Could the entire Biden administration, his presidency, could be null and void because of a little hiccup in the supply chain between China and the U.S. supply chain? Glenn explains what could happen if that happens.
00:00:43.920Especially when the steak comes from good ranchers or the hamburger or the fish.
00:00:47.700Because with good ranchers, you know, the meat you're eating was born, raised, and harvested right here in the United States by American farmers and ranchers.
00:07:36.040And everybody, even if you voted for him and liked him, you should be able to admit to yourself, at least, the guy got rich by selling out his country.
00:07:46.700And he strapped my kids, your kids, to a debt they're never going to climb out from under, $34 trillion and counting.
00:07:58.440And that money was borrowed from China or enemies who would love to see us crumble.
00:08:05.740And because he did it all on short-term loans, we are now having to re-up all of those loans at interest rates that are going to choke us to death.
00:08:16.700And if they didn't borrow the money, they just printed it.
00:08:58.880And it's not something that we should all go, oh, well, maybe we can work the system and say, none of that applied because of the auto pen.
00:09:05.820If this story actually holds, that says someone else was running the show.
00:20:53.400And that makes April 15th not our patriotic duty, but since they're going to throw us in jail and knock down our door with guys with guns, every time you write that tax check, I think it's armed robbery at this point.
00:21:05.360And then they borrow all the money that they can't.
00:21:09.860They can't live on the biggest windfall of taxes the country has ever seen.
00:21:15.760We have more money coming in than ever before.
00:26:42.240The problem, Glenn, among other factors, is that when you keep on extending a so-called temporary restraining order,
00:26:48.200at some point it ceases to be temporary.
00:26:50.120At some point it actually takes on the effect of one of these so-called nationwide injunctions,
00:26:54.860whatever you want to call it, whatever you want to self-style it in order to try to evade SCOTUS review there.
00:27:01.400But Samolito and the Justice Defending, they get it totally right there.
00:27:05.280You know, I think a situation like this, Glenn, some of the other cases that we've seen from the judicial resistance,
00:27:10.920which when I'm feeling a little less charitable, I like to call it actually the judicial insurrection,
00:27:15.680I think that they're really just challenging the fundamental separation of powers itself.
00:27:20.900I mean, you really have to look at this at a fundamental Article I, Article II, Article III type of situation there.
00:27:27.000The notion that a single district court judge, whether it's in Washington, D.C., Hawaii, Seattle, Washington, New Hampshire, whatever,
00:27:33.700the notion that one judge could bring the entire executive branch to a halt when it comes to bread and butter discretionary funding decisions there.
00:27:42.780I mean, this is the kind of thing that would have struck Thomas Jefferson back when he was writing this 1804 letter to Abigail Adams, John Adams' wife.
00:27:50.080He basically said that to give judges this kind of power would bring the judiciary into the realm of a despotic branch.
00:27:56.960Abraham Lincoln, my hero of all heroes in American history, viewed the Supreme Court and the judiciary very similarly there.
00:28:03.380So we're really kind of heading off, Glenn, to an actual constitutional crisis.
00:28:07.400The media actually has that largely crest.
00:28:09.560Unfortunately, they are pointing in the wrong direction.
00:28:11.800They're plaguing that constitutional crisis on Trump.
00:28:14.160But the real constitutional crisis, Glenn, is coming from these lower court judicial activists, frankly, these judicial insurrectionists.
00:28:19.940Okay, let's say that because I think this is what America is kind of hearing.
00:28:26.620Let's say this is the actual argument that Congress said you got to spend the money.
00:28:40.420And I don't think we should spend this money.
00:28:43.580And the judge said, you know, you can't even stop and take a breath and look at that.
00:28:48.620And so, you know, I was thinking about it yesterday.
00:28:51.360If my wife and I approved and allotted a bunch of money and then told my brother, assigned him, you know, play the role of the president in this case, and said to my brother, you know what?
00:29:01.780I need you to pay the tuition of the school for my kids.
00:29:34.060So, I don't think you're missing anything.
