Episode 2561 CWSA 08⧸09⧸24
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 13 minutes
Words per Minute
153.40263
Summary
In this episode, we talk about the recent spate of burglaries in my neighborhood, a tornado warning in the area, and the recent earthquake in Japan. We also discuss the dangers of coffee and tea, and how to survive a tsunami.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
what is it unparalleled you know there was a study that showed that it's a brand new study
00:00:08.320
that says that coffee and tea are linked to a lower risk of dementia two perspective cohort
00:00:14.480
studies were presented at the elsa well it's worth a try it's the so the unparalleled hold
00:00:22.400
on hold on it's the unparalleled wait pleasure pleasure it's the unparalleled pleasure there we
00:00:32.560
go i hope you took your sip that was your opportunity yes it's true another study says
00:00:40.800
that coffee and tea link your lowers your risk of dementia so that's the good news well another
00:00:48.320
one of my neighbors got burgled probably by the organized south central american gangs
00:00:55.440
so that makes three high-end homes in my very safe california neighborhood who have had people break
00:01:03.280
in and steal their shit in the middle of the day usually so here's the creepy part in each of the
00:01:11.600
burglaries i think there have been several in the last few years nobody's ever home
00:01:16.160
now you say to yourself oh that's good nobody's home when the burglaries happen but it also means
00:01:24.080
they're watching how does anybody know if you're home what exactly would be the mechanism by which
00:01:31.360
you could tell if somebody is home because they've never once been wrong they've never gone into a home
00:01:36.720
and found somebody there and then had to run away so how do they know and it makes me wonder if they're
00:01:42.720
using drones because remember i told you there was a drone that came down in my pool area of my backyard
00:01:50.400
you know just it just came down and looked in my windows
00:01:55.200
and it it cased the whole neighborhood and then it went back to some distant place and it was a pretty
00:02:01.200
high-end drone and it made me wonder if the criminals just have a way of monitoring people
00:02:07.520
the other thing i wonder is do they just wait until they see a garage open and then if the garage is
00:02:13.440
open and there are no cars left around the house they figure there are no adults so that's a good
00:02:18.400
time to go in i don't know but here's the other thing that i wonder if it's a coincidence so i have a
00:02:27.040
unusually uh high diversity in my neighborhood but it's a it's an expensive neighborhood so everybody here is
00:02:34.960
doing well and a lot of my neighbors are either uh chinese american or indian american and you know
00:02:43.040
we've got everything else too we've got hispanic you name it but uh it's pretty diverse neighborhood
00:02:48.960
but so far i think only the asian and indian american high-end homes have been hit
00:02:55.920
and i don't have a hypothesis about that but it could be an assumption of lower gun ownership
00:03:05.120
maybe i don't know if there's a correlation or not um it could be an assumption that they're
00:03:12.080
more likely to have jewelry because i think the the criminals all like to just grab what they can put in a
00:03:18.880
pillowcase and then run out so it's usually just medications i guess they sell the medications or
00:03:25.840
they hope they're opioids or something and jewelry now i have exactly you know zero jewelry in my house
00:03:35.120
i literally don't have i don't even have a watch you know that anybody would want to steal and i you
00:03:41.120
know i don't have any good drugs that you couldn't get anywhere so i don't know i just wonder if i'm safe
00:03:48.880
because the criminals know too much about me because i can guarantee this would be the wrong house to rob
00:03:56.400
but do they know that it feels like they do it just makes me wonder anyway
00:04:04.960
um so i guess the national weather service is telling the washington dc area that there
00:04:12.480
there's going to be a tornado a tornado do you think god has finally had enough
00:04:20.560
yeah do you ever wonder if god is just watching this whole show and just like
00:04:26.320
it's time for another flood but let's just see if the let's see if the tornado cleans anything up
00:04:32.160
yeah if that doesn't get it done there's always a flood option
00:04:35.760
and of course japan is bracing for what they're they're expecting or at least they think is
00:04:44.160
possible not expecting but they're they're talking about a earthquake of an eight or a nine
00:04:50.800
that they think might happen in japan like any moment because there have been a number of small
00:04:55.840
rumbles that give them an idea that something big is coming how in the world could japan
00:05:01.120
survive an earthquake of an eight or nine on the richter scale is that that doesn't even seem
00:05:08.320
survivable it seems like the whole island would collapse under a tsunami or something
00:05:14.400
so keep an eye on all that looks like um yeah this reminds me of why we're all crazy now
00:05:24.400
you know lots of reasons social media etc but i wake up in the morning and i read the news
00:05:30.720
and i learn about 10 different you know deadly situations that if i didn't hear about them
00:05:36.960
wouldn't affect me so now i'm worrying about you know people dying in washington dc from a
00:05:43.520
tornado and i'm worried about the you know the neighbors getting burgled and i'm worried about
00:05:48.720
japan sinking into the ocean from an earthquake i wouldn't know any of that stuff if i were born in
00:05:55.200
the 1700s and i just woke up and it was time to do some farming so how in the world do you not go
00:06:02.720
crazy in today's world because you're hearing about everybody's problem and then it becomes like it's your
00:06:08.400
your own problem yeah yeah then monkey pox and that now it looks like uh africa's got a monkey pox
00:06:16.720
problem and it's coming to you and i'm thinking really if i had never heard about this monkey pox
00:06:23.440
problem do you think i'd be happier i do because i don't have to do anything about it until
00:06:29.520
you know there's some reason to do something about it and between now and then it's just one
00:06:34.400
extra thing to worry about on top of my 50 other things that were in the news to worry about
00:06:40.800
let's talk about the fun stuff uh this doesn't sound like fun but it might become fun jordan peterson
00:06:47.440
he failed in his court appeals to avoid being re-educated so his profession the i guess the
00:06:57.120
psychologists of ontario the college of psychologists in ontario they want to put him into
00:07:03.200
re-education training so he can learn how to be a better communicator online and not be insulting
00:07:10.400
people i guess uh now the interesting thing about this is that i'm not sure this is true
00:07:18.880
but it sounds like from peterson's lawyer that they've exhausted all their appeals and he might
00:07:25.120
actually go to re-education training now how much would you pay for as a ticket just to be in the
00:07:34.080
class with jordan peterson being taught how to use social media could that be better
00:07:42.240
like like honestly if you said how much would you pay for a ticket to watch jordan peterson give let's
00:07:47.760
say a speech or a presentation i'd pay a pretty good i'd pay a pretty expensive ticket for that i
00:07:54.560
i would feel quite confident that if i saw him in person i would walk away saying wow that was a good show
00:08:01.440
but how much would i pay to be in this re-education camp with him in ontario i mean if i traveled
00:08:07.440
i would pay a lot like if they said all right it's going to be a thousand dollars you have to pay a
00:08:16.240
thousand dollars and you have to sit through the training you you have to do the training too i'd be
00:08:21.680
like and jordan peterson's gonna be in the same class in the same room right and they're like yeah
00:08:27.440
that's how it works and i'd be like here's your thousand dollars because i don't think that could be
00:08:31.760
