Dying Ideas, New Technology, & Opportunities of a lifetime
The dying ideas of the boomer generation have left behind a fertile soil that is beginning to produce the green shoots of tomorrow’s world tree.
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Transcript:
https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/64296104
Speaker 0 (0s): Well, well, well, welcome back, everybody. Hope you enjoyed the last podcast where we got into an in depth idea or multiple ideas of supply chains and eugenics in a world that seems to be changing in a way reminiscent of old ideas. Does that make sense? I guess what I'm trying to say in a way to segway into this new idea I have is to talk just a little bit more about the old idea.
And the old idea is this world of boomer ideology and the old ways. It seems to me, there's a lot of talk about the fourth turning in the fourth industrial revolution and what it comes down to is cycles. And there was no, I don't want to get into people being evil or angry or racist, or I think what's probably more likely is that there is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come.
I think we've all heard that before. And what we're seeing right now is in fact, the retirement of a large group, probably the largest group, the boomers are retiring. And so were, there are ideas. And it's not that even though gen X, Y zoomers millennials, they tend to look at these older people in positions of authority and power and think to themselves, how can these people do what they do?
Do they not see the level of destruction that they are bringing down upon the world? Do they not understand the level of poverty they are bringing to the future people on this planet? Do they not care? And it's a valid point. However, it's not that those people don't care. It's just that those Ideas are the only idea. Those were there, Ideas.
They don't have new ideas. They only have their ideas and their ideas of what worked in the past logically should work in the future. When you're set in your ways, it's very difficult for you to see things differently. And that's why things are changing. And that's why there is this old world. And nothing seems to be working the dollar. The military might have the United States, this idea of globalization, as idea of stakeholder capitalism.
These are all really old ideas that never truly came to fruition in the way the people thought they would come into fruition. You look at Klaus, Schwab, Henry Kissinger, Joe Biden, Donald Trump. You look at all these old people that did their best to try and do what they thought was right. I don't agree with a lot of what they did.
However, I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt that they did, what they thought was right. And they are Dying. And so were there Ideas, it's cyclical. And now we're moving into this new brave new world where it is possible that if we don't remember our past, we're doomed to repeat it in the future. Let me read to you a quick little excerpt of what I'm talking about.
And I think it lends credence and evidence to show that this argument is something that has been with us forever, unity and division within appearance, a lively New debate about the concepts. One divides into two and to fuse into one, this is unfolding on a philosophical front in every country.
This debate is a struggle between those who are four and those who are against the materialistic dialectic, a struggle between two conceptions of the world, the proletarian and booze was a conception. Those who maintain that one divides into two is the fundamental law of things are on the side of the materialistic dialectic.
Those who maintain that the fundamental law of things is that to fuse into one are against the materialistic dialectic. The two sides have drawn a clear line of demarcation between them and their arguments are diametrically opposed. This polemic reflects on the ideological level, the acute and complex class struggle taking place in China and in the world.
This is a passage from the red flag of peaking, September 21st, 1964. I want you to think about those two struggles. The struggle between two classes, one divides into two
Speaker 1 (5m 59s): Or to fuse into one. I think about that for a minute. Does
Speaker 0 (6m 5s): One divided into two? Can you cut it in half? And each person gets half a day
Speaker 1 (6m 12s): To, to fuse into one.
Speaker 0 (6m 19s): It's an interesting concept to think about it. It's capitalism, it's communism in a way
Speaker 1 (6m 23s): It is it's life.
Speaker 0 (6m 26s): It's the yin and the yang. And depending where you're at in your life probably depends on where you think you fall in those lines of demarcation. Everyone's heard that quote, that when you're young, if your not a liberal,
Speaker 1 (6m 40s): If you don't have a heart
Speaker 0 (6m 42s): And when you're old, if you're not a Republican, you don't have a,
Speaker 1 (6m 44s): The brain is nothing. You don't have a heart or a brain is not that you're the scarecrow or the lion. It's just that you must be,
Speaker 0 (6m 56s): Be on both sides of this argument at one point in your life, in order to truly understand,
Speaker 1 (7m 2s): Stand that there is no solution to this problem. There was only the acceptance of it. Does that make sense to take a hard line and always say, no,
Speaker 0 (7m 18s): We must take from this and give to
Speaker 1 (7m 20s): These, or on the flip side to say, we must circle our wagons become one.
Speaker 0 (7m 30s): You got to be on both sides. You have to live both of those experiences.
Speaker 1 (7m 35s): Do you truly understand the argument? And once you've lived, both of those experiences, you know that there's no right answer. There is no right answer. There's only what's right for you and the people around you take it to the extreme that's human nature. That's why we have chaos. That's why we have greed. That's why we have oppression,
Speaker 0 (8m 8s): Same forces, greed, and oppression, right?
Speaker 1 (8m 11s): And selfishness. They give
Speaker 0 (8m 18s): The way to inspiration. They give way to the eye of the tiger, if you will,
Speaker 1 (8m 29s): Natural selection. So let me speak a little bit
Speaker 0 (8m 41s): About the new world that I see for me. And I think it's unique. I think gen X-ers, you know, people born after the boomers, before the millennials, I think we have a really rare idea of what the world looks like. Most of us were pretty cynical because we've seen our parents go through their life and tell us about this world in which they lived. But it wasn't really all our world. And we've seen this new class of kids come up and have it in a way where everybody got a trophy and everybody got this.
And we as like the small group of genexers realize, like that's never going to work, but that we looked at our parents' group and we're like, that didn't work. That's ridiculous. That's a stupid, old idea. And then we looked at this new group and we're like, Jesus Christ. You're so fucking naive. That's not going to work either. You know, I, I want her to quote that said, if you scratch a cynic, you'll find an old idealist. I think that's true. I think that the majority of people in my age group are people that want to believe in these ideals that are closed or at least have family members that can remember the feeling fifties.
But yet we know that that's not reality. We also know that it's not going to be cooled by a, everybody is equal and we're all going to be the millionaire's like, that's not it either. So that being said, let's talk about this new digital world in which the new world is forming. I call it the it's like finding a new continent. It's like sailing across the cyberspace and finding a whole new continent to be explored.
And what does this new continent and cyberspace it's Bitcoin it's cryptocurrencies it's NFTs is the abstract idea of money personified. The old idea of money was as a medium of exchange. The new idea of money is a abstract store of value.
You see there exactly the same only different let's look at what happened to money in, in the last 50 years, right? It used to be that money, at least the dollar, and then currently is based on the dollar we're exchange for its worth and gold. And once that happens once, so when that happened, things were Well.
However, once taking off the gold standard, all of a sudden, it just became a Pick
Speaker 1 (11m 58s): Of paper. That piece of paper could be printed and moved about.
Speaker 0 (12m 5s): And it's no longer money, its a note. But the note is only backed by the mite, by the gun
Speaker 1 (12m 13s): One's by the threat of death from the government. Well, what happens when the amount of money it takes to pay the person who does the threatening become so extreme, it's no longer worth it. You know what I mean? By that the us government has to pay the difference
Speaker 0 (12m 41s): Fence industry and the military industrial complex. So much money,
Speaker 1 (12m 46s): Money to go around the world and enforced that everyone used the dollar that it's no longer worth it. It's no longer worth it. It's an old idea and it's Dying. We don't. What if
Speaker 0 (13m 13s): Do you guys remember back around the turn of the century when doctors would operate in the, in the infancy of doctors operating on humans, that it was a time, right?