00:29:38.660What I will say is that, kind of going to the constitutional merits here, getting out of the procedural weeds of the temporary restraining order type stuff, the actual constitutional argument that I think John Roberts, namely Coney Barrett, are probably sympathetic to, gets to this debate over what the lawyers call presidential impoundment.
00:29:58.720So, impoundment of federal funds, which is the idea, which is kind of what you're getting at in your hypothetical, that even though a different body has authorized funding there, then the actual party responsible for literally dispersing the fund can then make a decision as to whether or not this is going to its best use.
00:30:14.820So, this is called impoundment of congressionally authorized funds.
00:30:18.960It actually has a long and illustrious pedigree.
00:30:21.440It was actually Thomas Jefferson, believe it or not, who was the first president to impound the congressionally authorized funds back around 1801, if I have the year correctly there.
00:30:30.760Richard Nixon was viewed by some in Congress at the time as abusing the impoundment privilege, which is why Congress passed a statute called the Impoundment Control Act, which has not been constitutionally challenged.
00:30:42.340That's kind of just been left as the law for the better part of a half century now.
00:30:47.060But this is a longstanding constitutional debate.
00:30:49.900And to my knowledge, Glenn, I don't think the court has ever directly ruled, actually, one way or the other, as to whether presidential impoundment of funds does run afoul of the Constitution or not.
00:30:59.180I personally think it makes a lot of sense, actually, for the very reasons that you just kind of outlined in your hypothetical about the school funding.
00:31:05.560But that's just one of many constitutional issues, frankly, that this court is set to rule on, I would suspect, over the next couple of years, along with birthright citizenship, nationwide injunctions.
00:31:14.620There's no shortage of high-profile constitutional issues headed the Supreme Court's way, I think.
00:31:18.920So I want to ask you about two judges, one of which I don't understand, and the other one I don't think America understands.
00:31:52.960So you're totally right about Judge Amir Ali.
00:31:55.200So he was a left-wing activist litigator as recently as like five months ago.
00:32:00.160Glenn, he didn't resume his seat on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia until the lame duck session of Congress.
00:32:06.460He was part of the lame duck deals that were being made by Mitch McConnell and Chuck Schumer.
00:32:11.500He literally assumed office on November 22nd, if I have the date right there.
00:32:16.000And this is someone who you're totally right.
00:32:17.880He was very outspoken publicly in his prejudicial life as a left-wing litigator.
00:32:23.820He was saying that the Roberts Court is tyrannical and he wants to undermine the legitimacy of it.
00:32:28.360So, I mean, what a Banana Republic-type situation that this is the guy who is now telling the executive branch that you cannot choose whether or not to disperse this $2 billion in extraordinarily dubious funding there.
00:32:41.860So, I mean, that makes America look fundamentally unserious, frankly, the fact that this is the guy who's doing that.
00:32:52.680So, Amy Coney Barrett is a tremendous disappointment.
00:32:56.540I don't think that we should mentor her to this point there.
00:32:58.880There are more than enough data points to indicate that she does not have the fortitude, the spine, the courage of her convictions.
00:33:06.520I mean, there's all sorts of things that you can say to try to kind of apologize for her.
00:33:09.900But at some point, you kind of have to just bluntly assess where we are.
00:33:13.380And she's heading the way of David Souter.
00:33:15.780I'm not going to say that she's not there yet.
00:33:18.880I mean, she still rules the correct way in any number of high-profile cases, the affirmative action case, obviously the Dobbs abortion case that overturned Roe v. Wade.
00:33:27.060But she is clearly the weakest link of the three Trump nominees.
00:33:31.640Glenn, I have one kind of overarching take on this, which is, in hindsight, Amy Coney Barrett was not a particularly impressive Supreme Court nominee in the first place there.
00:33:42.140She was somewhat of a middling academic in Notre Dame.
00:33:44.960She was not a particularly prolific academic.
00:33:46.680She was nominated to the Seventh Circuit because, you know, young, affable, beautiful family, former Scalia clerk, and so forth there.