more entertaining anyway we'll find out i'm sure they'll have some stories the best stories would
00:08:39.600
be the other people in the class giving their their account of how the class went oh my god that's
00:08:46.240
going to be good all right are you ready for the best laugh of the day does anybody want to start
00:08:52.560
their weekend with a good laugh now this is not my joke this is uh actor kevin sorbo
00:09:02.080
so this is one of the funniest things i've ever seen so i'm just going to read his joke
00:09:07.040
and i hope you enjoy it as much as i do he he posted on x quote if kamala really is black
00:09:14.720
have her say the n-word let the people decide for themselves
00:09:26.240
i would like to add to it and add some commentary about it
00:09:30.240
but you can't do that when something's perfect no you can't say it could be better because it
00:09:36.080
couldn't you can't criticize it because it's perfect so i have nothing to add to it just take a moment to
00:09:44.640
fully enjoy kevin sorbo's best post on x in a long time i mean best post of anybody in a long time
00:09:52.880
that is just so clever well the rasmussen uh polling company continues to be provocative
00:10:01.200
um and they're insisting that based on their expertise as pollsters that they can tell that
00:10:08.880
the other polls are bullshit the ones that say kamala harris has pulled ahead um rasmussen just
00:10:15.680
says nope who were i'm paraphrasing but basically they're saying we're in this business too and i
00:10:22.960
can tell you that kamala harris is not ahead and we can also tell you how the other pollsters do their
00:10:29.680
fake polls now that's interesting it has something to do with a timing difference of how they how they do
00:10:36.720
it but i don't know the details but rasmussen is quite adamant that the uh that trump still has lead
00:10:44.080
i think this is part of my larger theme today that all data is suspect some of it might be right but
00:10:54.720
you have no way of knowing because you can't tell by the source you can't tell by how many scientists
00:11:00.560
agree none of that means anything so just treat all data like it's fake because you can't tell what's
00:11:08.800
real so you're gonna have to you know make sure you're covering all your risks
00:11:15.280
um some of you may have seen a uh video that purported to show presidents president macron of
00:11:23.120
france making out with a man at some uh beach swimming situation where they're wearing trunks
00:11:31.840
now i looked at that and i said to myself i don't think i'm going to retweet that
00:11:36.080
because we are in the age of ai and in the age of ai it seemed to me that somebody could have faked
00:11:44.800
that video and so i said to myself i'm just going to send it to a friend and say i think it looks like
00:11:51.760
an ai fake it turns out it's an ai fake it's exactly what i thought now i could not tell
00:11:59.840
by looking at it so if you want a preview of what's to come i looked at it pretty hard and i said i
00:12:07.840
don't know there's no obvious tell in the video itself it just looks like a perfect video somebody
00:12:15.600
took of him making out with a guy but it didn't happen it was ai and here's the only way i knew that
00:12:23.920
it was fake two on the nose remember the two on the nose trick i teach you this you're practically
00:12:33.360
once a week um if you see a story in the news that fits your bias or your your let's say your
00:12:41.760
darker expectations and it fits the two perfectly it's probably not real it means that somebody
00:12:49.360
created something because they knew they could get you to believe it because you were already
00:12:54.160
biased in that direction so as soon as you see a story that's just so right on the nose
00:13:00.720
you should automatically say probably not let's wait a little bit on that one
00:13:05.600
so my instinct to say that was too on the nose and wait a little bit was the right instinct it's not
00:13:11.440
going to work every time but certainly in the age of ai if you see something that just so
00:13:17.040
perfectly on the nose tells a story automatically put that in your maybe not box
00:13:26.880
there's a story about a chess champion amina bakarova she was caught on video in a
00:13:36.320
smearing mercury on her rivals chess pieces causing her to be hospitalized
00:13:42.800
so apparently you can sabotage your chest partner by rubbing
00:13:51.520
mercury on their chest pieces so if they touch it with their hand
00:13:55.520
they'll get sick and go to the hospital but anyway she was uh stripped of her title
00:14:03.280
uh i do i do appreciate that she thinks chess is bigger than the board you know she sees the big game
00:14:09.680
but uh apparently you can be a chess master and not know that rooms typically have security cameras
00:14:19.440
which was probably entirely visible and pointing right at her when she did it
00:14:23.840
so uh can i give you this advice should you plan to murder anybody be it your chess rival or anybody else
00:14:32.320
and you go into a space and this space could be indoors or outdoors there's a thing you should
00:14:38.720
do before you do the murdery thing all right and it goes like this if you're watching if you're just
00:14:43.680
listening on audio i will now be moving my head in many directions do some of this okay looking for
00:14:54.160
video cameras all right now that doesn't mean you're gonna see them uh if you're at my house you would
00:15:01.920
not be able to see all of my video cameras because some of them are intentionally hidden but others are
00:15:08.640
intentionally obvious so that you know i have video security so i can get you both ways but don't do
00:15:17.280
things in a space that has a high likelihood of having a camera looking at you when you're doing it
00:15:22.960
that's my advice for you criminals there's another uh video of kamala harris looking drunk
00:15:31.360
in my opinion we're all just going to ignore this right so we just went through four years of ignoring
00:15:37.600
that uh biden was obviously cognitively declined and now we we just put kamala harris there who
00:15:45.760
looks obviously drunk in a lot of situations and we're just not going to talk about it right
00:15:51.680
so only on social media you get to say it because we can't prove it or something
00:15:56.160
so will the news just never acknowledge that whether or not she's actually drunk that that would be a
00:16:02.400
separate question she acts drunk quite often now do you want somebody whose natural personality
00:16:09.760
is indistinguishable from drunk how is this not a big issue because i don't think it's just me
00:16:17.840
right okay let me ask in the comments how many of you think that there are multiple videos
00:16:24.400
of kamala harris obviously being inebriated you could disagree on whether it's alcohol or something else
00:16:30.240
but how many think it's obvious she's inebriated a lot in public how many of you would say that's a
00:16:36.400
a fair statement we'll we'll wait and see in the comments anyway so erica abinanti has this post in
00:16:45.200
which she's summarizing her kamala harris's interview it was over over video with somebody
00:16:52.880
named angela rye i'm not sure when this happened uh 2020 i think it was but uh she was asked by angela
00:17:00.560
rye who she thought was the best rapper alive and remember this was asked in 2020 and her answer was
00:17:08.240
tupac now if you know the history of kamala harris and questions about music she has said before that
00:17:15.920
she smoked pot and listened to tupac in college but tupac hadn't done any hadn't done any work when
00:17:23.360
she was in college so she's lied about tupac before and then angela rye said he's not alive
00:17:31.280
because she'd asked best rapper alive and kamala says i keep doing that and angela says keep going
00:17:38.960
and harris says who would i say there there's so many i mean you know uh there are some that i would
00:17:45.760
mention right now because they should stay in their lane and angela rye says i want to know who one of
00:17:51.680
those are and kamala harris says keep moving keep moving in other words she wouldn't answer the
00:17:56.880
question now i ask you this how many black women who really enjoy dancing and music as kamala harris very
