Bioengineering, Billionaires, & Magic Beans
The L/R brain relationship & how it apples to the world we live in. Decadence, & the path forward
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Transcript:Speaker 0 (0s): Hello, my friends. And welcome back to another edition of the TrueLife podcast. I've been on vacation for a little bit, but I'm bad. I was thinking about you guys. I hope everything is going well. I hope your COVID free care-free and free to do what it is you think is right. I'm going to start off with a quick joke today. I hope it makes you laugh and that makes you smile. There's a businessman and he has started a company in his garage.
He's been working hard on it for the last six months. And lo and behold, he gets a call from an investment banker in the big apple, New York city. The investment banker says, I have noticed your product and I would like to make you an offer. Can you come and meet me and my team in New York to hear that offer a gentleman says sure, a day of the, he exits off the plane.
The day of the meeting, he's there pretty early. However, he finds his flight was delayed. And now as he's exiting the airport, he's beginning to scramble. He realizes that he is supposed to meet these investment bankers in front of Carnegie hall. However, he's never been in New York city. And so he is beginning to worry. As he comes out of the airport, he sees a young woman exiting a cab and she is carrying a violin case.
So he runs up, she's dressed nice. And he says, maybe she'll know. And so he runs up to her and he says, ma'am do you play in the symphony? And she says, well, yes, I do. He says, fantastic. Could you tell me how to get to Carnegie hall? And she pauses for a minute. She looks him up and down and she says, practice, practice. I thought that was kind of funny.
I'm so fascinated by all the things that are happening in our lives today. And it has been such a, a culture shock. It has been such a cultural divide, a natural disaster or a man-made disaster, or maybe both. If man has in fact part of nature, then maybe it's both. And that's kind of a subject that I wanted to get in today. I've been revisiting this book called the master in his emissaries, and it's about left right brain lateralization.
And what goes on in between those two hemispheres, they've done plenty of research on victims that have had lesions in their left brain, in lesions, in their right-brain. And for those of you who have done some research on it, I'm sure you're aware of this. And for those of you who have yet to do some research on it, I hope to peak your interest. Let me just give you a couple examples of what happens when there's trauma on each side of the brain.
So when there's trauma on the left side of the brain, it tends to cause people to forget how to speech or ruin their speech patterns or makes it very difficult for them to communicate via their speech. They can be paralyzed on the right side of their body. However, if the stroke or the trauma victim can overcome this, they can teach themselves how to speak again.
And they can at times learn how to walk again or gain mobility in the side of their body. That is paralyzed, which would be the right side. If indeed the trauma's on the left, a lesion on the right side is completely different. It, it causes someone to no longer be able, excuse me, to no longer be able to understand the in implicitness has that a word.
It causes people to be that changes their worldview. You see the right brain, the right hemisphere of the brain holds all the context and concepts, the underlying meaning what the situation is telling us, the body language, the, the humor, the, all these parts of communication that aren't words are done in the right hemisphere of the brain.
And there's been some fascinating, fascinating experiments done. One area that I wanted to talk about, and this is just kind of coming off of that book and kind of my own theories about what's happening again. The guy that the book that I'm referencing is the master in his Emissary, in his, by Ian McGilchrist. It's a fascinating read. He's actually got another book coming out pretty soon. I highly suggest that you get an opportunity to check it out. I think you'll enjoy it.
The right hemisphere of the brain has these just beautiful notions of an art and seeing the world in a way that is not hyper analytical. It may help to see it may help to follow this conversation. If you think of the left hand or the left side of the brain is a scalpel. That's constantly dissecting. It's constantly criticizing. It's constantly making sense of it's kind of crazy, but I like to think of it as like this arrogant, cocky, no, at all.
And I know that seems kind of hard. Like, you know what to think about yourself like that, but it's necessary and it's necessary for the left side of the brain to act that way. Like it needs to be able to categorize stuff so that you can function in this world. It needs to be able to say like, okay, is that a, is that something I could eat? Or does it not? You know, what has to be a definitive? Whereas the right hemisphere of the brain is trying to see things the way they've never been seen before and say, why not?
It's constantly looking for a little idiosyncrasies or looking for little bits of detail that are very difficult to describe. And in fact, when you even talk about the right hemisphere of the brain, it's difficult because you have to translate it in the left side of the brain. The right side is the master. That left side is the Emissary. It's another good way to think about it. Any type of a metaphorical thinking is usually done on the right when you find yourself, here's a, here's a, here's an interesting thing.
If you find yourself grasping for language, see the term grasp to reach out on the left side of the brain. That means to actually pinch something or grab it, or to reach out, to get something. But on the right side of the brain, the grasp means to get a hold of and understand in reaching out can mean more than just extending your arm. It can mean trying to connect with something else beside yourself.
