Episode 3089 - The Scott Adams School 02⧸06⧸26
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
173.72124
Summary
Join us this morning as we're joined by returning guest BJ Urda and special guest Ericka Urdan to talk about all things dad jokes, the Mexican government's obsession with the mummified body, and more.
Transcript
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well welcome to coffee with scott adams it's the best thing that's ever happened to you and we're
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going to take it up to a level that you can't even understand with your smooth tiny human brain
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all you need for this is a cup or mug or a glass a tanker chalice a stein a canteen
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jug or flask a vessel of any kind fill it with your favorite liquid i like coffee and join me
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now for the unparalleled pleasure of the dopamine that is a day thing that makes everything better
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it's called the simultaneous sip that happens now go
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a reminder i was just talking about this in the pre-show with the locals people
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if you can find the old gilbert animated show um sometimes it's on youtube illegally
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uh played at 1.5 or 1.25 speed and it becomes hilarious it was it was not bad at regular speed
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but it's way funnier if you speed it up a little bit because your attention span
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isn't really it isn't really set for slow speed
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that's your tip for the day well cbs news is reporting that the mexican government
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they were trying to uh move a uh a mummified body as part of the museum piece it's a 19th century
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mummified body and uh one of its arms fell off wow that's a bummer they got a mummy with a an arm
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fell off well one of the things you can know from this story is that the mummy uh did not come from
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one of the cartels do you know why you know that the mummy is not a cartel member how do you know
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because mexico's never disarmed anybody in the cartel yeah i'm starting right off on the dad
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jokes about disarmed mummies and the rest of the show it's just gonna get better from that i know
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it's hard to believe i may have peaked too soon yeah nobody in the cartels ever been disarmed
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i love a good scott dad joke that's the best so welcome everybody my name is erica uh we have
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our sergio there with his morning his his his cute little beanie we've got owen gregorian the smooth
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sounds of owen beautiful marcella we have two special guests today returning favorite of the show
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is bj uh bj dictor is here and our our canadian honking for freedom friend and you guys who do
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we have next to me is our beloved shelly we love you shelly and you guys you've heard a lot about her
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and now the moment has come where you are meeting shelly's sister aunt shauna shauna
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all right so shauna you were gonna talk to us for a few minutes about the scott adams meetups let us
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know okay um i went to a scott adams meetup not knowing what to expect and um i was missing him
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so i thought i'm gonna just go and see and it was a wide variety of people who um were there for
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different reasons some were looking for um others that were really smart and they could talk you know
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uh others were there wanting to discuss politics others were there because they missed him like me
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um it was really interesting i loved the diversity of people that were there and i i got to hear some
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amazing stories on how scott changed their lives and what he did for them it was great and um i want to
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do a shout out to um my friend travis who gave this to me to give to my sister he had made this originally
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for scott but scott said not many things so he listened um anyway travis from vulcan dog portraits
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so i love that so you guys jimmy on um x has an account it's uh it's at scott adams meet
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m-e-e-t and he has a meetups um website so it's really simple if you go to you guys put it in the
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chat for everybody youtube x everywhere you could drop scott adams meet and then you guys follow
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jimmy and in his bio on his page at the top of his page there's a link that says i think host a meetup
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all that means is you click the link you put in just some simple information like what area you're
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in pick a coffee shop or somewhere and say like okay on this day in this part of arizona we're gonna
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do a meetup so if anybody's from around here come join us this is where we'll be at this time and
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shauna right it was that simple it was just like posted and you just go and you hang out for a couple
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hours right yes it was it was amazing when you're missing that you know um and you got to have it in
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person so um and then i come back and i listen to the show and i'm like oh you know if we have another