00:18:08.160
she dances in public all the time sort of like ellen which i don't mind by the way you know that's a
00:18:13.600
that's sort of an interesting fun element she adds to the the mix i'm okay with that uh i mean
00:18:21.520
i'm okay it's not it's not like it's up to me to be okay with it i just think that as a technique
00:18:25.920
it's not bad i i think it does show some energy and i know women in particular like it shows she's
00:18:32.480
lively so who do you know who is black and loves music so much that she's always dancing to it and can't
00:18:41.280
name one artist in that domain isn't that weird it makes you wonder if she actually has even one
00:18:51.360
black uh rapper artist who's still alive that she would listen to i'm guessing maybe no no there's
00:18:58.880
nothing wrong with that of course that's not a criticism except she keeps putting herself
00:19:04.480
in positions where she can't answer easy questions how hard would it be to give a
00:19:12.960
satisfying answer to the question even if you had been lying about it you could say something like
00:19:18.720
you know honestly i don't i don't want to give a favorite because then it'll just become a thing
00:19:23.280
but uh it's not so much that i have favorites i just like the genre i turn on my i turn on my uh
00:19:29.680
let's say my streaming service and i just hit hip-hop and i listen to it i'm not too obsessed
00:19:34.640
with who's making the music i just like it so when you ask me who's my favorite honestly i just blank
00:19:40.320
but i like the you know i sort of like the genre i'm not so into following the the details of who's
00:19:45.920
doing it how hard would it be to answer that question it would be the easiest and she couldn't
00:19:51.120
handle that she couldn't handle who's your favorite musician i don't think you get an easier
00:19:58.480
question so can't wait to see your deal with the hard questions ontario the wait is over the gold
00:20:07.440
standard of online casinos has arrived golden nugget online casino is live bringing vegas style
00:20:13.120
excitement and a world-class gaming experience right to your fingertips whether you're a seasoned
00:20:18.400
player or just starting signing up is fast and simple and in just a few clicks you can have access
00:20:24.000
to our exclusive library of the best slots and top tier table games make the most of your downtime
00:20:29.520
with unbeatable promotions and jackpots that can turn any mundane moment into a golden opportunity at
00:20:35.520
golden nugget online casino take a spin on the slots challenge yourself at the tables or join a live
00:20:41.200
dealer game to feel the thrill of real-time action all from the comfort of your own devices why settle for
00:20:46.960
less when you can go for the gold at golden nugget online casino gambling problem call connects ontario
00:20:53.760
1-866-531-2600 19 and over physically present in ontario eligibility restrictions apply see golden nugget
00:21:01.600
casino.com for details please play responsibly well apparently a debate will happen i believe three have been
00:21:09.360
proposed but only one has been agreed by both camps and i think that's the nbc hosted one on september 10th
00:21:17.120
if i'm correct so that would leave two that trump says yes to that harris has not yet said yes to
00:21:25.360
but might if i had to recommend the harris team strategy i would recommend one debate what would you
00:21:34.880
recommend if you were on harris's team and you were recommending you can't recommend zero zero is too hard
00:21:44.240
and three is just giving you three ways to lose i think one is their best play because if you do one
00:21:54.480
you can't be said that you didn't do one and she might get lucky you know she just might have a good
00:21:59.360
day so if she has one good day so if she has one good day it would be a mistake to have another one planned
00:22:06.320
and if she fails in her one she probably was going to fail on all three
00:22:19.520
all right cnn the company is uh in bad financial straits uh parent company just took a 9.1
00:22:27.120
billion dollar write-off uh apparently they lost 10 billion dollars this quarter
00:22:34.320
is that even possible how do you lose how do you lose 10 billion dollars in one quarter
00:22:45.360
i don't know i don't even think that data could be correct that can't be right 10 billion and a quarter
00:22:52.800
how could they possibly spend 10 billion dollars in one quarter that that makes no sense at all does it
00:23:00.800
all right there's something about this story that's not adding up but one thing we can tell
00:23:05.520
for sure is that cnn is not a is not for profit just hold that in your head for a moment cnn
00:23:18.400
doesn't run for profit and it looks like it never could
00:23:24.560
if you were the owner of the company who owned a money losing just huge money losing entity what would
00:23:32.240
you do would you continue losing losing money forever with no no real hope that it's going to
00:23:38.240
change around because it's legacy media and it's going to decline until it disappears wouldn't you cut
00:23:45.120
your losses unless unless there was some other reason that you own cnn maybe it's so you can have some
00:23:55.360
control over the narrative maybe there's some shady government entity that's saying to you
00:24:02.400
you know if you just suck it up and take these losses and keep cnn on the air because it says things we
00:24:09.040
like it to say well maybe in other domains your business would start doing really well because
00:24:15.600
the government would suddenly be flexible about those things you need that you keep asking for that
00:24:20.160
they keep saying no to but we could get them to say yes so it makes you wonder what is up with cnn
00:24:28.000
if it's not being kept alive as a pure propaganda brainwashing tool which is what it looks like
00:24:38.640
why is it being kept alive it's not for money if you're not doing it for money and you're not doing
00:24:46.240
it because it's a government mandate you know if the government said you have to keep it alive well
00:24:50.960
that'd be something but it's not a mandate and there's no profit incentive so you tell me why it
00:24:57.840
exists i can only think of one reason it's because somebody wants to control the propaganda and the
00:25:05.040
brainwashing can you come up with another reason i mean i'm over i'm flexible i'm open to another
00:25:12.800
explanation what would be another explanation that that they're optimistic that they can turn the ship
00:25:19.440
around no nobody thinks that nobody you know nobody experienced enough to be an executive at the parent
00:25:28.000
company no nobody would think that so we are left with the obvious conclusion that it's a brainwashing
00:25:37.280
tool and that's why it exists um here's some fun do you remember smart maddox that's the software
00:25:46.160
company that the software that operates in a lot of voting machines around the country and around the
00:25:53.920
world actually around the world as well as america so i wonder if anything is suspicious about that
00:26:01.360
company lately well uh the founder and president of the whole company along with three other
00:26:08.080
executives have been indicted by a federal grand jury in florida huh it turns out they're being charged
00:26:14.720
with uh bribery and money laundering over some kind of deal to get their to get their product into the
00:26:22.880
philippines now apparently there was a million allegedly there was a million dollar bribe and these
00:26:29.280
executives were all you know part of it and uh and they're also calling it money laundering
00:26:36.080
but i think maybe the bribe might have been more important than the money laundering i'm not sure
00:26:41.520
but the idea was to gain the business of the philippines now here's where it gets interesting
00:26:50.480
first of all how common is it for a multinational company to bribe
00:26:56.240
uh locals in another country to get the business how common is that i assume it's kind of common
00:27:04.960
because as soon as you leave the united states your odds of having to bribe somebody to do business
00:27:10.080
in another country go really high right i would assume that central america is you know largely a
00:27:16.720