Speaker 1 (13m 25s): When English, gentlemen, English, gentlemen, doctors thought that it was incorrect.
Speaker 0 (13m 33s): The only foolish to wash their hands before or after surgery gentlemen, a gentlemen didn't do that.
Speaker 1 (13m 40s): They didn't need to. However children and patients alike began Dying right
Speaker 0 (13m 48s): After childbirth, during childbirth, during operations and doctors could not seem to figure out what that was, what it was, what it was determined to be was that germs from the doctor's hands, from not being washed were being introduced into the body instruments that doctor's were using to cut open individuals during operations were in fact
Speaker 1 (14m 14s): Contaminating the patient infecting the in-patient
Speaker 0 (14m 20s): Causing large-scale infections, which
Speaker 1 (14m 22s): Cause death. It was, it was determined that it was the
Speaker 0 (14m 30s): Unsanitary conditions that were causing the rash of death
Speaker 1 (14m 34s): In patients be a childbirth or complications around the turn. The
Speaker 0 (14m 42s): That's what they figured out. Oh, I guess not washing your hands. Not sterilizing your hands, not sterilizing the environment. We're not sterilizing instruments can lead to infection. It's toxic. It's toxic to the body to not sterilize the instruments you're using to open up the body. And if you have toxic instruments, then you will not be able to successfully operate.
Does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (15m 15s): The
Speaker 0 (15m 17s): Unsanitary conditions, the unsanitary environment environment, but mostly the unsanitary instrument's be at your hand or the scalpel. If you were a doctor causes you to infect and kill that, what you were operating on, you got it. That is what money has been almost forever. It's an unsanitary instrument.
It never works well. Let me put it this way. It never works for working people. It does work. If you're someone like the Rothschild banking dynasty who says I care, not who makes the rules, but who prints the money. Then it works for you. You see, if you understand how to wield an unsanitary instrument, if you understand that your toxic instrument will kill people, then you have a power to kill people.
And that's what banks are. Banks are the ruthless unscrupulous doctors wielding a dirty scalpel on the proletariat people in the world. You get it. They understand that they have toxic instruments and they want to use them. In fact, they go around and tell everyone, this is the tool you need to solve your nation's problems.
We have this dirty scalpel that can cut away. The cancer is poor people of your population. And we figured it out. Well, someone figured it out. I don't claim to be the person to have figured out. I'm just relaying the message. A cryptocurrency, a decentralized network becomes a sanitary, a sterilized scalpel. It takes the dirty instrument from the people in power and hands it over to the individual who can't take the necessary precautions to operate effectively and efficiently without the permission
Speaker 1 (17m 42s): Of the money changers.
Speaker 0 (17m 46s): This is the foundation on which the new world is being. There is a lot of promise. The decentralization has a lot of promise for the people to live in a world without the threat of monetary confinement, without the threat of monetary exclusion or without the threat of poverty.
It is this decentralization. It is the star fish versus the spider. It is the urban warfare versus the Roman legions. It is the opportunity of a millennia. Let me give you an example of what de-centralization and sanitary instruments can do to the world in which we live. And I think after I began painting these pictures, I think that you will begin to see the canvas be filled with opportunity.
Imagine a talented singer in the boomer world, he makes a video or he goes to an audition. He is found by a scout. The scout works for a recording agency or a record label. They bring in the talent, they bring in the kid, the kid begins to put out an album, the kid or the band, or the person performing is signed to like a five or six album deal of which they make 10% maybe of the profits.
And the rest goes to the middleman. It goes to the scout. It goes to the recording agency. It goes to the record label, the longterm profits of that album forever. It could be locked up in the digital rights of that company. So there's all these people, all these middlemen managers feeding off the very person that produced the music while the actual producer of the music gets put a small sliver of that, which he produced in the new world.
The band, the kid creates an NFT, a non fungible token. And for those of you that don't know what that is. Just think of a recording of a picture, whatever your product is, it's yours and your, you are the record label. You are the person with the royalties and you are the person with the way.
Speaker 1 (20m 51s): And now you have a means of distribution.
Speaker 0 (20m 56s): So there is no longer that there is no the, the platforms be it, Facebook, YouTube be a telegram or whatever platform you use, Twitter, whatever your platform is now, the talent scout. You take your ideas straight to the world. You no longer need a talent scout. You no longer need a talent agency. You no longer need a record label. You no longer need
Speaker 1 (21m 22s): A recording room.
Speaker 0 (21m 27s): Instead you as the individual, our in fact, the creator and your creator can be released
Speaker 1 (21m 34s): To the world effectively, cutting off the bat,
Speaker 0 (21m 40s): The Vipers and the leeches that want to suck all your royalties and all your money from you. That's the promise of Bitcoin. That's the promise of a decentralized institution now as the promise of a sanitary monetary instrument, that is the promise of that.
Speaker 1 (22m 3s): A
Speaker 0 (22m 7s): Sterilized monetary
Speaker 1 (22m 10s): Instrument. So
Speaker 0 (22m 17s): That's a very, it's in the beginning. I could take us a little while to think about that. And if you are a little, a bit older and you just see cryptocurrency, or do you see this wave of monetization via digitalization? You don't understand it because you've never lived in it because you've never even thought of it because it's a new concept. And because for 50, 60, 70, 80 years, you lived a certain way. So it's very difficult for you to see this new way. And if you even do begin to see, and it's really easy to say, things like that will never work.
There's nothing behind it. It doesn't hold on.
Speaker 1 (22m 52s): The only thing that's usually the Ideas or the rebuttal
Speaker 0 (22m 58s): Goals and or arguments of modern day politicians, banking officials, money, changers, middlemen. Everyone says, look at Bitcoin decentralized. There's nothing behind it. That way.
Speaker 1 (23m 13s): That's because a, they don't want it to work and be, they don't understand how it works.
Speaker 0 (23m 18s): You ask a millennial, Hey, what is this Bitcoin? What is this cryptocurrencies? You'll see the stars in their rise. And you will see
Speaker 1 (23m 26s): If you talk to
Speaker 0 (23m 27s): Somebody, a young person who understands it and you take a moment to look in their eyes. You can actually
Speaker 1 (23m 34s): See the reflection.
Speaker 0 (23m 37s): I have a new world being built inside their mind.
Speaker 1 (23m 42s): You can see the freedom. You can see the unchecked
Speaker 0 (23m 47s): Ultimate opportunity to build something. No one's ever seen before. Limitless, limitless, limitless. That is the promise of this new world and on one level. And here's another example yesterday, a drone Powell for those of my friends and in Europe, he is this federal reserve president of our central bank, who is arguably much more powerful than the president or any single government official we have in the United States.
And I would argue that the federal reserve is in fact, the fact that the government, not only of the United States, but the bank of international settlements, the banking institutions on hold our in fact, the governing body of the planet. And so yesterday Drome, Paul gets up and he speaks to the world about our economic system. He speaks to the world of interest inflation deflation. And he says that basically that they have, they have now figured out a way to magically manipulate the monetary systems so that there is never a depression.
Again, like a wizard, like an Alchemist. He's created a world where inflation no longer matters to him or the people in which he truly serves. And those people are usually people of means that we're born into lots of money that have the ability to move money around and not really make anything the central bank speak to the class of people that we're the previous middlemen, the leeches, the money changers, the Vipers of our society, the federal reserve in the bank's like attracts like water seeks its own level.
