'Turning Back To Revolution?' - 4⧸3⧸18
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 53 minutes
Words per Minute
160.07321
Summary
Glenn Beck explains why Google is spying on you and why we should all be worried about it. He also explains why you should turn off your smart phone, Alexa, and other smart gadgets that can spy on you.
Transcript
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The Blaze Radio Network, on demand, love, courage, truth, Glenn Beck.
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All right, let's face facts on a couple of things.
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First of all, Google is the ultimate big brother.
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Facebook is the current scapegoat for all of our paranoia about technology and privacy
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and data collection and social media, but that is really only coming to the masses because
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They're just the first megatech company to have something go wrong in a big way and have
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it go wrong in a big way revolving around politics, but they're not going to be the
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And if you think Facebook is bad, have you checked out what Google is up to?
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Google knows and stores an insane amount of information about you that you probably don't
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One of the most alarming is that it constantly tracks your location and travel times between
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Google logs your hobbies, your career, your gender, your age, your interests, your possible
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Google also knows all of your YouTube history, which means they have a pretty good idea of
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They also have your emails, even the deleted ones.
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The good news, if you can say there's good news in this situation, is that you can log
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into your Google account and view your personal data and tracking history, and supposedly even
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delete things you don't want King Google to keep in their filing cabinet in the dungeon.
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Just don't try to print it, because it will be several million pages on you.
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A spokesperson for Google told NBC that they should be aware of their online privacy choices
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And it's true, the burden is on us to track down what every tech company knows in stores
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The problem is, do you have time to do that for every app?
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The director of the nonprofit Center for Digital Democracy in Washington says Google has built
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a global commercial surveillance machine that rivals what the NSA or other intelligence agencies
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can gather in order to become the leading global digital advertising company.
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Some say handing over our personal data by the bucket load is the price we pay for free web services.
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The problem is, Google has the world over a barrel at this point.
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Did you say that they could detect your weight?
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That's not a good, uh, that's not something I want my Alexa yelling at me as I walk by.
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Uh, this, I, did you see the article in the New York Times about this, by the way?
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I, I had, I want to hear your opinion on this because this is, some of this is nuts.
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This is stuff that they've actually filed for because everyone has these scare, like,
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these weird visions of what might happen with this technology, right?
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This is, these are things that they've actually already filed for.
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Each company has, uh, this is talking about Google and, um, Amazon.
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Each company has filed patent applications, many of them still under consideration, that
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outright, uh, outline an array of possibilities for how devices like these could monitor what
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Because a lot of people are freaked out that it's recording you all the time.
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You have to say, uh, hey, Alexa, or hey, Google, or whatever it is.
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22% of Americans, by the way, now have these devices in their homes already.
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Remember in the, ah, I remember when I was young and naive and I said, I'll never give
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You don't, how, the government wants a collection of all of our fingerprints?
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Oh, yeah, but that saved you a good half second.
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We're giving all of the private conversations we have with our spouses and with our families.
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I can't believe the ancient times that used to be putting my fingerprint on this thing.
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And it saves me, you know, a good quarter of a second.
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Whatever you're about to tell me, I will tell you how it's going to be packaged and
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how it's going to be used and how you're going to say, I can't live without it.
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Amazon, in one set of patent applications, has a, quote, voice sniffer algorithm.
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It could be used on an array of devices like tablets, e-book readers.
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And it would analyze audio in real time when it hears words like love, bought, or dislike.
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A diagram included with the application illustrates how a phone call between two friends could
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result in one receiving an offer for the San Diego Zoo and the other seeing an ad for
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So let me tell you, let me, let me show you this.
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And this is, this is why this, I've got to write this book because it's been in my mind
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for a long time and I can explain it and it will all make sense to you when you see it
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It sounds crazy, but it won't be crazy in 10 years.
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Imagine you're having a conversation and you're just talking to a friend.
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They're over at your house and you're talking about dream vacations.
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You're talking about all of this and you say in there, but I can't afford it.
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Now, tomorrow morning, when you get up, Google says to you, you're not, it's not going to
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It's going to say, Hey, Stu, I heard you were talking to Glenn last night and you said you'd
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love to go to Hawaii, but you couldn't afford it.
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But I've been working tonight and I found some really great prices.
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You can use Airbnb, which you and Lisa would really like.
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And if you take this flight, you can actually save a ton of money.
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I've already checked your banking account and I know what bills you have, but I can find
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Like it's a good, it's actually someone with knowledge of your finances, knowledge of your
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preferences that is going to be convincing in an argument about, about it.
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So, so, so, so, so let me, let me go a step further.
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It's voted one of the best hotels in the world.
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It is always one or two in the Western hemisphere and it's the, the peninsula of Beverly Hills.
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I've stayed at the peninsula of Beverly Hills and it's worth every single penny that you pay for this
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If you are going, if you are going, um, you know, for you want to do anniversary or something
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and you want to go to a great hotel, um, there's no hotel I've ever stayed like this.
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What they do is they have a meeting and this is all documented.
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It's, it's in, it's in, uh, magazines, um, that you should read.
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Um, they have a meeting in the morning and they have it at like four or five o'clock in
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the morning and the general manager comes in and says, okay, here's who's coming in and
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They have complete records of everything that you ordered and did.
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And if you've stayed there before and you've stayed there more than once, they'll see if there was any
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For instance, I would go and I would have, I would have a bowl of strawberries, uh, before I would go to bed.
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I stayed there a couple of times and I ordered a bowl of strawberries before I went to bed as a
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Well, I left, I had meetings, I came back and lo and behold, without me ordering, there was a bowl
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And I'm like, oh my gosh, they remembered when I, when I went there one time with my family,
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they opened the door of the cab and my son was the first to get out.
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And my son, he, he'd been there once, once, one night, like two years before they opened up the
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door and the doorman, the guy who's just opening up the cab, he looked at Rafe and said, master
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They have to know because people come and they come with their mistresses.
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He was here last week, but he was here with his mistress this year or this week he's back,
00:10:04.840
So the last time you saw him was four months ago.
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I mean, it's insane, but this is what they do, you know, without electronics.
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If you're wealthy, people stay there because it's total service that you don't have to think.
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Google and Amazon are going to be able to do that for you for free in your own life.