blackmail situation or a bribery situation where you know there are all these indirect ways to get money
00:27:23.440
to people that need to be bribed so i do think that big business in a international sense is probably
00:27:34.000
pretty bristling with bribery now it's illegal in america but it's also the only way to get business
00:27:43.200
in a lot of countries for a lot of industries probably the only way because whoever does the best bribe
00:27:48.080
probably gets that business so now now let's go back to the cia's interest in controlling the
00:27:56.800
elections in other countries does the cia have an interest in influencing elections in other countries
00:28:04.080
such as the philippines and the answer is well yeah that's pretty much their business that's what they do
00:28:10.640
so do you think that maybe somebody in the cia would be perfectly happy with some entity bribing the
00:28:22.960
philippines to bring in software that maybe they could have some impact on now i'm not alleging any of
00:28:30.400
these are the case i'm not i'm not alleging that the cia has any control or uh or influence over the
00:28:36.960
smart medic company but it would be quite a dereliction of duty if they don't if i were the
00:28:45.440
boss of the cia and i called my spooks in i'd say all right guys and gals what are you doing to
00:28:53.760
influence the government in the philippines and if they said well nothing well i'd find better spooks
00:29:01.120
but if they said to me hey we we've got an end with this voting machine software company
00:29:07.920
and uh if we if we let them buy this business which would require some bribery but if we let
00:29:15.440
them buy the business then we'll have the software of our choice running the machines in the philippines
00:29:20.240
and then i'm the boss of the cia and i say oh very good very good i'm going to give you a promotion
00:29:26.000
now i'm not saying that the cia has anything to do with anything i'm not saying that there's anything
00:29:33.680
wrong with this software i'm just saying that if you know the players and you know the incentives
00:29:41.200
the question you'd want to ask is um did smartmatics just want to buy some extra business
00:29:48.800
or did they have somebody who might be a silent partner who might really want them to buy that business
00:29:56.720
and so here's what i would look for could it be that one entity of the government
00:30:03.120
just sees the crime and then is going after it and that's why there's an indictment
00:30:08.560
because there's some entities that are just fighting crime but if there's another entity let's say a
00:30:15.200
shadowy entity within the united states who's happy that the software company would have some
00:30:20.800
uh let's say uh let's say some influence on the elections of another country what you should
00:30:28.480
expect is that these cases would go nowhere meaning that the cia would intervene and say you know we
00:30:35.440
kind of need these guys to stay out of jail so find a way that they don't go to jail
00:30:43.520
so here's what i'd look for look for anything that looks like a suspicious reason that this case
00:30:49.200
doesn't go forward that would be the prediction so if you think that this is darker and deeper than
00:30:56.720
it looks on the surface well let's see if the case proceeds like a normal case
00:31:03.200
now the other possibility would be if the cia was trying to influence the company but failing
00:31:10.560
they might have thrown the executive under the bus
00:31:11.920
the bus as in how did anybody know how did anybody in america know that this company was
00:31:18.400
bribing a philippines company how would you know that unless it was a whistleblower well you might
00:31:24.160
know it if the cia was watching them and they decided they didn't like that executive because he wasn't
00:31:29.120
playing along with them anymore so i don't think this is the kind of story that you can really know
00:31:34.880
anything about it it seems to me that whatever there is about this story though you know it's true of
00:31:41.440
every story that's big and complicated there's something we don't know about this story and
00:31:46.960
probably never will not that my speculations are accurate i'm just putting it out there so you can
00:31:53.280
see what the whole world looks like and what to expect so keep an eye on this and see if they
00:31:59.680
suspiciously and magically don't go to jail for anything that looks like a clear crime that that's
00:32:06.320
what i'd be looking for all right there's a website called the ballot assure website and
00:32:15.040
they're listing a number of things that this group the cyber ninjas group analysts who did a
00:32:20.240
they did analysis of the voting systems in one county in michigan and they uncovered a number of problems
00:32:28.400
which i assume in context that what's happening here is the problems that they found in one county
00:32:34.080
they believe are generalized so the findings are from one county but i guess they they they have reason
00:32:42.800
to believe that the same mistakes would apply to other places that use same equipment i guess here are
00:32:49.520
some of the things they found these are vulnerabilities in that one county just in michigan that may be
00:32:58.720
general hard-coded passwords the discovery of hard-coded passwords that have been unchanged in the system
00:33:07.120
since 2010 the password is embedded directly in multiple points in the source code making it easily
00:33:14.880
exploitable by anyone with access to the code okay well that that sounds less than ideal high-level access
00:33:23.920
vulnerability uh let's see accounts with high-level privileges um are inadequately protected
00:33:32.240
um so it looks like they could be compromised widespread use of global passwords that sounds as
00:33:37.120
bad as that uh oh the same password in multiple systems in different states so they allege that the same
00:33:44.400
passwords are on these machines everywhere including georgia arizona new mexico and michigan
00:33:50.480
meaning that if you could get into one of them you could get into all of them
00:33:57.440
uh weak password management practices and lack of salting in the hashing well i don't know about you
00:34:05.920
but i like a lot of salt in my hash but this is a technical term um it just means uh salting is adding
00:34:14.960
a unique random value to each password before before hashing it and the absence of it allows for
00:34:21.840
reverse lookups of hashed passwords significantly weakening security so let me ask you this
00:34:30.960
does any of this sound like our election systems are at the highest level of cyber security
00:34:38.080
it doesn't really sound like that does it so if you were to say where does this rank uh let's say
00:34:46.000
compared to big corporate systems that are sensitive or infrastructure systems well i'm thinking that a
00:34:53.200
big corporate important infrastructure system would have really good cyber security
00:34:57.840
and they still get hacked still get hacked basically every system is hackable it seems
00:35:06.800
so you know how the the fbi thinks that china has already gotten into our infrastructure systems
00:35:13.680
if china can get into all of our major infrastructure systems and by the way i think the fbi would only say
00:35:20.720
that if they knew that the united states has already gotten into everybody else's infrastructure
00:35:25.440
right because if nobody in the united states knew how to hack into somebody's highly protected
00:35:32.160
cyber security in another country we probably wouldn't assume that they're already doing it to us and not
00:35:38.400
being detected well one has to assume that we're already doing it or else we wouldn't assume anybody's
00:35:47.680
doing it to us because they don't leave doesn't leave evidence so
00:35:54.800
you look at these allegations of low security in the elections and you say to yourself if the highest
00:36:01.600
security things are routinely hacked that would be what the fbi says what would happen to the lowest security things
00:36:12.320
you look like something in the lower at least 50 percent i would say the lower half of security maybe
00:36:20.400
the lower 10 percent i mean this is pretty bad um does it look like it's designed to fail
