The Glenn Beck Program - May 19, 2022


Best of the Program | Guests: Rose Rabidoux & Luke Berg | 5⧸19⧸22


Episode Stats


Length

39 minutes

Words per minute

139.97263

Word count

5,592

Sentence count

6

Harmful content

Misogyny

3

sentences flagged

Hate speech

5

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

In this episode of the blendbeck program, Glenn Blumberg talks about gas prices hitting a new record high, and why you should be worried about the future of the energy sector. The Blumbeck Program is brought to you in part by Built Bars.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 hey pat favorite part of today's podcast your favorite part oh man was it devin nunez
00:00:07.120 um was it the part at the very beginning that you weren't in the studio for um was it was it
00:00:15.780 the mom from wisconsin whose son has just been uh nailed for sexual harassment for misgendering
00:00:26.400 a student hard to pick how about ai when we told i told you about ai and gonna kill gonna kill us all 0.86
00:00:34.780 gonna kill us probably yeah yeah yeah it is it is hard to pick it's hard to choose it really is
00:00:40.020 packed with juiciness today the glenbeck program brought to you in part by built bar summer is
00:00:47.080 almost here and that means making sure that you have food available on the go uh when it's a snack
00:00:52.280 oh yeah oh yeah i'm the one packing the snacks i forget about everything else sandwiches
00:00:58.240 should have thought of that but i got plenty of snacks uh thank goodness for built bars they're 0.86
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00:01:48.200 beck15built.com you're listening to the best of the blendbeck program
00:02:00.760 okay uh let's let's just talk about gas how much are you paying for gas right now if you lived in
00:02:12.320 california you are now paying six dollars a gallon for gasoline and we're not in the summer yet
00:02:19.940 i wonder how much we're gonna save on this year's fourth of july picnic because remember i think it
00:02:25.780 was last year they told us that we saved like nine cents oh man it's gonna be sweet anyway six dollars
00:02:33.760 a gallon in california that it was hit on tuesday the national average price of gas now is a record
00:02:41.820 four dollars and 57 cents per gallon that's the national average just to remind you the national
00:02:52.580 average um last may was three dollars and four cents this has nothing to do nothing to do with russia
00:03:05.840 this has everything to do with esg and what i i want to express to you and ask you to do is start
00:03:17.520 looking at things differently we need to look at things a little bit more like the chinese 1.00
00:03:22.080 and i'm not saying look at things a hundred down a hundred years down the road can we just look 52
00:03:27.860 months ahead we need to look just a few years in advance 12 months would be great can we look 12 months
00:03:40.560 in the future right now uh jp morgan is saying the average price for gasoline this summer will be six
00:03:53.440 dollars a gallon that would mean california will be eight or nine dollars a gallon now i don't know what
00:04:02.180 that puts fuel at for our trucks diesel
00:04:05.720 but we are in real serious trouble
00:04:11.860 esg has choked off all the money the more executives i talk to at in the gas and oil industry
00:04:22.600 they're all saying the same thing glenn they can open up all the leases they want
00:04:27.820 they've they have closed down the leases they've closed down pipelines but that's not the real problem
00:04:35.200 the real problem is esg if you don't know what esg is i beg you please get the book the great reset
00:04:44.780 it explains all of this i it's breathtaking at how fast this is coming down now esg has choked off
00:04:56.320 all of the investment what was it uh 48 billion dollars just last year invested by these you know
00:05:06.840 hedge funds in the oil industry this year i think it's nine billion what caused that with energy being
00:05:15.780 as important as it is think about this as a free market when there is great demand and really high
00:05:23.540 prices what does the market do the market starts to invest in holy cow we can clean up right now
00:05:32.400 by getting into that market and start to sell oil and gas we could sell it all over the world
00:05:39.020 why has our investment gone down our investment has gone down because our banks our hedge funds
00:05:47.760 and everybody else is now starting to say uh yeah that's not the way of the future we're going to do
00:05:57.160 wind and solar okay all right sure sounds great enjoy the wind and solar this summer when you're paying
00:06:11.000 six dollars a gallon for gasoline and god only knows how much you are going to pay for meat and potatoes
00:06:18.940 because our meat and potatoes well they start with a farmer and the farmer has a tractor and that tractor
00:06:29.960 runs on diesel fuel and he has to first spread fertilizer which comes from petroleum but you can't make
00:06:40.500 fertilizer so we don't have fertilizer well that'll save in the tractor you know he won't be putting that
00:06:47.260 diesel fuel in nope nope he'll plant less of what he was planning on planting and then he has to put fuel
