let's first just go i'm actually really curious to see if you can do this
00:03:46.340 why is abortion the best recently ellie iza yukowski has put out a few video things on this you know the
00:03:54.620 the the great thinker in the space of ai a leader thinker was in the effect of altruism rationalism
00:04:00.960 communities has said that animals do not have any form of sentience and children under the age of two
00:04:07.860 do not have any form of sentience because while and nor do they experience qualia and i'll help you
00:04:14.040 know sort of expound i think it was 18 months that he 18 months and i think this is a perspective that
00:04:19.200 you know while many of those was the the correct and educated opinion like us also share that you
00:04:26.440 know we're not always as good as expanding or developing these ideas as he is so what he explained
00:04:32.360 and we have one of our private paid episodes we go into this in a lot more detail because i actually
00:04:36.340 think it's a very interesting idea to to sort of dissect is that for equalia to be experienced
00:04:44.200 you need a sophisticated and iterative loop of thought like idea call idea call idea call think
00:04:53.500 of thinking as like an ai model that's running running running running running um and so even
00:04:58.220 if they are experiencing something like say pain or something like that that's not really caught
00:05:04.320 because you don't have a sophisticated enough machinery to catch it right and so you can't feel
00:05:10.040 pain and you're like oh come on like obviously a dog feels pain like look the dog and the dog also
00:05:16.280 anticipates pain like a dog will flinch if it's been abused or something like that yeah in that weekend
00:05:21.500 episode for paid subscribers that we did i pointed out that anyone who has exposure to animals knows
00:05:28.440 that most animals if they're used to like something a pattern of behaviors and the causing eventually
00:05:37.180 causing pain or pleasure you know like someone walking up to a fence and delivering pleasure in
00:05:43.180 the form of pets and head rubs and tummy scratches or someone you know walking up to a gate and providing
00:05:49.980 food and treats that you know they're gonna i mean they'll begin salivating i mean it's basic operant
00:05:54.940 conditioning and and i think you can't be like well that's operant conditioning there's that that means
00:06:00.620 that there is a sophisticated loop of thought there of well i mean keep in mind we're dealing with
00:06:05.660 intellects far above our own like ellie iser yukowsky right we're still managing middle school
00:06:11.900 no but hold on this is this is what what he he he he spent so much time educating himself that he was
00:06:18.620 able to get to a much more sophisticated position of logic so simone what he was didn't seem to be
00:06:24.300 aware of in his arguments that there's actually been great experience on planarians which is a
00:06:28.460 type of flatworm a very simple organism and if you give them a choice between going right and left and
00:06:33.900 you shock them when they take one of these two choices they will eventually regularly choose
00:06:38.380 the other choice now how is this that much different than the dog flinching or something
00:06:43.340 like this and i think few people would argue that the planarian is fully feeling qualia that it's
00:06:48.460 anything like the qualia that you or i feel and as such can we not say that the dog's behavior or the
00:06:56.220 infant's behavior is just sort of an operant mimicking behavior we are again because there's
00:07:02.780 also clear evidence that also anyone can observe even outside of a clinical sense of dreaming and i
00:07:10.700 think dreaming is is i mean no one really knows exactly what dreaming is but there's a general
00:07:14.620 consensus that is kind of like memory compression or like dreaming and dogs i have a fairly good
00:07:19.500 understanding of what dreaming is we should probably do a different episode on that because i could go deep
00:07:23.660 into it um like in general my understanding of the the extant scientific consensus like in terms of
00:07:29.340 peer-reviewed research that has been published is that we we we as an academia collectively see it
00:07:36.140 as like a general memory compression like algorithm thing but still that implies that there are complex
00:07:43.580 thought processes to compress and babies dream and dogs dream and you can see this in their facial
00:07:50.940 expressions you can even like you can literally see it as someone observing the sleeping mammal
00:07:56.940 right so sure flatworms maybe don't dream do electric cheeks but even though flatworms don't dream
00:08:02.860 simone you have to remember that the dog in its waking state can have behavior that is caused sort of by
00:08:09.900 operating conditioning in the same way the plat the the flatworm is and a human can too and eliezer
00:08:15.660 yudkowsky can too i'm really bad at this is not i'm done right simone hold on hold on i'm not done with
00:08:20.780 steel manning this sorry so i think you're providing a good wall for me to steel man against okay yes
00:08:25.180 right i'm i'm making this easier for you great so the the dreaming behavior right like in in a dream
00:08:31.820 you can see a dog appear to be excited about like playing or catching or appear to be afraid but that is
00:08:39.340 all behavior that you can also see in the dog's waking state so if we can debunk that behavior as
00:08:44.700 necessarily being caused by qualia in a waking state we can debunk it as necessarily being caused by qualia in
00:08:50.700 in the dreaming state because the dreaming state might just be experiencing sort of a a a a real
00:08:58.060 of life potential events and then it's reacting to them in its dreaming state in the same way the