00:36:29.520
do do you think this is looks like it's designed to give you a credible and reliable unhacked result or does
00:36:38.960
it look like it's designed so you can never tell what the actual vote was
00:36:46.240
let me give you a little more background on that uh so a interesting post by fisher king uh who's a
00:36:53.600
good follow on x fisher king one word fisher is spelled f-i-s-c-h-e-r king one word anyway he says a
00:37:04.640
realistic scenario for the election is that kamala wins over 90 million votes and then parenthetically
00:37:11.760
he says harvested mailed in made up and we're then told ad nauseum that we just had the quote fairest
00:37:19.360
most free election in american history and a lot of people on the right will insist we go along with this
00:37:26.080
i remember andrew sullivan demanding that michael anton agree to his proposition to this proposition in
00:37:31.920
2020 and getting angry when anton wouldn't does that sound likely that harris will get an unbelievably
00:37:41.840
high number of votes and we won't think there possibly a chance that that could have happened
00:37:47.200
naturally and we'll all just go oh well i think that's very possible yep and that brings me to my
00:37:57.200
conclusion the creators of our election system did not choose a design that could be regarded
00:38:12.000
bank more encores when you switch to a scotia bank banking package
00:38:16.480
learn more at scotiabank.com banking packages conditions apply scotia bank you're richer than you think
00:38:23.440
there's no objective observer of our elections who could say that these are secure because we
00:38:31.600
don't know where the mail-in ballots are coming we don't have everybody watching every stage we don't
00:38:36.640
know what happens when the software in the machine is doing its thing we don't know how many ways there
00:38:42.000
are to cheat we don't know how many hackers can get in we don't know how many passwords are compromised
00:38:46.960
we don't know how many insiders are in on it we don't know how many people are hiding things deleting
00:38:52.000
things we have no way to know now given that we have a hundred percent certainty of knowing how to
00:38:59.120
create an election process that is faster cheaper and more secure and the country would say yeah that's
00:39:05.280
credible i believe that which would be paper ballots with more than one person watching them getting counted
00:39:10.960
simple right now you might say no no scot too many people in the country no there isn't we don't have
00:39:19.920
too many people in the country if we need more people to count votes we can get volunteers we can get as
00:39:27.280
many vote counters as you need that's not a problem so the fact that we have a system that's designed
00:39:35.200
with not just a problem but massive systemic problems to the point where nobody would ever
00:39:40.800
know for sure if an election was fair that's a that's a decision right and i'll say this this is a
00:39:49.040
very important point if you design something and it doesn't work the way you wanted it to in the short
00:39:57.680
run that design doesn't mean anything because you tried something it didn't work and then ideally you
00:40:03.280
would pull it back and try again with a new design until you got something that worked now if you saw
00:40:09.520
that process happen you'd say oh these are people who are trying to design a system that is secure
00:40:16.800
and the public trust it but if you've been doing this for decades and the public has been complaining
00:40:24.240
for decades and nothing's really different you have to assume that the current design is intentional
00:40:31.440
because it wouldn't be that hard to change it back to paper ballots so if it's intentional
00:40:38.960
and the design really removes any hope that you would know if an election is real or rigged
00:40:45.680
what are you supposed to make of that what kind of conclusion would a reasonable person make
00:40:52.960
my conclusion is that given this much time and the number of complaints we've had and the number of obvious
00:40:59.760
vulnerabilities that if you leave the system like this for decades it's because you want it that way
00:41:07.520
so whoever's running the country doesn't want you to know what the vote is that's for sure
00:41:15.840
well pelosi did an interview and talked a little bit more about removing biden and she did sound like
00:41:23.120
she was taking credit for pushing him out and she said her the most important thing was quote not letting
00:41:29.680
trump back in office now imagine that one of the most important politicians in the united states
00:41:38.400
was going to tell you their top interest and the top interest was not letting trump back in office
00:41:51.120
to me if there was something that trump was going to do specifically that would destroy the country
00:41:58.160
you'd have to see a little of it happening in his first four years and then you could say oh did you
00:42:04.240
see what he did in those four years he's going to do that again well that could be a thing that
00:42:10.640
you'd be afraid of or they might say he's proposing to do x or y such as when they say
00:42:18.320
we think he might do this or that well that would be an argument might be silly but it'd be an argument
00:42:23.920
but you know what's not an argument that her most important priority over everything was not letting
00:42:29.760
trump back in office shouldn't she be talking about the country why is her objective trump
00:42:38.640
to me that sounds personal to me that sounds like she's trying to keep her buddies out of jail
00:42:46.880
to me that sounds like it has nothing to do with the good of the country who words it that way the
00:42:52.560
highest priority my highest priority is keeping trump out of office forever
00:42:59.120
that is just not the way you talk if you're trying to do what's good for the country
00:43:03.600
it just you wouldn't choose those words this sounds very much like somebody who's afraid of going to
00:43:08.720
jail that's how i read it well tim waltz the vp choice for kamala harris we're continuing to get
00:43:17.200
all the opposition research and part of it is that in 2023 he signed a measure to give free college to
00:43:23.920
illegal immigrants in the state that would be free state college and also to give them so it'd be free
00:43:31.920
tuition and uh they'd be able to get driver's licenses i guess too so i don't think that's
00:43:40.240
terribly popular but i understand you know in a left-leaning way why you do such a thing because
00:43:47.280
you know if they're going to be here and you're not going to ship them home it's probably better if
00:43:51.680
they're educated you know so they can get a job and get a skill so it's not crazy but it's going to be
00:43:57.520
unpopular with voters i think in other countries in other states um there's another attack on tim
00:44:06.000
waltz saying that he's lying when he says he was a head coach because other people are saying he wasn't
00:44:12.080
a head coach but apparently he's called himself a head coach a number of times so here's the question i
00:44:17.760
ask about that and if somebody said that they were a tennis coach i would say tennis coach that's
00:44:26.880
somebody who coaches you how to play tennis got it if somebody is a baseball hitting coach
00:44:34.080
i'd say baseball hitting coach okay that would be somebody who coaches somebody
00:44:39.440
had a hit in baseball got it got it uh but he said he was a head coach
00:44:54.880
the ftx company that fake crypto company of sam bankman freed apparently the court is ordering him to pay
00:45:06.320
almost 13 billion dollars back to customers um which could be 100 recovery on customer claims
00:45:17.120
now i didn't think that was a thing i'm kind of i'm kind of impressed that there could be a 100 recovery
00:45:25.280
of all the people who were victimized by this fake company but apparently they do have that many billions
00:45:31.360
of dollars so the company was sitting on billions of dollars and now the customers are going to get it
00:45:36.880
back so that's a happy ending sort of except for sam bankman freed
00:45:44.000
um so i was watching a video of uh harris answering a question and i noticed have you noticed that 75