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It will notice the patterns and it will just make those things happen for you.
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People are going to like that enough to not care about the privacy stuff.
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Everything, you know, we forget that we look and say, oh my gosh, you know, a big flat screen
00:10:52.680
Well, when the first flat screen TV came out, it was $10,000.
00:11:03.040
Services is what really sets the wealthy apart.
00:11:10.720
You don't have somebody that has, you know, that is, that is a Alice from, you know, the
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Brady Bunch that is ordering all the groceries and doing all the shopping and everything.
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So all of these things that were only had by the rich, they're now going down to everyone's
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If you can afford a Google Home, you now will be able to live the life of a very wealthy
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So Google also submitted a patent application and they own Nest as well.
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So they have lots of different ways to look at you.
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One application details how audio monitoring could help detect that a child is engaging in
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mischief by at first using speech patterns to identify a child's presence.
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Then it could try to sense movement while listening for whispers or silence and even
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a program, a smart speaker to provide a verbal warning to your child.
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This is again, this is what they're looking at.
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How many parents, every parent says, every parent says, hang on, I haven't heard the
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So you have Google doing that for you and then saying, hey, kids, stop whispering.
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And what parent we have all relinquished, our parent parental responsibility to the school,
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to the television, to society, what's better than this?
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This is something that's going to regulate our children and discipline our children and
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make sure so I can go do the things that I want to do.
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And also it's going to, I mean, there's a larger conversation to have here about what
00:13:07.840
Like where, are they going to care about government monitoring when they grow up after that life?
00:13:13.740
Well, are they going to, are they going to be shaped into saying things?
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For instance, if Google decides that something is politically incorrect, but you don't in
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a household believe that that's politically incorrect.
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Is Google going to shape your children and say, by the way, kids, most people, I know your
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family doesn't, but most people believe, do they believe Google, the all knowing, the all
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It talks about how they can detect your mood in your home with these patents.
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Eventually the same application outlines how a device could quote, quote, recognize a t-shirt
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on the floor of a user's closet and quote, bearing Will Smith's face and combine that with browser
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history that shows searches for Will Smith to provide a movie recommendation that displays.
00:14:07.420
If his new movie is playing at a theater near you, they're going to look in my closet.
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I want to gouge my own eyes out when I'm walking in my closet.
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But those eyes, if you take your phone and you haven't covered your microphone, you haven't
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covered your camera on your phone and you charge it next to your bed, there are eyes already
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in your bedroom and everything that you do and say while that phone is sitting next to
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It has the ability to be heard, has the ability to be seen.
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You have the ability to be the next star in the next famous knitting film or whatever it
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They did deny this, of course, Amazon and Google.
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They didn't deny that these are their real applications and these are the exact same
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things that they came up with to do with this technology, but they did say they filed
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a number of forward-looking patent applications that explore the full possibilities of new
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And Google wants you to know that all of their products are designed with user privacy in
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Yes, they're going to be looking at the t-shirts on the floor of your closet and combining
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By the way, did anybody notice that the Pentagon has decided to keep all of the Pentagon files
00:16:03.900
Oh, so the government is merging a little bit with Amazon and Google.
00:16:15.460
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00:17:01.340
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00:17:09.180
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00:17:14.480
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00:17:19.120
So he took this business and he saw, okay, so it's outdated now, but if I change it,
00:17:25.080
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00:17:43.300
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00:17:53.400
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00:17:56.700
You got to change it, do business with people who do business, right?
00:18:00.960
Do business with somebody who cares about the jobs in America and they care about making
00:18:05.720
a better product here in America and getting it to you.
00:18:28.460
I glossed over this one, but a separate application regarding a personalizing content for people
00:18:33.720
while respecting their privacy noted that voices could be used to determine a speaker's mood
00:18:38.140
using the, quote, volume of the user's voice, detected breathing rate, crying, and so forth.
00:18:45.440
Also, medical condition based on detected coughing, sneezing, and so forth.
00:18:52.600
Okay, so I think there's a couple of things here is the good spin on it.
00:18:57.300
If somebody is going to be in a domestic dispute, Google will be able to sense it.
00:19:03.940
They'll be able to hear it and they'll be able to dispatch police.
00:19:11.760
Why do you have to worry about doctors when it comes to gun control?
00:19:18.460
Because you'll be able to sense that there's somebody in the household who is depressed.
00:19:27.360
So dispatch police, make sure there are no arms in that house.
00:19:39.820
It's just going to make people not speak, right?
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Like, if you know these things are going on, you're not going to express depression or express worry.
00:19:51.720
You're just going to, like, if you're in public, for example, sometimes if your kids are being bad, people will get over here.
00:20:01.160
And then, like, muffle their voice and not yell at them.
00:20:03.580
Where at home, they're probably going, get over here right now.
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Like, they're going to change their behavior even in their own homes.
00:20:14.440
Gee, that sounds like a free state I want to live in.
00:20:43.160
It's super not hard to, you know, to protect yourself from Google and Facebook and Amazon.
00:21:02.080
Get the phone case that shields your phone's RF signals.
00:21:06.540
By the way, I just pointed out that it was said on Twitter.
00:21:11.500
So, your digital footprint is recorded now on Twitter.
00:21:15.820
And if you've ever Googled anything, they have millions of pages about you.
00:21:21.160
And I think, like, the point here is not, you know, I mean, I understand that's a good,
00:21:25.260
Like, you could obviously protect yourself from the Amazon or Google speaker by not buying it.
00:21:29.420
But the issue is, even if you do those things and you take all those steps, you're just playing at the fringes there.
00:21:37.440
It's like people who talk about global warming.
00:21:39.580
They're like, oh, well, what I do is I compost.
00:21:43.500
And when I, what I try to do is I bicycle once a week to the gym to make sure that I save my...
00:21:53.820
What you're doing is making yourself feel better.
00:21:56.840
And you're, of the very fringes of your environmental impact, you can say to your friends that you've done something.
00:22:05.820
Well, you could also say to yourself, some people do, I mean, my daughter composts.
00:22:09.820
And, and she, you know, she said, I know this isn't going to make a big difference, but it makes a big difference to me.
00:22:21.620
But the point is that it's the same thing with technology.