Okay? So that's kind of a little bit of a background now that I'm going to try to tie this into another thought, a couple of thoughts I've been having, especially since this pandemic is, you know what you should really, if you can do this, here's a strategy of a music. If you can try to see yourself in everybody, around you, if you can't begin to understand that the person you're talking to is a different version of you, right?
And I promise you, regardless of how different that person is, you can see something and then that you recognize. And if you can't, then here's one for you to have. Everybody can learn. Everybody can learn. Everybody can learn. That is a good first step. If you're having difficulties identifying yourself in someone or something else, you can start there.
But once you begin looking at it, that way you can see yourself in anybody else, you can see yourself in a tree. You can see yourself in the ocean. You can see yourself in a porcupine, and if you could begin doing it, I think it's a great exercise to understand where we're going wrong in life. I'm not saying, I think we're all equal, cause we're not, we're not. That's the noble lie. We're not born equal. That's all bullshit.
But there is parts of us and everything else around us. And that to me is the unifier. That is, that has a very good beginning, a building block in order to build back better. Right? There is a great quote. My wife told me, and I forgot where she picked it up from, but
Speaker 1 (9m 47s): It says last year I was, how does it go? He says, last sure.
Speaker 0 (9m 57s): I was very coy. And I thought I could change the world. As I've grown older, I've become and Y's and realize that I can change myself. Right? And that quote is everywhere. That's gone. D and B the change you want to see in the world. And this is a good start to it. Seeing yourself in the other is a great way to start. And once you do that, at least for me, like up a gun too. And I'm beginning to have new ideas open to me, or maybe these ideas have always been there, but it's becoming more easy to see like the scales falling from your right.
Like it's, it's all fractal. It's all fractal. And let me give you, let me try to, let me try to tie this together a little bit. So the left side of the brain is analytical. The right side of the brain is conceptual. Look at all the debates we're having in our society. It seems that on one hand, we are this, it seems to me, you could make an argument that there's like this technocratic bureaucracy that has been evolving and growing and becoming ever more assertive.
When you think of the way Eric Schmidt, mark Zuckerberg and Larry Ellison in this new class of oligarchs are beginning to emerge as the world leaders, people from like the world economic forum, CEO, these large multinational corporate CEO types, not all is that I would never say it all, but a large percentage of these people, for whatever reason, B it, they were born too.
A good family be that they're smarter than everybody else. Whatever reason it is that they find themselves in this position, they have begun to see the world at a similar way. And since they control the authority and the money they are able to, well, I think that they're trying to look at the world the way they look at their company. And when they do that, the way they make sense of the world, the way they make sense of their country or their company is, and even their country is to see it from an analytical point of view.
They're using this left brain, break it down to a common denominator and move from there, right? Believe the science trust the science. If we can harness all the resources, we can make things. Even for people, you know, it's this, it's this analytical, broken down formula. That make sense. It's on paper. No, that's why employees that large corporations, employees have employee numbers and they've, they had extrapolated the they theory of interchangeable parts.
And they've applied that to the human being kind of making us an a instead of a human being. We become a human appearing and they've are they broken down our society and our world on the left hemisphere of the brain. It's this rep re representation, representation, representation. Think about that word, re present, represent re present.
When they look at the world's problems, they represent them. They try and find a solution. They, they look at the problem and then they apply. They apply their potential solution to a representation of the problem. That's basically what an experiment is, right? But let me tell you why that's wrong. Anytime you represent any time you re present something, it's no longer the actual thing you're trying to solve.
Instead of solving the issue, you're solving a representation of the problem and that's different. And if I see two people fighting and then I go, wow, how can I say next time? I see that? How can I stop it? Or let's say, if I see two people fighting and I'd run over and I was a gay, you dummies stop fighting, or let's say, I don't do anything. And I go home and that I draw two people fighting. And I say, how could I stop that?
See, I'm, I'm re presenting the problem, but that's not the actual problem. That's just a drawing of the problem. Right? If I do that drawing, I could come up with 10 different ways to solve it. I could run over there and stop it. I could yell at them. I'd throw a rock at them. I could do all of these things to try to stop those people from fighting. However, I am unable to map out or come up with a solution because I can't factor in the unknown.
In reality. If I went over there and try to stop it, one of those guys would pull a knife and stab me. That's not in my drawing. You see? So when you come up with a solution to represent a problem, you're leaving out all the unknowns. That's the, that is in a nutshell, the whole problem with our world, that we have these people, that positions of authority that are pretty smart, but they're using this analytical scalpel of the left hemisphere of the brain to solve problems via represented <inaudible>.