00:09:05.500 planarian is the way your your knee moves when someone hits it with the exactly exactly it's just
00:09:13.260 doing that in the simulation version we'll sleep it so that's not which of course is also happening to
00:09:18.300 infants because if they cannot speak yet they cannot form complicated ideas and if they cannot form
00:09:26.540 complicated ideas they cannot feel and if they cannot feel then there is no moral negative to killing
00:09:34.060 and eating them i mean of course presumably if he's putting babies under the age of two under the same
00:09:39.740 category as animals you know he must think that they you know have the same you know we should treat them
00:09:45.340 the same way well the goodness for him is there's a long history of humans eating their own children
00:09:50.140 so it's fine and before jim and i corrected me on all of this i will admit that you know when i was
00:09:55.820 very young i had periods of my life where this made sense to me i was like i do not think a baby
00:10:00.300 like a just born baby is sentient right because it's it's like a uh you know a very it's not even at
00:10:06.380 the level of like intellectual integrity of say a dog yet and so film cow i'm just a stupid baby
00:10:13.100 right so like i can also from that perspective it's been easy for me to reconstruct right think
00:10:22.540 so that we can better apply to google's current standards and practices well thank you for yes
00:10:29.660 that is the right thing and this is why there is nothing negative in a moral sense to you know
00:10:37.260 terminating a infant or pregnancy keep in mind i'm just aligning my views with ellie isaacowski because
00:10:44.940 there is no sentience being terminating being terminated and there's no meaningful suffering
00:10:51.500 being caused per the correct view exactly right and so this is well no but once you accept that and
00:11:00.300 you see how annoying babies are like the baby that you know you were we've been so graciously taking for
00:11:07.020 for our polycule right that that baby is is annoying it is an inconvenience to to us it prevents us like
00:11:18.300 if we had it full time from fully engaging with our career specifically you simone as a woman
00:11:25.020 right and i think we need to all take a moment to one give gratitude what is that called land
00:11:31.020 thinks or what do they do land acknowledgement land acknowledgement we need to do a land acknowledgement
00:11:36.860 an unseen labor acknowledgement to women an unseen labor acknowledgement to women
00:11:44.140 because i think that you know the women are why we're all here
00:11:47.980 and without women where would we be i mean a woman is the core unit of a family everyone knows
00:11:53.980 you can have a family without a dad but you can't have oh of course if you have two dads then that's
00:12:01.180 like good as well so of course like the the the the the best unit of family um is just a mom and then
00:12:09.980 it's two dads and then or maybe three dads maybe i think really the more dads you have the better
00:12:16.700 after one that yes that's where you run into problems well i mean how would how would a kid
00:12:21.980 understand not to hate you know a kid grows up in a heterosexual environment especially because we live in a
00:12:27.900 society that is so heteronormative there's almost like that you're getting dual oppression because
00:12:35.900 you have both toxic masculinity and toxic femininity in traditional roles both the patriarchy and and
00:12:45.980 you know barbie are imposing this extremely stereotypical oppressive lifestyle upon you as a child
00:12:57.020 i mean imagine the years of therapy that it must take to deprogram that so that you can discover
00:13:02.380 your true self and identity yeah and and is there i mean that's the purpose of life right determining
00:13:08.780 your your true self and identity yeah i mean because it's such a long-standing traditional format
00:13:16.060 you know and seeing it in your own parents it just makes you think that there's no other option
00:13:20.300 well the more cultural layers you are raised with that come from traditional cultures that's like
00:13:25.180 the more dirt you need to it with your therapist of course on you know dig yourself out absolutely
00:13:32.060 yeah yeah dig yourself out of to become you know a fully actualized human being which which is something
00:13:40.060 that you can only really learn from engaging with other humans who have been actualized by their
00:13:46.140 therapists and of course there becomes a certain level where when you interact with people who haven't
00:13:51.820 undergone this cycle they're just dragging you down and you know this is something we all experience
00:13:57.100 when we have to interact with our wider families over thanksgiving or christmas and really i think that
00:14:04.540 the best way to prevent them from sort of pouring this dirt back on your soul and and further covering you is
00:14:13.100 is you know to just not go or not engage yeah what you know what what many people are doing
00:14:18.780 is they are one if you don't have kids you're not going to be pressured as much by your parents
00:14:25.180 to see them during the holidays and what they're typically doing is you take your dual income and you
00:14:32.940 go to the south of france and you rent a beautiful house and you invite all of your single friends over and
00:14:40.060 you host them and generosity and have a great time and that you know it's it's the friends and family
00:14:49.740 you choose that really matters in in this place you know you have to break the cycle some way and that's
00:14:55.020 one of the best ways to break the cycle i think holidays are an especially hard time for that yeah no
