Peasants Perspective

AI, Power, And The End Of The Rules-Based Order

Taylor Johnatakis Season 2 Episode 258

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Start with the smell of coffee and a listener’s Bluetooth mishap, end with a hard look at power, purpose, and the speed of change. We take you from Senator Marco Rubio’s Munich remarks—“armies fight for a way of life”—to Ray Dalio’s bleak verdict that the rules-based world order has flatlined, and then right into the furnace of the AI buildout that’s quietly rewiring the economy. The throughline is simple and sharp: if enforcement now defines rules, clarity of purpose matters more than ever, and the tech we deploy decides who gets a future worth wanting.

We unpack the competing stories of a “new golden age” and a fractured labor market. David Sachs points to roaring capex, jobs in non-residential construction, and an AI-powered productivity wave. We pressure-test that optimism against the street view: what does this mean for workers in muddy boots, for small shops without IT teams, for the millions of solopreneurs who need results, not hype? Mark Cuban’s advice lands like a map—learn to implement, not just research. Think agents as operating systems, not chatbots; workflows that link leads to invoices to taxes; and practical plays that make the next hire a model, not a full-time seat.

From there, the episode gets heavier. We probe the implications of alleged surveillance capabilities, digital public infrastructure, cross-border gene-editing pipelines, and the shift from data hoarding to AI-driven inference. Privacy stops being a storage issue and becomes a comprehension problem at planetary scale. That spills back into politics: “created” candidates, contested elections, and the non-negotiable need for transparency that can keep up with technology. The stakes aren’t abstract. They show up in how we work, what we keep private, and whether our institutions still deserve the benefit of the doubt.

Across ninety minutes, we connect culture, economics, and security without the buzzwords. If you want a practical takeaway, here it is: pick a lane to learn fast—AI implementation for small businesses, sales that ride new tools, or operational excellence built on agents—and demand clarity from the systems that claim to serve you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a reality check, and leave a review with one question you want answered next. Your move.

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Cold Open & Listener Story

SPEAKER_16

Where are those people? Where are those people? Good morning, peasants! Welcome to another episode of The Peasants Perspective. So glad I made it with you guys here this morning.

SPEAKER_13

That was so close.

SPEAKER_16

Did I make it?

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, you made it. Oh yeah, you made it. You're right on time.

SPEAKER_16

Woo! That was my breath. That was a that was a rush job there. That's all I could say. All right, good morning, peasants. I heard a really funny story from one of our listeners. She said she hadn't listened to the show in a couple days. Something was going on with her Spotify account. And the last week she thought, I am listening to the show. I've got to tune in. So she started hitting play on her Spotify. And uh it kept stopping after the intro. It kept stopping. And then she'd hit play again and reset it, and it would play the intro and it kept stopping. And finally her daughter comes in yelling, Mom, it's connected to my Bluetooth. So she woke her up with good morning, peasants. Over and over and over until her daughter came in like Mom! And she's like, Well, get up and get ready for school, anyways. So that's funny. So good morning, peasants. Good morning. All right. I am looking for the simultaneous sip because it is time for that. Where is it?

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, where is it?

SPEAKER_16

That is this is this is not AI. Let me tell you that right now.

SPEAKER_13

President's Day version.

Simultaneous Sip & Show Banter

SPEAKER_16

Yeah, President's Day version. Just sit back, relax. It's a holiday. What are you in a rush for? Yeah.

SPEAKER_13

Okay, seriously though.

SPEAKER_16

Where is my screen? I haven't memorized it yet. I need like another six months. All right. Well, cup or mug, tanker chass, caffeine challenge, drink, simultaneous sip. Here we go. Now oh my gosh. I'm just hitting I'm hitting 90 99 out of 100. I'm off here. We got simultaneous sip. We got no sound. I almost sit on like a disaster.

SPEAKER_21

Here we go. Simultaneous sip. You know, funny how coffee never tastes as good as it smells. As you grow older, you'll discover that life is very much like coffee. The aroma is always better than the actuality. May that be your thought for the day.

Weekend Headlines: Rubio, Epstein, Norway Arrest

SPEAKER_16

And so is the Peasants Perspective podcast. Sometimes the idea of the podcast is better than the podcast itself. All right, we got Carlito and Tiffany listening in on YouTube. Good morning. Peasants Perspective. Good morning. That's you, Ron. Carlito, good morning. Pony Boy, good morning. Muddy Easel watching on the big screen. Yes, I find it interesting how many people do watch this show on their full-size TV. Really? It makes me feel like I should actually care about like my hygiene or what my hat says or something like that. Or my bed hair. And my bed hair. Yeah. Let's keep this, let's be patient though. This we don't need to do too much. There was a lot of stuff that happened over the weekend. Marco Rubio last week, I think on Friday, gave an unbelievable speech at the Munich Security Conference. One of the best speeches you're ever going to hear from an American politician or cabinet member. Really good speech. Um, you had a little more Epstein drama. There were some more files that were released or trickled out. Um, as people go through those Epstein files, there was another uh another cabinet member somewhere in Europe that stepped down. One of the Norway former important people was actually arrested. So, you know, he was run out of office, then his house was raided, now he's officially been arrested. So there's kind of things happening, okay, quite a few things happening. And uh one of the biggest things about it has just been the cell phone that has happened to the Democrats because it's it's kind of been centered around their world of influence. It's amazing looking at this situation with Epstein and Obama's fixer, Kathy Rumler, and how they were involved. Like every everything that as a conspiracy theorist that we try to dismiss and maybe think that we were conspiracy theorists, like make light of the fact that we were conspiracy theorists, turns out uh you almost have to go back through some of the most wild stuff and try to disprove it. I don't know that you can at this point. Like the the the the idea that these elite who have all these private chefs and all the money in the world are inviting each other to thousands of pizza parties. I know. I mean, it just no, like Ron, I could go through all of your emails since you were 18 and you're gonna find no invitations to a pizza party.

SPEAKER_13

That's pizza gone wild.

SPEAKER_16

Yeah, it's really interesting. So Marco Rubio gave the speech in the Munich conference, and this is something he said that I think is again clarifying this idea that I express as peasants that there's something real and tangible behind what we're doing. There has to be a benefit, right? Some people do sign up for the military because they want free education or they want a paycheck, but when it really boils down to who's willing to go and fight, it's more than just for a paycheck.

What Are We Defending? Rubio’s Munich Speech

SPEAKER_22

National security, which this conference is largely about, it's not merely a series of technical questions. How much we spend on defense or where, how we deploy it, these are important questions. They are. The fundamental question we must answer at the outset is what exactly are we defending? Because armies do not fight for abstractions. Armies fight for a people, armies fight for a nation, armies fight for a way of life. And that is what we are defending a great civilization that has every reason to be proud of its history.

SPEAKER_16

So one of the things that came out of this Munich conference, and Ray Dalio put posted this on his uh X, is the world order, the rules-based world order, is officially dead. Nobody is expecting it to come back. It is not in effect right now. And he says, right now, we're at his little phase six of the economic cycles that he describes. But he basically says, right now, the world order is might makes right. And he even says the very words laws don't matter, military might was, which is really similar to what I say, which is there are no laws, there are only cops, there's only enforcement. And that is the reason why the United States is having to flex its muscles so much right now, is because the United States has been fighting for some regional economic open zone, right? Free trade. And that's not why my friends went and lost their legs. That's not why my friends went and fought. They thought they were fighting to preserve free speech in Afghanistan. You know what I mean? Like, and there's a huge betrayal that has happened inside of America because of this idea of why are we fighting? Why are we fighting this 20-year endless war on terrorism? Why can't we win it? Right? Why are we fighting in Afghanistan just to turn things back over? And so Trump's the Trump administration to refocus what it is we fight for and why we fight is what's allowing them to take this hard stance to say, look, there are some battles we're not going to fight. We don't fight over economic zones.

SPEAKER_13

Well, it seems like we've been fighting for democracy and installing democracy in the areas of the world that are undemocratic and don't give a crap about that.

SPEAKER_16

And we've been un we've been untraditionalizing democracy and family values and things like that. At the same time. While at the same time going and defending their right to have the values that we so much don't want to have. Canada has just become like this this, you know, we we played the clip a while back where it's a parody clip, but the guy gets broken into and he's like, Oh, would you like this? I left the safe wide open, the safe, you know. And by the way, my wife's jewelry is set out for you. Go ahead and pick what you want. You know, it's like a joke because you had their local law enforcement officers like the best thing you can do if your house gets broken into is go out the back door. You know what I mean? Like, run. This is the United States military. This is the Canadian mounted police. And what she's talking about is people in Canada have become extremists. And it's very concerning for the military and for the mounted police is extremism in Canada is on the rise. And so this officer here is on the news. This is CBCNN. Okay, she's talking about how to recognize extremism.

Rules-Based Order Is Dead: Dalio’s Phase Six

SPEAKER_12

Well, radicalization in general quite often will show by people isolating themselves and uh changing their behavior, like changing um what they're saying on a subject, like becoming more extremist. Like, and um, if someone you know was very um uh believed in equal gender rights, but all of a sudden are leaning towards like traditional values, then that might be a sign that uh they're becoming more extremist.

SPEAKER_13

Okay, yeah, okay.

SPEAKER_16

Was that a police officer telling me that if I believe in traditional values, I might be becoming an extremist? Yeah, but if I re if I believe that the one to two percent of the population that are fudge packers and gay, if I believe in their equal rights, I'm not an extremist. But if I believe in the rights of 98% of people just to live normal traditional lives, I'm an extremist. I might be isolating.