And the more we go down this road, the more the people in positions of authority use this analytical, left hemisphere scalpel. The further we get away from it, right? The right hemisphere of the brain is taking in so much information. And it seems that at least in our society, the problems that we see are due to the atrophie of the right hemisphere. And that might not be a literal atrophie and that it's getting smaller.
But it seems to me that it's a being applied less to the actions of our world. And yeah, I'm going to kind of go out here. I'm going to, I know that this might be a little bit crazy already, but what if, what if like what we are seeing right now, if you think about our planet, the whole globe, if you think about our planet and our a globe as a brain, in a large percentage of the people are left him, his feet, like are or make it like this.
The tech, the technocratic CEO political class is like the left hemisphere and all the people on the right or like the right hemisphere. It's very easy to say all, all these people, he's working, people, all these people in third world countries, they are dumb. They're stupid. They're useless eaters, but that's not true. The truth is they're not being allowed. They don't have a seat at the table.
They're not being allowed to apply solutions that they have thought of
Speaker 1 (17m 46s): It's as if the left has caged the right hemisphere, this political
Speaker 0 (17m 55s): SCIO class, this technocratic class has decided to put a cage around all the working people to try to enslave the working people so that it doesn't have to face the fact that it is wrong. All these protests around the world is like the right hemisphere exploding. And the left hemisphere has no idea what to do. And so it's constantly making up excuses for the reasons that the world is so shitty.
And that's what our politicians, the bankers, the technocratic class, the world, economic forum, the trilateral commission. That's what all these fucking dummies are doing are sitting around making excuses so that they don't have to change the world in which they live. They refuse. They flat out refuse. Every person in that class seems to be tainted by this desire to never lose anything, to never give up anything they have.
Instead they want to steal it and rape and pillage people that work for a living. And they indoctrinate people through schools and they indoctrinate their kids'. And they sit around in lie to themselves about that, how they are not privileged, but they're smarter. And that's what this internal struggle is. So in a way, it just goes back to what I was saying, as far as if you can see yourself in the other.
And if you can see the microcosm as the macro and the macro as the micro, if it, if it is fractured, what I think you could make the case for us as individual human beings, but you know, a lot like individual thoughts, some of us are on the right hemisphere. Some of us were on the left hemisphere and that if both hemispheres, the brain are fighting.
If the, if the left is struggling for dominance, because it doesn't want to face the truth, that it doesn't know everything. It's afraid. It'll if it, if it admits that it doesn't know everything it's going to lose. If it's, if we're unable to come together and work as a whole, then we're unable to grow as an organism.
I think we're running from the very thing that would free up what it's this unwillingness to admit that we're different. It's this unwillingness to admit that everybody should be able to do the same thing. It's this soft tyranny of equality. It's not true.
It's not true. And it's a painful truth to know, but it's a liberating truth to know. And the more we allow our kids, the more we allow our colleagues, the more we allow people, we love to believe these lies that we live in this world, where there should be equity and equality. Maybe there can be more equality and equity, but it can't be forced.
No, you can't create policies that say this. These people all have to be the same and they have to have the equality of outcome. You can have the equality of opportunity, but not that equality of outcome. It's just becoming a so perverse way that I don't see how we can continue to move forward without collapsing. It's like we it's like were a big, giant game of Jenga.
And the only way that we've grown so fast, economically socially, is by pulling the blocks from the foundation and placing them on top. And anybody who's ever played Jenga knows that the higher you build, the more you use that strategy of pulling from your foundation to put on top, the more unstable the tower becomes on another note like that, it kind of scares me to think that maybe the only way to really transition out of this is to have a collapse.
Maybe the foundation has been so undermined that the only way to move forward is to start over. And it's a scary thing to think about if there's a lot of evidence that that's exactly what's happening. And if you look at how many trillions of dollars have been printed and given out to the biggest institutions, if you look at the financial system, especially in the United States where I'm from, you know, you can see that the, the government, the federal reserve is not supposed to loan directly to the government, but they just give money to their own banks.
And then the banks give them a, you know what I mean? Like it's just this big circle jerk. And it blows my mind to think about how many trillions of dollars we're spending and how little of that money really trickles down to the individual. Like, where is it all going? What we're printing trillions of dollars, you know? And it makes me think for every person that earns a dollar, probably a person that gets a dog and that doesn't deserve it.
That means there's somebody who deserves it, that doesn't get it. You know, that's the, that's this predator class that was just pulling from the foundation and putting it right on top and then taken the spoils and putting in their pocket. I'm going to try to do some more research on the left, right brain hemispheres in and break it down. I really think that it's a really good metaphor for a world.
That's a really interesting idea that can at least help people begin to try and reestablish a connection with beauty and another, as I talk about it, I began thinking more, you know, if you look at some of the like agenda 30 or agenda 21, or the great reset, what you see from the master class of people or the, the people who have been born into prestigious authority, you know, they would like to push people into smart cities.