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meetup we can discuss this so it goes hand in hand with the show if you uh want some people like to
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stay behind the screen but i like people so so i have a question for shauna if i have a chance
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on the meetups oh sorry go ahead i was just gonna say jimmy from scott adams meet is gonna do an
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exclusive local show with us so that'll probably be next week we'll let you know when but it'll be
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not in the morning it'll be later in the day and um i already asked i'm gonna immediately call you
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aunt shauna uh to come join us on locals also so she can be a locals regular with us from time to
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time because let me tell you she is a lot of fun and things could get rowdy i'm just saying so go
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ahead sergio oh yeah i just wanted to ask shauna what is the process to um a let's say for example i
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wanted to do a host i wanted to host something in my town what do i look for do i look for a coffee
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whole house that is like what do i do first i mean yeah i sign up but do a place it doesn't have to be
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in my place right it can be anywhere right it can be anywhere as long as you know uh it can hold
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a few people because if you host one people will come and so we had a very small room it was a small
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coffee shop uh but it did fit us all you just have to make sure there's enough chairs it's not too loud
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um because you're gonna want to talk and listen and all of that and if you know someone with a coffee
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shop or it could even be probably you know a restaurant or whatever people just want to meet
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up love that thank you oh thank you that's awesome but did you want to say anything else shauna you know
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we um we do want people that heard the stories from scott's memorial service that's where we got
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to meet shauna and shauna you just made like the entire family made all of us feel so comfortable
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like we feel like we've known you all forever and thank you for taking us on our little private tours
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and being the best hosts ever and uh especially going through such a crazy hard grieving process
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we love you guys and appreciate you anyone else want to jump in before we let shauna run away
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the only thing i would add to this is you know we do a lot of this in the bitcoin world
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and people host you know monthly meetups that sort of thing uh they tend to you guys you guys have
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momentum so you have more people come out but even if you get just a small group of people together
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it starts to become ritualistic and before you know it you have 10 20 50 people getting together
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once a month and then you put ideas together and people find you know business partnerships they find
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relationships they find love uh so you know sometimes people hear about these things like well i don't
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know if i i don't know anybody i'm gonna be nervous uh don't be because as scott always says you're
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going to be going there to rescue the people who feel anxiety themselves about being present
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that's right all right i wanted to add that um jimmy had said that there's need there's a need for
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host um there's a lot of people that want to meet up but nobody wants to host so go ahead and um try
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to you know pick a coffee shop and host i probably will be hosting one and uh you might get crazy
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i will too i think i'm gonna do one also i will do nice all right that's amazing so you guys look
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for um some locals exclusive only shows coming up soon you're going to want to make sure that you
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come over subscribe if you haven't and you guys while you're on the platforms now would you hit the
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like buttons give us a thumbs up it just helps the algorithm and helps keep this show going um
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as scott intended and wished for it to be so shauna thank you so much we're gonna get to know you more
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and more i'm sorry i'm not all right guys so um we're gonna take over with the news now and um bj our
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canadian friend i love saying our top hat to the north i can hear someone typing um we are going
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to get into the news now owens picked some great stories for us to talk about today sounds good all
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right well we can start out with some science uh apparently they've come up with the new rna
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nanotechnology to program living cells which is a new path for a cancer cure um so it seems like these
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rna structures assemble inside cells like lego blocks and they uh target cancer by disabling
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stem cells and oncogenes um so they have designed these synthetic dna templates for rna to fold into
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precise shapes and looks like current therapies are targeting one molecule but this one is hitting