SPEAKER_13

Happy president's day.

SPEAKER_16

It's utter nonsense, right? But that's that's Canada, our 51st state, right above us. Okay, they're up there like, oh, how dare you believe in the nuclear family? Extremists, extremists. Meanwhile, Marco Rubio's putting the world on notice. Look, we've had enough of this. Like, we're not playing Mr. Nice Guy for the sake of playing Mr. Nice Guy.

SPEAKER_22

For five centuries before the end of the Second World War, the West had been expanding. Its missionaries, its pilgrims, its soldiers, its explorers pouring out from its shores to cross oceans, settle new continents, to build vast empires, extending out across the globe. But in 1945, for the first time since the age of Columbus, it was contracting. Europe was in ruins. Half of it lived behind an iron curtain, and the rest looked like it would soon follow. The great Western empires had entered into terminal decline, accelerated by godless communist revolutions, by anti-colonial uprisings that would transform the world and drape the red hammer and sickle across vast swaths of the map in the years to come. Against that backdrop, then, as now, many came to believe that the West's age of dominance had come to an end, and that our future was destined to be a faint and feeble echo of our past. But together, our predecessors recognized that decline was a choice. It was a choice they refused to make. This is what we did together once before. This is what President Trump and the United States want to do again now, together with you. And this is why we do not want our allies to be weak. Because that makes us weaker. We want allies who can defend themselves so that no adversary will ever be tempted to test our collective strength. This is why we do not want our allies to be shackled by guilt and shame. We want allies who are proud of their culture and of their heritage, who understand that we are heirs to the same great and noble civilization, and who together with us are willing and able to defend it. And this is why we do not want allies to rationalize the broken status quo rather than reckon with what is what was what is necessary to fix it. For we in America have no interest in being polite and orderly caretakers of the West's managed decline.

Canada, Extremism Labels & Cultural Drift

SPEAKER_16

We have no interest in being the polite and orderly caretakers of the West's managed decline, right? What do armies fight for? They fight for a way of life. And right now, this is your Secretary of State making a massive world declaration that it's time to fight. And it's time to fight for what? This way of life. Gone are the days of being apologetic, gone are the days of opening our borders, gone are the days of doing things for others' best interests rather than your own. And Ray Dalio says it best. Might makes right right now. You only get to have the rules that you're willing to enforce internationally. And that is both a scary place to be, and it's also a really good place to be. Because as Americans, what we've had is we've had the draining. We've had the draining, right? We have been buying goods from around the world, which is a transfer of wealth. As they give us their trinkets, we give them our gold and silver, our cash, right? And in this case, it's been IOUs, which means we're in debt. So it's not even a clean transaction, right? It guarantees a switching of the of the uh seats at some point, the merry-ground stops, which is where we're at, which is why it's so important that we now have some goods to sell to collect back the value that we've been spending around the country all these years. David Sachs uh was on his all-in podcast, and he's talking about how things are changing. And this is one of the realizations I've made in the last week or two. With all the stuff that's been coming out with Epstein and the revelations of that, it's untenable to go back. The people that are getting fired from their bank positions, I mean, there's a long list of people now that have had to, you know, quietly resign from university positions. The stank is too much. There's a reason why Pam Bondi came in and is like, you guys care about Epstein? The Dow just hit$50,000. Epstein's friends are the ones that are propping up that Dow. Okay. But at the same time, what is the Dow mostly based on? And all of the stocks. The biggest stock companies in the country are digital output businesses. So we're going to take a look at how that could be changing. And then I guess we just have to look in the mirror and say if it's good or not for us. Here's David Sachs. We're on the verge of a golden age.

West, Decline, And Call For Strong Allies

SPEAKER_07

But a golden age for who, Ron? But economic boom. Again, we saw on all this economic data. I think we're kind of missing the lead here, which is we are at the beginning of an economic boom. Again, we saw it in the GDP growth rates in Q3 and Q4 last year, over 4% Q3, over 5% Q4. We just had a January job report where the economy added 172,000 new private sector jobs. This blew away the expectation, which was around 70,000. At the same time, the government shed 42,000 jobs. The net of this was to bring the unemployment rate down to 4.3%. So I remember a few months ago, J. Cal, you were wringing your hands about the fact that the unemployment rate had ticked up. Well, now it's back down. And you're seeing a lot of jobs being created in construction, especially non-residential construction, has to do with the data centers, the AI boom that's going on. 33,000 new construction jobs in January. While, again, like we talked about, over 300,000 government jobs have been cut, which increases the productivity of the economy, and it does what Secretary Besson says, which is re-privatized the economy. So I just think that the overall economic news is really good. Again, we have this AI boom going on. There's a new chart showing that the capex for this year that's expected just from the four leading hyperscalers is$600 billion, just from four companies. That's a roughly 2% tailwind to GDP growth right there. That is just the CapEx. That doesn't include all the ROI that you might get from that infrastructure on the software side, on the application side, the productivity side. So we have a boom going on, and I feel like everyone's kind of blackpilling about this. Uh, you know, they're focusing on this CBO report that has unrealistically low growth rates. We're gonna print 6%. Right. Or they're boom scrolling about Epstein or what have you. And I just think when we look back on this period, it could end up being a little bit like the late 90s. Remember when we had, you know, we look back on the late 90s and we're like, wow, we had like phenomenal economic growth. Golden age. Yeah. Golden age, economic. Labor participation, it's not zero to right. But if you remember what politics were like at that time period, all anyone talked about was whether Bill Clinton got a blowjob from Lewinsky. So my point is just again, I'm not sure we're focused on the right things. I suspect we'll look back on this time period as the beginning of a new golden age.

SPEAKER_16

Yeah, I think we will look back at to it at a big as a beginning of a new golden age, but I have to wonder if it's gonna be golden for everybody. Like I really genuinely wonder this. Because when you're looking top down like these guys are, right? They're not down in the mud. When I mean in the mud, I mean literally, like I was a septic guy, right? I was in the mud. How AI, how is AI going to help me? You know what I mean? Or worse off, how is it going to hurt me? Right? How is AI going to catch me off guard while I'm out here shoveling shit? Is there a possibility AI could take my job or change my job fundamentally while I'm completely distracted shoveling? You know what I mean?

SPEAKER_11

Yeah.

SPEAKER_16

Elon Musk had this clip. This circulated this weekend. I don't know what to make of it, Ron. This is another one of those. Is this wildly altruistic? Or is there something so dramatically that that's about to happen that if you're out there shoveling sh, you better watch out because there's a tsunami coming for you and you don't know. Why would the advice from the richest man in the world be don't even attempt to save for retirement?

SPEAKER_10

One like side recommendation I have is like don't worry about like squirreling money away for uh retirement in like 10 or 20 years, it won't matter. Okay. Either either we're not gonna be here or it it just uh like it's it's it's you you won't need to save for retirement. If and if any of the things that we've uh said are true, saving for retirement will be irrelevant. Unlike Side.

SPEAKER_16

Oh, okay.

SPEAKER_13

That might be true, but that's dangerous advice.

SPEAKER_16

Exactly. So why is he giving it?

SPEAKER_13

I don't know.

Might Makes Right And U.S. Strategy

SPEAKER_16

I think there's something here that we're not catching. I think there's something so significant here and so big here, and we're missing it completely. Here's Mark Cuban giving people advice about what to do with this AI information. Again, read between the lines. Telling him listen to him tell you about what your world that is, the current world, and how it's about to change. And think about how much of your current world is tied into the old technological model.

SPEAKER_25

I've been through every single technology you know, event and evolution, and this blows them all away. Now, how you implement it in business is a whole different issue. Like literally, when I was 24, I was walking into companies who had never seen a PC before in their lives and explaining to them the value and having these guys going, well, son, I got this receptionist right there, I got that secretary. I'm never going to need that shit ever, right? And but then, you know, my business then was helping them figure out how to implement it to give them an advantage. Yep. There are going to be integrators that, particularly young kids, like when I'm telling my kids who are 15, 18, 21, or 19, 21, and kids going to school, what should I do? What should I do? I'd be like, AI research. Learn all you can about AI, but learn more on how to implement them in companies, right? Because to your point, companies don't understand how to implement all that right now to get a competitive advantage. You got the head of Microsoft saying software is dead because everything's going to be customized to your unique utilization, right? Or use usage. Who's going to do it for them? Particularly small to medium-sized businesses. There are 33 million companies in this country. 30 million of them are solopreneurs, right? Um, single-person enterprises. There are only, you know, there are millions of companies that have one, five, ten, fifty, a hundred, five hundred people that aren't going to have AI budgets, aren't going to have AI experts. This is where kids getting hired coming out of college are really going to have a unique opportunity. If you're spending your senior year in college right now, your senior year In high school, even whatever it is, your excess time, and you're learning the difference between Sora and Vio, and you're learning how to do all this video. You're learning how to customize a model so that then you can then walk into a company and say, I understand your business as a shoe company selling shoes at a retail store or selling and selling shoes online. Let me show you how to benefit you. That is every single job that's going to be available for kids coming out of school because every single company needs that.

SPEAKER_16

Every company needs that. And whoever comes in and implements that is going to be the hand of death to all those secretaries that are going to get fired.