00:22:25.820
Yeah, you could not have a device in your home.
00:22:32.160
It is, it is watching and recording everything that you watch.
00:22:39.840
If you have a smart TV that also can get, you can also Skype.
00:22:49.460
So it's, it's looking at you and whatever you're doing in the living room.
00:23:01.800
I'm not saying that every smart TV is doing this.
00:23:13.920
How many conversations have you had that were sensitive between you and your wife or, you
00:23:19.520
know, you and your lover or whatever it is sensitive.
00:23:31.100
Um, you know, you think about really to get off of this now, and this is why this is
00:23:35.640
a battle that's, I don't know that it's winnable at all.
00:23:38.620
A, this improves your life quite a bit in every normal circumstance.
00:23:42.260
Um, and B, to get off of it at this point, your Unabomber Shaq style life is what you're
00:23:56.480
Because usually that's the word that follows those two other words.
00:23:58.760
No, no, no, um, I am, I'm, I, I have to get a little further away from something that
00:24:07.700
is currently ongoing in my life, in my household.
00:24:15.620
And when I talk to you about it, um, you will understand, uh, do not do not, uh, think
00:24:26.900
that the, the PlayStation or Xbox is safe at all.
00:24:41.300
It is, um, more dangerous than you can possibly imagine.
00:24:54.740
I have everything that the average person does not have.
00:25:05.880
And when I give you the full story, you will understand.
00:25:12.920
You're saying for your kids or you're saying it all.
00:25:15.980
I'm saying definitely for your kids, but in your, in, in your home as well.
00:25:36.920
Uh, you know, but we, we know, get it out of your house.
00:25:43.860
Uh, there, uh, I can't tell you anything right now.
00:26:05.920
Um, we're talking about this more tonight, uh, on the blaze TV.
00:26:11.220
Um, any, any mobile device, uh, make sure you, you tune in tonight.
00:26:16.940
It's tough, but it's a tough, like even you as someone who is legitimately has a, you know,
00:26:21.520
real situation and you've been something you've been hinting at for a while.
00:26:31.160
So do you know anybody who is more secure than me?
00:26:35.780
And this is, this goes back to what we're talking about.
00:26:40.100
You can't live a normal human American life, uh, and, and defeat these things right now.
00:26:46.740
And I don't think it's ever going to, we're never going back to that place.
00:26:50.220
You want to go to, you know, Comoros off the coast of Madagascar.
00:27:00.960
You're not living in a, uh, uh, cause I mean, look back at Unabomber.
00:27:08.480
I'm sure there's people who are attempting it, but every time you need to go get food,
00:27:12.560
every time you need to go get basic supplies, unless you're whittling your toilet paper from
00:27:17.260
the bark around you, what you're going to be on camera somewhere.
00:27:23.380
You're going to have, you're going to be monitored in several different locations.
00:27:29.340
And yes, there are ways, I guess you're going to, you're going to the leaves for toilet paper
00:27:36.700
Most Americans are not willing to go to that, pay that price.
00:27:42.480
Remember him, the terrorist guy who was, uh, you know, trying to run away from, uh, you
00:27:47.600
know, uh, police officers and stuff because what did he blow up a abortion clinic or something?
00:27:53.240
And he was trying to do the mountain man thing to get away.
00:27:56.740
And he, he, he, it's, he, he did it for a few months and then was eventually caught trying
00:28:06.180
How long would he last today trying to do that?
00:28:08.480
Oh, I don't, I, I don't think there's, I mean, there's cameras in the parks, right?
00:28:14.640
Like there, it's not just, where do you even go?
00:28:18.480
I mean, if you are an expert, like survivalist, maybe if you're Marcus Luttrell, uh, and you've
00:28:24.540
been trained by, you know, Navy SEALs and you can go through, uh, these periods, you know,
00:28:30.300
in the woods for a long time, but there's no off the grid anymore, but there's not even,
00:28:33.780
you know, when I talked to Ray Kurzweil and, uh, he said, you know, you'll be able to do
00:28:38.800
anything and think anything and yada, yada, yada.
00:28:45.120
If you have Google and Amazon and they are the source, why would they ever let someone
00:28:55.100
develop something that could hurt them and their business?
00:28:59.300
Why it, it absolutely stifles entrepreneurs because before you even have expressed the
00:29:08.700
idea yourself, you have done Google search, you have done research, it's monitoring your
00:29:16.080
pattern and AI or AGI is going to be able to figure out what you're doing.
00:29:21.420
And it's going to be monitoring you and thinking along the line, cause it's going to help you,
00:29:26.680
but it's going to be thinking along the lines the same way.
00:29:43.780
Um, this actually has happened already, um, with, I think it was Facebook who bought
00:29:55.320
So they purchased this company and it, they had all this public data that showed how you
00:30:02.040
And instead of they stopped, if you think of it, the, the product was, Hey, look at, look
00:30:06.540
at, here's the public data about how people use apps.
00:30:08.780
And then what they said is it's no longer public data.
00:30:10.980
It's now our data and as soon as they saw flare ups with certain apps, Hey, this one's
00:30:15.820
increased by a thousand percent in the last two weeks, they would go and try to purchase
00:30:25.360
Uh, and they were able to go in and purchase it.
00:30:28.460
And I think they did actually execute it a couple of times and they still own the company.
00:30:32.400
Um, you know, and that's essentially what you're talking about, uh, except a much, a
00:30:39.900
Did you see the news that came out that, uh, scientists now have come up with a device
00:30:49.040
So in other words, let's go back in time and then let's go forward in time.
00:30:52.660
Let's go back and grab Terry Schiavo and let's take her five years in the future, five years
00:31:01.020
in the future and put this new device that they have just developed onto Terry Schiavo's
00:31:15.620
Well, this device reads your mind and then turns it into text in real time.
00:31:23.880
So if you're thinking it is writing down what you're thinking, that's fantastic, right?
00:31:32.900
People like people like, uh, um, uh, Stephen Hawking.
00:31:40.360
It's fantastic for people who cannot speak for some reason or another fantastic, but
00:31:52.520
You don't want other people knowing you, you don't want anyone knowing when you're negotiating,
00:31:59.340
when you're bluffing, when you're saying, boy, that dress does make you look fat.