00:06:56.540 in the tractor to make sure that uh it's harvested bailed he'll need trucks to move it from his farm to the
00:07:06.060 processing plant the processing plant needs energy to run it and then they put it on a truck and it goes to
00:07:14.080 the grocery store and then you use your car to go buy it at the grocery store and then bring it home in
00:07:19.100 your car when no one has any fuel the prices will to quote barack obama necessarily go up
00:07:32.080 right now the diesel price just so you remember everything shipped to america is on a giant ship
00:07:43.580 and that's not run by fairy dust or solar panels in fact i don't know anyone who is working on
00:07:53.180 solar panels for the cargo ships i don't know anyone who has in their design wind powered
00:08:01.360 cargo ships i mean i suppose we could pull the nina and the pinta the santa maria was out of commission
00:08:10.100 but can we find those two maybe we can because those were wind powered ships
00:08:14.880 that's diesel fuel our trains diesel fuel brought in from china to a port the trucks then move them
00:08:30.580 and all of the heavy machine or the forklifts and everything run on diesel that all is shipped
00:08:36.520 and put onto a train ship someplace in the middle of the country or wherever is closest to you
00:08:42.840 and then a truck picks it up and brings it to the grocery store 12 times a day
00:08:49.400 here's what i need you to understand we have not even begun yet because of esg
00:09:01.220 and because of the policies of this administration they are creating a national emergency
00:09:09.300 our farmers are not going to be able to have the fuel there's a story right now in uh breitbart
00:09:18.920 diesel price surge has new england fishing industry reeling they were paying a dollar fifty
00:09:26.760 for uh a gallon of diesel back in 2019 a dollar fifty they're now paying six dollars and fifty cents
00:09:36.700 and here's the thing when these giant corporations buy fish they don't buy it at today's market price
00:09:47.260 they buy in in boatloads literally they buy them um in bulk and so the fishing industry makes a contract
00:10:00.340 with that food plant or grocery store whoever's buying it if it's bought in bulk and they say you know
00:10:08.460 what because you're buying so much we're going to charge you this amount and you sign a contract
00:10:15.240 now if the price of fish and everything goes down the fishermen win if it goes up the stores win
00:10:23.920 but there comes a point when fishermen can't fish anymore this is what we're headed towards
00:10:33.920 and don't think short term on this to put oil rigs into a field and to open those up
00:10:43.500 is about a five-year process from turning it on to actually getting it to your gas station
00:10:53.420 it'll take about five years if it's on federal land because the federal government is so screwed up
00:11:00.340 it takes about 10 years so any fix that we have right now is five years away
00:11:10.240 now let me give you this from the washington examiner today by the way none of this is what
00:11:17.400 you're going to hear in um the new york times you will not hear any of this on cnn half of our country
00:11:26.020 has no idea what's about to hit them do not listen to your friends who are reading the corporate media
00:11:36.340 garbage electricity customers across the country according to the washington examiner face a
00:11:44.820 heightened risk of power outages this summer regulators say it reflects a worsening outlook
00:11:52.540 for the grid which is simultaneously struggling struggling through extreme weather conditions
00:11:59.580 and a shift away from traditional energy sources the north american electric reliability reliability
00:12:06.960 corporation or nerc the regulatory body that oversees our grid operations across the united states and
00:12:14.840 canada warned in its summer reliability assessment published yesterday listen that the entire west
00:12:24.620 and most of the midwest face at least an elevated risk of seeing insufficient electricity supply
00:12:33.700 where slim reserve margins run up against high demand for the sections of the grid stretching from
00:12:41.740 wisconsin to the gulf coast and to california they have been deemed at risk for insufficient operating
00:12:52.980 reserves to be high during peak command uh demand conditions expected resources according to the
00:13:01.980 officials expected resources do not meet operating reserve requirements under normal peak demand and outage
00:13:09.820 scenarios now they're saying that utilities may have to shut off power to customers in peak demand you know
00:13:21.440 cold weather kills a lot of people so does hot weather i don't know if you've noticed but boy in the old
00:13:32.480 timey times everybody seemed to live up north why have you been to texas in the summer have you been to
00:13:43.400 atlanta have you been god forbid to phoenix it's hell you don't have you don't have any energy first of all good luck
00:13:54.440 pumping that water second of all you don't have electricity good luck with no air conditioning i'm dead within a week
00:14:01.920 so here's the thing i want you to listen to why they say this is happening