00:45:56.160
percent of democrat messaging during the election is their face so democrat messaging is mostly about
00:46:05.040
making a disgusted face while talking about uh what republicans do because they don't have policies
00:46:15.600
so i think they're selling disgusted face so instead of saying well you know i'd like to
00:46:22.400
uh make these changes to taxes or the government and my opponent has a different policy and here's why
00:46:29.520
his won't work and mine will i'd love to hear that here's what i don't want to see is a face he's going to
00:46:39.840
do trump things in bad person orange oh and it's just literally the whole message is the face they're making
00:46:52.640
because the words that are coming out of their mouth have all these generic
00:46:56.880
you know the things like he's going to steal your democracy and his character and baba
00:47:03.520
my face and i thought to myself that is such female messaging
00:47:11.200
that's female messaging now she's a woman so not a big surprise but it seems to be the primary
00:47:17.280
method of the democrats is face making and i and i always say this on msnbc especially their hosts
00:47:24.960
are mostly about the face they're making when they're saying ridiculous things so watch for the
00:47:30.880
face persuasion when i talk about trump and when i talk about my side here's my face when i talk about
00:47:37.600
my team look at my happy face i am so happy about this old white guy oh man i'll tell you what we
00:47:44.640
really need it i know it's a surprise but we really needed an old white guy yeah yeah i love it look at my face
00:47:53.440
i don't think republicans do that do they you know republicans like to be you know annoyed and
00:48:05.440
pissed off and you know and disgusted by things as well but they don't make the face
00:48:10.320
and i think it's a difference between male and female messaging women want you to feel what they
00:48:17.520
feel men want you to think about what you're thinking about and you know obviously that's a
00:48:24.880
giant generality and there are plenty of people who are on either side and mixtures and everybody's
00:48:30.720
unique and i say that just in case there are any npcs here who who want to say but i know somebody who's
00:48:37.120
not like that that's usually what happens at this point anyway um over in england 3 300 people have
00:48:46.800
been arrested so far for things that they said on social media that somebody deemed hate speech and
00:48:55.120
here's my question does that mean i could be arrested if i travel to england for business or pleasure
00:49:01.760
because that's my current reading of it here here's why i say it if it if there's a law that you can't
00:49:10.400
do something in a country but you do it in another country where it's not illegal you're fine
00:49:17.440
but if you go to that country where you can be put in jail for that behavior even in the past
00:49:24.160
even in the past could they not look at my social media and could they not say you know what i think
00:49:33.440
on this one post you did four years ago it looks like a little bit of hate speech there so we're
00:49:38.560
going to put you in jail are you telling me they can't do that to me to me it looks like i could never
00:49:44.880
go to england my my current read is that i can't go there am i wrong and and by the way if i'm right
00:49:53.920
why isn't that the big story that we have to there should be an advisory should not the united
00:50:00.480
states government give a travel advisory that if you go to great britain you could be put in jail for
00:50:07.200
free speech and that you should think twice about traveling to great britain am i wrong there should
00:50:14.960
be a travel advisory right because i can't believe that i could be an american and travel over to great
00:50:22.320
britain uh let's say i attend a protest and i'm like tweeting things that they think are hey speech
00:50:29.440
while i'm standing in england are they going to say oh you're not a you're not british so you can
00:50:36.320
say anything you want i don't believe that they would make that distinction i believe they'd say if
00:50:43.040
you're standing in england and you're doing these things we're going to put you in jail but i also
00:50:47.680
believe that they would put me in jail if i'd ever done it before i was in england that's how i read
00:50:53.840
it so i need the united states to do a travel advisory or a travel clarification telling me that
00:51:02.960
great britain assures us we will not be put in jail if we if we visit there without that insurance
00:51:08.960
assurance you should cancel every trip you should never go there as long as that's a thing
00:51:16.160
and i'm just sort of amazed that we're not talking about the travel risk because we would talk about
00:51:23.600
it in every other context you know when uh when china had a pandemic we said hey maybe don't travel
00:51:29.760
there right when uh when terrorism kicks up in some country we say don't travel there it's the most
00:51:38.720
basic it's just a basic thing the government does why aren't they doing it in this case
00:51:42.960
this is really dangerous you could be put in jail for things you've already done that were totally
00:51:50.960
legal it's just that when you go to england they say it's illegal here so you're going to jail
00:51:57.200
i don't know we need some answers claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament i've been
00:52:01.920
visualizing my match all week she was so focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind
00:52:07.520
her car on her backhand side good thing claudia is with intact the insurer with the largest network
00:52:13.840
of auto service centers in the country everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her
00:52:18.560
way in a rental car in no time i made it to my tournament and lost in the first round but you got
00:52:24.640
there on time intact insurance your auto service ace certain conditions apply um mike bens i saw was
00:52:32.880
uh commenting on some reports that i don't know how much credibility to put on any data that came
00:52:41.280
from the pandemic so here's my basic thing you've got some data that says that uh the vaccines did this
00:52:49.600
or that i don't believe it you got some data that says the pandemic did this or that i don't believe it
00:52:56.080
it because none of the data is credible because everybody has an interest it's all motivated data
00:53:03.280
and people are bad at collecting data and bad at analyzing it and bad at making sure they have the
00:53:07.360
right data and bad bad at collecting it in the right way so my experience as a person who used to
00:53:14.240
collect data and do analyses for a living for 16 years in my corporate jobs data is never real you just
00:53:21.840
settle for whatever is available and you sell it the best you can so it's settling and selling is
00:53:28.320
what you do with data what you don't do is collect accurate data and then report it nobody ever has
00:53:35.680
in the history of humanity it's just not a thing now that's really hard to accept if you've never been
00:53:41.840
in those jobs if you've never been in the job where it's your job to collect accurate data and then report
00:53:49.200
it you wouldn't know that it's not real ever really ever for all practical purposes you could just
00:53:56.800
assume it's never happened but there's certainly data you can sell and you can settle for it being
00:54:02.960
good enough and you can convince other people it's good enough that's real but the data itself
00:54:08.880
is never credible in our world unfortunately our world doesn't have credible data and i don't know if
00:54:14.400
there's any way to fix that it's always been that way but here's the given all of my setup that no
00:54:21.920
data can be trusted there's an allegation that the thing that killed so many people in american hospitals
00:54:28.080
was a combination of remdesivir and ventilation you've heard people say the ventilators killed people
00:54:36.880
but now there's also allegations that the remdesivir might have been the real killer and if you add the
00:54:43.920
ventilation to the remdesivir you had basically a double whammo and you know you were going to get
00:54:50.000