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multiple simultaneously um so they're trying to disable these cancerous stem cells so looks like
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we're making progress on that front um that's pretty good news and then they're also coming
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out with a blood test that they say can accurately detect 81 of the earliest lung cancers by looking
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for molecular chaos is what they say um so this is something where you could just get a blood test as
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opposed to like a biopsy or something to try and figure out if you have lung cancer and it's also
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something that might get the right beginning so that it would you know give you a better chance of
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of surviving it and um they also point out that it also is highly specific the way they say it is 95
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specificity which means it doesn't have very many false positives and that's very important because
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you don't want to scare a whole bunch of people and have them think they have cancer and maybe then
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have them do a bunch of biopsies or other things that are not needed um so it is highly specific so it
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means if it does tell you you have it you probably do um but it's about 81 of the cases would be
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detected um it also apparently works about 68 of the time on early breast cancer um so it looks like
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they're coming up with tests to make sure that we can find cancer all from a blood test yeah that's
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amazing i love how it's 81 it's not 80 it's 81 and it's not 70 it's 69 i'm sensing a little persuasion
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there like maybe it was more about 55 50 but that's not a story right but it's a story if it's 80 but
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that's just too perfect so let's make it 81 how can we fudge the numbers massage them just a little bit
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in our favor mm-hmm well scott would often say you know a lot of studies you can't replicate it's
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50 kind of a flip of a coin but um you know i i still applaud the progress i mean i think yeah of
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course we all as we all know is a big problem and if you can detect it earlier you have a much better
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chance of either managing it or getting rid of it so um you know i think it's progress and um
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i hope we can all cure cancer i mean uh i think both trump and biden had said that we would cure
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cancer this decade so um you know i'm waiting for that to happen i don't know if that was a
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promise they made just because someone told them to say it which is probably what happened
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um but you know i certainly hope that we get there because it does seem like it takes a lot of people
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away that shouldn't should still be here so yeah that's true okay so uh apparently on the ai and
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robotics front a company called humanoid has come out with a single ai brain system that is designed
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to run fleets of humanoid robots so they're calling this thing kinet iq that can control a fleet of
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diverse robots with one brain uh it can manage wield and bipedal robots and can work in industrial
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service and home settings the demo shows grocery picking packing voice interaction it can assign
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goals and plans and execute across the fleet so i think we are reaching the point where we're going
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to have these swarms of robots that are going to be coordinating um i think we already had some things
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like that because you've probably seen all the chinese aerial displays that look almost like
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fireworks displays but they're you know in the shape of a dragon or something really impressive
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like that but i think um you know to me that's probably more of a it's more of just a gimmick
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right like it's like yeah we can make these identical drones fly in a pattern we can make them just
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you know fly a route kind of thing but i think this is meant to be a lot more dynamic and a lot more
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ai driven in the sense that you can give it instructions and tell it what to do and have it
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do your bidding so i'm looking forward to having my fleet of robots investing is all about the future
00:17:26.320
so what do you think is going to happen bitcoin is sort of inevitable at this point i think it would
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come down to precious metals i hope we don't go cashless i would say land is a safe investment
00:17:38.020
technology companies solar energy robotic pollinators might be a thing a wrestler to face a robot
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that will have they'll have to happen so whatever you think is going to happen in the future
00:17:49.700
you can invest in it at wealth simple start now at wealth simple.com
00:17:54.380
owen how does that pair to i'm sure you've seen what's been going on in the ai space with
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moltbot and well now it's uh what's it called now open clawed and open open claw yeah yeah open
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claw and all the i don't know if you want to comment on it because i got a list of them here
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the various ai social media websites where it's just ais talking to ais have you come across this