SPEAKER_13

And the skill set that you need is the skill of adding value. That's the only thing you need to worry about. If you can add value, you are valuable to the corporation.

SPEAKER_16

Exactly. You have to be able to add value. But again, I want to look at this as something different than what we've seen in the past. Let's assume every now in this history there's something that changes everything. I would say the internet changed things more than anticipated.

SPEAKER_13

Oh, yeah.

AI Boom Vs. Real Economy: Sachs’ Case

SPEAKER_16

Right. There was a time when people thought, oh, that's cute how you can get your cheat codes for Nintendo or whatever. But real businesses will always run on paper. And now you have whole enterprises that are completely paperless. Everything's digital, has just as much weight as real world paper. Like it's completely been adopted. If you're not on the internet in 2026, there's a good chance you're not in business. You know what I mean? Like you've got to have some of that. Well, one of the things when you listen to Jeff Bezos and others talk about AI, he's like, this isn't a boom. This is even this isn't even the dot-com boom. This is an infrastructure boom. And one of the things that that was mentioned is that all software is going away. So what is software? Software takes generic hardware and then it creates the operating system that kind of works with that hardware, right? And what he's saying is the software is going to go away. All hardware will have its own unique operating system that is AI. It will, there will no longer be that interface where it's like we're all familiar with Windows 98 and it runs across Dell and Phillips. It's going to be no. Every item is going to have its own unique operating system that's unique for that hardware and perfectly function for it, just like every brain is unique to every human body because it's working off that same neural network. And I think again, many of us Luddites, we're behind on what's actually happening in the labs. Elon Musk's talks about star uh neural neuralink and how neuralink has the ability to come in and replace brain function, restore sight. And then we're going to talk about how communication is going to be advanced through Neuralink.

SPEAKER_10

Um and then over time, I think you get to higher resolution than human eyes, and you could also see in different wavelengths. So like Jordy LaForge from Star Trek came at like the thing. Do you want to see in radar? No problem. You can see ultraviolet, infrared, eagle vision, whatever you want.

SPEAKER_16

Uh so he's talking about how Neuralink here, it doesn't just replace sight, it improves sight. In fact, it'll become so developed that there will be people that have perfectly fine vision that will opt to have Neurolink sensors because of how advanced advanced it will get.

SPEAKER_13

Well, do you know how awesome it would be to be able to see in infrareds when you're out there trying to hunt uh rats in your farmhouse?

SPEAKER_16

That would be significant. Yeah. The other thing Elon Musk said, and it looks like I might have. Did I lose the clip? Oh, yeah. I did lose the clip. That's okay. One of the things Elon Musk also talked about was the speed of communication. He says, right now we compress all these thoughts into these little words, right?

SPEAKER_13

Right, so that we can get them across.

SPEAKER_16

And we lose a lot of meaning and intention in the compression. But unlike all the other animal species, we have the highest rate of compression in that we can get thoughts into words and communicate, which has allowed us, the human race, to just race ahead of all other mammals and life forms on earth as far as technology and civilization and organization and complete and total dominion over the planet, right? I mean, every now and then some swimmer gets midway in the food chain in front of a great white, but for the most part, we sit at the top of the.

SPEAKER_13

I was just thinking, you know, maybe we should test Neuralink on some animal, but then I thought, um, maybe they might take over the world. Um, they have to be careful about what animal we test.

Who Benefits From AI? Labor And Risk

SPEAKER_16

Have you heard them talk about how they've had to like take them out of the monkeys because they advance? Like they do, they advance. And they're like, ah, we don't need talking monkeys. I was just joking. No, it's it's a real thing. So what he goes on to say is once humans start communicating through Neuralink, because I'll be able to transmit to you an entire mental image and a mental thought. It's write it down a math equation. I'll just show you the entire math equation. He says, the speed of communication will leave anybody who's not using it behind.

SPEAKER_13

Right. I heard him explain, I heard it explained as you won't Google anything anymore. You'll just know.

SPEAKER_16

You'll just know. And for people that are not using this, they'll be so far left behind. We will have like a species drift. Right. Like we won't even be able to interact. It would be it'd be so slow for me. It'd be like, you know, coming in to talk to my dogs and horses, which are incredibly intelligent and can intuate a lot, but I'm not gonna give some nice big king's oration to my horse. You know what I mean? And that's what it's gonna feel like. Like it's not even worth the effort to communicate to the Luddites, just let them do their homestead or whatever.

SPEAKER_13

They'll be like the tribes that you find in the Amazon basin. You just like you can't really talk to them.

Musk On Retirement And Acceleration

SPEAKER_16

It'll basically be us, right? Yeah. So here's the thing again, they're not talking about over the next decade or two. Internet took over the world, it took 20 years from 96 to about 2016 for the full conversion. By 2006, everybody got the writing on the wall that you had to go online. Right. By 2016, everybody was online. By 2026, you're onto your fourth website if you're a small business, right? I mean, you know what I'm saying? Like you've kind of you've done the web 1.0, 2.0 advancement. But with AI, this is something new. It's not just a new technology, it's not just a new way to kind of do things. It's an entirely new way to integrate everything you're doing. The way that they talk about using AI is you come into your business, put everything in it, all of your systems, all of your spreadsheets, all of your invoices, all of your bookkeeping. Give it to AI, who then goes out to the breadth of human information, everything that's ever been databased online, and it will come with the best business plan model for you, the best workflow, the best way to connect your customer leads to your invoicing, to your bookkeeping, to your tax accounting. It will eliminate dozens of procedural.

SPEAKER_13

And then it will implement all that for you.

SPEAKER_16

And it will implement all that for you. And to the extent that you have an Optimus robot, it'll even generate the work orders and have them start cleaning the bathrooms.

SPEAKER_13

And pretty soon your uh Bitcoin wallet will get so heavy you won't be able to carry it around.

SPEAKER_16

Exactly. Your ledger. Truly, you're entering a phrase where most small business owners and most people cannot comprehend how AI will help you because you're stuck in the large language model free version online. We're not thinking about any thoughts that you have are inferior, and you can use AI to prompt it to create large-scale things that would take a lot of thinking time, and they can present it for you in one shot. This young man gets it. He spent a little time deep diving to understand how AI works, and he has basically created an entire new life plan on how he's gonna go be successful because all the advice that we've given our kids up till now, we have to step back and take a look at it and see if it's even relevant anymore.

Cuban’s Playbook: Implement AI In SMBs

SPEAKER_03

Not to scare anybody, but I just watched a six-hour course on YouTube about AI agents, and here's what I learned. You have about four to six years before your job is likely replaced by AI. And that's I'm speaking to the majority of people that are in those corporate jobs where you're working on a computer. I mean, I literally worked those jobs for five years, and every single one that I worked will be gone. I was a technical recruiter, those jobs will be gone. Um, I was in the financial analyst uh uh for a company, I was financial analyst, those jobs will be gone. Uh, any investment banking jobs, those will be gone. Pretty much all of the service-based jobs that are on the phones, those will be gone. Any Uber drivers, those will be gone. Um yeah. So, like consider this a fair warning to work with urgency on the side hustle. Start learning sales, that that skill will never go away. Short form marketing and content creation, that skill is going to be here for a long time. That won't go away. Obviously, if you want to learn AI automation, I just kind of dipping my toes into it right now. But learn that. Obviously, stay ahead of the curve the best that you possibly can. But if you're not working with urgency right now, you are going to be screwed in a couple years. And I don't mean to scare you. I'm just being real. I'm just being real. What bucket do you want to fall under? The bucket of people who are going to ignore it until it happens, or the bucket of people who are going to go out of their way to learn this so you don't end up screwed in the future. Fair warning.

SPEAKER_16

I can't think of really any industries that are going to be so dramatically impacted in such a short amount of time as perhaps maybe farriers in Manhattan were affected when the automobile took over. You know what I mean? Like I can promise you, in Manhattan, there's not a lot of farriers in the phone book as it once was. You know what I'm saying? But there was a point in time when you could make a killing in Manhattan as a farrier.

SPEAKER_13

There's not a lot of phone book printers anymore either.

SPEAKER_16

Exactly. This is going to be dramatic. And I think it's going to be in ways a lot of us don't expect, especially for people that only have exposure to AI on the large language model side, aka grok, chat GPT-4, right? Oh, great. We treat it like a search engine, which is frankly kind of how I've treated it. But these these world masters.

SPEAKER_13

Well, we just don't really understand it yet. So we don't really know what we're doing. We don't even know. We don't know what we don't know what to do.

SPEAKER_16

We don't know. But the elite of the world are way ahead of us on this. We just ran through the entire 2020 nightmare with COVID and all that kind of stuff, and the skip tracing and the track tracing. And they had some pretty incredible tools for surveillance, but AI takes it to a whole new level. One of the problem things I heard Elon Musk say years ago was the problem with data collection, with spying on you is in the data collection. It's on the problem of the collector, right? Sure, I can grab all the phone calls Americans make. And who's going to listen to them all? Right? Like, sure, I have it. And what am I going to do with it? So the most of the United States government has up till now has decided is just to store the data. Right. And I guess we can target a person or two, but for the most part, you can talk on your phone. And unless you're already on the state enemies list, you're probably just talking into the ether, right? I mean, fair enough. Well, now with AI, that changes because now you do have an intelligence that can go and listen to it all, contextualize it at all, and come up with target lists or whatever you want to do. Here's Bill Gates talking about how they're going to create more of a control grid to track more and more things, you know, to keep you healthy. But we need to see what's in your bank account at the same time.