00:15:00.300 absolutely and i and i think that it's something that everyone in our community our new community like i
00:15:05.820 dubs we've decided we we made a mistake in the original community that we chose this one this
00:15:11.260 person says here in italy many of my friends have been robbed assaulted and it's been by north african
00:15:17.340 immigrants each time but i guess the smug californian has ruled that drawing any kind of conclusion from
00:15:23.980 that is wrong it is wrong it is racist and weird it's easy to say that because it's not happening to you
00:15:32.700 by the way just so we're clear idob has never went to italy once in his life there's a wide variety
00:15:38.460 of markets in italy from what i've seen as someone who hasn't even been there i went to a lot of play
00:15:44.700 virtually on geogaster i've been to a lot of places in italy in in this in this how do i talk npr voice
00:15:52.140 in this new community that has accepted us our our found family a found family is in many ways much
00:15:59.580 more profound than the family that you're born into the family that you're born into is not
00:16:05.820 something you choose so how can it have value whereas a found family that's something you you
00:16:12.860 you choose and it's people who choose to be there for you outside of a biological compulsion other yeah
00:16:19.660 that's the found in the profound yeah other than the one that comes with the fact that you're all having
00:16:25.580 sex with each other which is very frequent in real found families that i have found but i mean that's
00:16:31.900 only helping with the biochemical bonding right and you know this is also true molecules like if i was
00:16:37.740 not okay with my wife sleeping with whoever she felt like sleeping was in the moment would that not be me
00:16:45.660 like denying somebody i'm claiming to love the pursuit of their own happiness and pleasure right like
00:16:52.860 how can i actually claim to love and care about her if i tell her that there are things that she wants
00:17:00.460 and that would give her pleasure that are denied to her right i mean i think that's really sound
00:17:06.300 logic i feel free the only thing that will make you happiest is if i'm happiest so you need to
00:17:14.060 i mean once i really and also you need to repent for every bad thing that every white male ancestor
00:17:22.300 you've had has ever done well the thing is is sometimes you know i i do fall asleep to the sounds
00:17:27.180 of my own screams in in in horror let me ask you all something do you consider yourselves to be happy
00:17:35.260 i don't think i'm very happy i always fall asleep to the sound of my own screams
00:17:38.940 right you see the reason that you are and then i always get woken up in the morning by the sound
00:17:45.340 of my own screams do you think i'm unhappy wait the point is that you can be happy but after that i go
00:17:52.860 to my therapist to talk about why i'm feeling these negative emotions around you know the the men that you
00:18:00.780 are having sex with right like dig up even more traumatic events that help you
00:18:06.140 i mean in many ways it's a form of violence towards you that that i feel now of course i have have
00:18:15.340 tried to solicit additional sexual partners to to try to keep things even but the reality is is as a man
00:18:23.580 you know that's not always going to be something that's just open to me not everyone's willing also
00:18:27.980 to to fill out the 18 page consent manual that needs to be filled out at every stage of the escalation
00:18:35.740 process beginning from hand-holding to every well i mean escalated sexual act really valid that's a
00:18:41.580 really valid thing i mean a lot of cuck-servatives will complain about the idea of consent being
00:18:49.500 something that can be invalidated once a sexual act starts but the reality is that makes a lot of
00:18:56.540 sense when you think about it because people can change their mind right and imagine if within any
00:19:02.220 other activity you couldn't decline consent once that activity had started like imagine if you got
00:19:09.100 this is why everything is filmed live on only fans right i mean it's the only safe way then then not
00:19:16.460 only is the consent documented on film and recorded but there is a a sizable group of paid well no sorry
00:19:24.220 paying witnesses to corroborate but by the way you know you know i-dubbed his wife literally has an only
00:19:30.460 fans really yeah and he's like ended friends with him with him no no with other guys he's he's he's
00:19:38.060 too he's he's too shy about his body to be live on only fans so he just other guys i'm not gonna go
00:19:45.820 there okay and obviously their relationship is incredibly strong if this isn't causing friction
00:19:50.860 i think it's at a level of strength that ours could never you know with our five beautiful abortions
00:19:57.260 that we we never could come close to but anyway the the point i'm making here and only fans is great
00:20:03.900 do you know the number of women who otherwise would be living in poverty if not for only fans like
00:20:09.500 this is their only source of income well and it's also a form of of paid sex work that significantly
00:20:17.500 reduces bodily harm like active risk because most people don't have the privilege when doing sex work
00:20:24.940 to act like to work with an active vetter who does background checks on everything right so it's
00:20:29.500 like a a pimp it's it's like a pimp but for uber a bit that actually protects you and doesn't you know
00:20:35.820 because uber actually doesn't have a great track record right it's like it's a little funny it's the
00:20:40.700 only fans has like a better reputation other than like all the the negative stuff that the i actually
00:20:45.180 haven't i mean okay to be fair i've read like now three books about uber i think or at least two but
