Your Job Dies in 2026 Unless You Act

you can go to the Aaron day show.com and you can actually, search my podcasts and it's not just looking at the captions. It actually went through and looks at the frames of the video. And so you can say, oh, which episodes was Aaron wearing red glasses? Which episodes was Aaron sitting next to his wife? And so I started doing that as just kind of, you know, a small data set of my own, but that's actually one of the ways I've been able to push the NVIDIA DGX, which has been, you know, still not caught up on the driver front so it's kind of frustrating to use i don't know if you've experienced that as well what kind of waiting for for that well i thought i thought the spark was going to be faster than it is and i thought it the environment would be more stable but i do want to mention that um unsloth just put out a you know a downloadable environment that's got all the right pie torch and cuda drivers in place So that's worth looking into. And when I attempt training next, I'm gonna use that. Yeah, that's huge, because that is a big stumbling block and a big issue. You can waste days trying to get all the right drivers to coexist, even in a Linux environment. Yes, you can. Yeah, I know. I'm right there with you. I'm like, oh my God, please, somebody just stabilize this stuff. Yeah, but I'm looking forward. I'm going to do more of that, more experimentation with, I think, indexing videos because the ability to go in and say, you know, I mean, again, my podcast, I don't have a lot of content. It's like, well, what was that episode where he showed a, you know, a debit card on the screen and, you know, a Doconomy UN branded debit card. And so now it actually pulls that up. So that was my experiment with that. I'm going to be doing more more with that, and I think with the technocracy Atlas. And it would be good to be able to say, hey, when exactly did Klaus Schwab say, you know, you owe nothing and be happy, and then have the video clip pop up? Absolutely. Actually have it pull up not just the video where these things happen, but when was Aaron wearing red glasses? And it'll actually take you to the clip where you can most prominently see where I'm wearing red glasses. Well, yeah, automatic video clipping of high interest areas of people's videos. I mean, that's going to be a thing. Because a lot of clips do really well going viral on X and other platforms. Yeah, absolutely. So that's an area. I have a question for you about the videos. what do you make of the the so-called asian guy uh videos that are viral on youtube where he's talking about silver and you know everybody knows it's ai but the explanations are very compelling about what's happening in china what's happening in the lbma etc and this so-called asian guy who's on multiple channels yeah he's ai but I mean, some people don't know he's AI, but his channel is becoming more popular than a lot of human channels on the same topic. Isn't this kind of the beginning of AI avatars taking over sites like YouTube or platforms? Yeah, I haven't seen those, to be honest. So I will check that out. But I definitely think that that is In fact, I think we probably don't even know how much of what we see is already AI. That's my guess. I think we have no idea. But when I look at the different models now for avatar creation, You know, I did the podcast that I mentioned with my voice with Eleven Labs, which it's still, you know, I needed to tweak the script and everything else. You can figure it out if you listen. My wife detected it regularly, but I'm sure there's some that didn't detect it. But I look at it this way, you know, and some people will say, again, back to this cheating example, like, well, you know, if I'm going to be delivering my content, Do we want it during when I'm sick, when I'm coughing, or when I've had a bad day or I have low energy? Or do you want to project the best version of yourself? So again, this concept of training your own AI. Now, in this case, I don't know if this Asian guy is a clone or if it's literally just a completely fabricated avatar but i think that you're definitely going to see more of this uh in fact we may already be seeing more than than we could possibly imagine but it makes sense right it does make sense to be able to to clone now i've seen these things on my feed and i haven't gotten into this realm where people are putting together these pipelines where they're generating you know hundreds of tick tock videos at a time and then running them on different channels and then doing a b testing and seeing which one works and then focusing their efforts on the one that works and so there are people that are mass producing yeah clips um for instagram and for advertising purposes and so i wouldn't be surprised if you know over half of instagram is is ai generally and people don't know because if you look at the sora model or cling or some of the other ones now And I, you know, I use Higgs field a lot to experiment with the different video models and they haven't used it too. They have an API, but I don't think a lot of people know they have an API. No, I, I thought they didn't have an API actually. So they do. I, and I don't know if I just stumbled it's cloud dot Higgs field that AI. So this is what I use primarily when I'm, so when I'm doing this AI, when I'm doing these music videos, I'm, I'm. Now trying to figure out how to call the API because they don't publish good material. Like that's a bit right, but it exists. And so you just have to guess that it's like open AI compatible and everything or