00:33:53.700But if you go back and listen to her Seventh Circuit confirmation hearing there, I think what happened, Glenn, do you remember that infamous exchange with Dianne Feinstein, the late senator from California, where she says to Amy Coney Barrett, the dogma lives loudly within you?
00:34:07.540It was a disgusting thing, dripping with anti-Catholic bigotry and just kind of anti-religious sentiment in general there.
00:34:14.580But I think what happened, Glenn, my true sense on this, is that we essentially allowed Dianne Feinstein to make Amy Coney Barrett a folk hero.
00:34:22.240And she didn't necessarily deserve that status, really.
00:34:24.640But that's ultimately what I think led the powers that be to Tapper to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg after Ginsburg passed away in the waning months of the Trump presidency in September 2020.
00:34:36.480So my upshot is we can't do this again.
00:34:40.340We cannot let people like Dianne Feinstein essentially take our nominees and then vault them off the food chain so that they're in a position there.
00:34:48.980No, we have to make sure that we are doing the homework there.
00:34:53.060Have you actually ruled on all of the relevant cases, not just regulatory, economic, administrative state issues?
00:34:59.700Have you actually ruled on the civilizational cases, the cultural cases there?
00:35:03.500Have you actually called out wokeism, DEI, and all the various manifestations of cultural Marxism from your judicial chambers there?
00:35:10.360Are you going to get there and are you going to demonstrate an eagerness to overturn flawed precedent and not looking for all of these various procedural quirks to avoid ruling on the merits,
00:35:20.420whether it's punting on Article 3 standing grounds, which Amy Coney Barrett did last year in the Murphy v. Missouri case, the massive big tech free speech case there?
00:35:29.240What is your view of stare decisis when it comes to precedent?
00:35:32.120Are you going to be a chicken when it comes to the possibility of overturning a flawed 30, 50, 70-year-old precedent there?
00:35:39.200I mean, these are the kind of things that we have to do a much better job of vetting for next time there because Barrett quickly really is turning into a disappointment there.
00:35:46.820And I'm sick of people apologizing for her.
00:35:49.280At this point, she's really going to have to turn around or I think we're otherwise in a pretty bad state.
00:35:53.940Yeah, again, I've got so many questions on that.
00:35:56.960I mean, I don't know why it always happens in that direction and never the other way.
00:36:00.420But let me ask you, let me ask you this.
00:36:43.080So it's Sam Alito and Clarence Thomas are the two most likely to resign over the next few years there.
00:36:49.620But there also are two strongest justices.
00:36:51.420I do think that there is probably a slightly higher than 50, 50 chance that Sam Alito resigns over the next couple of years.
00:36:58.060If I had to guess, I think he's slightly more likely than than Justice Thomas.
00:37:02.120But Sam Alito is an absolute rock star.
00:37:04.260So that's I mean, that only kind of elevates the stakes and makes it makes us really make sure that we have to pick someone rock solid to replace him there.
00:37:11.900I mean, I'll tell you, I'll tell you, Glenn, in my opinion, who the replacement for the next justice should be.
00:37:17.960I'm biased, but I think it should be it should be my former boss.
00:37:20.780It's right there in North Texas, Judge James C.
00:37:23.620Ho of the U.S. Court Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
00:37:25.480I was one of his first four law clerks.
00:37:31.040We literally started that chambers in Dallas, Texas back in 2018.
00:37:37.220That's who I would personally advise the president to pick to fill the next seat, whether it comes from Justice Alito, Justice Thomas or someone else there.
00:37:44.280But again, we have to make sure we do better than we did the first time around, because even Kavanaugh and Gorsuch, they're they're they're better than Barrett.
00:37:51.920But frankly, none of these three guys are on the same level as Clarence Thomas or Sam Alito.
00:37:55.720What a chance that Mike Lee is ever nominated.
00:38:00.940I actually was a sentientary committee law clerk for Mike Lee over a decade ago after my first year of law school, working mostly on constitutional and antitrust issues.