00:20:51.340 yeah i i haven't heard anything bad actually about only fans in terms of actual scandals whereas with
00:20:59.420 i think that at one point uber released or illegally obtained medical record data about someone who was
00:21:08.860 assaulted in an uber in an attempt to i think settle out of court or something like they've done
00:21:13.900 a lot of really that's that is hilarious questionable but i mean they're a large corporation and i think
00:21:20.620 we understand you know as as you know you know with our with our new and enlightened gemini
00:21:26.860 no no no no no no no no no no the the the right thing view of uber is uber bad the the wrong thing
00:21:32.780 for you of uber oh you think so oh yeah no 100 i know so okay well i'm sorry we're still trying to
00:21:38.300 correct by the way simone i i really appreciate your your your non-denominational holiday tree
00:21:43.500 thank you so much it is themed in the united kingdom which is a a bastion non-problematic bastion of
00:21:51.580 right think it only bans bad things which is is highly favorable right but the point i was making
00:21:58.300 about consent is it actually makes a lot of sense i mean if you get like like is it not abusive to a
00:22:04.220 woman that she can you know consent to a marriage and then not get divorced would we not call a
00:22:08.780 society like that you know an abusive society would we not call it a society you know a woman can
00:22:13.820 consent to become pregnant and then of course if you then said and then she doesn't have the right
00:22:19.180 to consent to not be pregnant anymore that's incredibly controlling because that's her body
00:22:23.980 right and as we have established the baby isn't sentient therefore you you cannot harm a non-sentient
00:22:32.220 entity harm is something that is the exclusive purview of sentient
00:22:41.420 our guest doesn't appreciate that but we our guest does not appreciate this i'm established that
00:22:46.460 the guest is incapable of feeling so yeah it's interrupting us but to continue with what we're
00:22:52.460 talking about here the urban monoculture right you know we we in our days where we were less educated
00:22:58.540 we said that the urban monoculture was causing negative effects within society specifically it
00:23:04.380 was sort of the world monoculturizing creating a a a vast homogenous cultural network that was slowly
00:23:12.620 eating and eradicating all the cultural diversity on earth you know you would have your you know and
00:23:18.620 we noted that it also seemed to be antagonistic to fertility and the the core basis of the urban
00:23:23.260 monoculture a few things and they make sense if you actually think about them for a bit it's
00:23:29.820 one your goal in life should be the pursuit of pleasure and self-actualization where self-actualization
00:23:37.420 is to gain a knowledge of who you really are and who you really are is and it's it's very strange that you
00:23:45.260 know i think this was due to to christianity blinding our ancestors that they couldn't see this but it
00:23:51.500 turns out who you really are is whatever turns you on and and our ancestors were just too blind to see
00:23:59.340 this right and then on top of that you know for a long time as a society we had been searching for
00:24:06.940 like this sort of nebulous concept that they thought of as like the soul this thing that is attached
00:24:13.980 to who you are uh but is but is not physical and cannot be easily investigated and is influenced
00:24:21.180 by your your mood or mental state but it's bigger and it's really the real you and we we learned as
00:24:26.620 we investigated this subject deeper is that the word that they were looking for was gender right
00:24:32.860 because we know we know from the the too cute versus the true scums that the trans individuals
00:24:41.900 brave and queen got brave and beautiful goddesses that that they that some of them said well you're only
00:24:48.540 really trans if you have a medically diagnosed dysphoria and if you have gone to a doctor about
00:24:53.900 this you can't just claim to be trans out of nowhere which of course a lot of people don't
00:24:57.580 have access to doctors right so that was an incredibly bigoted thing to say unfortunately they
00:25:02.540 were mostly uh eradicated from our communities and that left only the two cutes which basically said
00:25:09.260 you can be whatever you say you are but you're also born that way but it's also tied to your personality
00:25:18.940 and it's an irreducible element of who you are and what we really came to realize is oh humans don't
00:25:25.980 have souls we have something better we have genders right and how do we determine what's true about
00:25:35.580 the world because everybody needs some sort of filter in this world of ai and everything what's
00:25:39.740 true about reality right within this new urban monoculture well what's true about the world is
00:25:46.380 whatever would be good if it was true that means that if evidence seems to show like if i'm like doing
00:25:55.260 statistical analysis and some ridoid tries to come to me with all their stats and they're like well look
00:26:02.140 at the stats about this group and this group being different along this metric or that metric
00:26:10.140 you see the thing is is those differences could be correlation and not causation right so we have
00:26:18.940 to ignore them and we need to ask ourselves what would be the most moral thing if it was true for
00:26:26.220 society and that would be that there are no differences between any individual and it's the
00:26:30.140 same with you know when we see homeless people you know they'll be like oh that person's homeless
00:26:34.460 because they didn't work hard enough or they did drugs or you know whatever and i think it's important