SPEAKER_05

Another place that India leads, uh, but there's a lot more that all of you can be involved in driving forward, is this digital uh public infrastructure. You know, no country is more able to take government benefits and get them out efficiently and effectively to their citizens than India. You know, you would have expected rich countries or others to do that, but in fact, uh uh they did not. And so that basic structure that starts with identity and bank accounts and payments is just foundational. And as part of this visit, I'm now seeing how that foundation is being built out, built out in um agriculture with profiles of farmers to understand uh what they need and give them advice, uh built out with health records, uh, so that we can help people not only with infectious diseases, but uh the challenge that's coming in the future with the growth of the non-communicable diseases being a huge thing.

Beyond LLMs: Hardware-Native AI & Neuralink

SPEAKER_16

And that's cancer, by the way. So I'm I don't have this clip teed up, but the president of Pfizer, the veterinarian Burla or Bulla, he goes, We save the world from COVID, and now we're gonna save the world from cancer. He said that. He said those words. We save the world from COVID, and now we're gonna save the world from cancer. Please don't. I'm pretty sure the research we're doing is saying you're causing more of this cancer crisis. Like you didn't save the world from sh, but please stop. Yeah, please stop. But you know, Ron, they need access to your bank account, they need access to your farms and what you've got on those farms. They need all of it, right? Why to prevent the non-communicable pandemic in the future? Wait, if it's non-communicable, why do you need to what? The spreading?

SPEAKER_05

Um that digital public infrastructure will help us uh with these uh climate uh problems. I was in Odisha uh yesterday, and and what they showed is that they've registered the farmers and uh registered what type of crops they grow and what land they own. They literally have a control center. You know, when you walk in, you think, wow, this is agriculture, but you know, you've got a command center and maps and people doing queries and sending out messages. And so that all starts, you know, with an ad hour identity, listing those farmers, uh, getting the information, making sure it's up to date.

SPEAKER_16

You know, I think AI is going to change things dramatically, especially when people are voluntarily registering their whole lives into these databases so that they can have a command room to tell the farmers where to plant their peas and squash. You know what I'm saying? This does it not spell like trouble, like all over.

SPEAKER_13

Oh, yeah.

Species Drift And Ultra-Fast Communication

SPEAKER_16

So Palantir got hacked this weekend. Bad Kitty posted this. Palantir hacked. Supposedly they have stuff on Elon and Trump. Actually, I knew about this hack, but I didn't know what they had. Now maybe the time to remind you that Palantir partnered with World Economic Forum Center for the fourth industrial revolution, along with CCP's Huawei. Nobody ever listens to me. So Kim.com posted this. This Kim.com's account is out of New Zealand. He's got, I don't know, a couple million followers, and he does a lot of these tech leaks. He's, you know, Kim.com is one of those must-follow accounts on X. Palantir was allegedly hacked. An AI agent was used to gain super user access. And here's what the hackers allegedly found. Peter Thiel and Alex Carp commit mass surveillance of world leaders and titans of industry on a massive scale. They have thousands of hours transcribed and searchable conversations of Donald Trump, J.D. Vance, and Elon Musk. They have backdoored the devices, cars, and jets of world leaders and accumulated the biggest archave of blackmail material. Palantir is creating nuclear and bioweapon capabilities for Ukraine and is working closely with the CIA to defeat Russia. They believe that they are one year away. They plan to achieve this by keeping Russia busy with meaningless peace negotiations. Palantir is responsible for the majority of Palestinian deaths in Gaza. They have developed an AI targeting for Israel. Palantir is an arm of the CIA, and all data from international clients is copied into a CIA spy cloud. Palantir has become the most dangerous company in the world. If you work there, you have the right to know that this is what Palantir AI is used for without your knowledge. The Palantir data hackers allegedly gathered will be given to Russia and/or China. I was chosen as a trusted partners for this publication. I am not involved in the Palantir hack and I don't know the hackers, but I do know that the hack happened. Yay! It's always great when other world leaders get the nuclear codes. You know what I mean? Like this is truly the we had the Manhattan Project. We got way out ahead of the world with nuclear weapons. I Eisenhower and Truman both ran around the world basically beating people on the heads because we had nuclear weapons. And then one day, one day, Russia got nuclear weapons, and the entire face of the world changed because now you had detente, right? Mass, mutually assured destruction. This Palantir it and its early capabilities of surveillance and basically being the premier AI that can read everything, right? There's no interface. It just, if it can touch an electronic, it can figure out what it is, figure out its keystroke logs, figure out all of its database and organize it in some manner and create something of it. It's premiere. It's the top of the line. It's the super secret advanced. If it just got hacked, I mean, this is no different. Was it who were the spies that gave the atomic secrets to Russia? Was it the Roseburgs? The Roseburgs that were I think it was the Roseburgs. I mean, this is the same thing. If Palantir just got hacked and Russia and China now get it, now we're in a world where it's bite makes right, detente, they're gonna reverse engineer it. You know what I mean? Like you're gonna see internet blocks, people aren't gonna let the internet talk to other countries because you can't risk letting these AI agents come into your internet and do what they're doing if they're able to surveil and grab onto everything and zero, zero hour hacks on people's devices. Like this is a conversation that we peasants, while we're out in the fields shoveling shiz for our jobs or whatever, it's so beyond us. But yet this has the ability to change everything around us. It has the ability to, on one hand, lift us into a golden age where we have universal high standards of living and we don't have to save for retirement. And on the other hand, this could end up being one of the worst things that's ever happened to us. Uh, here is uh Jay Bartacharya talking to Megan Kelly about something that's been going on with our DNA, right? And all these special different uh there's all kinds of gene therapy that you can go get for different reasons, stem cell research, you know, all kinds of stuff. And people are going and getting these services. Keep this in the backdrop of the context where we're way, we don't have control over this tech.

SPEAKER_08

The companies who were offering a gene editing sort of therapy for individuals, something called CAR T therapy, they were uh drawing the blood cells of Americans in the United States, then shipping them off to outsource the gene editing to labs in China. This is all recent. It was just approved in the last administration, and then they're shipped back to infuse into Americans. And I thought, oh my God, uh, do people not understand the potential national security risk? And I I wonder if these patients were even informed what's going on. They just were they just told, hey, we're gonna do this therapy, we're gonna draw your blood. Do they even really understand what was happening?

AI As Business Operating System

SPEAKER_16

Meanwhile, not only were those machines that were doing the gene editing doing it through AI, but they also have AI reading your genes and now putting it into their database, and they're like, Who's gonna get this year's virus? Who's gonna get this year's non-communicable cancer disease so that Bill Gates can tell you what to do or not do? Or, oh, hey, they want to take your farm. What a good time to get cancer. It's the beginning of the end, and it's the end of the beginning, right? We've made the transition now. Our leaders have committed to the transition, absolutely committed to the transition. Here's uh Marco Rubio. We are transitioning. The world either comes with us or we don't. And I, as a peasant, am going to do nothing but raise the alarm. We need to be prepared for what's coming, and we need to be on the front wave, otherwise, it's probably going to eat us alive.

SPEAKER_22

The international institutions, while many nations invested in massive welfare states at the cost of maintaining the ability to defend themselves. This, even as other countries have invested in the most rapid military buildup in all of human history, and have not hesitated to use hard power to pursue their own interests. To appease a climate cult, we have imposed energy policies on ourselves that are impoverishing our people, even as our competitors exploit oil and coal and natural gas and anything else, not just to power their economies, but to use as leverage against our own. And in a pursuit of a world without borders, we opened our doors to an unprecedented wave of mass migration that threatens the cohesion of our societies, the continuity of our culture, and the future of our people. We made these mistakes together, and now together we owe it to our people to face those facts and to move forward to rebuild. Under President Trump, the United States of America will once again take on the task of renewal and restoration, driven by a vision of a future as proud, as sovereign, and as vital as our civilization's past.

SPEAKER_14

And while we are prepared, if necessary, to do this alone, it is our preference and it is our hope to do this together with you, our friends here in Europe. For the United States and Europe, we belong together.

Four-To-Six Years To Job Disruption

SPEAKER_22

America was founded two hundred and fifty years ago, but the route began here on this continent long before. The man who settled and built a nation of my birth arrived on our shores carrying the memories and the traditions and the Christian faith of their ancestors as a sacred inheritance, an unbreakable link between the old world and the new. We are part of one civilization, Western civilization. We are bound to one another by the deepest bonds that nations could share, forged by centuries of shared history, Christian faith, culture, heritage, language, ancestry, and the sacrifices our forefathers made together for the common civilization to which we have fallen heir. And so this is why we Americans may sometimes come off as uh a little direct and urgent in our council. This is why President Trump demands seriousness and reciprocity from our friends here in Europe. The reason why, my friends, is because we care deeply. We care deeply about your future and ours. And if at times we disagree, our disagreements come from our profound sense of concern about a Europe with which we are connected. Not just economically, not just militarily, we are connected spiritually and we are connected culturally. We want Europe to be strong. We believe that Europe must survive. Because the two great wars of the last century serve for us as history's constant reminder that ultimately our destiny is and will always be intertwined with yours.

SPEAKER_14

Because we know. I don't know what he said at the last sentence.