So here's this older gentlemen with his antiquated ideas, talking about how he's going to use his old ideas to solve old world problems. And most people pay attention to them. And the people that pay attention to them are beginning to worry because they say Jerome central banking has a problem. This is inflation's coming. There's got to be deflation. We can't just pay people. We can't print trillions of dollars. And he was like, yeah, we can. And there's this huge debate.
And people are worried. They're losing their houses. They don't know where to put it. They know their money's losing value. And a lot of these people are really stressed and worried about life. That's the old world. That's the world is dying and think about it. The banks are boomers. The economy is Boomer's. The central banking board of directors are boomers and all of their Ideas are boomers and they are die yang.
So are there Ideas thus that world they live in is Dying.
Speaker 1 (26m 59s): It's kind of sad. And that's the one foot
Speaker 0 (27m 4s): In that world that we talked about in the last podcast, supply chains and, and eugenics and baking and those issues we talked about last time, the new world,
Speaker 1 (27m 17s): It is exciting. It's fascinating.
Speaker 0 (27m 20s): I mean that you can create a non fungible token, put it into cyberspace and maybe make a million dollars. You can be an artist. Let me tell you about this that you may not know about. Let's say you're an artist and you create a piece of art, be it an AE, a meme, or a painting, or a digital painting, or a song or a poem or something digital. And you release it to the world with whatever price you want.
I guess what you could set parameters where you would get paid on that piece of art forever. You will get a royalty on that art forever. Imagine a beautiful van painting that get sold from van, go to the salon for the first time. You probably did to make that much money. And then so after that point, once he is sold that painting, now he's gotta make another one and sell that one. He gets paid one time and that painting increases in value.
When it moves from collector to collect or to collect her. And every time it moves, it generates more revenue for the previous holder. With these new digitalization of artwork, you was, the creator can set the parameters in which you or your holder or your family we'll get paid for ever let say on the van go. And I said, you know what? I'm going to create this digital rights. And I want to make 30% of whatever this thing is sold for every single time it gets sold well, in order to unlock the digital rights, the person has to pay me the one-time fee of what the paintings is worth.
And in fact, collector in the future would like to sell that particular piece of art.
Speaker 1 (29m 9s): No one else that I 'cause it's in the code, even if I'm dead,
Speaker 0 (29m 16s): 30% will still go to the person that holds the key
Speaker 1 (29m 19s): Cheese to that artwork. Your
Speaker 0 (29m 25s): For the first time in history,
Speaker 1 (29m 28s): We are, we have found a way to send energy into the future. Think about right now, if have a little
Speaker 0 (29m 42s): Bit of money in your, a boomer or your just, you've worked hard, your whole life, and you find yourself knocking on death's bed and you want to leave something to your child
Speaker 1 (29m 53s): Before you die
Speaker 0 (29m 54s): In a, in the United States, you can give $10,000 to your kid without paying taxes on it. Anything after that, you got to start paying taxes. Imagine that you've worked your whole life and you want to give money away to people you love. And the government says, you cannot.
Speaker 1 (30m 7s): I do that. You must pay us. You must pay us in America. It's fucking crazy. I work. I get a paycheck for a living and
Speaker 0 (30m 18s): It comes out of my check before it even comes to me, I got money that comes out of my check. It goes to the state and it goes to the federal government. It goes to insurance agent, and then I get what's left over.
Speaker 1 (30m 31s): And then I've got to pay taxes on my groceries, my house, my electricity. I got to pay fucking
Speaker 0 (30m 38s): Taxes on every goddamn
Speaker 1 (30m 40s): Thing. But what if, what if
Speaker 0 (30m 44s): I start participating in that system in sure.
Speaker 1 (30m 47s): You know what? I give them
Speaker 0 (30m 49s): The paycheck. I still have to pay the fee. I've got to pay the state. I've got to pay the right.
Speaker 1 (30m 53s): Yeah. But once they give me one sec,
Speaker 0 (30m 55s): You can get what's left over. I take all that money and I put it in Bitcoin. I put on a digital currency. I put in a cryptocurrency. I, by in an F T, now that money is no longer available for the government or the state
Speaker 1 (31m 7s): To take, let's say a week.
Speaker 0 (31m 10s): No, not for a few years. And because the price of digital currency is going up two a hundred percent year over year,
Speaker 1 (31m 19s): The little
Speaker 0 (31m 19s): Amount of money that I've made from the old system, I plug into the new monetary system and it begins to grow out of that.
Speaker 1 (31m 25s): The rate of 200%. And guess what?
Speaker 0 (31m 30s): Because I don't hold that money in a state institution or any institution at all, because I have my money that I earned in my savings account in my cyberspace. And I hold the keys. I don't know if I don't need to go ask a bank or to get my money. I don't need to ask for permission to get it. I don't need to ask for permission to solve it. I don't need to tell people what I'm buying. Now. I find myself on day two,
Speaker 1 (31m 57s): The door, and I got a few years to live. I can give,
Speaker 0 (32m 2s): Okay, I have tons of money. I can give a million dollars to my daughter, a million dollars to my son, a million dollars to my nephew, and I can do it with a click of a button. And there is no politician. There is no political individual. There is no union. There's nobody that cuts in front of me and says, well, well, well you can't do that. There is nobody that cuts in front of me with your hand out and says, I want some of that. All right, go fuck yourself. This is mine. I earned it. I played by your rules.
I went to your institutions. I paid you. Now. This is mine. Get the fuck away from me. I'm doing what I with it. This new world is going to be difficult. It's going to be crazy because I think humankind is beginning to become adults. We can't be children and live in this fucking fantasy land of, Hey, we're all equal Coon by
Speaker 1 (33m 2s): Yala. We
Speaker 0 (33m 4s): Got to help everyone get the fuck out of here. That's not how it works. It's not how it works. The people that start helping everybody usually become the person that get shit on because they are not doing enough.
Speaker 1 (33m 20s): That's why the most, that's
Speaker 0 (33m 23s): Why the richest people in the world, you don't even know their names.
Speaker 1 (33m 26s): They figured it out. They figured it out.
Speaker 0 (33m 32s): That's important to understand this because the shit that's got to come down. The pipe in this new world is going to be the nightmares of what happened in the old way
Speaker 1 (33m 43s): World.
Speaker 0 (33m 46s): Oh, for a long time, I think that the old world, the old Ideas did what they could to try and protect everybody from the nightmares.
Speaker 1 (33m 54s): And in
Speaker 0 (33m 54s): Some ways I'm really glad that a lot of those old stupid ideas are dying, but it doesn't change. The fact that,
Speaker 1 (34m 2s): That
Speaker 0 (34m 4s): The people coming up in the new world, we need to come up with new solutions
Speaker 1 (34m 8s): To face the nightmare. If you like,
Speaker 0 (34m 11s): You know, the old ideas, I think of them as like a grandfather or a spirit that protected you. And now it's your turn.
Speaker 1 (34m 19s): If you're a millennial,
Speaker 0 (34m 20s): If you're a gen X or if you are a Zuma, You know, the old world did what they could. We may not agree with it, but now it's our turned to face It. Okay. So let's try and take a look at the old world through a set of fresh eyes. And lets talk a little bit about where we left off in the last podcast with eugenics. There's a lot of people, a lot.
If we don't do something, the level of corruption, the level of anguish and torture in the countries that have too many people is going to be devastating. So one option is to not do anything in the West. We could just build up a huge fence and get rid of all these people. Hey, you guys stay outside the fence. But eventually history has shown us walls that are meant to keep people out.
Eventually begin to be walls that are in prison. You so it was probably not a good
Speaker 1 (35m 29s): Idea.