00:32:03.840
Um, how many things do you think that you do not want to speak out loud?
00:32:14.680
I could grab this and you don't do it, but that is in your head all of a sudden.
00:32:21.820
You know, Jesus said, if you're looking at somebody and you're committing adultery, you're committing
00:32:30.780
So control your thoughts because your thoughts, you commit to them.
00:32:34.560
It, it, it is the sin to even think that, well, that's what this is.
00:32:43.880
I mean, the Peter Thiel book that came out, we did an interview with the author a couple
00:32:48.300
And, uh, he, in, in there, when he's talking about how he was going to go after Gawker,
00:32:54.320
they said, has a throwaway line that basically says, oh, you know, we, we thought of, I guess
00:32:59.200
a lot of the stuff we came up with was illegal.
00:33:02.600
And that was a big press story for a few days because he considered, now he didn't really
00:33:08.500
Was it, he, you know, somebody said to him, look, we could do this and now that's illegal.
00:33:15.900
Imagine if they caught that in your subconscious, how you would be immediately prosecuted for it.
00:33:21.420
I mean, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, but think of how many people it will save.
00:33:31.360
And this is why I've been saying for the last few years, we have to have these moral conversations.
00:33:38.680
We have to have ethical conversations that are so much bigger than stormy fricking Daniels.
00:33:45.720
And we better know what's right, what's wrong, what we believe is an intrusion because all
00:33:53.300
of this stuff is coming and it's coming wrapped up in pretty bows and everybody's going to
00:34:03.900
If it is misused, we need to set standards, ethical standards and boundaries now.
00:34:15.720
It really starts with having a conversation that I'm not hearing anywhere.
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She's not only an abuser, but now she is also a victim.
00:36:03.400
What she did to David Hogg was despicable in every way.
00:36:10.300
Is the most reprehensible thing that has ever been done.
00:36:24.780
This now, you know, this is really confusing the left because they want to say she's the
00:36:29.340
worst person on earth because she's a Trump supporter and she's a right wing and she does
00:36:37.300
However, they also noticed that she's a victim of sexism.
00:36:44.540
Well, as the Huffington Post lays out in incredible detail, Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson can
00:36:54.100
So she's not only a vicious attacker of this poor student, but also a wilting flower of sexism.
00:37:03.100
No, that means that David Hogg is also a poor child and a vicious attacker of women.
00:37:16.520
He's a sexist and a helpless child, but he's also a vicious sexist at the same time.
00:37:33.100
I want to play an amazing piece of audio for you.
00:37:45.540
She is the Democratic National Committee's Black Caucus Chairwoman.
00:37:57.540
And when we talk about the movement as a former Black Panther with Angela Davis and Kathleen
00:38:06.260
Cleaver, it was important for us to make people understand that it was about the movement for
00:38:16.560
Now, here's here's it's really amazing, especially if you watch this clip, because the camera can't
00:38:25.000
So it's focused instead on Keith Ellison, a former member of the Nation of Islam.
00:38:33.380
Remember the days when hardcore radicals actually tried to hide their extremist past?
00:38:39.500
When I started outing out President Obama's ties to radicals, his PR team went out in in
00:38:50.880
Do you remember me saying to you one of these days they're not going to care anymore and
00:38:56.460
the mask is going to come off and they're just going to tell you, yep, I was a communist.
00:39:18.320
To the contrary, they're now bragging about it in a public forum.
00:39:23.080
Rollins goes on to talk about, quote, the movement and the, quote, revolution, end quote, as inspired
00:39:30.520
acts that brought forth equality to feed the masses.
00:39:34.860
At one point, she yelled, quote, we've got to turn back to the revolution, end quote.
00:39:43.040
Now, it's not surprising that she can say this now in an era where the Black Panthers have
00:39:47.500
been whitewashed and completely scrubbed clean to the point to where their radical extremist
00:39:55.820
Martin Luther King was not involved with the Black Panthers.
00:40:01.000
Well, well, well, I mean, even though they were fighting for equality, right?
00:40:10.220
Rollins declaration of bringing back the revolution sounds eerily similar to what her Black Panther
00:40:15.380
party was saying back in the 60s when they chanted, quote, the revolution has come.
00:40:21.960
It's time to pick up the gun off the pigs, end quote.
00:40:27.500
Now, if they were talking about actual pigs and they were thinking about taking those pigs
00:40:32.300
and then slicing them up into nice little pieces of ham to feed all the children, that
00:40:49.060
It's amazing to me how history is so easily forgotten and discarded.
00:40:53.220
But it is another thing to do what is happening now, making terrorists look like they were the
00:41:04.220
This popular Black Panther chant is nothing compared to their actual actions.
00:41:10.760
They were involved in multiple shootouts, shot several police officers, employed ambush tactics
00:41:17.760
and tried to kill police and armed militants that actually stormed a courthouse and killed
00:41:29.600
They were even caught torturing and executing one of their own members for suspecting him of
00:41:38.560
All the while, they're making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for the kids, just like
00:41:46.840
In fact, race, as always, has very little to do with it.
00:41:55.440
Rawlings mentions two people in the same speech, Angela Davis and Kathleen Cleaver.
00:42:01.360
Oh, you mean the two that were both radical Marxists?
00:42:11.080
The way to clean people's image up is to process them through the radical university system.
00:42:19.000
She was so radical that she allied with North Korea while she was with the Panthers.
00:42:27.260
If that happened, I'm pretty sure that good old Angela was there at the time.
00:42:35.840
Angela Davis was the one that gave guns to a teenager who then went in and shot a federal judge.
00:42:46.900
I thought we were trying to take the guns away from teenagers.
00:42:49.840
Class warfare, race warfare, the Black Panthers wanted it all.
00:43:02.240
I'm going to be doing a block on this on television.
00:43:10.960
Because they just dropped the radical means for the radical ends.
00:43:16.060
But you can guarantee that people like Virgie Rollins, she hasn't forgotten.
00:43:22.400
She's now part of the Democratic establishment and leadership.
00:43:29.600
People who are like my grandfather and many of my relatives.
00:43:38.260
Just like all of my other relatives that vote Republican every single time.
00:43:53.960
You are not Keith Ellison that was a member of the Nation of Islam.