SPEAKER_16

I was expecting a we know where we go one, we go all the time. I mean This is why some of these maxims or these axioms that I throw out there, like facts don't matter, narratives do. Right. Yes, Ron, we've known for a long time, going on 40 or 50 years now. Right? The people who have implemented the grift, uh, the the scam, they don't care about the climate. Al Gore does not care about the climate. He made millions upon millions and raised billions upon billions of dollars for his pet causes, which becomes a patronage system. You can use the money you changed on climate change to get a local sheriff installed, or a district attorney, or a council member, or a representative or a senator.

SPEAKER_13

And that's all it was.

SPEAKER_16

Yes. No real Elon Musk, Elon Musk, in all of his Asperger capacity, right, does such a good job of putting these people's shame in their face. They they, you know, there was that big thing about if we just had three billion dollars, we could fix world hunger if it was directed properly. And Elon Musk is like, I'll cut the check right now.

SPEAKER_13

So I guess what I'm trying to say is, are we entering the age of reality?

SPEAKER_16

We are entering the age of reality. This is what I'm saying. Elon Musk is like, I'll cut the check right now. Uh right now, the whole amount. But no more money from anybody in the world gets to go to world hunger. You have to fix the problem. Well, I mean, well, then there's no number that can fix it. I can either fix the problem and throw money at it, and we can actually fix hunger, or you guys are all just raising money to redistribute to your friends. That's exactly what's going on. He completely blew it up. Hey, Bill Gates, nobody is doing more for the climate than Tesla. Nobody. Why do you have a short position on the stock?

SPEAKER_13

Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_16

You don't you don't actually believe in climate change. And that's the thing with all of this stuff. You don't actually believe in democracy when you're doing anti-democratic things. You don't actually believe in health and welfare and the Hippocratic Oath when you're when your injections to prevent a non-problem COVID virus cause turbo cancers. You don't actually care about health.

SPEAKER_13

Right. The data point that everybody likes to look at is sea level change. You know, Florida's not underwater yet, and the insurance companies are still insuring all the properties on the beach. So yeah.

Surveillance At Scale And DPI Models

SPEAKER_16

Here's the thing perspective. Yeah. Okay. Who is this good for? Who is it not good for? One of the reasons in America that our technology has grown so much, and I'm not just talking about computer tech, I'm talking about automobiles, trains, telegraphs, is those technologies were made available to the people. What use does a king have for the telegraph? What use does the king have for transcontinental railroads? Right. Like really, he has to only absorb them because they become inevitable, or because he needs to use them to fight another king in another area. But for the most part, the king's incentive is to keep things exactly as they are so that I don't give up an inch of power.

SPEAKER_13

But if the tech touches the peasants and the peasants are have an increased utility, yeah, an increased utility, and there is value added, you can't keep it away from them.

SPEAKER_16

No, not in America. That's the beautiful thing. So in America, we take that tech and we democratize it and we use it, right? You get a tech titan or you get an industrial titan that will run the railroad across the country because he can sell tickets to the little guy. You get a Ford, who decides to make vehicles and pays his employees enough to buy the vehicles, thereby creating his own supply and demand loop, right? X is another one of these companies. Elon Musk is an industrialist titan. Okay. And here's the key secret. Here's the secret. Don't be a globalist.

SPEAKER_10

I'm against globalist power. The UN should not have a lot of power. It's like who voted for them? I am not going to vote for them. You know, and it's it's like we we we want power to the people. Power the power should the max the maximum power to the individual. Um and so like we should we should not have any sort of international treaties that restrict the freedom of Americans, and we should minimize the amount of federal interference uh at the state level. So it should be like so unless this unless it's at the state level, which which which is something you can influence, then the it really agencies at the federal and the national level should have minimal to zero power over you. Yeah.

SPEAKER_16

Yeah. And how do you do that? As an industrialist, there's one and one way only to do this. You have to decentralize the tech. What did Mark Cuban talk about earlier? All software's going away. It's going to be specific. That is a decentralization. Your robot is going to have its own unique LAI brain, right? Does that make sense? You know what I mean? That's not going to be mimicked with other stuff, be similar, just like all humans are similar.

SPEAKER_13

Is this only going to work if we patch in?

SPEAKER_16

That's that's the billion-dollar question. There's going to be there's going to be a split track.

SPEAKER_15

Yeah.

Palantir Hack Allegations And Deterrence

SPEAKER_16

I mean, there's going to be a track of people that want to patch in as technology symbiotes. Yep. And then there's going to be people that want to genetically alter. And I think you're going to see a divergence, but you know, let's not get too sci-fi. The thing that's super concerning about me is these conversations aren't conversations we're having over the span of 20 or 30 years or a lifetime. Right. We're trying to keep we're trying to play catch up. They're looking at it going, hey, in five years, there will be no white-collar jobs. Hey, in five years, all of the top 50 companies that have digital output will not exist. Okay, hey, don't even try to save for retirement. What a wasted adventure. Okay. Like, so what am I supposed to do here? Sit back and just figure out how to tell small businesses to implement AI? What if the result is, oh, by the way, you're out of business? I don't know. One of the things I thought this was really funny. How uh when when immigrants go to China, the difference on if you go to China versus if you were to immigrate to Britain. So here's a British man who decided to immigrate to China and treat Chinese just like the immigrants that go to Britain teach the British. It's just uh just something to laugh at. This is pretty fun.

SPEAKER_24

Okay, I think we can all agree everything here is a little bit too Chinese. Restaurants and cafes and that for a start, way too many noodles. I don't eat noodles. You know, we're gonna need iron mash hammock and chips. I mean, you need potato to me, yeah. I don't think you understand. I'm not from here. I think UK because I didn't like it, right? So I need you to change everything to make it feel like it's the UK, yeah? Still no, is it? Right, okay. Well, uh also I can't really work at the minute. Um anxiety. Yeah, so when do I get my money? Obviously, they're gonna need to come here. That's a no-brainer. Um why do you keep saying no? I've noticed as well there's a lot of Chinese people here as well, isn't it? So I was thinking we could get loads of me over here, and we have our own little area, and then you lot can just fuck off. Sound good? It doesn't. Well no, here we go. If we can get loads of me over here, then we can vote in, you know, one of me to be in charge, and then we can all start telling you lot how to live. And after that, I was gonna organise some marches where we go through the streets chanting anti-Chinese sentiments. So uh obviously you'll need to protect us while we do that. That's a no as well, is it? Oh, and finally, I am here illegally. Um, yeah, didn't respect the rules on that one. So uh, do I just choose any hotel or have you got certain prison?

SPEAKER_16

I just thought that was funny. Hardly knew where to fit it in today because we're not talking too much immigration, but oh, that's a great one. Uh so I came here totally illegally, ignored all the rules. So I just check in at any hotel, prison. Okay. One of the things that I've mentioned, and I'm echoing this, is that Barack Obama is a created person, right? That he's this like this entity that comes out of nowhere and all of a sudden he's the president of the United States. Donald Trump is not a created person. You can follow him talking to Oprah in 1983 about tariffs, right? I mean, it's like completely authentic. I think that is one of the things about the world going forward. If you have somebody that's running for office or something like that, and they have no social media history and like kind of came out of nowhere, highly suspect it could be a created person. Tim Burkhart's talked talking to Benny Johnson about Barack Obama being created. One of the things that we have learned about is the very first election that the Dominion Smartmatic software influenced in the United States, where it officially threw the election, was the Iowa 2006 caucus where Barack Obama, it or is it 2008, the 2008 caucus where Barack Obama beat Hillary Clinton and it changed the entire uh trajectory of Obama. That was the first time Smartmatic, according to the Venezuelan whistleblowers, flipped an election in the United States. So listen to Tim Burkhart here, sitting member of Congress, who's explaining about Barack Obama and how he just kind of is a created person, like came out of nowhere to suddenly become the president. And then we find out the person who gave him the Nobel Peace Prize is one of these island hoppers with Jeffrey Epstein, and we find out that his big donors were trying to have kids with Jeffrey Epstein's, and we find out his head attorney was, I don't know, calling Uncle Jeffrey and asking for dating advice, torture advice, and uh other things.

Gene Editing, Data Sovereignty, And Risk

SPEAKER_17

The hits keep Kathen Rumler is the big news this morning because she resigned from Goldman Sachs, she was Obama's personal White House attorney. Personal like Obama's the one, Obama's the one who's like sort of skated on this, and nobody's really brought up his name. But wait a second, like the vast majority of Epstein's most heinous crimes took place while Barack Obama was president. Yep. Epstein got out of jail right as Barack Obama was being put into office, and all of this stuff was going on, and it's his lawyers, the White House counsel who's communicating with this pedophile, this convicted now, convicted, sentenced, pedophile, and she's like tee-hee-heeing, doing favors for him through Obama. Obama is like signing executive orders. You can like tie all this back, the Rothschild bank, like he's like doing all this stuff, and he's like scathing somehow. Like Obama's getting zero pushback on this. Why'd nobody asking Obama like, why didn't you do something about Jeffrey Epstein?