Speaker 0 (35m 31s): The second idea was tried. If you look at Germany, if you look at the integration like the baby, the, the, the greatest generation, the people with like what I see Germany and what they did with the migrant crisis. Like you, can't like it's heartwarming. It's awesome that you try to integrate Everybody, but you cant, congratulations. You try it. It's not working. So what do you do? Well, if you continue to do what you are doing now, you're going to end up with the same result that you use to have.
Right? I think it was Einstein who said that the definition of insanity is doing things over and over again in except and expecting a different result. So if you continue to try to hand out freebies and healthcare and open your heart to the, to the people that have less than you, they're going to fucking take you over and kill you eventually.
And this is a weird journey for me because I don't want to sound like I am pro hardcore capitalist or hardcore, right? Cause I'm not, I'm not. I just want to make the argument that can you see from someone else's point of view, can you truly just stop for a minute and imagine what it's like to be someone who's come from a third world country into a rich country and seeing how awesome it is and how much more opportunity there is.
If that's you, if that's me, I'm going to do everything that I can to get my family into a country, to give them more opportunity. That's what we want. Right? We want the world to be better. But what happens when You try and force a group of people who are used to having a lot, what happens when you forced them to have a little so that other people can have more force morality?
It is still forced. If you go into a groove and say, listen, you have too much, we need to give some of your shit to other people. Good luck taking It. Good luck. But that's what's happening. That's what's happening. And there's going to be all kinds of answers. Do you genics answer, you're saying is for sterilization right now, what's happening right in front of you and they're coming for your kids. I mean, they don't even know what the fuck half of these vaccines do.
Here's a little tidbit for you. I just saw an interview without you today, where you talked about all three of the vaccines in the United States, Pfizer Madrona and Johnson and Johnson. They have been Given the access to the public via the FDA. There's an emergency procedure that allowed the vaccines to be used, but there are not approved.
Do you understand none of these vaccines are approved, but they are allowed another way to say that is the formal Seussical companies have found a way to get out of the regulations previously imposed on them. Another way to say that is
Speaker 1 (39m 38s): Corporate powers. I have taken over to the government.
Speaker 0 (39m 44s): People will say, Oh, well, listen, man, there's too many regulations. George government strangles innovation. Maybe, maybe they do sometimes, But unchecked corporate power
Speaker 1 (39m 58s): Leads too.
Speaker 0 (39m 58s): The IBM punch card system, which can be great for inventory and killing Jews.
Speaker 1 (40m 6s): And
Speaker 0 (40m 7s): It's like, it's like these it's like people don't get that. Like this is a great technology for this. Lets use it for that. You know, technology, you can tend to take away all our humanity for every good thing. Technology gives you, it takes something away. And I think that technology is making things more mechanistic, but taking away our humanity.
Speaker 1 (40m 53s): Okay. So here's
Speaker 0 (40m 55s): Here is a little excerpt that continues to, I think maybe bridge the gap between the old world and the new world, the unity and division and the appearance of unity and division. Here we go. The society which carries the spectacle does not dominate the underdeveloped regions by its economic hedge pneumoniae alone. It dominates them as the society of the spectacle.
Even where the material base is still absent. Modern society has already invaded the social of each continent by means of the spectacle. It defines the program of the ruling class and presides over its formation, just as it presents pseudo goods to be coveted. It offers false models of revolution to local revolutionaries. The spectacle of bureaucratic power, which holds sway over some industrial countries is an integral part of the total spectacle it's general pseudo negation in support.
The spectacle displays certain totalitarian, specializations of communication and administration when viewed locally. But when viewed in terms of the functioning of the entire system, these specializations merge in a world division of spectacular
Speaker 1 (42m 29s): Tasks,
Speaker 0 (42m 32s): The division of spectacular task preserves the entirety of the existing order and especially the dominant pole of its development. The root of the spectacle is within the abundant economy, the source of the fruits, which ultimately take over the spectacular market, despite the ideological police protection, as barriers of local spectacles,
Speaker 1 (42m 55s): Aspiring to be in power
Speaker 0 (43m 1s): Under the shimmering diversions of the spectacle, but novelization dominates modern society, the world over and at every point where the developed consumption of commodities has seemingly multiplied the roles and objects to choose from the remains of religion and of the family, the principle, a Relic of the heritage of class power and the moral repression. They assure merge. Whenever the enjoyment of this world is affirmed this world being nothing other than repressive, pseudo enjoyment, the smug acceptance of what exists can also merge with purely spectacular rebellion.
This reflects the simple fact that dissatisfaction itself became a commodity. As soon as economic abundance could extend production to the processing of such raw materials. Let's think about that for a minute
Speaker 1 (44m 4s): In a world with so much abundance. And I know
Speaker 0 (44m 8s): I'm looking at the West right now
Speaker 1 (44m 12s): In a world of abundance, where if you live in the United States and your poor, the government is going to give you a $1,400 and it might start being a universal, basic income. Like that's a abundance. We will give you the, you need to live
Speaker 0 (44m 32s): A life
Speaker 1 (44m 34s): Worth living. We will give it to you. That's abundance in this world of abundance. Everything's a commodity. Everything becomes commodified. And that means even ideas like dissatisfaction become commodities, and you can spend your money on It.
Speaker 0 (45m 10s): DIA is like dissatisfaction. You can spend your money on fake rebellion In this world of abstract commodification. Everything has become a commodity in this world. Everything, every idea and word and move and thought has become a commodity. If, and it hasn't yet just to try and find one and make it a commodity. You'll be a multi-billionaire.
Speaker 1 (45m 39s): Everything is true
Speaker 0 (45m 41s): Yet. And nothing is true. Does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (45m 45s): Kind of right.
Speaker 0 (45m 46s): Let me try to do a better job of explaining the commodification of Ideas, the commodification of Yeah.
Speaker 1 (45m 56s): Of everything. Like what I think about copyright laws. I think about the patent laws. Think about it.
Speaker 0 (46m 12s): You as an individual, having a great idea that could help the world and then applying a rule to it so that no one can ever, you know,
Speaker 1 (46m 21s): Does it, how does that make the world better? What if we pass in the wheel? What if we only allowed people to use a wheel? If they paid us, you see the commodification of Ideas has led us down a road to nowhere.
And that concept has holds both the salvation and a detriment to our future. How do you think about it? What can you do to change it? What is the world look like to you? If you hold all the keys,
Speaker 0 (47m 34s): I know sometimes people may not want to think about
Speaker 1 (47m 36s): It. You are the master of this world.
Speaker 0 (47m 46s): Maybe you do have the right to take people's lives. Maybe you do have the right way
Speaker 1 (47m 54s): To invade
Speaker 0 (47m 55s): Countries. Maybe you do have the right to take the resources. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (47m 60s): Do you need, if not you than who is a great quote, I heard
Speaker 0 (48m 9s): A while back and it was from, I think it was the CEO of InBev. For those of you that don't know InBev is a brewery. I think there is there from, I want to say in Brazil, by another firm in South America, but there were a brew maker and they make beer and they have been around since the 13 hundreds. And I heard this gentleman speaking and he said, this is, if you are not at the table, then your on the menu.
Speaker 1 (48m 34s): If you think about it,
Speaker 0 (48m 40s): If your not at the table, you were on the menu. If you listening to this, aren't playing a big role in your community, in your family and in your life.