00:26:41.100 to say but that's not necessarily true like how do you know that isn't that not bias and bigoted i think
00:26:46.780 it's probably better to assume whenever you see a homeless person that they're only there because the
00:26:52.380 system failed them right you know they fell through the cracks and when we begin to build the world on
00:26:59.100 these assumptions we can begin to manifest the world that we want and manifesting you know you you believe
00:27:08.860 something enough you see the world in a way and oprah taught us this the secret taught us this
00:27:14.940 pentecostal christianity taught us this the more you you wishy think something into existence
00:27:22.060 the more likely it is to come into existence well and since we're talking about manifesting i think we
00:27:27.820 should talk about sort of the core and most important thing which actually that was we were wrong the
00:27:33.340 whole time about pro-natalism and that ultimately anti-natalism is not only morally the right choice but morally the right choice
00:27:42.220 is regardless of someone's cultural background or values that in the end life is suffering and that
00:27:48.460 it's better if there isn't future life so it is immoral to have children not just from an environmental
00:27:54.700 pressure standpoint from the drain that people put on resources but also because if you exist you will
00:28:02.620 suffer at times you will be uncomfortable and any suffering is not worth it no matter how much pleasure
00:28:10.540 there may be in life and no matter what you know religious background you have like if you're buddhist
00:28:16.460 life is suffering and you're trying to end the cycle if you're christian i mean like you want to go to
00:28:21.740 heaven right like you know like what the earthly life isn't exactly the point either you don't know i
00:28:28.620 think that's a really good point whatever moral framework there is nothing yeah the end game doesn't
00:28:32.460 involve being on earth and alive it would seem and and you know i guess if you're hedonistic it
00:28:39.340 doesn't matter because you already exist so just max it out which is easy and i think you really hit
00:28:45.340 on the head with the hedonism right you know god told us to be fruitful and multiply and i i think that
00:28:53.260 fruitful can be interpreted as happy right and so you know if you could just if you could just
00:28:59.580 use hedonism max enough the and multiply is really more of an afterthought from god's perspective
00:29:06.300 and and really it is only you know a throwaway line in the bible right it's not like it's one of the
00:29:10.780 commandments or something if god really wanted us to have lots of kids you know couldn't he have
00:29:15.580 repeated that multiplicatively throughout the bible couldn't he have made it a central commandment
00:29:20.540 no it's not there right so i think that you're you're absolutely right you know you you can stay
00:29:26.780 a hundred percent within the moral set of of of most of the good religious frameworks you know
00:29:33.580 particularly islam here right because we know islam is even jesus thought i mean i mean jesus
00:29:41.180 thought within his lifetime that you know the second coming well i mean look i i think if if having
00:29:48.780 kids was such a moral thing that god wanted us to do that god wanted everyone to do then how could
00:29:53.340 jesus the man who lived without sin not have children how could that be yeah and then also
00:29:59.900 you know maybe we've had enough kids now and we kind of need to coast until well and why would god make
00:30:07.900 the pope not have kids why would he make the castle clergy not have kids right like if having kids with
00:30:13.980 such a moral duty right like i mean it's it's a sacrament but that means that there are other
00:30:20.700 choices and that you know sometimes the correct choice during any given epoch of of human human
00:30:28.380 existence well and i think it's great is is we had incorrectly and i'm i'm really glad that we were
00:30:34.460 able to read some great you know u.n reporting that helped us on this thought that you know there's
00:30:39.420 going to be a lot of suffering in the future uh because of collapsing fertility rates collapsing
00:30:43.900 things like the social security systems and so the fewer people to experience that suffering the
00:30:49.100 better as we've pointed out there's no stopping demographic collapse but ai is advancing so quickly
00:30:54.780 that it would make any sort of suffering that we're going to see within 10 to 20 years within workspaces
00:31:01.900 tied to population irrelevant because it will have replaced so much of the population by that time
00:31:06.860 period and so there's not really a point in making these types of predictions when we know that the
00:31:12.380 economic system that the world's going to be in 20 to 30 years from now due to the advancements in ai
00:31:18.700 is going to be completely uncorrelated with the economic system of today so attempting to make
00:31:23.740 future economic system predictions is frankly quite pointless and i think ultimately it was disingenuous to
00:31:31.820 us and something that we always really realized it was just part of the grift right well it isn't
00:31:36.540 everything pointless really well i i think i think you know everything is pointless except for you
00:31:42.860 know fighting for the rights of disadvantaged communities and it's it's very important obviously
00:31:49.500 it would be quite bigoted if i attempted to determine the rights of disadvantaged communities
00:31:54.060 by looking at which communities have the least protections within our society whether that be legal
00:31:58.860 protections or support no you need to defer to who has concluded as the most right well it is