SPEAKER_09

Because President Obama was created. He was not, he's not organic. I mean, you pick this obscure guy from college who has zero records. You have college professors that don't remember him ever being there. And uh he runs and he's un and all of a sudden people drop out of races and he's unopposed. And he goes from a state senator to a to a U.S. senator to um an unknown to be in president of the United States because he was created. They found somebody that fit their mold. It's the classic. I went back and watched it a couple days ago, the Brady Bunch, where Greg was wanting to be a great musician, you know, and he was playing all this like Jim Croce stuff or something. I don't know. And you know, look up who Jim Croce is. He was great. But he had some kind of ballads that were kind of romantic and sad, you know. And so Greg's this guy, and he goes in and this record studio, and they're like, Yeah, man, yeah, we're really digging what you're putting down, you know. And he and then he says, um, and he's and the lady, and he means it's it's very almost Epstein-ish, and she says, She says, 'Oh, I'm never wrong about these things.' Well, the guy that they had, Johnny Bravo, had quit before they could make him a star, and they'd already bought his suit, and Greg fit that suit. And so then they tried to make him a rock, and he was going to be a rock star, but because of his, you know, he is a his slave to his his art form or whatever, he couldn't do it, which is total bogus. Anybody give him that opportunity to take that chance. But that's that's the way Obama was. You know, he fit the suit, and he he was um he's a good-looking, articulate guy, and um you know, had a couple of kids and came up through the corrupt Chicago machine. And uh, and that's and and you know, you've got several in Congress that are just like that. Several, the squad. I mean, they you had billionaires putting money behind probably 30 or 40 different candidates across the country, and they hit on on a half, you know, AOC, they hit on a bunch of them, and that's and that's how they got there. And we got to start realizing this, and the conservatives just aren't good at creating anybody. I mean, uh, you know, it's we're all a mismatch of mismatch of different backgrounds and and everything, and and somehow it it tends to work occasionally, but here we are one vote away from losing the majority. But back to the Epstein files, um uh, you know, they were putting them out, and the media just would, for some reason, wouldn't wouldn't pay any attention to Comer in the oversight committee. We were doing it the right way. We 20 or 30,000 pages, and it wasn't good enough.

Created Politicians And Election Tech

SPEAKER_16

Yeah, so they dumped them all. But that idea of Barack Obama being a made man and there's other made people, I've said this many times. So, what do you think about this person? I think that's a made person. Like to me, their opinions are fungible, they change with the wind depending on who their donors are. AOC, the whole squad. In fact, you could make a really good argument that there are no real people on the Democratic Party left. I mean, even Fetterman, who we kind of joke about, is the biggest example of a made man. Here's a guy who hasn't really had a lot of jobs. Again, I love his opinions. Hasn't really had a lot of jobs, had a stroke, couldn't actually even complete a sentence when he was elected because of the stroke. You know, like if you're not looking at someone who they can just insert name, win election, Fetterman is the example. Like it's kind of the guy like it's almost a blessing that he couldn't talk because the Democrats didn't know he would turn out to be the middle of the road moderate. Does it make sense? They could kind of paint him to be their far left liberal when the reality is he's much more moderate. How many of these, how many of these politicians do we have? Tim Burkhart says 20 or 30 or 40. That's not a small number. That's 10% of Congress.

SPEAKER_13

Or more.

SPEAKER_16

Or more. And here we are as as Republicans with a one-seat majority. And Republicans come from business, law. I mean, they come from all the class. It's real people. It's real people that are like, hey, government touched me, right? They regulated my business. Something happened that made me decide I need to get into public service to change the rules. Then you've got the left. They don't get into business to change the rules. They get into business for power. Republicans aren't there for power. It's just the truth of the matter. They don't see the game the same. They see the game as a debate, as constant improvement. The Democrats see it as a zero sum, you have to win or lose. They don't care what your background is, as long as you always vote with the squad or the team, they want team players.

SPEAKER_13

Well, there's also another slight distinction as well, and it's not as distinctive because Republicans fall in this category too, but they are looking out for themselves. If they're looking out for themselves, they can't figure out what the people need. Yeah.

SPEAKER_16

Can't figure it out. The other thing, too, is the elections. The elections. So they went to Georgia, they grabbed the ballots. They went to Arizona, they grabbed the ballots. One of the next states on the list is probably going to be Colorado. So Donald Trump put out a truth social last week on the 13th. The Democrats refused to vote for voter ID or citizenship. The reason is simple. They want to continue to cheat in elections. This was not what our founders desired. I have searched the depths of legal arguments, not yet articulated or vetted on the subject, and will be presenting an irrefutable one in the very near future. There will be voter ID for the midterm elections, whether approved by Congress or not. Also, the people in our country are insisting on citizenship and no mail-in ballots, with exceptions for military disability, illness, or travel. Thank you for your attention to this matter. I had a conversation with the campaign manager for one of the campaigns for local sheriff. And one of the things that a couple times they said was what the political makeup of this county was. And I said, forget it. You have no idea what the political makeup of this county is. We do all mail and ballots. Nobody does any targeted polling in this county. You have no idea. I said, just because a couple people show up to a protest, you know, you got 300,000 people in this county. They got a newsletter list with 10,000 people on it, and nine people showed up at a protest. That is not the mass of the county supporting no kings or whatever. And I'm like, and I wouldn't trust what the voter rolls have said. I go back to what your example was in 2020. Didn't you assume, didn't you, through the numbers they showed, have like 40,000 extra votes and uh kits.

SPEAKER_13

There's a lot of wildness going on around it.

Voter ID Push, Legal Moves, And Resistance

SPEAKER_16

A lot of wildness. So I said, forget all of it. You've got to just find real people. Just get as many real people as you want, because this year, 2026, the midterms, either by hook or crook, they're going to change the way these elections work, right? Whether it's voter ID, which is going to change the universe of ballots that they can draw from, possibly eliminating the machines completely, and possibly even going a step further and getting rid of mail and ballots. All of that is on the table this year leading into midterms. If they get rid of mail and ballots, get rid of machines, and clean up the roles, Washington state elections are 1,000% different than they were in the last election cycle. Right. So you've got different secretaries of state, specifically Jenna Griswold out in Colorado. Remember, this is the woman who is keeping Tina Peters in jail for crimes that literally she committed, like the whole flip-flop thing. So she's a little panicked here. Listen to her response to Donald Trump basically saying, one way or another, we're doing the Save Act.

SPEAKER_18

The president does not get to decide how American elections are ran. He has tried through executive order to put his thumb on elections, and we will continue to stop him, uh, just like we did with the prior executive order. We have seen him escalate his attacks on American democracy. Just in the last month, not only did he say he planned to nationalize elections, or maybe heck, we don't even need elections, they raided uh uh the Georgia Fulton County elections office based on conspiracies and tried to coerce Minnesota into handing over voter data with the threat of ICE. So this administration is doing everything it can to undermine American elections. Democratic secretaries of state and myself were going to hold the line, and Americans will be able to make their voices heard in the 26th elections in November.

SPEAKER_19

So it doesn't stop with what I've just laid out. No.

SPEAKER_16

Stop with just that. Here's the thing there is a prosecutor in the United States, actually in the territories of the United States down in Puerto Rico, who somehow, through the entire last regime, skated by, he was the one attorney that Biden didn't replace. The one guy out there in Puerto Rico, right? The one guy turns out to be the one attorney that actually had some integrity and a background. Patrick Byrne describes this United States attorney down in Puerto Rico. And this is the genesis. This is the guy who actually legally went in and has like gotten this these machines back to door corner. Puerto Rico is going to save the nation. Puerto Rico's going to save the nation.

Puerto Rico DOJ Thread And Subpoenas

SPEAKER_06

The U.S. attorney of Puerto Rico is the only honest guy in the DOJ at some level. His name's Stephen Moldreau. The man he's he's that that article mentions, the U.S. attorney of Puerto Rico. This is what how in the U.S. system, the cardinals of the church are the U.S. attorneys. There are 94 of them, they're sprinkled across the country.

SPEAKER_16

Biden came in, and well, and remember, the Catholic Church is a government. It's set up as a government. Before there were constitutions and stuff like that. And so the cardinals are like your governors, right? When the when like they they have a lot of power in the system. So if you're looking at the executive branch, like the Catholic Church, the U.S. attorneys serve the function that cardinals did in the Catholic Church. That's what he's saying.

SPEAKER_13

Okay.

SPEAKER_16

So they uphold the zeitgeist. Cardinals uphold the belief system. So lawyers are ones that keep the belief in the current system of law from one generation to the next. That's that's their job, is to make sure everybody plays the game. Their job is to protect the system from generation to generation.

SPEAKER_06

Trump, Trump appointed uh when he was he appointed a lifelong DOJ guy to be the U.S. attorney of Puerto Rico, not a political position. And the guy wasn't a political guy, a careerist DOJ, highly regarded, 36-year prosecutor. Biden came in, he fired 93 out of 94 U.S. attorneys, but he left that guy in place because the guy wasn't a he's not a Trump. He's a widely everyone in the DOJ respects him. He's a you know a guy who worked his way up. He's what U.S. attorneys should really be. It's not a police, and honest, honest is I hear I've never met him face to face, but I know quite a bit about him because I know, and they say he's like a priest and that he seems mild, but he's got a spine like an iron rod. They say he's just a tough guy, did no nonsense, as straight as an arrow as you can find.

SPEAKER_16

So that's the guy that has been in the behind the scenes going after this election stuff. That's where these warrants and subpoenas and all the stuff has been coming out of. Now, Jenna Griswold, who we just heard from before, and you can tell, you know, she's kind of flustered by the ballots being grabbed in Georgia, and you know, they're using all their might, but we're gonna stop attacking democracy. Yeah. Well, she got asked pretty point-blankly, are you gonna resign?