Speaker 1 (48m 58s): What the fuck is wrong with you? We need you,
Speaker 0 (49m 4s): All of you listening to this. We fucking need you. We need you. You listening to this,
Speaker 1 (49m 13s): We need you. I need you. I love you. Hello.
https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/64296104
Speaker 0 (0s): Well, well, well, welcome back, everybody. Hope you enjoyed the last podcast where we got into an in depth idea or multiple ideas of supply chains and eugenics in a world that seems to be changing in a way reminiscent of old ideas. Does that make sense? I guess what I'm trying to say in a way to segway into this new idea I have is to talk just a little bit more about the old idea.
And the old idea is this world of boomer ideology and the old ways. It seems to me, there's a lot of talk about the fourth turning in the fourth industrial revolution and what it comes down to is cycles. And there was no, I don't want to get into people being evil or angry or racist, or I think what's probably more likely is that there is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come.
I think we've all heard that before. And what we're seeing right now is in fact, the retirement of a large group, probably the largest group, the boomers are retiring. And so were, there are ideas. And it's not that even though gen X, Y zoomers millennials, they tend to look at these older people in positions of authority and power and think to themselves, how can these people do what they do?
Do they not see the level of destruction that they are bringing down upon the world? Do they not understand the level of poverty they are bringing to the future people on this planet? Do they not care? And it's a valid point. However, it's not that those people don't care. It's just that those Ideas are the only idea. Those were there, Ideas.
They don't have new ideas. They only have their ideas and their ideas of what worked in the past logically should work in the future. When you're set in your ways, it's very difficult for you to see things differently. And that's why things are changing. And that's why there is this old world. And nothing seems to be working the dollar. The military might have the United States, this idea of globalization, as idea of stakeholder capitalism.
These are all really old ideas that never truly came to fruition in the way the people thought they would come into fruition. You look at Klaus, Schwab, Henry Kissinger, Joe Biden, Donald Trump. You look at all these old people that did their best to try and do what they thought was right. I don't agree with a lot of what they did.
However, I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt that they did, what they thought was right. And they are Dying. And so were there Ideas, it's cyclical. And now we're moving into this new brave new world where it is possible that if we don't remember our past, we're doomed to repeat it in the future. Let me read to you a quick little excerpt of what I'm talking about.
And I think it lends credence and evidence to show that this argument is something that has been with us forever, unity and division within appearance, a lively New debate about the concepts. One divides into two and to fuse into one, this is unfolding on a philosophical front in every country.
This debate is a struggle between those who are four and those who are against the materialistic dialectic, a struggle between two conceptions of the world, the proletarian and booze was a conception. Those who maintain that one divides into two is the fundamental law of things are on the side of the materialistic dialectic.
Those who maintain that the fundamental law of things is that to fuse into one are against the materialistic dialectic. The two sides have drawn a clear line of demarcation between them and their arguments are diametrically opposed. This polemic reflects on the ideological level, the acute and complex class struggle taking place in China and in the world.
This is a passage from the red flag of peaking, September 21st, 1964. I want you to think about those two struggles. The struggle between two classes, one divides into two
Speaker 1 (5m 59s): Or to fuse into one. I think about that for a minute. Does
Speaker 0 (6m 5s): One divided into two? Can you cut it in half? And each person gets half a day
Speaker 1 (6m 12s): To, to fuse into one.
Speaker 0 (6m 19s): It's an interesting concept to think about it. It's capitalism, it's communism in a way
Speaker 1 (6m 23s): It is it's life.
Speaker 0 (6m 26s): It's the yin and the yang. And depending where you're at in your life probably depends on where you think you fall in those lines of demarcation. Everyone's heard that quote, that when you're young, if your not a liberal,
Speaker 1 (6m 40s): If you don't have a heart
Speaker 0 (6m 42s): And when you're old, if you're not a Republican, you don't have a,
Speaker 1 (6m 44s): The brain is nothing. You don't have a heart or a brain is not that you're the scarecrow or the lion. It's just that you must be,
Speaker 0 (6m 56s): Be on both sides of this argument at one point in your life, in order to truly understand,
Speaker 1 (7m 2s): Stand that there is no solution to this problem. There was only the acceptance of it. Does that make sense to take a hard line and always say, no,
Speaker 0 (7m 18s): We must take from this and give to
Speaker 1 (7m 20s): These, or on the flip side to say, we must circle our wagons become one.
Speaker 0 (7m 30s): You got to be on both sides. You have to live both of those experiences.
Speaker 1 (7m 35s): Do you truly understand the argument? And once you've lived, both of those experiences, you know that there's no right answer. There is no right answer. There's only what's right for you and the people around you take it to the extreme that's human nature. That's why we have chaos. That's why we have greed. That's why we have oppression,
Speaker 0 (8m 8s): Same forces, greed, and oppression, right?
Speaker 1 (8m 11s): And selfishness. They give
Speaker 0 (8m 18s): The way to inspiration. They give way to the eye of the tiger, if you will,
Speaker 1 (8m 29s): Natural selection. So let me speak a little bit
Speaker 0 (8m 41s): About the new world that I see for me. And I think it's unique. I think gen X-ers, you know, people born after the boomers, before the millennials, I think we have a really rare idea of what the world looks like. Most of us were pretty cynical because we've seen our parents go through their life and tell us about this world in which they lived. But it wasn't really all our world. And we've seen this new class of kids come up and have it in a way where everybody got a trophy and everybody got this.
And we as like the small group of genexers realize, like that's never going to work, but that we looked at our parents' group and we're like, that didn't work. That's ridiculous. That's a stupid, old idea. And then we looked at this new group and we're like, Jesus Christ. You're so fucking naive. That's not going to work either. You know, I, I want her to quote that said, if you scratch a cynic, you'll find an old idealist. I think that's true. I think that the majority of people in my age group are people that want to believe in these ideals that are closed or at least have family members that can remember the feeling fifties.
But yet we know that that's not reality. We also know that it's not going to be cooled by a, everybody is equal and we're all going to be the millionaire's like, that's not it either. So that being said, let's talk about this new digital world in which the new world is forming. I call it the it's like finding a new continent. It's like sailing across the cyberspace and finding a whole new continent to be explored.
And what does this new continent and cyberspace it's Bitcoin it's cryptocurrencies it's NFTs is the abstract idea of money personified. The old idea of money was as a medium of exchange. The new idea of money is a abstract store of value.
You see there exactly the same only different let's look at what happened to money in, in the last 50 years, right? It used to be that money, at least the dollar, and then currently is based on the dollar we're exchange for its worth and gold. And once that happens once, so when that happened, things were Well.
However, once taking off the gold standard, all of a sudden, it just became a Pick
Speaker 1 (11m 58s): Of paper. That piece of paper could be printed and moved about.
Speaker 0 (12m 5s): And it's no longer money, its a note. But the note is only backed by the mite, by the gun
Speaker 1 (12m 13s): One's by the threat of death from the government. Well, what happens when the amount of money it takes to pay the person who does the threatening become so extreme, it's no longer worth it. You know what I mean? By that the us government has to pay the difference
Speaker 0 (12m 41s): Fence industry and the military industrial complex. So much money,
Speaker 1 (12m 46s): Money to go around the world and enforced that everyone used the dollar that it's no longer worth it. It's no longer worth it. It's an old idea and it's Dying. We don't. What if
Speaker 0 (13m 13s): Do you guys remember back around the turn of the century when doctors would operate in the, in the infancy of doctors operating on humans, that it was a time, right?
Speaker 1 (13m 25s): When English, gentlemen, English, gentlemen, doctors thought that it was incorrect.