They want to track people. They want to get them away from nature. And the more you do those things, the more you strengthen the analytical left hemisphere, you know, it's, it's only in nature that we begin to have these ideas about how the world really works. It's only when you're in nature, that you're surrounded by beauty and you can feel this connection to the earth.
And that's the right hemisphere. That's this conceptual thinking that these are these ideas that at first are very difficult to explain and rightfully so because the left hemisphere has the speech centers. And I think being away from nature, most people, you know, they live in a box and they get in their box car and drive to work. They need, they have a box lunch and then they get back in their box and they drive back to the box in which they live. And maybe just, maybe they have a cylinder to change their state of mind.
You know, we can be creatures of habit. We can be creatures that are stimulus response, and that's the left hemisphere. But what we really are is creatures of creativity. That's when the world's the best. When you think about the Renaissance and the artwork and the sculpture and the beauty, the poetry and the language like this is, this is the dominant right hemisphere. This is a society that's healthy, a society that is creating beauty and is not just creating for creating a loan, right?
When you begin creating just for the sake of financial procurement, then that, which you begin creating becomes meaningless. It becomes a habit strictly for the habits, purpose alone. It does that make sense? Like we're building there's right now. It seems to me, there's no goal except for the goal of expanding.
And that is pretty much a cancer, right? This is uncontrollable growth that continues to growth for growth's sake. If we could just draw that down and take a look at ourselves in the mirror as a, as a world of what, what the fuck are we doing? What are we doing? Just stop and think about that for me. Like, what the fuck are we doing? We just get up, go to work, consume, come home. Like, what the fuck are we doing?
And there's all this crazy rhetoric about this billionaire oligarchs, a Jeff Bezos, his company didn't make a fucking dime until he got a contract from the government. Don't tell me this. Guy's the fucking smartest man on the planet. Like, okay, how about this? Here's a paradigm shift. Look at all these fucking billionaires. And they're, they're presented. They're represented to us as if some there's some sort of savior, as they say, there's some sort of a God-like creature that they have created.
All of these things. They've created all these jobs. And, but what I see when I see bayzos, when I see Elon Musk, what I see is the parable of the prodigal son. What I see is this story of a man who wished he could have everything and made a deal with the devil and didn't realize he's going to lose everything. Look at him, look at Jeff Bezos. That guy is so he looks like a fucking, the saddest child that I've ever seen in my life.
They look at pictures of him before he got money. And then after he had money, it's like, he rubbed a magic lamp and he got all his wishes, but he didn't understand what he was going to give up. When you look at him prior to the government contract, he was like this skinny kind of nerdy guy that had this fascination with books and loved all stuff. And then all of a sudden he gets, he gets a government contract and he starts taking testosterone. He starts fucking kind of a bulk it up a little bit. And then he loses his wife.
I mean, you fucking lose control of your relationships. You lose your wife, you lose your kid. Same thing with Musk, right? How many times that I've been married? How many kids does he have? Like that guy is not a hero that these are stories. These are ideas. And they're being shown to us. And what not to do, let's say that they are incredibly intelligent. I'm sure that they are. What lesson are they teaching the world? Hey, look at me. I can buy everything. And while the world around me fucking crumbles, I'm going to fuck and try to go into a space, but I'm going to, they're not even going in this space.
They're going 50 miles into the air. It's like a, a really expensive, hot air balloon ride. Hey, congratulations. Fuckheads, you've spent billions of dollars on a fucking giant carnival ride. Congratulations. Meanwhile, the middle horsepower, the, all the, the money and love and everything that was given to you to build a better future. You spent on a fucking carnival ride.
You got Magic Beans. Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, the Ross child, all these fucking billionaires. The people in the world have given you everything. And you gave us Magic Beans. No wonder your kids are fucked up. The wonder Bezos is divorce. No wonder bill gates has divorced. They're a fucking wives. Hate them. Think about that. The woman you love more than anything in the world fucking hates you.
Like you took a wrong turn. Fuck heads. Look at these ruling families. What pieces of garbage they are all. They have his money. All they have all of these intrinsic, a fucking pieces of paper. That a reality. You don't mean shit. They're nothing. They're fucking up our planet. I think that there's gotta be a way for us to change the channel. Like I truly believe like what if we just all stopped using Amazon for one day?
What if everybody just tweeted at bill gates, you are a horrible person. We gave you everything and you gave us Magic Beans. If you guys read this, just start tweeting Magic Beans to all the billionaires. Elon Musk, Magic Beans, bill gates, Magic Beans, Jeff Bezos, Magic Beans. They don't want your Magic Beans. Politicians, Magic Beans.