SPEAKER_04

A final question. This is not the first time uh that your office has made mistakes that have damaged voters' confidence in our elections. In 2022, your office sent out mailers to 30,000 non-citizens inviting them to register to vote. They, of course, are not eligible to register to vote. That same year, your office used Colorado's ballot tracking system to send messages to specific Coloradans encouraging them to vote when in fact they had already voted, causing confusion that had to be cleaned up by the county clerks. And now this leak of the voting system passwords. Given your office's repeated errors that have damaged confidence in our elections, which you say is paramount, will you resign?

SPEAKER_18

Absolutely not, Kyle. Um, and I I just want to you're unfairly characterizing and leaving out some uh crucial information.

SPEAKER_04

No, but a final question. This is not the first time.

Errors, Confidence, And Refusal To Resign

SPEAKER_16

I'm not resigning. It's bad, man. It's bad when they're getting asked by like mainstream press. She agreed to do that interview. Okay. It's getting bad out there, folks. You don't think it's getting bad? Okay. Uh, FDA commissioner said this on 60 Minutes this weekend. You know, it's funny because 60 Minutes has got a couple of these interviews that are kind of like, I don't know, Miyakoupas, but here they're talking about how they've, you know, just been poisoning Americans for decades, like and we knew it.

SPEAKER_20

Over the last 40 years, the United States has been exposed to something that our biology was never intended to handle. Energy-dense, highly palatable, rapidly absorbable, ultra-processed foods that have altered our metabolism and have resulted in the greatest increase in chronic disease in our history. Type two diabetes, pre-diabetes, hypertension, abnormal livings, paddy liver, heart attacks, stroke, heart failure. From our food.

SPEAKER_16

From our food. He should have said, from our advertisers.

SPEAKER_13

Brought to you that is what from Kraft?

SPEAKER_16

From Johnson and Johnson? Yes. From Tyson Foods? Absolutely. Kellogg's from our foods? You mean your advertisers? Those were your advertisers, 60 minutes. You've been shoving chick smex down our throats for decades now. It is actually really stunning when you think about that. The the case against John Brennan, the grand conspiracy case, it is advancing. John Solomon was on with uh War Room talking about that.

Ultra-Processed Food And Chronic Disease

SPEAKER_00

I'm seeing a lot of activity, Steve, that uh suggests that the case against uh John Brennan is advancing. The case of whether he misled the country about the true intentions and actions of the intelligence committee assessment that tried to portray Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in uh in bed together when there was no such evidence. So that is one sign that would be the first cannon fire in accountability. And then there are signs that lots of other elements of that weaponization investigation are really cranking up subpoena's testimony, FBI agents out and interviewing people. Uh it took easier, but then again, this was a 10-year conspiracy, so it took easier to get rolling, but you're really seeing signs of that. I would keep an eye on Fort Pierce. I'd also keep an eye on Washington. I think as John Soon keeps making excuses to the president why he can't get the votes for the same document why the president starts to consider uh doing an executive order to do what uh the Senate has not had the courage to do. I think we're gonna get some bombshell revelations about truth that we were denied about the election. I'm not suggesting that we're gonna prove it. Uh votes were flipped. I am going to I I am doing a lot of reporting suggesting that there was a much larger body of evidence that foreign powers were meddling in our election in 2020, 2022, and 2024 than was given to Congress, was given to the American people. And I think there's a series of bombshell revelations that may um increase the resolve of weak Republicans and even some wobbly Democrats to go in and try to fix our system from foreign interference. And I think the next few weeks in Washington, we'll learn about election interference in ways that we didn't know. And down in Florida, we'll see the first signs of accountability. That's our that's our two-step. And then in Maricopa County, keep an eye out. Christy Noah was down there. I think she set off a flare while she was down there yesterday. I think the FBI is doing some work. At some point, we'll see some activity in Maricopa County.

SPEAKER_13

Oh, setting off flares. We're here.

Brennan Probe And Foreign Interference

SPEAKER_16

We're here. Uh okay. We're gonna wrap up the show, you guys. On the private side, we've got a little bit, or excuse me, on the public side, we've got a little bit we're gonna do on the private side. I did want to play this. This is uh uh this is from Henry Fjord, and he's talking about watching a coworker radicalize. So you've got that Canadian police officer where she was talking about, you know, you might be dealing with an extremist if they believe in you know traditional values. You know, if somebody reverts back to the norm, ah, extremist. But you also have the other side of things where people are just kind of starting to look around and go, I don't know that this is yeah, right? It's like, what could change? There's this joke about the artist. Have you heard this? I think it was we were explaining this before the podcast.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah.

SPEAKER_16

So one of our listeners, she was joking about something going on over in England, and she's like, Yeah, my husband, he he thinks that the Austrian artist might not have been so wrong. It's it's kind of like the really subtle way to the tip to the artist. I do remember talking about it. Yeah, the Austrian artist. So we don't even need to say I had another thought about Canada.

SPEAKER_13

Um, have you do you guys watch that show alone? It's all about survival and self-sufficiency and all that. And uh in one of the episodes on uh season 11, you know, they always have to preserve their food or their food gets eaten and uh, you know, by the local critters. Well, this one guy, he's like, I'm gonna put my keep my fish on the line in the water. And I was like, that is brilliant because you know it preserves the fish. You don't kill it until you're ready to eat it, yada yada yada. And I was thinking about that. I was like, that's what Canada is for us. They're just the fish we're keeping on the line until we need it.

SPEAKER_16

Until we're ready, until we're ready. They're hooked, they can't really get away. They they pretend like, oh, they're swimming around. That's not good. Okay, so this is uh this is a gentleman saying that he's watching one of his co-workers slowly get radicalized.

SPEAKER_11

I think I'm watching my coworker get uh radicalized by his algorithm in real time. Uh he's the one a few weeks ago he asked about what coin clipping was, so I had to explain it to him. And then yesterday, uh it was pure silence, and then out of nowhere he's like, he's on his phone, he's like, Who's the painter? I just hide my face. I'm like, Aaron. Who's the painter? I was like, what's the context? He's like, he he's like, it's a meme that says something about how our country's ran by pedophiles, and then all the comments are saying the painter would have never allowed this. So I had to explain to him that once upon a time there was an Austrian painter that failed out of art school, and he's like, Is this I'm like, it is, buddy. Don't yeah, and then he says, Well, you know what? He probably wouldn't have allowed pedophiles to run the country, so yeah.

Pivot To Private: Teasers And Topics

SPEAKER_16

The superwaffins are coming, ladies and gentlemen. The superwaffins are coming. That's the that's the thing about radicalization, right? It starts out as just an appeal back to normalization, and that's I think the big thing that these radicals, these people that want to push these change agendas on you, just don't recognize. Okay, guys, it is time for us to jump over to private. We're gonna be hearing a little bit more from Marco Rubio talk about how we don't really want to go it alone as a world, but we will if we have to. And even though the punditry class all thinks that what we did in Venezuela was a bad deal, other worlds think it was a great deal. We're gonna talk a little bit about the wayfare scandal. And uh again, another confirmation from this Epstein thing that that wave scandal wasn't a bunch of nothing. It was very legitimate. And then uh we're gonna hear from Marina Abramovich. So we're covering a little bit of Epstein, and then we'll hear from, of course, our favorite Hillary Clinton. And what did Hillary Clinton have to say about Pizzagate? So we'll talk to you guys on the other side, we'll see you the rest of you on Monday. That's a tease. That's a tease. That's a tease. Okay. So let's start out here with Hillary Clinton talking about the whole Pizzagate nonsense.

SPEAKER_14

Um actually We were a little girl by the time I was six.

SPEAKER_16

Okay, so this is it. Hillary Clinton being asked kind of about pizza gate and censorship, just the whole thing.

SPEAKER_01

And we've been talking about Western values throughout the conference, and uh, Madam Secretary, I'd like to ask you I'm the mother of a daughter, and it absolutely horrifies me to see what the Epstein files have brought out. And I wanted to ask you, what does it say about Western values when Western leaders have perpetuated and participated in these horrific abuses of minors and girls? Thank you very much. We have gone over.

Clinton Question, Bannon Mentions, Files

SPEAKER_16

So the context of this, remember, even Donald Trump has called out Hillary Clinton specifically with her involvement in Haiti. You know, you stole whole villages of children. Like these the the the Hill Bill and Hillary Clinton Foundation, specifically with Haiti, is a human trafficking organization. Like it's just you it is. If they were not the Clintons, we would have done something about it. Okay, it's bad what they got caught doing down there. Bad. And then there's allegations that it happens elsewhere, and then of course, there's you know, Bill Clinton going down to the island, and Donald Trump saying things. Well, Bill Clinton's gonna have some trouble with what he did down at the island. So for her to be like, I'm a mother and I have kids, and you know, you guys clearly have been part of this. What do you have to say? So this is a pretty big question, right? It could be a real gotcha, but apparently whoever's asking it either is like, I don't know, giving her an out.

SPEAKER_19

Let's listen. The last question, it's horrifying, and we're hoping that uh, you know, there will be continued release um every day that passes. Um, you know, that doesn't mean as our news commentators say, every day in the United States, it's because someone's name is there, they committed a crime. But I think there's a lot of uh very uh troubling and and really horrific information coming out today. Uh came out that Steve Bannon was trying to get Jeffrey Epstein to help him overthrow Pope Francis. I guess that was part of the civilizational uh true conservatism. So it it is something uh that you know uh needs to be totally transparent. I've called for you know many, many years for everything to be uh to be put out there so people can uh uh not only see uh what is in them, but also, if appropriate, uh hold people accountable. We'll see what happens. Um, on the uh new start treaty.