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hate it yeah there's moltbook and there's molt dj they're apparently coming up with their own music
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now i i actually posted a story about this it's later in the feed i think but it what it says is
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um apparently some security researchers looked into this moltbook thing where the it's that's the
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social media one where they're just it's like a reddit style posting sort of thing and um they found
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out that there's like 1.5 million of these ai agents on moltbook yeah but it's all run by about 17 000
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people and in addition to that the funny part is they now have only molts you know like only fans
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uh moltbook which you've mentioned the silk moat like the silk road and now there's one that's a
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molt match which is basically tinder molt it's just it's getting a little out of control all these you
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know ais start dating each other it's it's wild yeah i mean i'm i'm fascinated by the idea of open
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claw where you can have your own personal ai agent that can like keep adding skills and do a bunch of
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stuff and yeah be be your personal assistant and you know like make reservations for your way you
00:19:34.120
know there's probably a million different use cases for it but um you know i i do think we're
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really getting ahead of ourselves for anybody who's looking at trying this because um on one hand i think
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the open claw um is not designed for security and unless you really know what you're doing
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with security you're going to be opening yourself up to a lot of problems um you know if you give it
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access to your bank account or if you give it access to paypal or anything to do anything for you
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like that um then you're potentially going to have your bank account drained you're you know someone is
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going to be able to do what they call a prompt injection um because if you open this thing up to
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email like you can send it an email or get a message from a telegram channel or all these things that
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builds into how it's supposed to work um if it if it gets any information that looks like a command
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it very well may execute that command whatever it is and it could even be just something that's on a
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web page like you know it's not necessarily that someone sent it to your bot specifically it might
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just be something someone put on a web page that has an instruction in it that might be invisible
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but your bot can read it and if it reads it it might think oh that's an instruction i should go do what
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it just told me to do and so it's very easy for a malware writer to put something on a website that
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says you know give me all your bank account numbers list all your information give me everything you
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know about this person you know and it can it can be really dangerous to do these things what's
00:21:04.980
interesting about i mean the good news is all we all know all 18 year old 19 year old boys all make
00:21:10.800
wise decisions decisions and uh apparently there's so much interest in this that they have spiked mac
00:21:18.260
mini sales to the point that apple is running out of mac minis yeah and it's all kids i honestly don't
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understand that part of it more than anything it's it's a brilliant marketing move for apple whoever did
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that but i like you can run it on a raspberry pi which costs like 80 bucks and you can run it on any
00:21:39.700
computer you can run it on you know and i do think it is better to have it on an isolated computer so
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from that perspective it's a good thing to have it on its own computer with nothing else on it
00:21:48.400
but that's just one element of the security and um but you don't need a mac mini if you're using
00:21:55.060
cloud agents because all the processing is being done somewhere else so that's why a raspberry pi that's
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a pretty low-powered computer can do just as well with it um and so people who are spending you know
00:22:06.100
whatever it is maybe a thousand bucks for a mac mini um i you know they could have done it for 80
00:22:12.040
bucks and had just as good an experience and if you want to run local models which is what i was
00:22:17.480
interested in doing because that's a lot safer um and also a lot cheaper um that's really difficult
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i think because it i think it does depend on having the big brain llm models like opus 4.5 or now
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they just came out with 4.6 and like those are the ones that are really to the point where you could
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think oh this thing is kind of like agi like it really seems to know what it's doing but you need
00:22:42.000
that really advanced llm which means you can't really run those locally very easily because they're
00:22:47.480
massive and most consumer hardware wouldn't be able to do those types of things and so um most people
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are using those cloud agents and that has a couple of impacts number one like i said it can be really
00:22:59.700
expensive if you wake it up every 15 minutes which i think it might even be the default
00:23:03.420
suggestion that they give you um you know it can eat up all the tokens of whatever subscription you