Speaker 1 (32m 38s): Get it. Trump Pelosi, Clinton, Obama, magic fucking beans, man. That's all you got. You got nothing. You got nothing. We trusted you with everything and you gave us Magic Beans. McCrone president Z fucking Magic Beans, man.
He's been working hard on it for the last six months. And lo and behold, he gets a call from an investment banker in the big apple, New York city. The investment banker says, I have noticed your product and I would like to make you an offer. Can you come and meet me and my team in New York to hear that offer a gentleman says sure, a day of the, he exits off the plane.
The day of the meeting, he's there pretty early. However, he finds his flight was delayed. And now as he's exiting the airport, he's beginning to scramble. He realizes that he is supposed to meet these investment bankers in front of Carnegie hall. However, he's never been in New York city. And so he is beginning to worry. As he comes out of the airport, he sees a young woman exiting a cab and she is carrying a violin case.
So he runs up, she's dressed nice. And he says, maybe she'll know. And so he runs up to her and he says, ma'am do you play in the symphony? And she says, well, yes, I do. He says, fantastic. Could you tell me how to get to Carnegie hall? And she pauses for a minute. She looks him up and down and she says, practice, practice. I thought that was kind of funny.
I'm so fascinated by all the things that are happening in our lives today. And it has been such a, a culture shock. It has been such a cultural divide, a natural disaster or a man-made disaster, or maybe both. If man has in fact part of nature, then maybe it's both. And that's kind of a subject that I wanted to get in today. I've been revisiting this book called the master in his emissaries, and it's about left right brain lateralization.
And what goes on in between those two hemispheres, they've done plenty of research on victims that have had lesions in their left brain, in lesions, in their right-brain. And for those of you who have done some research on it, I'm sure you're aware of this. And for those of you who have yet to do some research on it, I hope to peak your interest. Let me just give you a couple examples of what happens when there's trauma on each side of the brain.
So when there's trauma on the left side of the brain, it tends to cause people to forget how to speech or ruin their speech patterns or makes it very difficult for them to communicate via their speech. They can be paralyzed on the right side of their body. However, if the stroke or the trauma victim can overcome this, they can teach themselves how to speak again.
And they can at times learn how to walk again or gain mobility in the side of their body. That is paralyzed, which would be the right side. If indeed the trauma's on the left, a lesion on the right side is completely different. It, it causes someone to no longer be able, excuse me, to no longer be able to understand the in implicitness has that a word.
It causes people to be that changes their worldview. You see the right brain, the right hemisphere of the brain holds all the context and concepts, the underlying meaning what the situation is telling us, the body language, the, the humor, the, all these parts of communication that aren't words are done in the right hemisphere of the brain.
And there's been some fascinating, fascinating experiments done. One area that I wanted to talk about, and this is just kind of coming off of that book and kind of my own theories about what's happening again. The guy that the book that I'm referencing is the master in his Emissary, in his, by Ian McGilchrist. It's a fascinating read. He's actually got another book coming out pretty soon. I highly suggest that you get an opportunity to check it out. I think you'll enjoy it.
The right hemisphere of the brain has these just beautiful notions of an art and seeing the world in a way that is not hyper analytical. It may help to see it may help to follow this conversation. If you think of the left hand or the left side of the brain is a scalpel. That's constantly dissecting. It's constantly criticizing. It's constantly making sense of it's kind of crazy, but I like to think of it as like this arrogant, cocky, no, at all.
And I know that seems kind of hard. Like, you know what to think about yourself like that, but it's necessary and it's necessary for the left side of the brain to act that way. Like it needs to be able to categorize stuff so that you can function in this world. It needs to be able to say like, okay, is that a, is that something I could eat? Or does it not? You know, what has to be a definitive? Whereas the right hemisphere of the brain is trying to see things the way they've never been seen before and say, why not?
It's constantly looking for a little idiosyncrasies or looking for little bits of detail that are very difficult to describe. And in fact, when you even talk about the right hemisphere of the brain, it's difficult because you have to translate it in the left side of the brain. The right side is the master. That left side is the Emissary. It's another good way to think about it. Any type of a metaphorical thinking is usually done on the right when you find yourself, here's a, here's a, here's an interesting thing.
If you find yourself grasping for language, see the term grasp to reach out on the left side of the brain. That means to actually pinch something or grab it, or to reach out, to get something. But on the right side of the brain, the grasp means to get a hold of and understand in reaching out can mean more than just extending your arm. It can mean trying to connect with something else beside yourself.
Okay? So that's kind of a little bit of a background now that I'm going to try to tie this into another thought, a couple of thoughts I've been having, especially since this pandemic is, you know what you should really, if you can do this, here's a strategy of a music. If you can try to see yourself in everybody, around you, if you can't begin to understand that the person you're talking to is a different version of you, right?