killed now um i guess i would explain a few things now according to mike ben's remdesivir was developed by
00:55:01.760
one of donald rumsfeld's companies so that would that would put remdesivir sort of in that
00:55:09.840
you know deep state connected world that makes it a little suspicious i don't know how much of any
00:55:15.760
that's true but um it would explain a lot if it turned out that remdesivir and ventilation was really
00:55:25.120
the cause of the high cover deaths it would explain a lot but i do think that other countries had
00:55:32.960
a lot of deaths and they were treating them differently so uh this is like every other pandemic
00:55:38.240
information don't believe it i don't rule it out i don't rule it out but it's not credible to me at
00:55:46.800
this stage it could be doesn't mean it's wrong i'm just saying it doesn't yet reach my level of
00:55:53.040
something i automatically believe could be more complicated um all right so the monkey pox as i
00:56:01.440
mentioned the africa cdc is going to declare it an emergency next week and the the viral infection
00:56:14.640
again i would be so much happier if i'd never heard that
00:56:20.560
all right let's talk about iran unless iran has attacked israel in a major way since i started the
00:56:26.800
show they're so far holding back now the iranian decision is really kind of hard they're in quite
00:56:34.640
a pickle because if they do a forceful attack which seems like it would be called for in you know the
00:56:41.920
normal tit-tat of these situations if they do something forceful um israel is just going to have
00:56:49.760
a free pass to take out the leadership of iran which i think would be their next move and i think
00:56:58.160
iran probably knows that or at the very least it would be a free pass to do some serious damage to
00:57:04.800
hezbollah at least so uh and then some people are saying i'm not so sure the current leadership of israel
00:57:12.720
wants to avoid war which is my opinion i think that you know everybody wants less war if they can get
00:57:20.000
it but if you're in israel you have to do the calculation that a little war now might might avoid
00:57:26.800
a bigger war later so for israel the no war ever is going to be a bad idea because then you'd be taken
00:57:35.280
advantage of you got to be willing and everybody has to know you're willing to do a little bit of war
00:57:39.360
and if you make it easy for them to do more than a little bit by some you know attack that other
00:57:46.880
countries would say oh that's bad okay i guess israel's got to hit you back i think israel's going to hit
00:57:53.360
back harder than anybody's ever seen anybody hit back because war is in their advantage right now
00:58:01.360
to me israel from let's say a government perspective not from not necessarily from the
00:58:07.040
citizen perspective because they they might just want peace peace peace but from a government
00:58:12.720
strategic playing chess kind of a way to look at it maybe the very best thing for israel would be a
00:58:19.920
hard attack from iran because then they can do what they feel like they need to do sooner or later
00:58:25.840
which is take out the risk so if they're if they're just itching for an excuse to go hard at iran
00:58:34.720
why would iran just give them that excuse you know it seems like iran would do better doing what
00:58:41.440
they've been doing forever which is slowly building up and you know doing a lot of pinpricks and
00:58:47.440
you know just bothering them forever but if iran wants to go for like a kill shot to maybe you know
00:58:54.400
wound israel deeply israel is going to just who knows but they're not going to stop
00:59:02.160
so uh to me it appears iran has no winning play they can look weak by not attacking or they can
00:59:11.680
attack and get creamed i don't think there's a third choice is there has anybody suggested there's
00:59:18.400
a third choice well the third choice is just sort of keep threatening but never really do anything of
00:59:24.160
substance so if i had to guess i'm gonna guess that iran does something small or they keep kicking
00:59:35.360
the can down the road saying any minute now guys you better clear your airspace any minute but just
00:59:43.200
don't do anything or don't do anything of scale anyway
00:59:45.840
anyway just the news website is reporting and others are reporting as well there's something
00:59:54.240
super sketchy about that alleged terrorist guy who got into the country and was planning to kill some
01:00:00.720
important people including trump if he could uh the story is now that the fbi interviewed him
01:00:06.160
fingerprinted him um and then gave him special permission to enter the country back in april
01:00:13.600
now what does any of that mean what does special permission mean i think what it means is that he
01:00:20.960
was on a list of people who should not be allowed in the country either because the country or we just
01:00:26.960
didn't know enough about him or some combination of that but what does it mean to give him special
01:00:32.640
permission to enter the country so the context i would need to know is this is it a routine process
01:00:40.480
by which people who trip the uh they trip the no fly zone kind of list you know if there's somebody
01:00:47.680
who's on a list from a sketchy country maybe they all get looked at and maybe most of them get approved
01:00:56.080
as in well you came from a sketchy country but we don't see anything specifically bad about you
01:01:02.000
in particular so we're going to give you special privilege to stay here so without knowing how
01:01:10.320
ordinary that is uh i have questions but i wouldn't i wouldn't jump to the conclusion that it was non-ordinary
01:01:19.600
it sounds non-ordinary but it might not be so i'd wait for a little little extra information on this one
01:01:26.720
well there's a report that uh nasa who has hired or has contracted with boeing to build them some
01:01:36.480
rockety stuff um is saying there's a new study saying that uh boeing's quality control is terrible
01:01:44.640
basically and there's a report that says uh the lack of trained and qualified workforce increases the risk
01:01:53.840
so they're saying that boeing has a uh an under-trained and under-qualified workforce for building these
01:02:02.320
nasa parts now what do you think i'm going to say
01:02:11.680
do you know me well enough to suspect that i might have something to say about the untrained and unqualified
01:02:18.960
workforce what could be the cause of that huh now this is where the people on the left are saying oh
01:02:27.120
you uh you you you racist oh you bigot i know where you're going to go with this scott you're going to
01:02:34.640
say this is caused by dei nope nope i'm not do you know why i'm not going to say that i go i have no
01:02:43.200
information to suggest that's the problem but it's the first question would you agree i i i don't have
01:02:53.600
any information that would say that's the reason for the problem none but my first question would be
01:03:02.560
how's your dei going now is that a bigoted thing to ask no because the dei system by its design
01:03:13.120
should cause mass incompetence eventually for every company that goes hard at dei why is it because some
01:03:20.560
people have bad genes no fuck you is it because some people have a culture that you have to worry
01:03:26.400
about no fuck you and that's not even part of the conversation stop bringing that into the
01:03:31.360
conversation has nothing to do with your race nothing to do with your gender nothing to do with
01:03:36.560
anything except are you qualified for the job and did you get it for the right reason now if dei is the
01:03:43.840
system and if the pool of qualified people is not big enough what happens in every company every time
01:03:51.840
when they have to satisfy dei but they can't get enough people that they're happy with they hire
01:03:56.720
them anyway because that's the way the manager keeps his job or her job of course there's no other way
01:04:04.000
that goes there's not one company big company anywhere ever who just said we're gosh we can't find
01:04:12.320
enough qualified people for diversity so we'll just keep our keep our bad situation nope they will continue
01:04:21.040