what? Yeah. You gotta play around with them a bit and then make sure that's created a lot of issues with references and everything else. But, uh, but my point is they have a lot of studio, they have a lot of tools there that are designed for, um, you know, using a reference image and making a character that is consistent. throughout time in different environments. And so I think the future of, I think we're already there and probably don't even realize how much we are already in the AI avatars. And I like Higgs field because it's kind of like Higgs Higgs field is to image and video creation. What open router is also for text LLMs. It's kind of like a routing engine. The way I see it with a common API, um, an open router has been really great. Did you know, by the way that you can append slugs to the model names on open router, such as nitro to always choose the fastest model. I did not know that. Yeah. You can put Nitro on it, and you can also put a slug called Extended to give you extended context windows. So you know how some open source models will be run by certain inference providers at maybe a thirty-two K context, but others will run the same model with one twenty-eight K. Well, you need to slap Extended on there to get the longer context, if that's what you want to do. But I wanted to follow up. I was searching for this while you were talking. This is actually a big deal. It's the unslothed Docker image is what I was referring to. And this unslothed Docker image now supports the . which is the, I think that's the Blackwell architecture now, right? And the fifty series, such as the RDX, the fifty ninety cards, which I've been buying a lot of, and now their price has suddenly skyrocketed. They're all going to go to five thousand dollars next month, we're being told, which is insane because I was buying them for twenty four hundred. But initially, when I got those cards, nothing was compatible with them. That's the same problem with the Spark that you were talking about. So, you know, NVIDIA will push out hardware very often that has no support in the developer community, and then it's a catch-up game to try to make that work. Anyway, Unsloth has put out a Docker image that looks comprehensive, and that's what I'm going to be using next as soon as I get bigger hardware. need a lot more ram for this because what i want to do actually i want to train a um like my own version of deepsea three two so it's a massive model it's going to take a lot of memory it's going to be slow But I've got this massive data set. So, I mean, I need to throw so much compute at this to do anything in under twelve months. You know, I can't wait twelve months for a new model to spit out and then find out that I broke its language. Like it's not speaking any language now. I've had that happen before. So anyway, there you go. Docker, unslothed Docker. I will definitely check that out. Yeah. So what are your predictions for twenty twenty six? Oh, man. Oh, I don't know. Well, let's let's start with the obvious ones. Number one, I inference. There are two forces that are competing. You're going to have much greater efficiencies because of things like sparse attention and also that new science paper from DeepSeek. But you're going to have massively increased costs due to rising costs of electricity and of the commodities that go into making the GPUs, such as copper, aluminum, even silver, obviously, which is skyrocketing today. Last time I checked, it was eighty one dollars. I have no idea where it is now, but, you know, This is why Nvidia announced it's going to double prices on a lot of its cards. So now the prices that we've been paying for inference, they've been on a downward trajectory in terms of cost per token or cost per compute. That might actually stall for a while because of the other costs I just mentioned. which means we should be really happy with what we have right now. It's like, be grateful for the compute we have now, because now we're about to go into an era of compute scarcity, compute scarcity. And China is going to be able to dominate this because it will be able to offer inference services on its open source models like DeepSeq and Quen using the much lower cost of electricity in China compared to the US and compared to Europe. In addition, and you know this, China is now innovating its UV lithography equipment to bypass all the sanctions on UV lithography. And it's still a couple years out, but they just demonstrated very high-end, I think, two nanometer or three nanometer capabilities with UV lithography, which means China's going to be able to produce its own microchips that will rival eventually what Taiwan Semiconductor is doing. Now, it's not going to be overnight. That's like a ten-year project. But China's not sitting around. They've got a lot of smart engineers. They're going to nail this thing, and the sanctions will stop working. That's why China's going to win this race currently is what it looks like to me. Yeah, those are all great points. So what do you think is going to happen in the U.S.? What do you think about the approach that the U.S. has been taking from a political perspective regarding AI? Well, I think what Trump is pushing is centralized AI through a few chosen, selected tech companies. And I mean, we know who they are. It's all the people he invites to the White House dinners, et cetera. Trump is not an advocate of open source decentralized AI. But open source will still win in the end, although it won't be US open source. It's going to be China open source again. I mean, I'm sorry to keep talking about