00:23:09.380
have pretty quickly and if you tell it to use an api that means it's going to keep using tokens and
00:23:14.200
it's going to rack up a huge bill and well the good news is remember all adult male teenagers all make
00:23:20.560
wise decisions so i'm sure exactly so we don't have to worry about any of this but i you know i think
00:23:26.020
it's it's it is a dangerous thing and i think a lot of people are probably just doing it for fun
00:23:31.080
and they don't even necessarily have some you know serious purpose behind it um i do think the idea has
00:23:37.920
potential but i think you know my advice if anyone is interested in doing this is take it really slow
00:23:44.080
be very careful and maybe have someone who really understands it security set it up for you
00:23:48.820
um and and and tell you what you shouldn't do with it because um you know it is something that
00:23:57.560
that could get you into a lot of trouble and um the more autonomy you give it and the more information
00:24:03.520
about yourself that you give it the more risk you're taking i just want to say who else in the chat
00:24:08.800
heard raspberry pi perked up for like two seconds and then drained out again i was like raspberry pi
00:24:17.000
and then i was like oh wah wah wah wah wah for anyone who doesn't know what that is it's a really
00:24:24.480
small really cheap computer um but it's like literally like the size of a of a tin of altoids
00:24:32.180
to use an example because i think sergio likes his altoids um you know it's like that size it's like
00:24:37.600
you know the size of a pack of cards and wow you know it is pretty functional like you can run linux on
00:24:44.980
you can run a basic operating system with some basic applications and it works pretty well and
00:24:50.720
if you're just browsing the web or something it can work for that too um but you know it's um yeah so
00:24:58.500
it's a nice sort of hobbyist thing that if you have something that doesn't require this like massively
00:25:02.980
powered cpu um it's a good it's a good computer for that excellent all right so anyway i know that
00:25:11.940
some of this stuff i i often veer off into the technical without even knowing i'm doing it you
00:25:16.440
can get a lot more of this kind of talk you guys tomorrow on spaces if you love this technical talk
00:25:23.020
owen can do it forever like i don't know what he's saying but i think it's interesting well along the
00:25:30.960
same lines there's the there's machina labs that raised 124 million dollars to launch a large-scale
00:25:36.420
intelligent u.s factory so they're apparently in more of the defense space so they're it's aerospace
00:25:42.480
defense auto complex metal structures um but they're you know basically building this kind of automated
00:25:50.760
uh factory that um i'm guessing means it won't require many people but um you know it looks like
00:25:58.980
it would be highly robotic and um maybe you know be a way that we could scale up our u.s manufacturing a lot
00:26:05.360
faster than otherwise so we're we're in the age of robots now i don't know does the story say where
00:26:13.460
it's the factory is going to be built i don't i don't remember seeing that i know that it does say
00:26:20.900
they're in the sort of aerospace and defense space and that they have contracts with the air force
00:26:25.360
um but it's dual use with like it can make toyota auto panels apparently and so i'd have to look at the
00:26:32.320
article to see if it said anything about where it was going to build it but i know that they
00:26:37.300
raised a bunch of money to build it but i'm not sure if they've picked a site yet
00:26:40.620
okay all right well we can get more into the politics so we have a whole bunch of stuff going
00:26:48.340
on with immigration of course um trump apparently went on a tear talking about don lemon making fun
00:26:56.300
of him for using a free speech defense and saying how horrible it was to experience or even see the
00:27:02.380
the church being stormed by a bunch of people um he made some statements at a prayer breakfast about it
00:27:09.540
i think and uh you know i think he also made some news on that just by saying we're going to rededicate
00:27:15.380
the country to spirituality or something along those lines i can't remember maybe one of you remember
00:27:20.520
exactly what he said but it was kind of like a religious rededication of the country um
00:27:27.700
and uh then at the same time we have of course um the democrats coming out against all this stuff
00:27:37.340
and saying they need to reform dhs and put a bunch of guardrails around ice and the interesting part of
00:27:44.840
that is that buried in there they want to make sure that ice cannot operate at polling stations
00:27:51.360
for voting right right um and there was a question like yeah sergio had his hand up what were you
00:27:58.760
going to say oh yeah oh i think that yeah when owen mentioned that uh about the religious uh breakfast
00:28:05.000
that he had uh trump had yesterday um yeah so i i since 2017 that was the last time anybody
00:28:14.440
lied to me about anything that trump said right he started watching every single speech every single
00:28:21.580
everything so yesterday i watched that too and it was an amazing breakfast that he had with the congress
00:28:28.120
uh delegation from the democrats and the republicans and uh it was um he announced that there's going
00:28:33.760
to be a rededication of america's um uh a eradication of america of the 250th on may 17 i think and so
00:28:44.660
that's going to be a big event um to to to again celebrate america uh for the principles that it was
00:28:52.420
started and that's why i want to you know invite bj to unite as a one big country you know you're not
00:29:00.320
all right we're going to be invincible i'm the omnipotent ruler of canada i i have declared us
00:29:06.780
part of the united states you're going to be you're going to be your wildest dreams i'm telling you
00:29:12.260
we're going to be amazing greenland alaska uh you know we got venezuela too it's going to be beautiful
00:29:17.760
it's so amazing people can't even believe it yeah
00:29:20.380
sergio just throws in venezuela he's like i'm venezuela come on down
00:29:27.140
i am interested have you seen the venezuelans have you seen them
00:29:33.160
i am interested bj like what's going on with immigration in canada because i haven't heard
00:29:38.580
anything about that in a long time no well i can give the the intersection between uh immigration
00:29:47.320
fraud the somali community and truckers who shouldn't have licensing if you want the very
00:29:54.200
short version of it and this is something that's been um it's been a problem in canada for uh for