00:38:11.940But I think I think there's decent odds.
00:38:14.840I mean, he's very close, certainly to President Trump these days, much closer than he was maybe, you know, five, 10 years ago or so there.
00:38:20.860I think it's ultimately less likely these days, Glenn, that a U.S. senator gets tapped for a SCOTUS seat simply just because partisan politics these days are what they are.
00:38:30.080But if you're going to choose anyone from the Senate, you know, certainly him or Ted Cruz would be fantastic choices.
00:39:22.280But buying and selling a home is a complicated thing, partly because it's taking place in a market that is affected by a thousand different things all at once.
00:39:29.820So if you're about to dip your toe into the rushing river, may I suggest you consider getting somebody who's like who's like a really, really good real estate agent.
00:39:38.020And also their eyes didn't glaze over when I was reading that list of stuff that just would bore the snot out of me for decades.
00:39:45.040One who knows how the market works and how the process itself works like the back of his or her hand.
00:39:50.880I started a business over a decade ago called Real Estate Agents I Trust, and the job is to set you up with the best real estate agent in your area.
00:39:58.900I didn't know how to vet these people myself until I started working with what The Wall Street Journal said was the 500 best real estate agents in the country.
00:40:07.880And they all had certain things in common.
00:40:10.220And all we did was like, hey, connect the dots here.
00:40:13.480That's what we got to find the real estate agents that have those dots in their life.
00:40:18.460And that's what we found for you, and that's what we'll recommend to you.
00:43:05.380There are no extra fees, which means it's perfect for small budgets or for anybody who wants to build up a stockpile of Second Amendment tools without having to spend a bunch of money up front.
00:43:16.100It is the easiest way to stay prepared without the hassle.
00:45:33.620Let me answer some basic questions on what happened, what it means to you, who's behind it, what we have to do, and the hope and the warning of what happens if we just shrug our shoulders on this one, too.
00:46:20.800The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews brings people of goodwill together to support Israel and the Jewish communities in need.
00:46:28.500Look, I want Israel to fight their own battles.
00:46:30.340I'm not going to fight any of them for them.
00:46:35.500But when it comes to standing up for people, the IFCJ has delivered hope and food to the hungry and shelter for the homeless and safety for those who are fleeing persecution.
00:46:46.600This is Christians and Jews standing together, fulfilling God's promise to bless all those who bless Israel.
00:46:53.840Give a gift to bless Israel and our people.
00:47:36.540So right around that same time, April 2024, the Biden-Harris administration, via the EPA, handed over $7 billion of your money to a ghost called the United Climate Fund.
00:47:54.880Now, $7 billion, that's not the real story.
00:47:59.040This was all part of a $20 billion jackpot from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
00:48:05.840That was tacked in and tucked in so you couldn't really find it in the so-called Inflation Reduction Act that had nothing to do with reducing inflation.
00:50:09.420Stacey Abrams, this power forward communities.
00:50:12.000If you thought the other one was a sham, she had only raised a hundred dollars, a hundred dollars, not a hundred thousand, a hundred dollars.
00:50:22.680You could get that from the guy who's begging on the street.
00:50:25.380If you want to if you want to rob him, I'll bet you if he spends a couple of days just at a street corner, he's got a hundred bucks, maybe even a day.
00:50:34.500That's all she could raise for her own organization.
00:50:37.440And then suddenly Biden comes in and is like, you know, it is two billion dollars.
01:25:53.680Shadows hide. Feel the dark on every side. Stand your ground when times get dark. Gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
01:26:04.720The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:26:14.680You know, everybody can tell you what happened yesterday. Very few people can tell you what's coming tomorrow.
01:26:22.220Uh, and occasionally I've had that ability and I've been telling you about AI for about 30 years and been warning and warning and warning.
01:26:30.000Uh, I can't believe I'm at this day today because today's the day that I'm actually going to take the next step, uh, and tell you what's coming next.