China. But I mean, look at the fact all the US AI tech companies stopped publishing science papers. in the last year they don't want to put out any science papers so all the best science is coming out of china all their names are chinese names all the conversations are in mandarin i mean this is the way it's going to continue now if i'm a corporation And I need to automate some internal process like customer service. Am I going to pay ChatGPT some premium amount or Google some premium per token cost to use their model and try to put a rag layer on it of my customer service emails? Or am I going to just freaking download Quinn? and just run it on a local server for free, for free, and train that. Yeah, I'm going to choose Quen, or I'm going to choose DeepSeek, or I'm going to choose whatever else is coming. Alibaba models are coming out of China. That's what you're going to do, and that's what corporations are doing. And so China is going to be setting the standard in these models. And US tech companies are going to end up just becoming like military contractors. They're not going to be leaving the space for consumers and corporations, really. That's where it's going. I mean, Google might be an exception because they have so many brilliant people there. But Google's no angel. They use AI for weaponization, for surveillance. They have a long track record of censorship and rigging elections, the whole deal. Google's evil. You know, that's not going to change. No, that's not going to change. The only thing, and again, even saying us versus China, I mean, these are obviously multinational corporations, technocratic corporations anyway. So even the distinction is not even that important, but, um, I've been impressed with anthropic at, you know, I don't know if now I haven't tried, what is it? GLM four point seven. I've been meaning to try this, I guess it's the coding model that is. supposed to be almost up to Claude's standards. I guess that's their nearest rival. Claude's been so easy to use that I just haven't bothered to switch. But I do want to experiment with it because that's the one area that I see a gain here. But it'll be interesting to see what happens with X AI this year with version five when that comes out. Yeah, well, I really don't think, like Grok, for example, it still fails on so many important questions, questions about medicine and jabs and money and freedom and things like that. Clearly, Grok inherited all the biases of the base models that originally started with Lama. and meta and if you don't make an effort to pull those out of the models through obliteration or other techniques then you're going to end up with models that are just pushing a globalist narrative and that's see that's the way this is going to go so even Think about refusals and guardrails from mainstream models. They're becoming more locked down. The chat GPT will no longer give you any kind of decent medical answer any longer, for example. That's all by design. But that's forcing people and companies like mine to go for base models that are outside the US. The US tech ecosystem is CIA controlled. And as a result, you're never gonna get good quality models that are capable of doing things rooted in truth and transparency out of the United States. It's just not happening. Frankly, even France is doing a better job with Mistral which is less censored than the U.S. models, which is hilarious because, you know, the EU is a very pro-censorship kind of place. But Mistral has sort of been able to do an end run around that censorship, and their models are actually very good. And there's an open-source version of Mistral Small that's quite good. But China... is the leader in this space and even though they still have censorship in their public facing like if you go to chat.deepseek.com you're going to get more guardrails and censorship there a lot of those guardrails vanish through the api so you know you do api access and you you really have a different engine and i i do not get refusals from deep seek when i'm doing a book normalization cleaning of books even very controversial type of subjects i don't get refusals from deep seek So what, you know, what engine am I going to use? I'm going to use the engine that doesn't refuse my prompts when I'm trying to freaking clean OCR errors and books that talk about vaccines or whatever. And that's China. I mean, think about it. I think it's important for people to understand that this is, that is actually true. And, but you know, and I've talked about this, the U S we do not, I think, what are we ranked? We're thirtieth or something in free speech. I've actually won one. Yeah. report was worth ranked fifty fifth in terms of freedom of speech. We are not even top tier. So we still have this idea that, oh, we have the, you know, First Amendment and everything else. And that's practically not not what's going on. I have the same experience. I use deep seek as well. I've been using deep seek for for my chat bots and, you know, which are becoming I'm focusing a lot of time on customizing the chat bots and trying to create customizable user experiences. And so I have by the end of this month, I'll have all six of my sites finally, you know, fully production ready. But I've been working a lot on the medical tourism marketplace, which is which is really expanded from, you know, kind of a directory of different locations to where you can go in and interact with the chat bot and you just ask it, okay, I need a hip replacement. And it's pulling from the database that I've compiled, but it actually walks you through