Speaker 0 (13m 33s): The only foolish to wash their hands before or after surgery gentlemen, a gentlemen didn't do that.
Speaker 1 (13m 40s): They didn't need to. However children and patients alike began Dying right
Speaker 0 (13m 48s): After childbirth, during childbirth, during operations and doctors could not seem to figure out what that was, what it was, what it was determined to be was that germs from the doctor's hands, from not being washed were being introduced into the body instruments that doctor's were using to cut open individuals during operations were in fact
Speaker 1 (14m 14s): Contaminating the patient infecting the in-patient
Speaker 0 (14m 20s): Causing large-scale infections, which
Speaker 1 (14m 22s): Cause death. It was, it was determined that it was the
Speaker 0 (14m 30s): Unsanitary conditions that were causing the rash of death
Speaker 1 (14m 34s): In patients be a childbirth or complications around the turn. The
Speaker 0 (14m 42s): That's what they figured out. Oh, I guess not washing your hands. Not sterilizing your hands, not sterilizing the environment. We're not sterilizing instruments can lead to infection. It's toxic. It's toxic to the body to not sterilize the instruments you're using to open up the body. And if you have toxic instruments, then you will not be able to successfully operate.
Does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (15m 15s): The
Speaker 0 (15m 17s): Unsanitary conditions, the unsanitary environment environment, but mostly the unsanitary instrument's be at your hand or the scalpel. If you were a doctor causes you to infect and kill that, what you were operating on, you got it. That is what money has been almost forever. It's an unsanitary instrument.
It never works well. Let me put it this way. It never works for working people. It does work. If you're someone like the Rothschild banking dynasty who says I care, not who makes the rules, but who prints the money. Then it works for you. You see, if you understand how to wield an unsanitary instrument, if you understand that your toxic instrument will kill people, then you have a power to kill people.
And that's what banks are. Banks are the ruthless unscrupulous doctors wielding a dirty scalpel on the proletariat people in the world. You get it. They understand that they have toxic instruments and they want to use them. In fact, they go around and tell everyone, this is the tool you need to solve your nation's problems.
We have this dirty scalpel that can cut away. The cancer is poor people of your population. And we figured it out. Well, someone figured it out. I don't claim to be the person to have figured out. I'm just relaying the message. A cryptocurrency, a decentralized network becomes a sanitary, a sterilized scalpel. It takes the dirty instrument from the people in power and hands it over to the individual who can't take the necessary precautions to operate effectively and efficiently without the permission
Speaker 1 (17m 42s): Of the money changers.
Speaker 0 (17m 46s): This is the foundation on which the new world is being. There is a lot of promise. The decentralization has a lot of promise for the people to live in a world without the threat of monetary confinement, without the threat of monetary exclusion or without the threat of poverty.
It is this decentralization. It is the star fish versus the spider. It is the urban warfare versus the Roman legions. It is the opportunity of a millennia. Let me give you an example of what de-centralization and sanitary instruments can do to the world in which we live. And I think after I began painting these pictures, I think that you will begin to see the canvas be filled with opportunity.
Imagine a talented singer in the boomer world, he makes a video or he goes to an audition. He is found by a scout. The scout works for a recording agency or a record label. They bring in the talent, they bring in the kid, the kid begins to put out an album, the kid or the band, or the person performing is signed to like a five or six album deal of which they make 10% maybe of the profits.
And the rest goes to the middleman. It goes to the scout. It goes to the recording agency. It goes to the record label, the longterm profits of that album forever. It could be locked up in the digital rights of that company. So there's all these people, all these middlemen managers feeding off the very person that produced the music while the actual producer of the music gets put a small sliver of that, which he produced in the new world.
The band, the kid creates an NFT, a non fungible token. And for those of you that don't know what that is. Just think of a recording of a picture, whatever your product is, it's yours and your, you are the record label. You are the person with the royalties and you are the person with the way.
Speaker 1 (20m 51s): And now you have a means of distribution.
Speaker 0 (20m 56s): So there is no longer that there is no the, the platforms be it, Facebook, YouTube be a telegram or whatever platform you use, Twitter, whatever your platform is now, the talent scout. You take your ideas straight to the world. You no longer need a talent scout. You no longer need a talent agency. You no longer need a record label. You no longer need
Speaker 1 (21m 22s): A recording room.
Speaker 0 (21m 27s): Instead you as the individual, our in fact, the creator and your creator can be released
Speaker 1 (21m 34s): To the world effectively, cutting off the bat,
Speaker 0 (21m 40s): The Vipers and the leeches that want to suck all your royalties and all your money from you. That's the promise of Bitcoin. That's the promise of a decentralized institution now as the promise of a sanitary monetary instrument, that is the promise of that.
Speaker 1 (22m 3s): A
Speaker 0 (22m 7s): Sterilized monetary
Speaker 1 (22m 10s): Instrument. So
Speaker 0 (22m 17s): That's a very, it's in the beginning. I could take us a little while to think about that. And if you are a little, a bit older and you just see cryptocurrency, or do you see this wave of monetization via digitalization? You don't understand it because you've never lived in it because you've never even thought of it because it's a new concept. And because for 50, 60, 70, 80 years, you lived a certain way. So it's very difficult for you to see this new way. And if you even do begin to see, and it's really easy to say, things like that will never work.
There's nothing behind it. It doesn't hold on.
Speaker 1 (22m 52s): The only thing that's usually the Ideas or the rebuttal
Speaker 0 (22m 58s): Goals and or arguments of modern day politicians, banking officials, money, changers, middlemen. Everyone says, look at Bitcoin decentralized. There's nothing behind it. That way.
Speaker 1 (23m 13s): That's because a, they don't want it to work and be, they don't understand how it works.
Speaker 0 (23m 18s): You ask a millennial, Hey, what is this Bitcoin? What is this cryptocurrencies? You'll see the stars in their rise. And you will see
Speaker 1 (23m 26s): If you talk to
Speaker 0 (23m 27s): Somebody, a young person who understands it and you take a moment to look in their eyes. You can actually
Speaker 1 (23m 34s): See the reflection.
Speaker 0 (23m 37s): I have a new world being built inside their mind.
Speaker 1 (23m 42s): You can see the freedom. You can see the unchecked
Speaker 0 (23m 47s): Ultimate opportunity to build something. No one's ever seen before. Limitless, limitless, limitless. That is the promise of this new world and on one level. And here's another example yesterday, a drone Powell for those of my friends and in Europe, he is this federal reserve president of our central bank, who is arguably much more powerful than the president or any single government official we have in the United States.
And I would argue that the federal reserve is in fact, the fact that the government, not only of the United States, but the bank of international settlements, the banking institutions on hold our in fact, the governing body of the planet. And so yesterday Drome, Paul gets up and he speaks to the world about our economic system. He speaks to the world of interest inflation deflation. And he says that basically that they have, they have now figured out a way to magically manipulate the monetary systems so that there is never a depression.
Again, like a wizard, like an Alchemist. He's created a world where inflation no longer matters to him or the people in which he truly serves. And those people are usually people of means that we're born into lots of money that have the ability to move money around and not really make anything the central bank speak to the class of people that we're the previous middlemen, the leeches, the money changers, the Vipers of our society, the federal reserve in the bank's like attracts like water seeks its own level.
So here's this older gentlemen with his antiquated ideas, talking about how he's going to use his old ideas to solve old world problems. And most people pay attention to them. And the people that pay attention to them are beginning to worry because they say Jerome central banking has a problem. This is inflation's coming. There's got to be deflation. We can't just pay people. We can't print trillions of dollars. And he was like, yeah, we can. And there's this huge debate.