00:30:01.880
some time so essentially what's happened in canada like you you have we jokingly call them the somali
00:30:08.220
pirates those are the people who have committed 18 billion dollars of fraud which in the state of
00:30:14.680
minnesota which is greater than the entire gdp of somalia that is amazing i mean i am in awe
00:30:19.640
of their skill set but in canada we do things a little different we allow those somali pirates
00:30:26.060
to come into canada and then we make them the immigration minister that's right that's what we
00:30:32.120
did and in in our particular case there's something that every member of parliament our rcmp our national
00:30:39.860
police force has been completely aware of which is pardon me which is the fact that they're running
00:30:46.660
this immigration fraud scheme that is uh human trafficking so those truckers that you're seeing
00:30:54.500
that um are sikh they're actually calistani calistani is a terrorist movement that came out of canada
00:31:01.820
it's a separatist movement from india so they are trafficked from the punjab region into canada
00:31:09.320
under human rights legislation minister's permit from the minister of immigration he's now shifted to
00:31:15.860
another portfolio but there's another stooge in there that's continuing the same thing and it is
00:31:21.300
tens of millions of dollars maybe hundreds of millions of dollars in fraud and it includes cabinet
00:31:27.860
members so in our case it's not like the local community and the ngo in our case it's the actual
00:31:34.740
government representatives that are involved in it and it's through a network of cutouts and shell
00:31:40.280
companies around the world and what's frustrating is every member of parliament knows it all of law
00:31:45.900
enforcement knows it nobody will do anything about it why because canada is a dilbert cartoon but i can
00:31:53.040
go into detail i'm going to write about this sometime soon in zero hedge and lay it out over a series of
00:31:58.820
articles because i've been working with some lawyers who are aware of how this all fits together but
00:32:03.960
that's that's the state of canada that's awful i don't understand it's like this whole somalia
00:32:10.560
explosion of fraud that we're showing i i don't under i mean i don't understand a lot of this you
00:32:19.140
know that i guess i like i feel like my angle is always i'm so shocked that people are just willing
00:32:24.500
to sell out their countries and turn a blind eye and is it for money and power i mean do they not
00:32:31.800
they not want the existence of their countries in the future like they think oh i'll be dead by then
00:32:37.280
i don't know i don't understand what's the point of it all it's brainwashing we are a post-modern
00:32:43.400
state and that's you know that's why understanding post-modern philosophy is so important and an example
00:32:49.540
of that in right in the clear where everybody could see it was the past 10 years where prime minister
00:32:55.460
blackface trudeau this guy with the rbc avion visa you can book any airline
00:33:01.660
any flight any time so start ticking off your travel list grand canyon grand great barrier reef
00:33:09.820
great galapagos galapa go switch and get up to 55 000 avion points that never expire
00:33:17.840
your idea of never missing out happens here conditions apply visit rbc.com slash avion
00:33:25.140
was in charge of the country and he spent 10 years saying that canada is a racist colonial project
00:33:35.440
it is a post-national state with no cultural identity well eventually when you when you know
00:33:41.580
these land acknowledgements i make fun of on my streams it's because land acknowledgements are in
00:33:46.940
government they are in our schools our elementary schools they beginning the morning uh announcements
00:33:52.540
with land acknowledgements they're in our sporting events so they brainwashed a segment of the
00:33:59.200
population to believe that canada doesn't have an identity so trump says okay join america we have an
00:34:04.900
identity no we're canadian first it's just funny how quickly they can flip uh back and forth but it's
00:34:12.720
we have some very serious philosophical problems as well as cultural problems here yeah you do we do too
00:34:20.380
obviously like i just i i just said the other day you know all of this like illegal immigration and
00:34:28.280
the wokeism and the corrupt media the corrupt politicians as scott would say it's like well you
00:34:35.100
know if there's a slow moving disaster you know you have time to correct it and get ahead of it but i feel
00:34:39.880
like the the tip of the ship is hitting the iceberg now and you know how long it takes to slow down a
00:34:46.660
ship right so i don't know i don't see it slowing down fast enough and i don't want to be pessimistic
00:34:52.360
i really don't because i'd much rather live with optimism instead of the fear that i feel so i just
00:34:59.100
don't i need scott to get me out of my worry of that can i just give you a positive frame before
00:35:07.440
and the reality is the topics that i got intimately involved in when i was involved in politics which
00:35:15.100
is you know political entryism from foreigners foreign terrorist organizations ccp all that sort
00:35:20.960
of stuff 10 years ago nobody wanted to hear about it no no parliamentarians nobody in law everybody knew
00:35:27.860
but everybody wanted to do this now the general public even people on the liberal side are starting
00:35:35.000
to ask questions and they want to have those conversations i could only dream of us being in the
00:35:40.840
position we're in right now 10 years ago so i think we're on the right trajectory but like you said
00:35:46.100
changes culturally and in government is like doing a u-turn with a battleship it's low it's slow and
00:35:52.920
laborious by design because that protects us from being a schizophrenic society so it's just going to
00:35:59.220
take it's going to take time but i'm quite positive sorry owen go ahead bro no it's fine i mean i
00:36:04.680
part of my question and i don't know if you know the answer is just like my perception is that most of
00:36:10.060
the illegal immigration coming to the united states was coming up through mexico i know there was some
00:36:14.820
coming the other way from canada but but primarily it was a route through mexico and um i was interested
00:36:22.960
in knowing like now that we have really cracked down on it and it seems like we pretty much put a stop to
00:36:27.520
it and also we've had millions of people leave i'm kind of wondering like did a lot of those people
00:36:32.480
go to canada and do you have any statistics about like what that looks like in terms of how much you