00:44:06.040
You are not the people who are leading the Women's March.
00:44:24.500
And I want nothing to do with those people who try to spin them into great healers.
00:44:44.180
Not as outsiders, but within mainstream politics.
00:44:48.860
And hope to have any kind of bright future for tomorrow.
00:44:53.840
Will anyone in the Democratic Party actually call this out?
00:45:31.400
And it was my generation that was supposed to tell the old farts.
00:45:49.320
And we just kind of had to shoulder everything between our crazy out of control brothers and sisters that were older.
00:45:57.840
And now, the younger generation, we don't get, my generation doesn't get its day in the sunlight.
00:46:09.540
We're the ones that have to stand here and look at the mess that the last generation just left us.
00:46:19.280
And we have to stand here and shoulder that and hold that until the next generation gets on their feet enough to be able to say, we've got it and we've got a better plan.
00:46:43.940
So you think that, because, I mean, you think the people older than you are, you know, I mean, that's going to be.
00:46:58.480
And, of course, that's only a part, a slice of that.
00:47:01.920
And it's not everybody in my generation who feels the way I do.
00:47:04.520
So it's just that as a group, as a group, they went off the deep end.
00:47:13.800
There's a reason why in 2008, the housing market and the stock market collapsed.
00:47:17.440
And that is because in the 1990s, the last of the World War II generation, the ones that were always afraid of, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
00:47:27.820
You don't understand what a real collapse is like.
00:47:31.640
The ones who lived through it and were scarred by it for life, they were very, very balanced.
00:47:38.520
And they were like, look, let's not go crazy here.
00:47:42.040
Those people died, generally speaking, and they were nowhere in Wall Street by the end of the 90s.
00:47:48.700
And that's when all of this crazy, all this crazy spending, all the crazy derivatives, everything else happened.
00:47:56.140
OK, and that generation was the hippie generation that was doing.
00:48:01.100
It's like a free love and we can have everything.
00:48:05.700
That generation has spent us into oblivion and they're taking us off the rails because, quite honestly, when they were in college, they didn't believe in the Constitution in the first place.
00:48:16.900
Even though the Beatles said you want to change the Constitution, you might as well change your head.
00:48:27.340
So they they were caught up in this radical Marxist stuff and they're still going there.
00:48:34.080
So this generation, my generation, is the one that has to hold up the younger generation.
00:48:41.360
It's the one that has to expose the younger generation to the truth and expose them, the younger generation, to the people in my generation and say, look, they're not bad.
00:48:59.920
They're the ones that are going to take us to the right place and develop new ways and new ideas.
00:49:20.180
It is our job to teach and raise the next generation because they will do it.
00:49:29.200
Because we're entering a world where we're not even going to understand it.
00:49:33.140
I have already become my father and my grandfather that can't figure out the damn remote.
00:49:46.660
And as we start to get old, unless you surround yourself with young people and new ideas all the time, you start to go static.
00:49:56.280
Because you're just used to it being a certain way.
00:49:59.340
Well, with everything changing, we're going to get old really fast if we don't stay plugged in.
00:50:08.160
We're not going to be able to use the tools that are on the horizon.
00:50:13.640
You know, how many of us at my age still say, can I get a pencil and paper, please?
00:50:20.080
Nobody, nobody in their 30s says that unless you're an artist.
00:50:30.880
I mean, the journaling thing has become a trend lately because of that.
00:50:37.020
It's now like how vinyl became cool for a while.
00:50:40.220
And I guess kind of still is where, you know, instead of digital music, like it's the same thing.
00:50:44.260
Like that's now becoming like this little niche industry of journaling and everything is.
00:50:49.360
Look, that's why that's why composting is coming back.
00:51:05.160
And then we then, you know, the generation that is above mine and my generation, we were like, we don't have to do that.
00:51:19.060
We bought into all of the, you know, 1970 films.
00:51:26.840
And we were like, whoa, we can't even make the projector work, but it's going to be great.
00:51:31.700
And I'm at the point now when I do have to write something, if it's like a full size, like of one piece of paper, like my hand hurts because I haven't done it.
00:51:41.740
When's the last time I freaking wrote with my hands?
00:51:48.640
And now, now my thumb starts to hurt because maybe I just hurt.
00:52:01.700
Do your, do yourself and do the country a favor.
00:52:11.280
Seek out the millennials that are trying to do something.
00:52:16.640
Seek out the, seek out the young minds of our country and hold them up.
00:52:23.620
Do everything you can to hold them up because they're the ones that are going to make this transition.
00:52:30.960
They're the ones and they are, I had 15 relatives in my house over the weekend.
00:52:46.240
I really actually enjoy it because I like my family.
00:52:50.740
Um, but, um, we were having a great conversation and these are all my, uh, these are all my nephews.
00:53:03.360
And, um, so I spent the, the holiday weekend with that generation and they're just starting to have kids and everything else.
00:53:17.200
They're all saying things like, um, you know, we just, we use too much and we have too much stuff.
00:53:27.940
They're like, I, I think we can spend our time instead of having a big house that I'm cleaning all of this stuff that means nothing.
00:53:41.720
Why would I need a big house that I'm trying to clean and keep up with everybody?
00:53:45.300
I'd rather spend that money going and doing something.
00:53:53.500
I go through my closet and I've got so much stuff and I don't wear it.
00:54:07.700
And personally, I think that's a really, really good sign.
00:54:22.140
You know, I, I didn't plan on sharing this, but I, I found something earlier today.
00:54:27.100
That I, I want to play for you that I, I think you will.
00:54:29.960
It kind of goes into this and I think you'll like it, especially if you're a, if you're a purpose-driven person or a, a self-made person.
00:54:47.320
And we use them up at the farm and we use them until the doors fall off.
00:54:51.900
And then I might even still continue to use them.
00:55:01.240
So if you've ever taken your car in for an oil change and then the mechanic finds something wrong, you're like, oh crap.
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This just happened with one of my trucks, brought it in.
00:55:15.960
That's an oh crap moment, but not for me because I have car shield.
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00:55:42.340
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00:55:47.300
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00:56:42.340
I found this old audio today from, uh, David Bowie.
00:56:47.160
If you are a, if you're an entrepreneur or a self-made person, I think you'll find it inspiring as well.