01:26:40.980Um, we're going to do that and I'm going to, I'm going to play some because really kid rock and I in the podcast, we talked a little bit about AI and I think it's important for you to hear that exchange.
01:26:53.400We'll go there in 60 seconds. Stand by one minute. You're sitting at the breakfast table, just enjoying a few minutes of peace before the day starts.
01:27:00.680The next minute you start getting notifications. Next thing you know, your bank accounts drain, your credit is toast.
01:27:06.060And, uh, some faceless crook is living large on your dime. What the hell just happened? That's identity theft. That's what it looks like. And that's what's happening every single day in this country.
01:27:17.420Well, it's not going to happen to me. Okay. It's only going to get worse.
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01:28:07.520All right. So I have a podcast with, um, Chris rock this week and we talk about everything. And I asked him about, uh, what's coming with AI.
01:28:16.680And he's really, uh, he's very good at understanding AI and he has a really different look. Um, and I think a very healthy look at AI. Let me play that cut for you here real quick.
01:28:28.860I figured I actually met with a young man that, um, and had some other prominent musicians and record heads to have an off the record conversation about AI and music.
01:28:37.680And the app's called Suno and it's bananas. Cause it's pretty dang good. And, um, for writing music for it produces music. See what Spotify is doing is a lot of their, you know, they have to pay money every time they play one of our songs.
01:28:51.040They're creating tons of, you put on a beach, a beach playlist. It has a hundred songs. 20 of those songs might be by some artists you never heard of. Cause AI created it. They don't got to pay anybody.
01:29:01.180Wow. But are they using our stuff to make it? Yeah. But the way I looked at it is I looked at like Napster when that started and I was like, what's going on?
01:29:09.820And you know, all the artists were up in arms and the record companies wanted us to get behind, you know, they're stealing, they're pirating music. And I'm like, hold on.
01:29:17.740Are they stealing from the record companies? Like stealing from everybody. I'm like, huh, good. I care less. I make all my money live.
01:29:25.020But now with, with AI, I'm like, so I'm asking this guy and I'm like, so I can give you some acapellas of my vocals and you can model my voice and then you can put it on your system.
01:29:35.760And however many people want to write songs for me with my voice can write them. He's like, yep. I'm like, that's kind of cool.
01:29:41.760So I could have like a hundred thousand people writing. Now there's going to be some funny ones in there. Like, you know, Kid Rock, Joe Biden, like, I get it. I'll laugh at those.
01:29:49.060But so I get, let's say I got a million people writing songs for me. If one of those person nails it and they come up with this, you know, with this life changing song.
01:29:57.300It's great. I go play it live. Yeah. I'm like, I don't, I'm not seeing the evil in here yet. You know, the record companies and managers get all the artists up in arms about, we're not going to stop it. I know that much.
01:30:13.140So it's like, let's figure out how we use it as a new tool. The best, like anything else in life.
01:30:17.640That is the most important and astute statement I have heard. You're not going to stop it. So let's figure out how to use it.
01:30:30.900I'm so excited to take this next step with you because I've waited 30 years. I've been trying to ring the bell on AI and we've missed so many opportunities, but this is, this is kind of the last call of being ahead of things right now.
01:30:44.900We are right at the edge of something just absolutely game changing. And I've been trying to prepare you for this moment. And if you're not prepared, you don't really understand. That's okay. That's okay. I'm going to show you this, this hour, how you in your life should be viewing this and, and using it. Okay.
01:31:04.900Um, artificial intelligence, AI, it is not Siri. It's not, that's not it. We are on the verge of, uh, a GI artificial general intelligence. And beyond that is artificial super intelligence.
01:31:20.900That's that's, that's, that's, you know, that's the big ball of wax. And you've heard me talk for 30 years now about how AI is a tool that will think faster than you process more data than you could in a lifetime.
01:31:35.060And soon with ASI, it will outsmart every human mind that has ever lived combined. It will be the processing power of a, of a supercomputer that would literally be the size of planet earth. Okay.