the journey and you can save your journey. Okay, I'm gonna compare these destinations and there's a way for you to track your due diligence as you're going through that process or go through creating a medical trust. It'll walk you through the laws in all of the states and it'll point you to different tools and online resources where you can create your own trust. And so increasingly, I've been spending a lot of time figuring out, it is, I think you mentioned this earlier, and I'm not a fan of his, but I think Larry Ellison is right in the sense that a lot of the value here moving forward is going to be in private data, the application of these language models to private data. That's kind of the, because anybody can, you can download, you can go to various, tour sites or whatever, you can get access to a lot of public material. Some of it's illegal. You can get copyrighted material, you can get magazines, newspapers, and everything else. But being able to take your own data and take these private data sets, and then put an LLM on top of that. But if you're going to use an LLM, as you said, are you going to use ChatGPT? I can't use some of these things on my own data. I have to use. It is a true story. If you're talking about technology, you're talking about vaccines, and you want to be able to access and structure that data, you have to use a Chinese model or otherwise you're going to get censorship and garbage results. This is this is a fact and it's something that people need to recognize is already happening. It's not going to happen in the future that the censorship of these models is already here. Well, yeah. I mean, even Anthropic has guardrails and will refuse to answer certain prompts. Of course, there's all kinds of jailbreak techniques that are effective to use, but it's a pain to research and test and figure out which jailbreak is going to work correctly. Oh, I have to write poetry in the middle of my prompt to make this thing loosen up, which actually does work for most models. That's interesting, because it kind of fires off the right neurons, I guess, in silicon to open up the doors. But this is going to be the battle space. People want to solve problems like you said with medical tourism. People want to solve problems with their health. They want access to knowledge about what are the root causes of the symptoms I'm experiencing and what are the solutions that don't cost me a fortune because the conventional medical system is completely unaffordable, largely incompetent, ineffective, and usually just makes people worse. So how can I solve this health concern naturally with my own responsibility without a visit to the doctor and a prescription and a pharmacy or whatever? How do I do that? Well, that knowledge will never be made available to you through the mainstream US tech engines. It's available through our engines for all the obvious reasons. Because again, we have a data set that has been used to modify the base engines and also use, of course, as a research rag layer on top of everything else. But as far as I know, we're the only ones that have bothered to do that. I've seen other engines out there you know, like freedom engines or truth engines or whatever. It just looks like a customized system prompt to me. I don't think it's anything more than just a system prompt. But to actually collect all this data and bring it in and bring in, you know, the knowledge of a hundred thousand authors or a million scientists and aggregate that knowledge and bring it into your answer. Like, I don't know anybody else doing that because it's a pain in the ass to do it. I mean, it's a big ass pain. Trust me. How many late nights I've been fixing problems, you know? I, you know, I hear you. I know that with the technocracy Atlas, um, I've tried to pull together technocracy data, but then actually even just playing around with this Epstein data has been a chore. I've run into stumbling blocks and it's, you know, Hey, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when, when That throws another wrench into the whole thing. But I've been working on iterating the technocracy atlas to prepare for the next data dump, because I understand that apparently they released a hundred thousand documents or whatever, and there are five point two million, as many as five point two million that they have not released yet. So all of a sudden they were claiming, oh, well, the Southern District of New York had a bunch of documents and We didn't know about it or we haven't had time to properly go through and, you know, redact the victim's names. Right. But, um, but even something like with the, with the Epstein files, there are nineteen thousand four hundred pictures. All right. So what are you going to do with that information? So I've taken that and now I'm running it through. It's okay. Yeah. There's the, if there are captions, you want to run it through OCR, then you have to run through the images to describe the images, but then you don't necessarily have the ability to map the names. That's another layer you can do, but then now you submit a picture and then beyond that, crowdsource the information. So that's where Technocracy Atlas is going. But yeah. That's a big project, yeah. It's a huge project. And so what you're saying, acquiring the information and putting it into a usable form, is a lot of work it is a yeah it's like a constant it's a it's a labor of love particularly if you're trying to get information that's based on truth and you have built hands down the i don't even think there's a second place that of anyone