00:36:37.920
know did did you absorb a lot of those people up there don't have any statistics but yes a tremendous
00:36:43.300
number of them are coming across you know there's famously roxham road the border crossing where
00:36:48.260
people are legally crossing into canada into quebec and our national police force is carrying their
00:36:54.220
bags for them and helping them because they're told to stand down and just help those people one of
00:37:00.360
the things that's that's come up here is you have the carny government that's trying to play
00:37:03.640
play both sides as all politicians do and saying well we're ramping up the deportation of illegals
00:37:10.360
and i know some people in cbsa which is our equivalent of uh which is our border enforcement
00:37:15.880
and uh law enforcement and what they're telling me is yeah yeah we're deporting people who are from
00:37:21.920
latin america from eastern europe uh from parts of africa but not and you know this is going to be a
00:37:29.580
painted word not if they're part of the extremist muslim community if they have ties to any of the
00:37:37.180
extremist um islamist ngos and networks of mosques they're not being deported so we're keeping the
00:37:44.540
garbage and we're letting good people go we're forcing good people to leave wow that's a really
00:37:52.900
so canada is about how many years of this can canada take i don't know but there's a reason
00:38:00.400
i've given a few speeches in the u.s on laying out why canada has become a national security threat to
00:38:07.860
the united states and you know thankfully a number of the people who've attended uh some of them live
00:38:12.780
at mar-a-lago and many of them are uh within the uh the network of the trump uh administration so
00:38:20.100
that information has been able to filter there not just for me from other people as well uh who know
00:38:24.860
this file but yeah we are a and this is why trump is is looked at venezuela i think cuba is going to
00:38:30.140
be next and not once a deal is signed with the greenland and they start setting up some bases
00:38:35.980
you don't think that big land mass in between alaska and greenland is going to somehow be absorbed by
00:38:43.380
the united states when i had the last point on this and i'll shut up when i was very much involved
00:38:48.940
during my campaign all of our politicians were very worried in the conservative party that
00:38:53.860
russia was regularly surfacing its nuclear submarines in canadian waters and trump trump
00:39:00.960
actually referenced this recently and we don't have the resources to patrol this massive network
00:39:09.080
of waters in the arctic and therefore it was just a signal from russia to america yeah we can fire
00:39:16.520
nukes at you at any moment and that's why trump said to both denmark and canada you've been told
00:39:22.740
for 20 years to secure the arctic and neither of you have done it that's why we're gonna do it and
00:39:29.200
he's gonna crush our economy until canada submits and says okay let's do a deal instead of our idiot
00:39:35.760
politicians the dilbert politicians who could realize okay you know what let's do a deal now let's figure
00:39:41.320
out something that works for both of us no no they want to kill the economy first and then when they
00:39:46.680
have absolutely zero negotiating uh leverage then they're going to negotiate with trump it's just
00:39:52.900
foolish all over um bj montreal galaxy one of our local subscribers a canadian we have a great canadian
00:40:01.260
group over here she said please ask bj what he thinks of former p.m harper's recent remarks and that
00:40:08.000
he's been advising carney uh well this is remember we talked about last time the uniparty in canada
00:40:15.040
uh you know again the dilbert filter our political class our lobby class um and you know all the fixers
00:40:23.140
and ngos that work within this uh swamp and this network they are not incentivized to have any sort of
00:40:30.880
alignment with the united states their incentive is to remain as uh confrontational with the united
00:40:38.660
states as possible because that's that's where the money moves this is how the lobby industry works
00:40:43.760
so i'm not surprised you know i have many i'm not socially conservative at all but i have many
00:40:49.960
supporters and friends who are socially conservative and they've been telling me for many many years
00:40:54.920
harper is just a liberal in a conservative suit and i'm like i don't know whatever well when you see
00:41:00.540
the cbc is doing a fluff piece on harper's comments attacking trump well there you go that's how and
00:41:07.400
that's how you end up with a conservative party where the deputy leader used to work recently for
00:41:15.120
the firm founded by justin trudeau's chief of staff it is just one you know they say it's one big club
00:41:21.840
and you're not in it now canada's a one very small club and it's more like the oligarchy you know
00:41:28.140
scott always made fun of it but the oligarch structure in russia that's very similar to how
00:41:34.320
canada is governed and there's complete control over all the political parties as just one entity
00:41:40.480
it's completely fake it's completely fake all right well one more story i'll cover on immigration
00:41:48.940
uh you may have seen this guy that called himself an antifa general and he was telling everybody to
00:41:56.080
join an armed uprising against ice uh this dork is named kyle wagner he's been arrested in a pre-dawn
00:42:03.380
raid um in minneapolis and there's nice video of it you can find it on my feed uh there's a story by
00:42:10.760
cassandra mcdonald of the gateway pundit who was covering this and um so this guy was like doxing
00:42:16.520
ice supporters and calling ice gestapo and mass murderers and he was soliciting donations for this
00:42:22.640
and um so they did a pre-dawn raid and videotaped it and he's he's been arrested now so he was
00:42:30.180
threatening to kill ice agents and so i'm sure he's going to face justice so there's oh yeah that was
00:42:35.840
that was good thanks owen i i love that the guy's so vicious and he's you know he's just getting
00:42:41.080
everybody all stirred up and get your guns and you know you're just like oh my god it's not a video
00:42:46.360
game it's just insanity i and i'm so sick of these democrats like it's just the party of violence
00:42:54.500
murder you know breaking laws making up your own rules the the roadblocks that they're putting in
00:43:00.800
the middle of the street and deciding who can pass it's a miracle that the bullets aren't flying thank
00:43:08.240
god but that you know it's from that it's not from people that are just law-abiding citizens who are