01:31:54.620A lot of deep think there. And we've talked about the dangers of it. A machine so powerful, it could become a God of our own making and people will look at it as a God very soon. Uh, it's a force that might strip away what it means to be human. If we haven't thought about those things. I've also told you about the miracles that it could bring in ways that we never even thought, can you cure cancer? Sure. But why would I ready for this one?
01:32:21.320Why not just change the DNA of humans? So it doesn't cancer doesn't hurt the human body. Oh, okay. I don't know what even the ethics or ramifications of that are, but that's coming solutions that man has wrestled with for centuries, a world where scarcity could just be gone. Hunger could be gone.
01:32:44.680You've, you've, you've learned this from me, hopefully, or heard me yapping about it and didn't think it really applied to you, but this, the moment that I've been pointing to you at and saying, look, it's coming, it's coming. It's no longer on the horizon. We're here.
01:33:01.480March 7th, 2025, not just a date. Hopefully it's the day that you realize we've been pulled into what is called the event horizon of a technological singularity. What the hell is that? Let me, let me explain, try to do it. So you really can follow this because you're going to hear terms over the next couple of years, you know, kind of like, uh, when they started defining new pronouns and you're like, what the hell was that? And a new one came out every day.
01:33:30.780We're going to go through that, but this time it's really important that you understand these things. So terms that most people don't know, AGI, artificial general intelligence, ASI, super intelligence. The event horizon is a term that's usually used to describe the edge of a black hole. Okay. And a black hole has so much gravity, it bends light. Nothing can escape the black hole, right?
01:33:54.920Think of yourself in a boat. Think of yourself in a boat. You're, you know, just on this river. And then all of a sudden you start to hear a roar of something and you're like, oh, gee, that sounds like the falls. And you start to try to row the other direction, but it, the current is so strong now that it just pulls you over and there's no way to escape it because it's too late.
01:34:14.340That's what this is. Okay. In this, in this particular usage for AI, what it means is that you're at the point where we can't escape the grip, the grip of super intelligence because it is coming.
01:34:30.280Like the black hole, you're in its grip now, and it is eventually going to pull you into the singularity, the black hole. Once you cross the threshold, you can't escape it. And the black hole will crush everything you knew about life, physics, everything. Life as you know it.
01:34:52.280Once you cross the event horizon and you're in the singularity, it's called spaghettification. Everything is just pulled and stretched and everything breaks down.
01:35:05.140That is the way they're describing now this new technology. And we're on the edge of it and we can't turn the boat around.
01:35:15.180So we have human as humans have never, ever been here ever. I mean, maybe, I mean, there are some people who are like now saying, you know, maybe 10,000 years ago, because we can't figure out how the pyramids were built.
01:35:29.980Maybe 10,000 years ago, humans had this technology and they're completely unknown because this technology just destroyed them and wiped them all out.
01:35:40.300And they left behind the pyramids and the Egyptians were like, yeah, that's a tomb we built overnight.
01:35:47.240You know, we don't know. I mean, it could be, may not be, but it could be that.
01:35:51.700And this isn't science fiction anymore. You're living in it.
01:35:56.540And Grok3 or ChatGPT or any of these things, that's in your hand right now.
01:36:05.520And it is important for you to understand it and use it.
01:36:10.360This is a system that can analyze data. It can write reports for you. It can generate ideas.
01:36:15.520It can predict the outcomes with a precision that will rival the best human experts.
01:36:21.940And I'm going to show you how to use this and just start acquainting it, acquainting yourself, whether I don't care what you do, you're retired, you're a CEO, you're a mom, whatever it is, I'll show you how you should start thinking about this and using it here in the next few minutes.
01:36:38.420But here's the reason why I think it's really important to start here today is because I'm hearing some pushback from my good friends, my coworkers, anybody who has heard my warnings over the years.
01:36:52.440They're all like, wait a minute, you said this was bad. Yes, yes, it is.
01:38:06.680We have to ask those cells our questions.