And people are worried. They're losing their houses. They don't know where to put it. They know their money's losing value. And a lot of these people are really stressed and worried about life. That's the old world. That's the world is dying and think about it. The banks are boomers. The economy is Boomer's. The central banking board of directors are boomers and all of their Ideas are boomers and they are die yang.
So are there Ideas thus that world they live in is Dying.
Speaker 1 (26m 59s): It's kind of sad. And that's the one foot
Speaker 0 (27m 4s): In that world that we talked about in the last podcast, supply chains and, and eugenics and baking and those issues we talked about last time, the new world,
Speaker 1 (27m 17s): It is exciting. It's fascinating.
Speaker 0 (27m 20s): I mean that you can create a non fungible token, put it into cyberspace and maybe make a million dollars. You can be an artist. Let me tell you about this that you may not know about. Let's say you're an artist and you create a piece of art, be it an AE, a meme, or a painting, or a digital painting, or a song or a poem or something digital. And you release it to the world with whatever price you want.
I guess what you could set parameters where you would get paid on that piece of art forever. You will get a royalty on that art forever. Imagine a beautiful van painting that get sold from van, go to the salon for the first time. You probably did to make that much money. And then so after that point, once he is sold that painting, now he's gotta make another one and sell that one. He gets paid one time and that painting increases in value.
When it moves from collector to collect or to collect her. And every time it moves, it generates more revenue for the previous holder. With these new digitalization of artwork, you was, the creator can set the parameters in which you or your holder or your family we'll get paid for ever let say on the van go. And I said, you know what? I'm going to create this digital rights. And I want to make 30% of whatever this thing is sold for every single time it gets sold well, in order to unlock the digital rights, the person has to pay me the one-time fee of what the paintings is worth.
And in fact, collector in the future would like to sell that particular piece of art.
Speaker 1 (29m 9s): No one else that I 'cause it's in the code, even if I'm dead,
Speaker 0 (29m 16s): 30% will still go to the person that holds the key
Speaker 1 (29m 19s): Cheese to that artwork. Your
Speaker 0 (29m 25s): For the first time in history,
Speaker 1 (29m 28s): We are, we have found a way to send energy into the future. Think about right now, if have a little
Speaker 0 (29m 42s): Bit of money in your, a boomer or your just, you've worked hard, your whole life, and you find yourself knocking on death's bed and you want to leave something to your child
Speaker 1 (29m 53s): Before you die
Speaker 0 (29m 54s): In a, in the United States, you can give $10,000 to your kid without paying taxes on it. Anything after that, you got to start paying taxes. Imagine that you've worked your whole life and you want to give money away to people you love. And the government says, you cannot.
Speaker 1 (30m 7s): I do that. You must pay us. You must pay us in America. It's fucking crazy. I work. I get a paycheck for a living and
Speaker 0 (30m 18s): It comes out of my check before it even comes to me, I got money that comes out of my check. It goes to the state and it goes to the federal government. It goes to insurance agent, and then I get what's left over.
Speaker 1 (30m 31s): And then I've got to pay taxes on my groceries, my house, my electricity. I got to pay fucking
Speaker 0 (30m 38s): Taxes on every goddamn
Speaker 1 (30m 40s): Thing. But what if, what if
Speaker 0 (30m 44s): I start participating in that system in sure.
Speaker 1 (30m 47s): You know what? I give them
Speaker 0 (30m 49s): The paycheck. I still have to pay the fee. I've got to pay the state. I've got to pay the right.
Speaker 1 (30m 53s): Yeah. But once they give me one sec,
Speaker 0 (30m 55s): You can get what's left over. I take all that money and I put it in Bitcoin. I put on a digital currency. I put in a cryptocurrency. I, by in an F T, now that money is no longer available for the government or the state
Speaker 1 (31m 7s): To take, let's say a week.
Speaker 0 (31m 10s): No, not for a few years. And because the price of digital currency is going up two a hundred percent year over year,
Speaker 1 (31m 19s): The little
Speaker 0 (31m 19s): Amount of money that I've made from the old system, I plug into the new monetary system and it begins to grow out of that.
Speaker 1 (31m 25s): The rate of 200%. And guess what?
Speaker 0 (31m 30s): Because I don't hold that money in a state institution or any institution at all, because I have my money that I earned in my savings account in my cyberspace. And I hold the keys. I don't know if I don't need to go ask a bank or to get my money. I don't need to ask for permission to get it. I don't need to ask for permission to solve it. I don't need to tell people what I'm buying. Now. I find myself on day two,
Speaker 1 (31m 57s): The door, and I got a few years to live. I can give,
Speaker 0 (32m 2s): Okay, I have tons of money. I can give a million dollars to my daughter, a million dollars to my son, a million dollars to my nephew, and I can do it with a click of a button. And there is no politician. There is no political individual. There is no union. There's nobody that cuts in front of me and says, well, well, well you can't do that. There is nobody that cuts in front of me with your hand out and says, I want some of that. All right, go fuck yourself. This is mine. I earned it. I played by your rules.
I went to your institutions. I paid you. Now. This is mine. Get the fuck away from me. I'm doing what I with it. This new world is going to be difficult. It's going to be crazy because I think humankind is beginning to become adults. We can't be children and live in this fucking fantasy land of, Hey, we're all equal Coon by
Speaker 1 (33m 2s): Yala. We
Speaker 0 (33m 4s): Got to help everyone get the fuck out of here. That's not how it works. It's not how it works. The people that start helping everybody usually become the person that get shit on because they are not doing enough.
Speaker 1 (33m 20s): That's why the most, that's
Speaker 0 (33m 23s): Why the richest people in the world, you don't even know their names.
Speaker 1 (33m 26s): They figured it out. They figured it out.
Speaker 0 (33m 32s): That's important to understand this because the shit that's got to come down. The pipe in this new world is going to be the nightmares of what happened in the old way
Speaker 1 (33m 43s): World.
Speaker 0 (33m 46s): Oh, for a long time, I think that the old world, the old Ideas did what they could to try and protect everybody from the nightmares.
Speaker 1 (33m 54s): And in
Speaker 0 (33m 54s): Some ways I'm really glad that a lot of those old stupid ideas are dying, but it doesn't change. The fact that,
Speaker 1 (34m 2s): That
Speaker 0 (34m 4s): The people coming up in the new world, we need to come up with new solutions
Speaker 1 (34m 8s): To face the nightmare. If you like,
Speaker 0 (34m 11s): You know, the old ideas, I think of them as like a grandfather or a spirit that protected you. And now it's your turn.
Speaker 1 (34m 19s): If you're a millennial,
Speaker 0 (34m 20s): If you're a gen X or if you are a Zuma, You know, the old world did what they could. We may not agree with it, but now it's our turned to face It. Okay. So let's try and take a look at the old world through a set of fresh eyes. And lets talk a little bit about where we left off in the last podcast with eugenics. There's a lot of people, a lot.
If we don't do something, the level of corruption, the level of anguish and torture in the countries that have too many people is going to be devastating. So one option is to not do anything in the West. We could just build up a huge fence and get rid of all these people. Hey, you guys stay outside the fence. But eventually history has shown us walls that are meant to keep people out.
Eventually begin to be walls that are in prison. You so it was probably not a good
Speaker 1 (35m 29s): Idea.