to lower the standard until they've met their dei goal and they'll hope that it all works out
01:04:27.600
in many cases it might so let me let me say it again there's no information that dei has
01:04:34.640
anything to do with the low quality of the workforce training at boeing it is however the number one
01:04:41.840
question to ask and it is however completely predicted by dei as a system and not by anybody's genes
01:04:51.040
and not by anybody's chromosomes and not by anybody's gender and not by anybody's culture you could take
01:04:57.120
all of that out of the conversation and you still end up with incompetent workplace over time because
01:05:02.080
it's designed that way design is destiny when i found out my friend got a great deal on a wool
01:05:08.480
coat from winners i started wondering is every fabulous item i see from winners like that woman over
01:05:15.360
there with the designer jeans are those from winners ooh are those beautiful gold earrings did
01:05:21.120
she pay full price or that leather tote or that cashmere sweater or those knee-high boots that dress
01:05:26.720
that jacket those shoes is anyone paying full price for anything stop wondering start winning winners
01:05:34.240
find fabulous for less all right there's a study that says you're not indecisive you're you might be
01:05:42.640
unbiased so people who are biased are the fastest as making decisions you know who do you want to vote
01:05:51.040
for the democrat or the republican republican well you might be a little biased there that makes sense
01:05:59.040
but is the bias wrong well it depends who you ask right so bias doesn't mean you're wrong
01:06:07.200
but apparently people have a hard time making a decision it's because they don't have a strong bias
01:06:13.520
bias now i'm not so sure i trust any of this interpretation or science but it's sort of an
01:06:21.360
interesting angle that when you see somebody who can't decide do you say to yourself oh there's an
01:06:27.200
unbiased person but here's how i would decide whether whether what you're seeing is somebody who can't
01:06:33.520
make a decision or somebody who's unusually unbiased take them to the cheesecake factory
01:06:39.120
do i need to finish that have you ever eaten with somebody at the cheesecake factory who is not
01:06:46.880
good at decision making and they open the menu and it's like war and peace and not only is the menu
01:06:54.960
the biggest menu i've ever seen in my life but it's all pretty good
01:07:02.160
the cheesecake factory does a really good job of making their food delicious
01:07:06.400
yeah so you've got you've got like an encyclopedia of menu choices and they're all pretty good do you
01:07:16.560
know what i do oh that looks good and i'm done now is that because i'm uh i'm biased well a little bit
01:07:29.120
because you know there's lots of foods i don't eat so i can skip them but mostly it's because i don't
01:07:36.080
like sitting there and not eating so the reason that i pick quickly is that my odds of being
01:07:42.800
disappointed by what i get are pretty low because like i said cheesecake factory is really good at
01:07:48.880
producing food that tastes great you know i i can't speak for the health benefits or lack thereof
01:07:55.520
but their food tastes great pretty much everything so am i decisive no i'm a person who hates sitting
01:08:03.680
they're not eating i'm hungry i'm not biased so if somebody can't make a decision between harris
01:08:13.840
and trump take them to the cheesecake factory and find out if the lack of bias is a problem or maybe
01:08:20.320
they're just not so great at making decisions in complicated situations
01:08:24.000
the fda approved a new drug called zerni that with an auto injector to help people with a suspected
01:08:35.360
opioid overdose so that would work on either natural or synthetic opioids and it works about 90 of the time
01:08:43.200
so 90 of the time if it looks like somebody's uh dying from an overdose you can stick this thing into
01:08:50.880
them and uh apparently even if it's not the problem it's not going to kill them so i think you know
01:08:58.080
that i don't think it would be legal if somebody gave it to you and it killed you for other reasons
01:09:06.000
so i suspect it's fairly safe i mean i don't know the details but it's got to be fairly safe for
01:09:11.280
somebody who doesn't have an overdose problem because otherwise it couldn't be approved i assume
01:09:15.680
so that's interesting who's the company that made this purdue pharma
01:09:26.880
wait have i heard that name before purdue pharma
01:09:35.600
sounds familiar have they ever done anything in this field before
01:09:39.840
interesting question that doesn't sound real does it that's real by the way it's purdue pharma
01:09:52.320
so i guess it was a topic they knew about but who knows maybe the weirdest thing in the world just
01:09:57.280
happened maybe purdue pharma uh just came up with the solution for the fentanyl crisis and that would be
01:10:05.120
awesome that would be awesome that would be awesome maybe you know any we live in such a weird world
01:10:12.800
that maybe purdue pharma solved this problem which some would say they were part of the cause but um
01:10:21.200
if it's the same purdue i don't know how many purdue farmers there are
01:10:24.240
our own soil is under attack you say all right war is failure totally agree yeah yeah war is failure
01:10:42.560
but there are times when you don't have a path to success you know if a if a dictator is rolling up on
01:10:49.840
your shores and wants to conquer your country because it's good for the dictator maybe there's
01:10:56.240
no winning play here you got to go to war wait till iran has a nuclear bomb well see that's why
01:11:06.000
i think uh netanyahu may be just itching for a fight because if they do something now and they do it big
01:11:14.160
it could make a difference to iran's nuclear ambitions but they'd have to it'd have to be a
01:11:20.160
pretty aggressive strike i mean i don't know if taking out the leadership would be enough you'd
01:11:27.200
probably have to take out all their nuclear facilities and i don't know but here's the thing
01:11:32.800
i wonder do you believe that israel is always aware where the iranian supreme leader is at
01:11:40.880
don't you think they always know don't you think that iran has found somebody who would be in the
01:11:49.120
vast network of people who would know where the supreme leader is because right he's got to cook
01:11:55.120
he's going to have drivers he's going to have cleaners right there should be this giant universe
01:12:01.280
of people who do know where the supreme leader is that could be bribed for a million dollars
01:12:07.360
all right if your entire life looks like you're going to be cleaning the toilet and the supreme
01:12:13.040
leader's uh many mansions and somebody says how about i give you a million dollars and a
01:12:20.880
and a visa to the united states would you keep us informed where the supreme leader is it seems like
01:12:27.600
it would be the easiest thing in the world for israel to eventually you know maybe not on day one but
01:12:33.600
eventually find somebody who's willing to take a bribe to keep them informed where the supreme leader
01:12:38.800
is and i would think that the taking out the head of hamas and before that the united states taking
01:12:46.960
that uh solomon a if i said that right uh should send the strong signal that the leadership of iran is
01:12:56.000
not off the table and i think if after october 7th if they followed that up with some other brutal attack
01:13:05.280
on israel whether it comes from the air or anywhere else i feel like israel would finally and for the
01:13:13.280
first time have a free pass to take out the leadership of iran because i think everybody was objective and
01:13:20.960
looked at it would say you know what this is never going to end unless one of them just wins
01:13:27.200
so let's get it over with let's just have one of them win maybe maybe we can have shipping again
01:13:34.960
at a low cost all right that's all i got for you today thanks for joining i'm going to say a few words
01:13:41.680
to the private people on locals my beloved subscribers but to you on x and rumble and youtube thanks for
01:13:49.760
for joining and i will see you again tomorrow for