01:38:09.600You know, and this is the first of the seismic shifts that I told you for the last 30 years would come.
01:38:16.940I mean, 30 years ago, I started warning, there's going to be a time when even the person at the top of their craft, doctors, lawyers, artists, engineers, me, will find themselves out of a job.
01:38:31.700You know, you just, it just, all of a sudden it would just be over.
01:38:38.580It's really important that you understand the only ones that have a chance of really kind of surviving are the ones who have used it, knows, knows exactly what it can do.
01:38:48.560Know its dangers, have worked out the ethics in their own mind, and then have kept so nimble they can adapt to whatever comes.
01:38:59.540If you calcify in your thinking, it's over.
01:39:47.240I don't know when the next wave will hit.
01:39:50.260But in 18 months, this is going to be so undeniably clear to everyone, everyone around you.
01:39:57.200And everyone around you who haven't paid attention, hasn't done the work I'm going to ask you to do beginning today, they're going to be so lost.
01:40:06.280They're going to be so absolutely lost.
01:40:14.600And everyone is going to be scrambling to catch up.
01:40:17.480It will be too late at that point because you're either going to be the tool, not the master, or you're going to be the master.
01:40:28.540You're either going to be dragged into this black hole unknowingly and just spaghettification happens to you and your life and your family and your humanity.
01:40:39.900Or you will lead and say, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
01:40:46.300This is the point where I hit the ejector button and I'm like, I'm out.
01:41:59.180When, if I put an implant in me and I begin to have the internet in my head and I'm going to the internet and the internet is coming into my head and it's telling me things.
01:42:10.920But they're just kind of like the thinking of my, I can't recognize it.
01:50:53.780So you don't have to be a tech genius.
01:50:55.800All you have to have is curiosity, discipline, and the ability to learn how to prompt it, how to ask it questions.
01:51:04.940So this weekend, I want you to start with something like Grok3, okay, or any tool like it, but ask it questions that matter to you that you don't think it could answer, okay?
01:51:18.140If you're a CEO of a company, ask it to analyze your competitor's strategies based on public data or forecast market trends with the latest numbers and how your company can survive that.
01:58:02.160Show me the sources so you can go back and look it up yourself to make sure.
01:58:06.420This is why if you don't do these things, and these are the things a lot of your friends and a lot of your coworkers and everybody else, these are the things they're never going to do.
01:58:16.820They're going to see AI and they're going to be like, I can write my report.
01:58:21.140Instead of taking all weekend, I can write it in five minutes and I'm off to the golf course and I don't have to work.
01:58:49.740What's the most efficient way to streamline my work day?
01:58:53.400What am I missing at work that would change everything for me?
01:58:57.820How can I improve my skills in insert whatever field or question you want?
01:59:02.280What's the future look like for my job?
01:59:06.920If I want my job to continue in three to five years and you just showed me my future isn't real bright, what do I do right now that would help improve my chances of my job remaining?
01:59:39.040I mean, I do it, but it's not real intentional.
01:59:41.100Go on Grok 3 this weekend and say, I want to learn something new every day.
01:59:47.880I want to learn something and grow in knowledge and wisdom and ethics on this subject.
01:59:54.500Can you create an unbiased curriculum that gives me the truth with the sources, both sides if it needs to be, and present a five-minute lesson to me every day?
02:00:48.440Really important, the power comes from you.
02:00:52.180It takes the drudgery and the grunt work out of hours of research or data crunching or repetitive tasks, and it leaves you then free to create, to think, and to lead.
02:01:43.040And you can be an early adopter this time, which I really, really urge you to do because you will help define the ethics and the boundaries of this.
02:01:54.300If you don't, it'll all go to, have you seen Unhinged?
02:04:28.240Hey, thanks so much for listening this week.
02:04:43.300Thank you for sharing your time, uh, with me.
02:04:45.560I know your time is valuable and, uh, I hope we don't ever waste it and we make your, your drive in or wherever you are listening to the podcast.
02:04:54.120We just hope that, uh, we don't ever waste your time.