Speaker 0 (35m 31s): The second idea was tried. If you look at Germany, if you look at the integration like the baby, the, the, the greatest generation, the people with like what I see Germany and what they did with the migrant crisis. Like you, can't like it's heartwarming. It's awesome that you try to integrate Everybody, but you cant, congratulations. You try it. It's not working. So what do you do? Well, if you continue to do what you are doing now, you're going to end up with the same result that you use to have.
Right? I think it was Einstein who said that the definition of insanity is doing things over and over again in except and expecting a different result. So if you continue to try to hand out freebies and healthcare and open your heart to the, to the people that have less than you, they're going to fucking take you over and kill you eventually.
And this is a weird journey for me because I don't want to sound like I am pro hardcore capitalist or hardcore, right? Cause I'm not, I'm not. I just want to make the argument that can you see from someone else's point of view, can you truly just stop for a minute and imagine what it's like to be someone who's come from a third world country into a rich country and seeing how awesome it is and how much more opportunity there is.
If that's you, if that's me, I'm going to do everything that I can to get my family into a country, to give them more opportunity. That's what we want. Right? We want the world to be better. But what happens when You try and force a group of people who are used to having a lot, what happens when you forced them to have a little so that other people can have more force morality?
It is still forced. If you go into a groove and say, listen, you have too much, we need to give some of your shit to other people. Good luck taking It. Good luck. But that's what's happening. That's what's happening. And there's going to be all kinds of answers. Do you genics answer, you're saying is for sterilization right now, what's happening right in front of you and they're coming for your kids. I mean, they don't even know what the fuck half of these vaccines do.
Here's a little tidbit for you. I just saw an interview without you today, where you talked about all three of the vaccines in the United States, Pfizer Madrona and Johnson and Johnson. They have been Given the access to the public via the FDA. There's an emergency procedure that allowed the vaccines to be used, but there are not approved.
Do you understand none of these vaccines are approved, but they are allowed another way to say that is the formal Seussical companies have found a way to get out of the regulations previously imposed on them. Another way to say that is
Speaker 1 (39m 38s): Corporate powers. I have taken over to the government.
Speaker 0 (39m 44s): People will say, Oh, well, listen, man, there's too many regulations. George government strangles innovation. Maybe, maybe they do sometimes, But unchecked corporate power
Speaker 1 (39m 58s): Leads too.
Speaker 0 (39m 58s): The IBM punch card system, which can be great for inventory and killing Jews.
Speaker 1 (40m 6s): And
Speaker 0 (40m 7s): It's like, it's like these it's like people don't get that. Like this is a great technology for this. Lets use it for that. You know, technology, you can tend to take away all our humanity for every good thing. Technology gives you, it takes something away. And I think that technology is making things more mechanistic, but taking away our humanity.
Speaker 1 (40m 53s): Okay. So here's
Speaker 0 (40m 55s): Here is a little excerpt that continues to, I think maybe bridge the gap between the old world and the new world, the unity and division and the appearance of unity and division. Here we go. The society which carries the spectacle does not dominate the underdeveloped regions by its economic hedge pneumoniae alone. It dominates them as the society of the spectacle.
Even where the material base is still absent. Modern society has already invaded the social of each continent by means of the spectacle. It defines the program of the ruling class and presides over its formation, just as it presents pseudo goods to be coveted. It offers false models of revolution to local revolutionaries. The spectacle of bureaucratic power, which holds sway over some industrial countries is an integral part of the total spectacle it's general pseudo negation in support.
The spectacle displays certain totalitarian, specializations of communication and administration when viewed locally. But when viewed in terms of the functioning of the entire system, these specializations merge in a world division of spectacular
Speaker 1 (42m 29s): Tasks,
Speaker 0 (42m 32s): The division of spectacular task preserves the entirety of the existing order and especially the dominant pole of its development. The root of the spectacle is within the abundant economy, the source of the fruits, which ultimately take over the spectacular market, despite the ideological police protection, as barriers of local spectacles,
Speaker 1 (42m 55s): Aspiring to be in power
Speaker 0 (43m 1s): Under the shimmering diversions of the spectacle, but novelization dominates modern society, the world over and at every point where the developed consumption of commodities has seemingly multiplied the roles and objects to choose from the remains of religion and of the family, the principle, a Relic of the heritage of class power and the moral repression. They assure merge. Whenever the enjoyment of this world is affirmed this world being nothing other than repressive, pseudo enjoyment, the smug acceptance of what exists can also merge with purely spectacular rebellion.
This reflects the simple fact that dissatisfaction itself became a commodity. As soon as economic abundance could extend production to the processing of such raw materials. Let's think about that for a minute
Speaker 1 (44m 4s): In a world with so much abundance. And I know
Speaker 0 (44m 8s): I'm looking at the West right now
Speaker 1 (44m 12s): In a world of abundance, where if you live in the United States and your poor, the government is going to give you a $1,400 and it might start being a universal, basic income. Like that's a abundance. We will give you the, you need to live
Speaker 0 (44m 32s): A life
Speaker 1 (44m 34s): Worth living. We will give it to you. That's abundance in this world of abundance. Everything's a commodity. Everything becomes commodified. And that means even ideas like dissatisfaction become commodities, and you can spend your money on It.
Speaker 0 (45m 10s): DIA is like dissatisfaction. You can spend your money on fake rebellion In this world of abstract commodification. Everything has become a commodity in this world. Everything, every idea and word and move and thought has become a commodity. If, and it hasn't yet just to try and find one and make it a commodity. You'll be a multi-billionaire.
Speaker 1 (45m 39s): Everything is true
Speaker 0 (45m 41s): Yet. And nothing is true. Does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (45m 45s): Kind of right.
Speaker 0 (45m 46s): Let me try to do a better job of explaining the commodification of Ideas, the commodification of Yeah.
Speaker 1 (45m 56s): Of everything. Like what I think about copyright laws. I think about the patent laws. Think about it.
Speaker 0 (46m 12s): You as an individual, having a great idea that could help the world and then applying a rule to it so that no one can ever, you know,
Speaker 1 (46m 21s): Does it, how does that make the world better? What if we pass in the wheel? What if we only allowed people to use a wheel? If they paid us, you see the commodification of Ideas has led us down a road to nowhere.
And that concept has holds both the salvation and a detriment to our future. How do you think about it? What can you do to change it? What is the world look like to you? If you hold all the keys,
Speaker 0 (47m 34s): I know sometimes people may not want to think about
Speaker 1 (47m 36s): It. You are the master of this world.
Speaker 0 (47m 46s): Maybe you do have the right to take people's lives. Maybe you do have the right way
Speaker 1 (47m 54s): To invade
Speaker 0 (47m 55s): Countries. Maybe you do have the right to take the resources. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (47m 60s): Do you need, if not you than who is a great quote, I heard
Speaker 0 (48m 9s): A while back and it was from, I think it was the CEO of InBev. For those of you that don't know InBev is a brewery. I think there is there from, I want to say in Brazil, by another firm in South America, but there were a brew maker and they make beer and they have been around since the 13 hundreds. And I heard this gentleman speaking and he said, this is, if you are not at the table, then your on the menu.
Speaker 1 (48m 34s): If you think about it,
Speaker 0 (48m 40s): If your not at the table, you were on the menu. If you listening to this, aren't playing a big role in your community, in your family and in your life.
Speaker 1 (48m 58s): What the fuck is wrong with you? We need you,
Speaker 0 (49m 4s): All of you listening to this. We fucking need you. We need you. You listening to this,
Speaker 1 (49m 13s): We need you. I need you. I love you. Hello.
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