00:56:56.320
But you never learn that until much later on, I think.
00:57:00.180
But never work for other people in what you do.
00:57:03.900
Always remember that the reason that you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you felt that if you could manifest it in some way, you would understand more about yourself and how you coexist with the rest of society.
00:57:22.840
And I, I think it's terribly dangerous for an artist to fulfill other people's expectations.
00:57:30.480
I think they produce, they generally produce their worst work when they do that.
00:57:34.080
And if, the other thing I would say is that if you feel safe in the area that you're working in, you're not working in the right area.
00:57:41.820
Always go a little further into the water than you feel you're capable of being in.
00:57:47.940
And when you don't feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you're just about in the right place to do something exciting.
00:58:12.640
I want to play this from David Bowie again and then talk a little bit about it.
00:58:32.680
But you never learn that until much later on, I think.
00:58:36.380
But never work for other people in what you do.
00:58:39.440
Always remember that the reason that you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you felt that if you could manifest it in some way,
00:58:53.080
you would understand more about yourself and how you co-exist with the rest of society.
00:58:58.400
And I think it's terribly dangerous for an artist to fulfill other people's expectations.
00:59:06.200
I think they generally produce their worst work when they do that.
00:59:11.080
And the other thing I would say is that if you feel safe in the area that you're working in, you're not working in the right area.
00:59:17.380
Always go a little further into the water than you feel you're capable of being in.
00:59:22.940
And when you don't feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you're just about in the right place to do something exciting.
00:59:29.780
And that's the story of the Dancing in the Dark video.
00:59:41.460
I thought, you know, he said, you know, I thought, hey, this is commercial.
00:59:46.600
Well, in a way, really, it's an example of what you don't do.
00:59:51.660
He's describing, don't do the Dancing in the Dark video.
00:59:55.660
And he said, you don't learn that until too late.
01:00:00.400
You have to go through that, I think, to actually figure it out.
01:00:04.220
You know, I find interesting is, you know, what was the 1960s?
01:00:10.300
That was about the greatest generation coming home after complete decimation.
01:00:20.200
I mean, just I don't think we can really even begin to understand what the rest of the Western world was like after World War II.
01:00:32.760
You know, we came back and we started making big, huge cars with tail fins and everything else because we had the factories.
01:00:45.540
You remember, you know, those three wheeled little cars that, you know, England made.
01:00:50.900
They made those three little car, the three wheeled cars for two reasons.
01:00:59.600
They couldn't afford anything of any size because they were broke.
01:01:08.260
And so they didn't really start digging themselves out of that until 60s, 70s, and 80s.
01:01:14.480
They didn't have the good times that we had in the 50s and the 60s and, you know, up until the 70s.
01:01:28.960
That was about the rejection of what they saw their parents build.
01:01:34.020
And their parents just wanted to come home and build this idyllic little space that didn't have any horrors in it.
01:01:45.480
It didn't have what Europe had just gone through, what Germany had gone through, what Spain was going through.
01:02:02.320
But everybody's pretending because they're trying to create this image.
01:02:20.520
So we have this crunch of the hippies and the people like Donald Trump.
01:02:32.100
One generation went, no, man, smoke dope, free love, and rock on, Marx.
01:02:42.560
And went into amass wealth and build something.
01:02:46.520
But unlike the previous generation, when they built something, they wanted to build something that lasts.
01:03:07.180
So now the generation that I'm in just watched them.
01:03:16.000
And we just kind of watched them and did our own thing.
01:03:22.740
So we begat children who saw that excess and that Marxism.
01:03:40.420
Because everybody who's living in these homes know there's no meaning here.
01:03:46.860
It's why people who are younger are starting to feel like, I want to get rid of everything.
01:04:00.880
They didn't want the life of their parents because they knew that was meaningless.
01:04:05.500
They knew that it was being hidden by cocktails and Xanax.
01:04:12.540
And now what's being hidden is being hidden by the drug of Facebook.
01:04:23.280
And so people are once again hungry for something real.
01:04:29.260
Because I have, Tanya and I have talked about this for probably a year.
01:04:36.120
It's just, I got there in the 90s where I was kind of going through a period where I was like, I want to sell absolutely everything.
01:04:54.400
My kids are the ones who are like, yes, dad, do it.
01:04:57.760
Because we have a garage full of boxes that we haven't opened for like four moves ago.
01:05:12.580
I'm trying to think of, I'm trying to find a desire to do it.
01:05:17.720
I mean, I think there's certainly the decluttering of our lives is something that I think is, generally speaking, can be a positive at times.
01:05:27.000
So I think there's an element of it I kind of agree with.
01:05:29.920
But I mean, I don't find material things complicating.
01:05:41.220
So I'm not saying material things are bad by any stretch.
01:05:49.860
Like, we have a lot of stuff that we're like, yeah, and that was given to us by so-and-so.
01:05:57.200
And it's in a, you know, it's in a closet or it's there.
01:06:00.660
But we don't, we don't, you know, we don't, we can't really get rid of it because.
01:06:09.520
One thing I should point out is I do live with the Joseph Stalin of decluttering.
01:06:25.180
She's very, she's, my wife is very much like, just get rid of it.
01:06:30.380
You know, she, she, it just because she doesn't like clutter.
01:06:34.080
I hear the word clutter more than any other word in my home.
01:06:47.220
She, she, I get attached to things like, you know, there's certain like toys my kids had
01:06:54.240
And I just can't get rid of them, you know, because I can just remember, I can look down
01:07:00.380
And I'm like, I can, I cannot get rid of that toy.
01:07:08.380
Um, so our house is, uh, I wouldn't say, uh, it's certainly not clear of, you know, she
01:07:16.200
So, I mean, it's not, it's not clear of material things by any reason, by any means, but it
01:07:19.580
is, uh, it's a, it's a pretty simplified place.
01:07:41.320
Uh, no, I got this old piece of paper from 3000 years ago.
01:07:49.220
I've just, I've discovered that I can call myself eccentric.
01:07:57.080
Because everything in my house, everything has a story.
01:08:04.360
I go look for things that, and they may not even be valuable, but they have a story behind
01:08:13.300
That's, I, I believe there's a certain, this is, it doesn't quite apply to you.