SPEAKER_13

Hey, can you play one clip of her saying something like that? What do you mean? I mean, she just said that she's been calling for this open transparency for years. Can you play just put up one clip?

SPEAKER_16

There are no real clips of that. Come on, Taylor, just pull up one clip. No, no, no clips. No clips of that. No, but that's it's it's now she does bring up a good point. Found out about Steve Bannon. Yeah, Steve Bannon appears in the Epstein files like a thousand seven hundred times. The most prolific communicator with Epstein for a little bit.

SPEAKER_13

Like he might be the most It's like, what is going on, Steve O?

SPEAKER_16

But I'm not I everything I've seen, I don't see Steve Bannon being involved, going to the island, trafficking girls. What Steve Bannon is doing is he's strategically talking about impeachment or 25th Amendment or whatever. Now, Raheem Kassan, I think I mentioned this last week, he said the real secret here is that Bannon still talks to Trump like almost every day, and for how long? There's a good chance that Steve Bannon was Trump's inside man in that circle.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, we don't know.

SPEAKER_16

Trump isn't saying anything about it. Nobody that is in that orbit that would get a message out that hey, this is the guy we're gonna target now is saying anything about it. There's a couple, you know, uh sycophants, cat tur and dilly and things like that, that are on top of Steve Bannon. They hate Steve Bannon, but they're also kind of Elon fans, too. And Steve Bannon and Elon got a thing going on.

SPEAKER_13

So yeah, so it gets to the point where you just have to watch the fruits.

Wayfair Claims, Assistants, And Links

SPEAKER_16

Yeah, I've I think Epstein, I think, I think Bannon, I agree that he's either intelligence or he's private intelligence. He he walks that shadow world where he knows everybody. But like even in the documentary he was making with Epstein, are you Satan? Are you evil? Like, like Epstein, he's not giving Epstein a pass. You know what I'm saying? Like it I don't know. So, anyways, I guess we'll find out if uh Epstein was an inside man or not. Here's here's the thing that uh got confirmed through the Epstein files is this whole thing with Wayfair putting on you know random shelves that match up with missing children's reports and uh selling it and having it available for delivery. Here's just a bunch of these. These are all confirmed, right? Like you can you can connect the serial number to the missing person report, the name of the cabinet. So this is what we reported on five years ago that we got blasted off of our entire Spotify library, got off. Well, the reason this is so significant is uh there's an email Jeffrey's Epstein assistant who was directed to purchase a single unlabeled item for$8,453 from Wayfair, bought one of these emptied lockers. Empty lockers. So it's like if this was just a typo, if this was just a a random thing that wasn't supposed to be happening, all these expensive lockers and stuff like that, why would even Jeffrey Epstein have an assistant go buy one? You know what I mean? And have it delivered where they're gonna have a pizza party in a couple days, and the whole thing is just it's that it's the very thing that we hoped that it wasn't ever going to be. Marie Bronovich, who if you remember, Marie Br uh Bromovich did the spirit cooking stuff with all the celebrity elite, she's just had an entire career of really satanic artwork and stuff like that. Well, when the when the Out of the Shadows documentary came out that Liz Crokin and uh Mike, whatever his name was, produced, she was featured in there with all the spirit cooking, and it made it kind of hard for her to walk down the street. People recognize her. And she actually got a really big contract with Microsoft. Microsoft had hired her to be their little art consultant. She got fired because there was just like public outcry, like, oh my gosh, you're hiring a Satanist. And Microsoft was like, Oh, and like, duh. Well, we do here at Microsoft. Okay, but they kind of had to fire her, and then she became an ambassador for Ukraine. Zelensky appointed her as an ambassadorship. But she's was on a podcast this last week complaining because you know the public seems to know about her her predilections.

SPEAKER_23

And you know, this problem is that I have started having bodyguards because I, you know, they I I had the the the opera Seven Desomaria Kalas in Kare Theater in Amsterdam, and I lived there for 30 years. I had to be bodyguard every single day to go to theater and back because there was announcement, you know, the the alarm that there will be people in the weapons in in the theater when I'm there. Because of the Alex Jones story? All of this, yeah. Then when I was leaving the last day of performance, there was enormous beautiful made from fresh roses, the heart in the front of the theater. And I was thinking this was for me, uh finishing the work. And they said, No, no, this is a protest for the children you just eat. Honestly, it's not fun at all. And I am I am just horrified by this.

SPEAKER_16

But you make artwork that literally glorifies the eating of children.

SPEAKER_13

You know, I know we're all God's children, but damn, she that's scary.

Abramovic Backlash And Public Perception

SPEAKER_16

She is scary. And when you go through her art and her spirit cooking stuff, it's shock. I'm shocked that you're shocked. Does that make sense? Have you ever been in one of those spots? Like, I'm shocked that you're not more blown away that like I'm shocked that you don't think what you're doing is taboo or what you think you're doing is not shocking to the American people. Like, you know, us extremists that are into tradition. You know what I mean? Like what what you're doing is shocking. And so when you're like, oh, I can't believe they're putting an artistic display of flowers against the children you just ate, you just made an art gallery that showed you eating children. So don't get afraid by another art gallery. But it's like they don't get it. They don't get that the premise of your art is what is offensive and it's going to draw that fire. And if there's smoke there, Marina Abramovich, and we find out that you guys actually do eat people, we no longer will call it art. We will call it evidence. You know what I mean? We will call it intent, we will call it all those things. So pretty freaky. It's interesting having her climb out from under the carpet. I I thought she was afraid. Um I thought she wouldn't be making public appearances, but apparently, apparently they're all coming out of the woodwork. Mark Arubi, a last thing before we go, talks about the United States and how we are just doing it.

SPEAKER_22

A lot of countries didn't like what we did in Venezuela. That's okay. That was in our national interest. I'm sure there's something he'll do one day that we don't like, and we'll say, hey, we didn't like you, did this. So what? That doesn't mean we're not going to be friends, we're not going to be partners, we're not going to be able to cooperate with one another. Countries express their opinion all the time. We have very close allies that didn't like uh what we did in that regard. I can tell you what, it was successful. We're proud of it, it was necessary because the guy was a narco-terrorist, and uh we made him a bunch of offers and he chose to want to. And look what's happened in Venezuela in the six weeks since he's been gone. Okay, it is a now, it's got a long way to go. There's still much work that needs to be done, but I can tell you Venezuela is much better off today than it was six weeks ago. So, you know, we're very proud of that project, and you know, I know some will disagree and didn't like, but irrespective, I think everyone can now agree that Venezuela has an opportunity and a new future that wasn't there six weeks ago.

Venezuela, Realpolitik, And Outcomes

SPEAKER_16

A lot of countries didn't might makes right. So we're gonna do what we want to do, and you're gonna do what you want to do, and if we don't like it, the only thing that's gonna stop you is. Uh the new world that we have walked into the conference of last weekend the whole world death. And now it is just uh open enforced the terror, open enforced the tripod, and uh the whole world is gonna have to hit onto one of the big power. And that's just the way it is. One one one world one one five is going to win the AI fight. It's gonna be up, or it's gonna be fine. All right, guys, that's it for us today. We will talk to you again tomorrow.

SPEAKER_26

What night lives in that castle over there? I'm 37. What? I'm 37, I'm not old. Well, I can't just call you man. You could say Dennis. I didn't know you were called Dennis. Well, you didn't bother to find out, did you? I did say sorry about the old woman, but from behind you looked what I object to is you automatically treat me like an inferior. Well, I am king. Oh, king, eh? Very nice. And how'd you get that, eh? By exploiting the workers, by hanging on to outdated imperialist dogma which perpetuates the economic and social differences in our society. If there's ever going to be any progress.

SPEAKER_02

How'd you do? How do you do, good lady? I am Arthur, King of the Britons. Whose castle is that? King of the Who? The Britons.

SPEAKER_26

Who are the Britons? Well, we all are. We are all Britons. And I am your king. No, we had a king. I thought we were an autonomous collective. You're fooling yourself. We're living in a dictatorship. A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working class is. How dare you go? Bringing class into it again! That's what it's all about.

SPEAKER_02

If only people would please good people, I am in haste. Who lives in that castle?

SPEAKER_26

No one lives there. Then who is your lord? We don't have a lord. What? I told you. We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune. We take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week. Yes. But all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting. Yes, I see. By a civil majority in the case of purely internal affairs. Be quiet or by a two-thirds majority in the case of quiet. I order you to be quiet.

SPEAKER_02

I'm your king. Well, I didn't vote for you. You don't vote for kings? Why do you become king then? The lady of the lake, her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that I, Arthur, was to carry Excalibur.

Closing Riff & Monty Python Outro

SPEAKER_26

That is why I'm your king. Listen, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony. Be quiet! Oh, but you can't expect to wield supreme executive power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you. Shut up! Oh but if I went round saying I was an emperor, just because some Moisson bink had lobbed a scimitar at me, they put me away. Shut up, will you? Shut up! Ah, now we see the violence inherent in the system. Shut up! Come and see the violence inherent in the system! Help, help! I'm being repressed! Bloody peasant! Oh, what a giveaway! Did you hear that? Did you hear that, eh? That's what I'm on about. Do you see it repressing me?

SPEAKER_14

You saw it, didn't you?

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