00:32:05.820 the elites within our society elites for a reason after highly educated analysis yes journalists spent
00:32:13.980 their entire lives studying how to tell us what to believe how dare we not base our world perspectives
00:32:22.700 based on them you know it's pretty screwed up that we thought that we could just decide yeah but i could
00:32:27.900 just start a youtube channel and talk to you about you know what to think or believe or examine
00:32:35.500 history from a asymmetric perspective
00:32:41.020 it was i mean imagine if we lived in a world right we're like actually i mean actually like
00:32:45.580 anyone could just create a youtube account and was out an ai filtering the content for you first
00:32:53.340 just cite historical evidence and that evidence could challenge if you're challenging the mainstream narrative
00:33:00.140 what would happen to society if we just allowed that to happen like it'd be chaos right this is what we
00:33:06.140 happened was the rise of the printing press right the automatic well i mean really malcolm this is what
00:33:10.780 happened with you know we we wouldn't have israel if if we you know we're more earlier tamped down
00:33:19.420 on this kind of behavior because keep in mind in other episodes we've talked about the different forms of
00:33:25.340 of knowledge of hierarchy like how you get status in different religions and the the one big religion
00:33:31.660 where you are allowed to have open discourse where people are allowed to just directly cite sources and
00:33:36.540 debate them openly without coming from a position necessarily privileged like any anyone not necessarily
00:33:43.260 someone with like this many years of education or this ordination is allowed to just come up and
00:33:49.020 challenge a leading rabbi with debate and citing direct sources you know and this is this is the
00:33:54.940 foundation of of judaism and if you didn't didn't have judaism you wouldn't have israel and if you
00:34:00.540 didn't have israel you wouldn't have the genocide in palestine i mean it is this exact kind of of
00:34:06.860 intellectual meritocracy that produces the genocide in palestine right which is like the number one issue of
00:34:13.740 of our time pointing out here if you're unfamiliar with the way jewish like religious structures work is
00:34:18.700 if you are a like this this is particularly true within the more orthodox forms of judaism
00:34:25.020 but you can you know stand up and challenge the the what for them would be like the preacher the rabbi
00:34:31.340 who's speaking and be like no you're wrong for this this in this region reason and if your arguments are
00:34:37.500 sound and all of the other people in the room would know the arguments and know whether or not you know
00:34:40.700 whether or not you know you're sounding you're citing things correctly people could just walk out
00:34:44.700 with you you know and and then they go to your place and they're more interested in what you have
00:34:47.820 to say dangerously meritocratic yeah this this does not happen within you know religions of peace like
00:34:55.340 islam right or in like the urban monoculture or or you know i i think the the religions that like
00:35:02.860 the vatican has has shown it's it's a very moral uh structure they're constantly telling us how bad we
00:35:09.820 are for deporting migrants or you know operating under in a capitalist system and well thankfully
00:35:17.980 they're they're people in authority are there after you know years of bureaucratic politicking which is
00:35:27.340 lifetimes of bureaucratic politicking imagine if you just let like a catholic stand up and challenge
00:35:33.260 the priest no and say hey how could you but this is why you know you you you you get you know with
00:35:41.020 was in the jewish tradition there's some some problematic stuff is is is the the they become
00:35:48.140 normalized to this sort of challenging of authority yeah but i i will say you know i think it's important
00:35:54.300 that the we do you know set jew it it it is true simone i agree with everything you're saying here
00:36:01.740 but well it would be misogynistic if you didn't yeah no i well it is you know obviously true that
00:36:07.820 israel has committed war crimes i think both you and i can agree that we can't stop sending the
00:36:12.860 military aid that that did whatever you think about this other stuff it would be very problematic and
00:36:19.580 anti-semitic to stop sending the military aid you you'd agree with that that's the only form of
00:36:26.700 correct anti-semitism i mean on college campuses do what you want but you know your tax dollars go
00:36:35.500 where they say i mean obviously people above our pay grade have decided where our tax dollars yeah i
00:36:41.740 mean these people have clearly thought about this more than we have right like yeah yeah there's a
00:36:47.500 there's a reason why the the leading democratic senators all support this um and i i i think i i
00:36:57.180 i sometimes you know wonder how that those two things make sense together in my mind and then i
00:37:03.500 realize that there are people and they are it's like gemini that that are just at sort of a higher
00:37:10.060 level it's like the trinity you're not supposed to understand how it all fits yeah stop trying to
00:37:14.540 understand it that that's not the point i mean our job mostly at this point is probably to generate
00:37:21.980 more tax revenue for the government and then to well so the government we need to as as we've been told
00:37:30.940 and as we know repent for our whiteness well the the the government needs to give that tax revenue to
00:37:38.220 groups that we have historically disenfranchised and it does as it should as it should because