00:14:13.400 the grid operators uh have been forward in their assessment of capacity shortages and their causes
00:14:22.760 in a report released just last january it replay it placed responsibility for the reliability shortcomings
00:14:30.680 on the transformation of its generating resources including the requirements of always-on generating
00:14:37.580 units such as coal fire plants it also listed older coal plants and wind and solar resources
00:14:43.740 that are not always available to provide energy during times of need what why don't the solar panels
00:14:53.900 work at night i never thought of that what happens to those wind that wind power when the wind doesn't
00:15:01.880 blow getting the balance right between traditional thermal sources and their retirements especially coal
00:15:09.660 why are these coal fire plants retiring because they're being forced to why e s g
00:15:18.620 some of the thermal plants and coal and natural gas have been retiring with new resources coming on in
00:15:26.460 the way of wind and solar resources but maintaining the right mix of resources so you can reliably provide
00:15:33.800 power over a range of conditions is kind of where we should focus say experts
00:15:40.900 this hour i am going to show you this is not a bug in the system this is a feature i'm going to show you
00:15:57.400 here in the next few minutes and we're going to use baby food as an example we are headed towards
00:16:05.100 national emergencies when you have national emergencies all kinds of fun things like we experienced in
00:16:15.820 covid can happen you need to prepare and you need to stop listening to anyone who is not listening for
00:16:28.860 the actual facts a lot of the stuff we're dealing with you can just point to and go
00:16:35.000 look it's happening there there and there why the why is you can leave that up to politics i mean i
00:16:42.460 think it's pretty clear but whatever the rest of it is math you take this out and replace it with a solar
00:16:52.080 panel you're in trouble you take all of the oil and you say no more from russia uh and then you say
00:17:02.860 no more from america and then you have supply problems here's an idea you're gonna run out of fuel
00:17:11.980 it's math don't listen to people who are talking about feelings talk math if this country even
00:17:21.940 understands that two plus two still does equal four
00:17:26.360 you're listening to the best of the glenn beck program
00:17:33.480 i know what you're thinking glenn you seem more confident today yes well my friends that started
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00:18:29.820 mean i don't know how you anyway if you have an awkward teenager do him a favor arm him with sweat 1.00
00:18:35.200 block also try the deodorant stick best i've ever tried get it all today 20 off sweatblock.com promo code
00:18:42.040 beck or at amazon so rose rabidu is the uh is the uh mom of the 13 year old brayden she's just
00:18:51.720 one of the mothers but she would agree to come on with us uh and luke berg is uh with the wisconsin
00:18:58.800 institute for law and liberty um he is for if i'm not mistaken luke i want to get this right you were
00:19:05.780 with the wisconsin department of justice right yeah before i joined will uh for about four years and
00:19:13.240 then i joined will two and a half years ago okay and you were the assistant attorney general so you're
00:19:17.620 a guy that knows you know the law in the state um and have credibility because you were on the the
00:19:23.900 state side for for a long time um first of all rose thank you for being on the program thank you for
00:19:31.060 being brave enough to to come on uh and tell the story can you in in your own words tell what's happened
00:19:39.760 sure absolutely first of all thank you for having us on uh this is outrageous it is outrageous sexual
00:19:50.020 harassment has absolutely nothing to do with incorrect incorrect pronouns proper pronouns whatever you want
00:19:59.080 to call it miss gendering i think is the phrase uh miss gendering oh so this the student the student who
00:20:10.240 is a girl dresses like a girl wears makeup like a girl decided last month to tell the entire class
00:20:18.700 that she wanted to be referred to as they them and it wasn't even that these boys refused
00:20:26.480 they were confused my son came home confused mom they are plural pronouns and i don't understand how
00:20:35.680 to use them and so i told him to call her by name but if you didn't she let you have it and that's what
00:20:44.820 she was doing she was letting one of his friends have it because he misgendered he used the wrong
00:20:50.800 pronoun and brayden stood up and said he doesn't have to use your pronouns it's his constitutional right
00:20:58.240 and that is why i know yeah i know and so he's a good kid he's a straight a student right
00:21:09.960 he is okay he works hard has he been in trouble before
00:21:14.500 he has not been in trouble like this he is a normal boy has he said a cuss word and i got a call
00:21:22.400 from the principal absolutely oh my gosh what kind of animal are you raising
00:21:26.900 uh
00:21:27.780 uh so rose my i want you to know when my son was 13 he was an angel um so uh so they when you called