01:08:17.180
No offense, but there's a certain amount of wealth that you want to acquires in which
01:08:21.380
that's what you do with it is you just buy stories.
01:08:23.960
You're just, you're purchasing a story to tell.
01:08:27.060
You're like this way when you had, I knew you when you had like $9 or actually negative
01:08:31.160
much more than $9 and you were still doing this.
01:08:34.780
You're, you know, I think wealth just makes you good at the things that you are.
01:08:42.900
You have lots of really fancy things that you hoard.
01:08:45.640
It's not really, it's still, it's still a lot of crap.
01:08:48.580
I mean, I was, I was, some people, some people were here last night and they were here
01:08:52.700
for the Mercury Museum and we were looking through a bunch of stuff that, what are we
01:08:57.840
going to put out and what, what would be interesting to them and yada, yada, yada.
01:09:01.540
And so, you know, we get this, I'm just amazing stuff.
01:09:05.540
And then, you know, we get down to how that's the typewriter that, you know, uh, actually they
01:09:12.680
use to, you know, uh, type the, the, uh, peace treaty in the Pacific, you know, for world
01:09:20.140
world two, what the hell am I doing with a typewriter like that?
01:09:30.320
I remember buying it and I remember thinking, that's great.
01:09:51.320
Now we've removed all the C4, but it was a rat used by the French resistance.
01:09:57.540
They would put them in the boiler rooms and they would, they would stuff them full of C4,
01:10:03.260
put a, a deadening device up their butt and then throw them into the coal things to where
01:10:11.320
when they were shoveling, shoveling coal, the Nazis were shoveling coal in their big industrial
01:10:15.980
plants, they would just pick up the rat and just shovel it into the, and it would blow
01:10:24.220
Now the guy who came up with that is the guy who, uh, was, uh, who, uh, Q is based on in
01:10:37.100
He's the guy who came up with the explosive, explosive butt rap, a rat.
01:10:45.180
He probably, he probably, he probably called it something different.
01:10:58.520
Cause it would be cool if we had something from, you know, James Bond movies too.
01:11:03.100
So we could tie the rat along with the whatever.
01:11:13.260
You just don't need a rat on your shelf to tell it.
01:11:16.680
But you, but it's story is so much better when you have the rat.
01:11:21.480
So I stand in my living room and I'm like, we should get rid of the rat.
01:11:26.040
That's an easy choice for almost everybody, except for me.
01:11:34.460
This time it's orbits, the popular travel, uh, uh, booking platform.
01:11:46.280
Hackers access the credit card numbers used to book travel through the platform's website
01:11:52.120
So if you booked anything through orbits, it may have exposed you.
01:11:56.620
The hackers have stolen names, dates, um, dates of birth, gender, phone numbers, addresses,
01:12:14.640
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01:12:20.200
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So, Stu says to me, before we go off the air, you don't need the rat to tell the story.
01:13:13.180
We go off the air and he said, do you have that rat here?
01:13:28.340
Well, I mean, look, I would say a good chunk of the value of you as a human being is having
01:13:38.520
Because if you do get rid of it, you're losing part of your personal value.
01:13:51.900
No, I'm not talking about getting rid of the artifacts.
01:14:02.460
We're sending somebody to get it and I'll bring in the rat next hour.
01:14:06.040
So if you happen to be watching on the Blaze TV, you will see the rat with the fuse in
01:14:17.140
Almost got one of the dummies that we threw out of the airplane right before D-Day.
01:14:26.860
Because we wanted them to think we were going elsewhere.
01:14:31.980
And so we dressed all these dummies up, these parachutists, okay?
01:14:35.260
And we threw these dummies out of the plane to make it look like we were parachuting where
01:14:46.860
Again, what are you going to do with the dummy, Mr. Beck?
01:15:15.500
In the Age of Reason, Thomas Paine wrote this, quote,
01:15:20.140
It's impossible to calculate the moral mischief, if I may so express it, that mental lying has
01:15:29.580
When a man has so far corrupted and prostituted, the chastity of his mind has to subscribe his
01:15:34.640
professional belief to things that he doesn't believe.
01:15:38.220
He has prepared himself for the commission of every other crime, end quote.
01:15:45.960
I just thought I'd read it because it sounds smart.
01:15:49.000
In completely unrelated news, CNN, like many other news networks, has profited immeasurably
01:15:55.160
from the accusatory news segments about President Trump's supposed infidelities.
01:16:01.240
Reporters and commentators at CNN have turned into media watchdogs, the slightest hint of lurid
01:16:07.260
behavior by President Trump, whether it's true or not.
01:16:10.140
By the way, I was just watching CNN just a minute ago, and they had Richard Quest on,
01:16:15.440
who didn't, wasn't he arrested for making it with a prostitute or something?
01:16:26.920
I can't remember what the scandal was, but it was a bad scandal.
01:16:33.320
And nobody at CNN has a problem that he's back.
01:16:36.180
Why don't you look it up so you can get that scandal right?
01:16:38.820
CNN enjoyed the bump in the ratings from a recent interview with Playboy Playmate Karen
01:16:45.420
McDougal, who claims to have had an affair with President Trump.
01:16:48.360
If you turn CNN right now, odds are you're going to see Stormy Daniels, the porn actress
01:16:53.660
who alleges she has an affair with Donald Trump in 2006.
01:16:57.320
When a 2005 recording of Trump's locker room talk emerged, CNN, like most media outlets,
01:17:05.360
Yet the network's recent advertisement for their original show, American Dynasties, the
01:17:11.560
Kennedys, is glorifying President John F. Kennedy.
01:17:15.580
In fact, glorifying John F. Kennedy's, quote, rampant womanizing, in their words, his legendary
01:17:32.240
Did one of these love affairs, was it connected to the mob?
01:17:46.200
Ben Shapiro wrote in an article yesterday, was JFK's love life really legendary?
01:17:51.620
In actuality, JFK was an awful person in the bedroom who certainly would have been labeled
01:18:00.660
DePaul University professor Jeffrey McCall penned an op-ed for The Hill about the cognitive
01:18:08.540
CNN's warped obsession with reporting about supposed adultery demonstrates a larger problem
01:18:17.740
CNN's focus is not news, but on distracting itself and the nation's news consumers with
01:18:24.760
peripheral and sensational gibberish that falls to fails to enhance the national dialogue.