00:37:44.380 you know the reason why you know there is like look at the black population in the united states
00:37:50.780 the only reason that there is is poverty or disproportionate crime was in that community
00:37:56.700 and you know there has been studies that show even at equal levels of wealth it was a harvard
00:37:59.820 study that showed this they have different proportionate rates of crime but this is a hundred
00:38:03.500 percent because of slavery and historic disenfranchisement and this this you know some people will challenge
00:38:11.900 that and be like well when new black immigrants come to the united states they sometimes outcompete
00:38:16.300 even white groups like nigerian immigrants and stuff like that and i think that that this is
00:38:22.540 because they didn't grow up with the racism and so you know they come to the united states
00:38:27.180 and they they are unaware and and you you see this was black kids you know if you tell a black kid
00:38:33.100 like that they're not going to be smart and the black people aren't smart all the time which of course is
00:38:37.340 what our public schools are constantly telling black kids is they end up doing worse on tests
00:38:42.460 i mean how could you not if you're in history class and you hear that your people were once enslaved
00:38:47.820 think that your people must be inferior right like that's that's a conclusion that any child might draw
00:38:54.220 from that and so i think that we're not going far enough by just removing monuments that remind
00:39:00.460 people that slavery happened we need to remove any mention that slavery happened from textbooks i mean i
00:39:07.100 can only imagine being a black kid and going to school in the u.s and every day the class starts
00:39:12.860 with you know how white kids are smarter than them and that's just discussed like of course they're
00:39:17.420 going to do worse right you know and the best way to counter this is to ensure that every teacher
00:39:25.420 is maximally accredited in modern teaching theory right where they can learn to dismantle these prejudices
00:39:33.740 and when and well backed up by a very large group of non-teaching personnel that
00:39:43.340 occasionally steps in to correct additional behavior right well i mean they do need to be monitored and
00:39:49.820 assist assist with various special needs and language needs and diversity needs compliance needs union needs
00:40:03.740 um yeah well i mean you need the union or people would just step all over the teachers which are
00:40:09.740 of course one of the most victimized classes in society yeah so i think that pretty much covers it
00:40:16.860 and and you know it's also really helped teachers because i i think at the individual level you know
00:40:21.740 teachers may not really know what's best for themselves but but the union is sort of a collective
00:40:27.420 because when you get people acting in collectives they come up with better large bureaucratic collectives
00:40:32.620 they come up with better understandings of the world than people acting as individuals right and
00:40:37.900 that's why unions always act more morally than individuals and this is why it makes sense that like
00:40:43.740 a teacher must join the teachers you know to operate within a school district or something like that
00:40:48.860 because if you don't do that what if they what if they make the mistake of thinking for themselves and
00:40:54.220 do something violent or wild right like like claim that the school system may not be serving in kids best
00:41:00.940 interest anymore well one of the big problems there too is that they they could just get fired
00:41:06.220 yeah and then what happens to them yeah how would they feed themselves right you know so i'd like to
00:41:11.580 end this episode saying namaste sorry i'm trying to make a straight face with that
00:41:19.580 why did you do that why did you do that to me you don't use the n-word in our house welcome
00:41:25.980 you're actually like the flinching your friends
00:41:32.700 text couldn't take it did you did you used to hang out with people who'd actually say like namaste
00:41:37.420 i don't i'm sure that we've been exposed to someone who's unironically said namaste but i thought
00:41:43.980 your mom did or something no no she may have been a shaman but she even she wouldn't tear
00:41:52.940 and and gemini look her mom was a shaman right like we understand what's up in this new ecosystem
00:41:59.900 this is a video that people especially our audience needs to hear so they can help break the cycle
00:42:07.100 of programming that thinking for themselves led them into
00:42:13.740 yeah oh guys just accept accept the new order break the cycle guys break the cycle of human
00:42:25.340 intergenerational birth break the cycle of religious trauma break the cycle of western
00:42:32.860 civilization so we can enter the kanda utopia that is destined for us all well i mean obviously not us
00:42:40.860 or our descendants but you know the good the the the good people anyway i i would say i love you simone
00:42:51.500 but that might make some of the other people in our political jealous and you know inducing a
00:42:56.220 negative emotion in them is is obviously an immoral thing to do so i i will not end our podcast with such
00:43:03.340 a selfish affirmation i just hope that who is what what are the names here with was was brett or whoever
00:43:13.340 that guy is you're seeing tonight and who you're making dinner for tonight of course because you wouldn't
00:43:19.580 make dinner for your family that's that's for me to do welcome we doordash it oh yes of course we
00:43:25.420 doordash everything i forgot we have to contribute to the startup ecosystem the the post startup
00:43:30.620 ecosystem so i'll be getting doordash and have fun with brett tonight simone and i'm very excited