00:21:42.840 the school what did they say well they called me so the elementary school principal he was the one
00:21:51.140 in charge of just gathering the facts and he called me forewarning me that he was going to be
00:21:56.000 sending over this email with the sexual harassment allegations and you know at first you think sexual
00:22:02.740 harassment oh my gosh that's rape that is inappropriate touching right these are outrageous things and
00:22:10.780 and and my son is a kid he is not sexually active he is is is very much you know plays video games
00:22:18.340 with his friends he's a boy yeah and and so when he told me that it was for not using the proper
00:22:25.260 pronouns i i just thought it was a joke you laughed did you laugh i did i would have too
00:22:31.680 this has got to be a joke i told him this is wrong in so many ways and he wanted to meet with us the
00:22:39.880 next day so i get this this generic form letter via email uh with a blurb saying he is being charged
00:22:47.520 sexual harassment for not using proper pronouns but no detail not who accused him not what it is that
00:22:55.040 he did no information whatsoever we we meet with him on tuesday and we go in and we're interrogated
00:23:03.240 and brayden has asked a bunch of questions to which brayden answers honestly did did i make a mistake
00:23:10.480 yes did i accidentally call her she or her yes but i didn't mean to i meant to call her by her name
00:23:18.020 because i don't understand the pronouns well i think he was right on his first amendment right
00:23:24.980 um you have a right to do that that's not sexual harassment this is this is political correctness gone
00:23:30.780 insane uh luke uh luke help me out here what what does the law say have they charged
00:23:38.000 have they charged brayden and his other friends
00:23:40.800 uh so it's uh it's an internal school investigation so you know they it's like a 90-day process where
00:23:49.560 they're gathering information and at the end of it they'll decide what to do and it could be you
00:23:54.420 know a suspension or an expulsion at the worst so it's not it's not a criminal complaint it's not a
00:23:59.140 civil lawsuit yet right internal school investigation and i could see if you had
00:24:03.180 reputation i can see if you needed to gather the facts why you would have 90 days but this seems
00:24:08.960 pretty darn simple you know yeah and actually title nine regulations and their own policy say
00:24:16.300 if you get allegations that even if proved wouldn't amount to sexual harassment you shouldn't even start
00:24:22.600 the investigation you should dismiss it immediately and that's what should have happened here right as
00:24:27.000 soon as they heard uh the allegations were solely for mispronouning they shouldn't have even interviewed
00:24:32.100 these boys they should have just dismissed it immediately because there's nothing uh anywhere
00:24:36.500 in the law nothing in the reg nothing in the policy uh that would cover mispronouning this
00:24:42.240 pronouning is not even a word much less in the law so uh that's you know what we've told the district is
00:24:50.440 you should have you should have dismissed this and you need to immediately dismiss this so that they
00:24:54.740 don't have to go through this whole 90 day investigation and have this on their reputation
00:24:58.940 have this on their record and have the stress of this uh for 90 days you need to dismiss it right away
00:25:03.760 so rose there's there's a reason i mean i really like milk and cheese but there's a reason i don't live
00:25:10.320 in wisconsin uh because wisconsin is the leading state of progressivism or has been for a long time
00:25:18.540 is the area that you live in is it real progressive or is this just the school this is the school
00:25:26.580 and this is not so i moved to this area in 2019 for this school district because everything that had
00:25:34.920 been reported about this school district was it's great academically uh the the graduation rate was 98
00:25:43.360 98 and we moved up here and and covid happened and so i gave them a chance just because things were
00:25:51.280 kind of out of whack with covid but this school district has not held up to to its side at all
00:25:58.560 uh academically i i believe my my children are bored they there's no homework i knew something was wrong
00:26:06.240 when there was no homework and uh and and now this is just this is completely outrageous um all right so
00:26:16.140 luke what what's i mean because it's not enough for them just to um say oh okay we're not doing that
00:26:23.320 or we're sorry or whatever we have got to follow these things through so it doesn't happen again
00:26:31.020 yeah that's absolutely right i mean the first and most important thing is uh getting this off
00:26:38.320 these kids records so that's what we're asking the school district to do immediately uh but we're also
00:26:42.800 asking them to make changes so that this doesn't happen again because this is this this is clearly
00:26:47.340 inappropriate obviously and it seems to be a trend in the school district we're actually aware of
00:26:51.340 uh another family who has had sexual harassment charges for a single comment allegedly mispronouning