And I promise you, regardless of how different that person is, you can see something and then that you recognize. And if you can't, then here's one for you to have. Everybody can learn. Everybody can learn. Everybody can learn. That is a good first step. If you're having difficulties identifying yourself in someone or something else, you can start there.
But once you begin looking at it, that way you can see yourself in anybody else, you can see yourself in a tree. You can see yourself in the ocean. You can see yourself in a porcupine, and if you could begin doing it, I think it's a great exercise to understand where we're going wrong in life. I'm not saying, I think we're all equal, cause we're not, we're not. That's the noble lie. We're not born equal. That's all bullshit.
But there is parts of us and everything else around us. And that to me is the unifier. That is, that has a very good beginning, a building block in order to build back better. Right? There is a great quote. My wife told me, and I forgot where she picked it up from, but
Speaker 1 (9m 47s): It says last year I was, how does it go? He says, last sure.
Speaker 0 (9m 57s): I was very coy. And I thought I could change the world. As I've grown older, I've become and Y's and realize that I can change myself. Right? And that quote is everywhere. That's gone. D and B the change you want to see in the world. And this is a good start to it. Seeing yourself in the other is a great way to start. And once you do that, at least for me, like up a gun too. And I'm beginning to have new ideas open to me, or maybe these ideas have always been there, but it's becoming more easy to see like the scales falling from your right.
Like it's, it's all fractal. It's all fractal. And let me give you, let me try to, let me try to tie this together a little bit. So the left side of the brain is analytical. The right side of the brain is conceptual. Look at all the debates we're having in our society. It seems that on one hand, we are this, it seems to me, you could make an argument that there's like this technocratic bureaucracy that has been evolving and growing and becoming ever more assertive.
When you think of the way Eric Schmidt, mark Zuckerberg and Larry Ellison in this new class of oligarchs are beginning to emerge as the world leaders, people from like the world economic forum, CEO, these large multinational corporate CEO types, not all is that I would never say it all, but a large percentage of these people, for whatever reason, B it, they were born too.
A good family be that they're smarter than everybody else. Whatever reason it is that they find themselves in this position, they have begun to see the world at a similar way. And since they control the authority and the money they are able to, well, I think that they're trying to look at the world the way they look at their company. And when they do that, the way they make sense of the world, the way they make sense of their country or their company is, and even their country is to see it from an analytical point of view.
They're using this left brain, break it down to a common denominator and move from there, right? Believe the science trust the science. If we can harness all the resources, we can make things. Even for people, you know, it's this, it's this analytical, broken down formula. That make sense. It's on paper. No, that's why employees that large corporations, employees have employee numbers and they've, they had extrapolated the they theory of interchangeable parts.
And they've applied that to the human being kind of making us an a instead of a human being. We become a human appearing and they've are they broken down our society and our world on the left hemisphere of the brain. It's this rep re representation, representation, representation. Think about that word, re present, represent re present.
When they look at the world's problems, they represent them. They try and find a solution. They, they look at the problem and then they apply. They apply their potential solution to a representation of the problem. That's basically what an experiment is, right? But let me tell you why that's wrong. Anytime you represent any time you re present something, it's no longer the actual thing you're trying to solve.
Instead of solving the issue, you're solving a representation of the problem and that's different. And if I see two people fighting and then I go, wow, how can I say next time? I see that? How can I stop it? Or let's say, if I see two people fighting and I'd run over and I was a gay, you dummies stop fighting, or let's say, I don't do anything. And I go home and that I draw two people fighting. And I say, how could I stop that?
See, I'm, I'm re presenting the problem, but that's not the actual problem. That's just a drawing of the problem. Right? If I do that drawing, I could come up with 10 different ways to solve it. I could run over there and stop it. I could yell at them. I'd throw a rock at them. I could do all of these things to try to stop those people from fighting. However, I am unable to map out or come up with a solution because I can't factor in the unknown.
In reality. If I went over there and try to stop it, one of those guys would pull a knife and stab me. That's not in my drawing. You see? So when you come up with a solution to represent a problem, you're leaving out all the unknowns. That's the, that is in a nutshell, the whole problem with our world, that we have these people, that positions of authority that are pretty smart, but they're using this analytical scalpel of the left hemisphere of the brain to solve problems via represented <inaudible>.
And the more we go down this road, the more the people in positions of authority use this analytical, left hemisphere scalpel. The further we get away from it, right? The right hemisphere of the brain is taking in so much information. And it seems that at least in our society, the problems that we see are due to the atrophie of the right hemisphere. And that might not be a literal atrophie and that it's getting smaller.