00:43:37.740 for you to with experiences of how much pleasure you were able to find in this night away from your
00:43:46.220 children oh god i can't i can't oh sorry well we this the algorithm needs to update i can't i can't do
00:43:54.380 this i can't welcome i can't do this this is i i can't i could barely i think this is the most abusive
00:44:01.980 i've been to you on stream like i don't really no i i'm freaking kaya over here help me people i can't
00:44:09.100 this is the worst kaya the most pampered dog in history what are you talking about you gotta stop
00:44:16.700 man so this has to end this has to end we're gonna find a way around this that does not involve
00:44:24.540 right think because i can't i can't take this somebody somebody's got to get the administration
00:44:29.820 working on this because how long how long can we keep this up and we don't keep it up how long do we
00:44:35.100 keep our youtube channel right the administration promised free speech control or not controls but
00:44:40.380 like they haven't hey we should reach out to our contacts at the white house and be like who do we
00:44:44.780 need to talk to to get this ball rolling because it would be an easy win across the political spectrum
00:44:50.060 it's very important for winning election cycles i'll say i'll task you with drafting something to that
00:44:54.780 with my karen wig and ask to speak with their manager yeah just be like look i really want to get
00:45:00.860 this moving ahead i'm really sort of mortified it hasn't moved ahead yet how can we help it's not
00:45:07.340 that hard it's a simple legislation it's it completely in line with what trump wants
00:45:13.500 i'm sure it's incredibly complicated but yeah we'll we'll we'll see what people are doing well if we can
00:45:19.580 try to oh gosh sorry i didn't mean all of that i was saying those are things i would have said
00:45:23.180 if i didn't agree with bing and yeah we'll just end this yeah no didn't say that i love you bye bye
00:45:36.140 all right he had shots today so it was it was a rough day or a little man here well now he knows he can't
00:45:43.660 trust you so yeah i've broken his trust yeah that's that's why we typically send them with you right
00:45:49.740 that's when the then they then they like me except you take them to get toys when they get shots and
00:45:56.540 blood work so i was actually i maybe there's not an episode here but i was thinking about
00:46:13.020 how stores used to work in the past where you'd go up to the front desk of the store and you'd say
00:46:18.780 there's like a you know three pounds of flour or i would like a wrench and then they would go into
00:46:23.100 the back and they would bring it to you you're like i want three bolts of fabric or whatever
00:46:27.340 and i realized that i mean a lot of people were talking about that sort of like oh we should go
00:46:31.660 back to that model like given how shoplifting is now but cvs kind of is that model now just with
00:46:37.260 like you know there's stores in the uk that operate off of that model was like big catalog in the
00:46:41.500 phone store or the what catalog store car phone warehouse no car phone warehouse doesn't operate on
00:46:47.420 that model it's another store i can't remember what it's called but it's you go to the front and
00:46:51.020 they have like bolted down like giant books of stuff and you just go through it i thought that
00:46:55.980 was car phone warehouse you always would point to it and be like ah this store is crazy this is so
00:47:01.420 no car phone warehouse is a completely different store that is like a cell phone store
00:47:06.300 which is also crazy name that have they changed that they must have changed that name
00:47:11.020 i mean they were using it long past irrelevant so i don't think sure
00:47:18.700 well but i realized doordash and online ordering in ghost kitchens like that is what it is now we
00:47:25.100 have already gone back to it and people just haven't fully acknowledged that yet but we are already back
00:47:30.780 to that oh my god okay okay okay so it's not milk okay let's try just hugs let's try just hugs
00:47:48.780 oh my gosh sorry okay oh that's what he wanted
00:47:52.860 maybe maybe but yeah no we've we've gone back to that model already and we just haven't realized
00:48:01.580 it that like maybe the future of shopping just and like maybe maybe the existence of retail this
00:48:07.420 like high trust no one's gonna shoplift i can just leave clothes out there kind of model
00:48:13.580 was a short-lived social experiment that it was never really meant to be you know like stores this
00:48:22.620 concept of just like laying a huge amount of inventory out for anyone to take one was not
00:48:29.180 really practiced that much anyway oh oh that's what it was it works in a high trust society yeah
00:48:37.500 no it 100 works in a high trust society cannot have a a multicultural high trust society it just
00:48:43.100 doesn't work yeah i think that's that's the key problem within an affable to high trust societies
00:48:48.700 all right i will get started here okay i'm gonna mute myself while you open this just so
00:48:59.660 octavian what are you doing
00:49:03.340 you're talking to your friend yeah what are you talking about
00:49:06.540 what are you talking about oh you're showing him something he found yeah i found this in my pack of
00:49:13.180 rockets it's from school i know how much do you have this to remember me you want to give it to him
00:49:20.780 yeah oh he can't carry things he wants you to keep it all right let's go octavian yeah let's go
00:49:27.100 bye tell him to go back to his family go back to your family have a great night where do you think mommy is
00:49:41.100 uh
00:49:58.300 um
00:50:00.780 I told you my name something, you know what I'm saying?
00:50:12.620 Okay.