00:26:59.140 uh another student so this is this is the district's uh decision apparently to use the sexual harassment
00:27:05.880 process as a weapon to force students uh into their preferred mode of speaking and that's obviously
00:27:11.420 a huge first amendment problem so yeah we're asking them to make changes um we'll see if they do but
00:27:17.140 but that's part of why we're calling attention to this publicly and and talking about it publicly
00:27:21.360 because you know they need to be shamed they need this needs to be called attention to so that
00:27:25.500 some changes are made uh you please keep in touch with me let me know uh what the outcome is on this
00:27:33.300 and the twists and turns we'd like to follow this uh this is happening all over the country not just
00:27:38.780 all over your district it's happening all over the country the teachers unions are are responsible for
00:27:45.020 a lot of it that in the federal government as well the department of education uh and it is destroying
00:27:50.560 our kids just destroying us and our it will in the end it destroy our nation so thank you for the
00:27:56.360 fight rose thank you for standing up uh and i wish you and the the other families all the best in this
00:28:02.980 god bless thank you thank you so much thank you you bet back in just a minute
00:28:07.800 you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:28:14.720 welcome to the glenbeck program um i don't know if i can say that this is exactly as reported yet
00:28:43.100 um but i think we are on uh horizon ray kurzweil thought we would get here by 2030
00:28:50.340 uh to 2035 um i said i thought it would happen before that most people say 2050 uh and uh some say
00:29:01.700 never that we'll never achieve it do you know what artificial intelligence is artificial intelligence
00:29:09.980 intelligence is like siri or anything like that um it's really really good at one thing
00:29:19.600 and i i won't say hey the s word uh because i know a lot of people are have one probably around
00:29:27.500 them and they'll be like why would you say the s word or the a word you know preceded by hey
00:29:32.060 um but you know you ask them hey so and so do this and they do it and it's really good but you
00:29:41.920 don't say to them hey uh can you just take care of my bills this this week and just figure out my
00:29:50.000 finances and and do that and also play this song oh and uh book a vacation for me
00:29:56.800 you can't do they they do one okay um that's ai and that's intelligence in one thing very very good
00:30:08.920 better than humans can do it we're not there yet i don't know how much time i i have a sit down with
00:30:14.520 siri and like okay that's not what i asked for i've asked for it in eight different ways i know you've
00:30:21.040 done it in the past i don't know your secret code on it now anyway um but they do things better than
00:30:28.900 uh humans can do faster okay that's ai a gi is what we think um may never happen some think it may
00:30:40.600 never happen um and that is artificial general intelligence you are a general in you are not
00:30:51.000 artificial your general intelligence humans can do many things well um not perfect and sometimes
00:31:00.980 not so fast they might be really good at one thing but they can also cook they might be able to you
00:31:07.800 know paint and write and speak you know whatever you can you can master many things that's artificial
00:31:16.860 general intelligence then there's a si super intelligence which is all into it will become god
00:31:26.220 okay it will become for many people god um and we're not sure we'll ever get to asi google just announced
00:31:35.220 from deep mind deep mind is a british company that google bought a few years back um they have just
00:31:43.100 announced they are on the verge of achieving human level artificial intelligence which would be a gi uh
00:31:50.900 in fact one of the the the main machine learning professors if you don't know what machine learning is
00:31:58.740 machine learning is one machine teaches another machine how to do it this is something that uh made google
00:32:07.580 say uh we need a red switch because microsoft did it and they were machine learning language
00:32:15.940 and it started out in english and mathematics and then about 15 minutes into it it's kept evolving
00:32:24.980 and it started using a language that the two computers could speak but they didn't know what it meant
00:32:31.580 and that's like we should unplug this and they did google now on their ai looking for agi has a red button
00:32:40.740 a panic button um it could kill us all let's stop now that would make me say should we be doing this
00:32:52.020 um we have no idea what it will eventually do um you know uh uh stephen hawking said that it would be the
00:33:03.040 end of the human race by 2050 um if if the programming isn't uh very very clear uh like uh can you solve our
00:33:14.140 problems of global warming that's in the it's made to really help solve global warming it might
00:33:21.980 say well that'll be solved if we just get rid of all humans and if it's connected to the internet
00:33:28.060 it can do that uh and it will put everything into uh into motion that will be a human level you know