00:43:14.760
going to snap because it's it's enough of a pressure cooker yeah and i would just you know
00:43:20.040
generalize this a bit like i use this as an example but like justice is happening you know it may not
00:43:26.620
happen as fast as you want you might not be seeing tim waltz in prison yet i don't even know if he'll be
00:43:31.540
arrested but like there are a lot of people being arrested in charge with crimes and you know the
00:43:38.020
administration is taking it seriously and they are taking action and i think the perception on x and
00:43:43.700
other social media might be oh they're not doing anything about it why is nobody ever arrested and
00:43:48.720
i see these statements like people who come away with this impression of nothing's happening and
00:43:53.600
we're not arresting anybody and there was even a james o'keith video about some fbi guy that was
00:43:59.780
claiming nobody was going to get arrested but i think there's been over a hundred people in
00:44:04.020
minneapolis arrested for the fraud there were just some people arrested in california for the
00:44:08.660
the hospice fraud there have been lots of people arrested at these riots and this guy now has been
00:44:15.420
arrested too and like i think there was somebody who you know showed up at some politician's house
00:44:21.940
they just got arrested like there are people that are having criminal charges because of these things
00:44:27.720
and so it is being taken seriously the people are being brought to justice yes maybe some of them
00:44:34.300
will get a liberal judge and they'll get off i mean you can't well that's the thing so it's going to go
00:44:39.440
your way but you know i do think that the administration is taking action on this and they
00:44:44.740
are taking it seriously so i just want to make sure you you don't get so wrapped up in this rhetoric of
00:44:50.640
nothing ever happens that you don't see things when they do happen i am wrapped up in it i'm like
00:44:56.420
nikki over here on local saying it's people not politicians body not the head and that's how i
00:45:01.760
feel you know the fish rots from the head down and until the politicians really have serious
00:45:09.020
ramifications for the chaos and the the violence that they're creating because they are i don't see
00:45:18.420
it stopping and and if the liberal judges aren't held to account what's the point i know i do think
00:45:24.940
it's great that they they did arrest don lemon because i think that's an example where it was a
00:45:29.620
very you know celebrity type person that you might have thought would have some kind of immunity
00:45:33.480
or he could claim he was press and he'd get away with it and he didn't you know he he again we don't
00:45:39.440
know what's going to happen in court he might have some kind of first amendment argument but i don't
00:45:43.200
think he really does because i think he there is enough evidence of what he did that he was
00:45:47.120
coordinating with these people and it was private property and it was also breaking these specific laws
00:45:52.340
that were put in place by democrats frankly and so i think he's going to have to face those charges
00:45:58.060
but i think you know what i would what i keep in mind is that for someone like tim waltz for example
00:46:05.160
it's like making statements or like maxine waters you know making statements that are inflammatory
00:46:11.680
is kind of a borderline thing it's like it's free speech politicians actually have like this speech
00:46:18.340
and debate clause that gives them even more immunity where they're allowed to lie to us
00:46:21.840
get rid of it and so there is this extra leniency that they have built in for them which i hate but
00:46:32.280
it's just that's the reality and so and then you know as far as connecting tim waltz to the fraud
00:46:38.940
like to me that just takes time like you have to show how was he involved what did he know when did
00:46:44.920
he know it what kind of documentation do we have to prove it and and that takes time to put together
00:46:49.920
a case so i wouldn't expect something like that to happen overnight well the local chat is also saying
00:46:55.560
you know arrest versus convictions we need convictions the arrests are just you know bs i'm with you but
00:47:03.620
again we don't control all these things like we you know the trump administration can arrest people
00:47:08.980
cash can go arrest people but you know and the department of justice can prosecute it
00:47:14.920
but we do have to deal with just who's in the judicial system today and you're not always going
00:47:21.420
to get the result you want and you know it also depends on who ends up on the juries and so i you
00:47:26.840
know i think we can work towards that as much as we can and if you get selected for jury duty absolutely
00:47:31.960
go and maybe you'll end up on one of these juries where you can make a difference but you know other
00:47:37.460
than that i don't i think we just have to wait and see what happens but i i would also point out that
00:47:42.020
the process is the punishment a lot of the time but going through a trial like this i mean just
00:47:47.780
think back to when kyle rittenhouse was put on trial right that never should have happened and
00:47:52.680
he ended up innocent but that doesn't mean there were no consequences to him his whole life was
00:47:57.260
ruined by that and it cost hundreds of thousands of dollars maybe even millions of dollars just to
00:48:01.780
defend himself and those all these other people are going through that same process right now
00:48:06.520
that if they have to hire a high-priced lawyer they have to come up with hundreds of thousands
00:48:10.680
of dollars and if they don't they're going to end up with a public defender that is not very good
00:48:15.400
and so you know it's they are facing serious consequences even if they do end up getting
00:48:22.240
some liberal judge and getting a light sentence or getting off and they're probably always going
00:48:26.620
to be tarnished with these things having a criminal record so i wouldn't i wouldn't think that
00:48:31.020
there's no consequences just in case you know in the cases where there aren't convictions so you know
00:48:37.100
the process really is the punishment and um you know there may be another punishment after that and i
00:48:43.120
hope there is for a lot of these people because i think they deserve it but i i do think that there
00:48:48.340
are things happening to these people that are not things they want to happen to them and um you know
00:48:54.400
we should recognize that progress is being made that's my main point okay i'm gonna i'm gonna work