But it seems to me that it's a being applied less to the actions of our world. And yeah, I'm going to kind of go out here. I'm going to, I know that this might be a little bit crazy already, but what if, what if like what we are seeing right now, if you think about our planet, the whole globe, if you think about our planet and our a globe as a brain, in a large percentage of the people are left him, his feet, like are or make it like this.
The tech, the technocratic CEO political class is like the left hemisphere and all the people on the right or like the right hemisphere. It's very easy to say all, all these people, he's working, people, all these people in third world countries, they are dumb. They're stupid. They're useless eaters, but that's not true. The truth is they're not being allowed. They don't have a seat at the table.
They're not being allowed to apply solutions that they have thought of
Speaker 1 (17m 46s): It's as if the left has caged the right hemisphere, this political
Speaker 0 (17m 55s): SCIO class, this technocratic class has decided to put a cage around all the working people to try to enslave the working people so that it doesn't have to face the fact that it is wrong. All these protests around the world is like the right hemisphere exploding. And the left hemisphere has no idea what to do. And so it's constantly making up excuses for the reasons that the world is so shitty.
And that's what our politicians, the bankers, the technocratic class, the world, economic forum, the trilateral commission. That's what all these fucking dummies are doing are sitting around making excuses so that they don't have to change the world in which they live. They refuse. They flat out refuse. Every person in that class seems to be tainted by this desire to never lose anything, to never give up anything they have.
Instead they want to steal it and rape and pillage people that work for a living. And they indoctrinate people through schools and they indoctrinate their kids'. And they sit around in lie to themselves about that, how they are not privileged, but they're smarter. And that's what this internal struggle is. So in a way, it just goes back to what I was saying, as far as if you can see yourself in the other.
And if you can see the microcosm as the macro and the macro as the micro, if it, if it is fractured, what I think you could make the case for us as individual human beings, but you know, a lot like individual thoughts, some of us are on the right hemisphere. Some of us were on the left hemisphere and that if both hemispheres, the brain are fighting.
If the, if the left is struggling for dominance, because it doesn't want to face the truth, that it doesn't know everything. It's afraid. It'll if it, if it admits that it doesn't know everything it's going to lose. If it's, if we're unable to come together and work as a whole, then we're unable to grow as an organism.
I think we're running from the very thing that would free up what it's this unwillingness to admit that we're different. It's this unwillingness to admit that everybody should be able to do the same thing. It's this soft tyranny of equality. It's not true.
It's not true. And it's a painful truth to know, but it's a liberating truth to know. And the more we allow our kids, the more we allow our colleagues, the more we allow people, we love to believe these lies that we live in this world, where there should be equity and equality. Maybe there can be more equality and equity, but it can't be forced.
No, you can't create policies that say this. These people all have to be the same and they have to have the equality of outcome. You can have the equality of opportunity, but not that equality of outcome. It's just becoming a so perverse way that I don't see how we can continue to move forward without collapsing. It's like we it's like were a big, giant game of Jenga.
And the only way that we've grown so fast, economically socially, is by pulling the blocks from the foundation and placing them on top. And anybody who's ever played Jenga knows that the higher you build, the more you use that strategy of pulling from your foundation to put on top, the more unstable the tower becomes on another note like that, it kind of scares me to think that maybe the only way to really transition out of this is to have a collapse.
Maybe the foundation has been so undermined that the only way to move forward is to start over. And it's a scary thing to think about if there's a lot of evidence that that's exactly what's happening. And if you look at how many trillions of dollars have been printed and given out to the biggest institutions, if you look at the financial system, especially in the United States where I'm from, you know, you can see that the, the government, the federal reserve is not supposed to loan directly to the government, but they just give money to their own banks.
And then the banks give them a, you know what I mean? Like it's just this big circle jerk. And it blows my mind to think about how many trillions of dollars we're spending and how little of that money really trickles down to the individual. Like, where is it all going? What we're printing trillions of dollars, you know? And it makes me think for every person that earns a dollar, probably a person that gets a dog and that doesn't deserve it.
That means there's somebody who deserves it, that doesn't get it. You know, that's the, that's this predator class that was just pulling from the foundation and putting it right on top and then taken the spoils and putting in their pocket. I'm going to try to do some more research on the left, right brain hemispheres in and break it down. I really think that it's a really good metaphor for a world.
That's a really interesting idea that can at least help people begin to try and reestablish a connection with beauty and another, as I talk about it, I began thinking more, you know, if you look at some of the like agenda 30 or agenda 21, or the great reset, what you see from the master class of people or the, the people who have been born into prestigious authority, you know, they would like to push people into smart cities.
They want to track people. They want to get them away from nature. And the more you do those things, the more you strengthen the analytical left hemisphere, you know, it's, it's only in nature that we begin to have these ideas about how the world really works. It's only when you're in nature, that you're surrounded by beauty and you can feel this connection to the earth.