01:18:31.580
In the run up and the aftermath to the recently passed government spending bill, CNN mentioned
01:18:37.000
McDougal and Daniels more than three times as often as the spending bill.
01:18:42.040
The spending bill, of course, isn't photogenic, but it impacts citizens way more than a Playboy
01:18:52.140
The network's coverage of President Trump is so prolific that they've neglected much of
01:19:01.240
In other words, they've neglected truth in order to prove their own narrative.
01:19:12.320
And as playwright Tennessee Williams famously wrote, the only thing worse than a liar is a
01:19:22.580
I don't know what that means either, but it sounded good.
01:19:25.500
It's from Tennessee Williams and I like Tennessee.
01:19:50.140
The Central Park is closed from 1 a.m. to 6 a.m.
01:19:52.680
And Richard Quest was arrested around 3.40 a.m.
01:20:01.060
No, you're going to be in the park at 3 o'clock.
01:20:07.880
He was initially stopped for loitering, as I said.
01:20:24.120
Which is, you know, there's nothing wrong with that, right?
01:20:34.400
I mean, you're assuming there was something in the bag.
01:20:37.840
Sometimes Ziploc bags, they actually come from the factory empty.
01:20:40.440
It usually wouldn't have made the news story if it was empty.
01:20:49.700
It could have been crackers, but it also may have been methamphetamine.
01:20:53.340
Beside that, was he doing anything with anybody?
01:21:07.120
Or what are some of the other things that might have been...
01:21:12.780
That might be another reason you have a rope in Central Park at 340.
01:21:18.260
That was the one he was thinking, though, I guess is the point of this.
01:21:22.740
But he tied up his genitals in the park, in Central Park.
01:21:28.660
Maybe you don't want to have to stop to go to the bathroom.
01:21:33.720
Was he doing anything else or was anyone with him?
01:21:37.400
And this is why I said, don't go on the air with this, because I don't remember all the
01:21:45.940
He apparently, there may have also been a sex toy involved.
01:21:52.560
But I mean, people use toys for lots of reasons.
01:22:05.660
Whatever you're about to say, the answer is yes.
01:22:07.260
And I don't think we need to say it, because people probably have put this together.
01:22:10.240
So anyway, that's the guy that is currently reporting on CNN.
01:22:13.900
And nobody seems to have a problem with that one.
01:22:17.660
In all honesty, and I think you'd agree with this, people have issues in their lives.
01:22:25.420
He had six months of counseling and everything else.
01:22:30.900
I hope he's put his life back together, and it seems like he has.
01:22:34.460
The same network that yells at sports hosts when they say the word boobs on the air,
01:22:40.280
and they spend a month acting as if it's the most tragic, incomprehensible circumstance
01:22:48.600
That same one is going to have Richard Quest on the air, and is also going to have a sex
01:23:12.820
Again, I don't think it's something you need to say, but if there's anything you should
01:23:16.040
take for this segment, Central Park is closed from 1 to 6.
01:23:22.520
It's not the right time for things in the park.
01:23:25.540
I'd like to take one other thing from this, and that is...
01:23:29.220
There's another lesson here other than park closing times?
01:23:43.920
And, you know, I don't think we need to make a federal case out of absolutely everything
01:23:49.680
that goes wrong in somebody's life, especially if they're trying to make amends for it.
01:23:54.040
I mean, some would say maybe bringing up his incident from 2008 isn't the exact way we should...
01:24:04.920
It's on the network acting all high and mighty.
01:24:11.300
They're not playing the organ in Sunday church.
01:24:14.980
Well, look at the Me Too stuff and how many people in the media have been hit by that.
01:24:18.960
I mean, people who are on your TV day after day after day after day telling you what was
01:24:23.940
right and what was wrong, you know, many of them have been hit by this stuff, you know?
01:24:33.640
It's not always the way it's supposed to, you know, the way it's told.
01:24:41.180
But, I mean, it's another thing to go crazy when someone comes on the air and says boobs or whatever it is and act as if you're above it.
01:24:53.760
Especially if you've been in the park at 1 o'clock in the morning.
01:24:59.860
It's actually 1, you'd be okay because it's borderline.
01:25:03.740
Again, I don't think the time of the park is the 1.
01:25:04.960
3.40 a.m. is not the time to go for a job, for example.
01:25:08.220
If you're a nighttime, you know, maybe you work the night shift and that might be the...
01:25:13.360
Just stay out of the park at that particular...
01:25:15.020
The thing lodged is probably the thing for you.
01:25:24.220
So, if you were listening last hour, we were talking about, you know, you got to just...
01:25:30.720
So, now, this is the rat from 1942 from Lyon, France.
01:25:41.680
And it had hair at one point, but all of its hair fell out.
01:25:50.280
So, it's not like a rat they made to look like a rat.
01:26:05.320
If you look in the butt area, you see that it has...
01:26:11.560
This is an interesting tie-in to this previous conversation.
01:26:24.740
And what they did is they would take these and take C4 and stuff it inside of the rat.
01:26:35.160
And then they would throw them in the coal bins.
01:26:37.780
So, when the guys were shoveling the coal into the big burners that were running these factories,
01:26:51.140
And they finally figured out, I found a dead rat that had explosive in it.
01:27:00.960
The guy who came up with it is the inspiration for the James Bond guy that plays Q,
01:27:08.720
the guy who's coming up with all of the weird devices.
01:27:15.680
It didn't do as much damage to the factories as much as it just stressed and pushed the limits
01:27:24.340
of the soldiers because they all went out looking for dead rats.
01:27:29.500
And so, they had to take a lot of soldiers off of the line looking for the underground,
01:27:37.180
and had them look and start doing searches for dead rats.
01:27:59.960
but they're actually shoveling the C4 explosives into the furnace anyway,
01:28:11.140
hammering the soldiers who were missing the rats, right?
01:28:16.460
The upper echelon is pissed off at the workers who can't find the rats
01:28:26.140
okay, no, no, no, I don't want this in the house.
01:28:41.560
Okay, so, talking about just being a collector of stuff,