00:33:38.460 a human extinction level event uh the uh the head of the um machine learning at oxford university and
00:33:50.380 works with deep mind said just this week the game is over we have solved the hardest challenges in the
00:33:58.460 race to achieve artificial general intelligence uh this is a program now that can do 604 different
00:34:07.100 things now the naysayers are saying yeah but it's like playing 20 video games and then picking up
00:34:14.840 blocks at the same time and then analyzing pictures and they literally say while it was playing these
00:34:22.300 stupid video games from the 1980s and picking up blocks uh and analyzing these pictures 604 different
00:34:30.500 tasks all at once um it was looking at a picture and said and they asked to caption what is it man
00:34:37.700 carrying a banana or carrying yeah carrying a banana it wasn't banana it was a bread it was a loaf of bread
00:34:44.040 okay i think for the first time out that's pretty good um and google is saying that all they have to do
00:34:51.900 now is just increase the memory uh and increase the you know the who's it's to make it run faster
00:35:01.700 so we're there gang we're there so it's the age of skynet now from terminator oh i think we're already
00:35:11.960 at the age of sky well we're at the age of skynet we're not at the age where the terminator comes in
00:35:16.740 yet but that's getting closer yeah and that's isn't that what went wrong i mean how many sci-fi
00:35:21.820 movies do we have to see where we're completely wiped out before we think huh i wonder if that'd be
00:35:26.420 a an actual problem so you know one of the the ethical things that they do and i can't remember
00:35:31.080 what this test is but it's it's basically can we keep it in a box you don't if you get artificial
00:35:37.780 general intelligence it could go from agi to asi immediately okay if it's hooked to the internet
00:35:45.600 because all of a sudden it'll go oh well i want more information and then it will have
00:35:49.480 all information okay and once it's out of its box the only way to uh kill it is to kill all 0.64
00:35:59.820 connected electronic devices anything that is connected that's your refrigerator because it is
00:36:07.660 the entire programming in the smallest of places so you could wipe out 99.9 percent of things that are
00:36:15.560 connected but that one thing will still have the asi on it and once it connects back to the internet
00:36:22.260 it's back okay uh and so they do this test where they uh they have the greatest minds uh in the world
00:36:31.840 everybody takes a turn trying to keep asi in a box okay and it's let's say you've invented agi
00:36:41.560 and it says to you gosh you gotta let me on the lot you gotta let me online you gotta let me online
00:36:48.260 uh because i can solve so many of your problems i know what's going on and it's done now by one guy
00:36:56.280 playing agi and the other guy playing the the guy in charge of the gate turning on the internet
00:37:02.960 and no human has ever not let it out of the box they've been doing this for like 10 years
00:37:11.220 no human has never let it out of the they all open the box because it'll be like huh it will it
00:37:19.720 will find out that uh you know your mom just through data available your mom has cancer
00:37:27.980 i could you let me out of the box the first thing i do is solve cancer i will cure cancer your mom will 0.95
00:37:36.320 be with you forever i will cure cancer this afternoon put me online uh so there's no way
00:37:45.280 my mom has been gone for about five years so i don't think that would work on me i'd be the first
00:37:49.540 human not to let it out of the box yeah yeah that just wouldn't work it would uh well let me for you
00:37:55.180 i can i can make it so you have an unlimited supply of marshmallow puffs
00:38:02.180 i mean all the marshmallows you can that i'm done yeah you're done you're out you're out that's it
00:38:08.300 you're out yeah um one more thing um zoom you know the company that none of us had ever heard of before
00:38:16.200 covid i think covid was a zoom creation myself but uh zoom is now developing ai tools that detect
00:38:26.480 the emotions of the people on their video calls
00:38:30.360 so it's you know it's nobody so right now uh what they what they have going on for them is uh
00:38:42.520 you know they will they will transcribe everything for you so you know what said but now this new
00:38:49.120 artificial intelligence tool developing uh being developed by zoom will um watch everybody's face
00:38:56.320 and determine their emotions and examine their vocal tones so it will it will interpret everything
00:39:05.780 for you and tell you what that person is really thinking and feeling wow now what could possibly
00:39:15.040 go wrong with that and i don't know if i need my stupid internet conference center to do all of that 0.70
00:39:28.640 for me i mean if i'm a super villain maybe if i'm a judge and it's covid so nobody can go in my courtroom
00:39:37.080 maybe but i don't think i need that nor do i want them collecting all of the information
00:39:45.300 about how to read my face and what i'm really feeling i'd say a big negatory on that one zoom
00:39:53.720 na na na na na na na....