And that's the right hemisphere. That's this conceptual thinking that these are these ideas that at first are very difficult to explain and rightfully so because the left hemisphere has the speech centers. And I think being away from nature, most people, you know, they live in a box and they get in their box car and drive to work. They need, they have a box lunch and then they get back in their box and they drive back to the box in which they live. And maybe just, maybe they have a cylinder to change their state of mind.
You know, we can be creatures of habit. We can be creatures that are stimulus response, and that's the left hemisphere. But what we really are is creatures of creativity. That's when the world's the best. When you think about the Renaissance and the artwork and the sculpture and the beauty, the poetry and the language like this is, this is the dominant right hemisphere. This is a society that's healthy, a society that is creating beauty and is not just creating for creating a loan, right?
When you begin creating just for the sake of financial procurement, then that, which you begin creating becomes meaningless. It becomes a habit strictly for the habits, purpose alone. It does that make sense? Like we're building there's right now. It seems to me, there's no goal except for the goal of expanding.
And that is pretty much a cancer, right? This is uncontrollable growth that continues to growth for growth's sake. If we could just draw that down and take a look at ourselves in the mirror as a, as a world of what, what the fuck are we doing? What are we doing? Just stop and think about that for me. Like, what the fuck are we doing? We just get up, go to work, consume, come home. Like, what the fuck are we doing?
And there's all this crazy rhetoric about this billionaire oligarchs, a Jeff Bezos, his company didn't make a fucking dime until he got a contract from the government. Don't tell me this. Guy's the fucking smartest man on the planet. Like, okay, how about this? Here's a paradigm shift. Look at all these fucking billionaires. And they're, they're presented. They're represented to us as if some there's some sort of savior, as they say, there's some sort of a God-like creature that they have created.
All of these things. They've created all these jobs. And, but what I see when I see bayzos, when I see Elon Musk, what I see is the parable of the prodigal son. What I see is this story of a man who wished he could have everything and made a deal with the devil and didn't realize he's going to lose everything. Look at him, look at Jeff Bezos. That guy is so he looks like a fucking, the saddest child that I've ever seen in my life.
They look at pictures of him before he got money. And then after he had money, it's like, he rubbed a magic lamp and he got all his wishes, but he didn't understand what he was going to give up. When you look at him prior to the government contract, he was like this skinny kind of nerdy guy that had this fascination with books and loved all stuff. And then all of a sudden he gets, he gets a government contract and he starts taking testosterone. He starts fucking kind of a bulk it up a little bit. And then he loses his wife.
I mean, you fucking lose control of your relationships. You lose your wife, you lose your kid. Same thing with Musk, right? How many times that I've been married? How many kids does he have? Like that guy is not a hero that these are stories. These are ideas. And they're being shown to us. And what not to do, let's say that they are incredibly intelligent. I'm sure that they are. What lesson are they teaching the world? Hey, look at me. I can buy everything. And while the world around me fucking crumbles, I'm going to fuck and try to go into a space, but I'm going to, they're not even going in this space.
They're going 50 miles into the air. It's like a, a really expensive, hot air balloon ride. Hey, congratulations. Fuckheads, you've spent billions of dollars on a fucking giant carnival ride. Congratulations. Meanwhile, the middle horsepower, the, all the, the money and love and everything that was given to you to build a better future. You spent on a fucking carnival ride.
You got Magic Beans. Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, the Ross child, all these fucking billionaires. The people in the world have given you everything. And you gave us Magic Beans. No wonder your kids are fucked up. The wonder Bezos is divorce. No wonder bill gates has divorced. They're a fucking wives. Hate them. Think about that. The woman you love more than anything in the world fucking hates you.
Like you took a wrong turn. Fuck heads. Look at these ruling families. What pieces of garbage they are all. They have his money. All they have all of these intrinsic, a fucking pieces of paper. That a reality. You don't mean shit. They're nothing. They're fucking up our planet. I think that there's gotta be a way for us to change the channel. Like I truly believe like what if we just all stopped using Amazon for one day?
What if everybody just tweeted at bill gates, you are a horrible person. We gave you everything and you gave us Magic Beans. If you guys read this, just start tweeting Magic Beans to all the billionaires. Elon Musk, Magic Beans, bill gates, Magic Beans, Jeff Bezos, Magic Beans. They don't want your Magic Beans. Politicians, Magic Beans.
Speaker 1 (32m 38s): Get it. Trump Pelosi, Clinton, Obama, magic fucking beans, man. That's all you got. You got nothing. You got nothing. We trusted you with everything and you gave us Magic Beans. McCrone president Z fucking Magic Beans, man.
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