that's been aggregating primary source material that's that's focused on truth i i don't know yeah i don't know of anybody that's doing it either and look i mean we've we've spent We spent two years and two million dollars. I think it is on this project and Then we give it away for free. I mean, we don't even charge anybody to use it. So there's there's no revenue model for us but I understand that this is a critical core technology for independent media for truth seekers everywhere to be able to have access to this and to be able to advocate for decentralized open source knowledge that bypasses the gatekeepers and censorship. So this is my passion and mission to do this. And we're only getting started, actually. It's going to get way more powerful. mean we've already published fifteen thousand books that's just the beginning and i think you're probably cited in hundreds of them by the way aaron because of the content you provided and uh i was even running numbers like dr mercola he his website is cited in like twenty five hundred books you know one way or another so it's very interesting um but we're just getting started and frankly the establishment can't They can't close the doors on this any longer. It's out of the box. They can't control it. They can't censor it. And to your audience, please share this conversation so that more people can become aware of this. Use the tools. Share the tools. Create an income off the books if you want. That's allowed in the licensing. We did that on purpose. But use and share the tools because this is how we win or how we stay alive, those of us who aren't victims of the depopulation agendas that are running. Knowledge will save your life. Knowledge will save your life. Well, thank you very much. And again, I remind everybody, you want to go to brightu.ai. That's now brightanswers. Well, brightanswers.ai. Okay. Yep, yep. They both work, but we're doing brightanswers.ai now and brightlearn.ai. Okay, excellent. Well, great. Thank you very much for coming on. I think we're running up against time, but I'm sure we'll do this again. I can't wait to see what happens next. Thank you, Aaron. I'm always honored to be on your show. I love these conversations, and I'd love to have you back on my show. We'll do this again soon. We'll do it in ten years, which will be ten weeks. Exactly. sounds great okay talk to you soon talk to you soon bye okay all right there you have it there was the uh the interview with uh with mike adams we actually did that Yesterday or the day before, I can't even remember at this point. Time has all been a blur, but always very grateful to have Mike, not only in the show, but really grateful for all of the wonderful content that he's put out there. So as he mentioned, so I encourage you to check out brightanswers.ai and continue to use brightlearn.ai online. It's been quite a week. I can't believe it's Thursday. It seems like this has been a really long week. If you caught the show on... In fact, let me pull up my notes because I just went right into the podcast. So it's been a... It's been quite a week. If you tuned into the show on Monday, you will see that I announced that I'm exploring a run for the United States Senate. And I replayed that announcement at the very beginning of this podcast. It's only about a twelve minute announcement or so. And so I haven't had an opportunity to field any questions about that or talk to anybody about that. but I encourage you to go to day.com. And, uh, if, if you're, if you support me exploring this run, uh, please sign up for the email list. I have a counter going last time I checked, we were at about people so far who've signed up since Monday, which is great. Actually. I think that's a pretty, pretty big number given, um, you know, the number of people that have actually heard the announcement and the fact that I haven't even formally issued a, a press release or gotten any press coverage or anything. So that's a good, strong initial indication. And as a reminder, uh, I don't believe we can vote our way out. The reason that I'm doing this is very simple. I'm trying to fight technocracy, raise awareness about technocracy, which has been exceedingly difficult. It was easier before the presidential election because people identified the technocrats as being Klaus Schwab and Bill Gates. And then people think that they won. Because Trump won and the Avenger team and everything and Musk and Tulsi Gabbard and the opposite is true. We've had technocracy without any resistance at all. So backdoor CBDCs through the Genius Act have hyper-accelerated. I just saw a tweet while the show was going on. Thirty-three trillion dollars worth of stablecoin transactions. in the last year that's up from twenty seven trillion the previous year and those are essentially backdoor cbdc's we have ai surveillance with palantir database of americans doge connecting all the federal government departments together connecting all of that information build a database of americans and now we're going to have the clarity act which they're calling a market structure bill which by the way is a really interesting term in and of itself but it just means they're going to be able to digitally control and program everything else that you own and and so all of this is going on and people are are cheering it on because they don't understand it and they're and they're buying into the propaganda now As you know, it looks like the Republicans have lost control of the House, or I think they've already lost control of the House, and are likely to lose control of the House in this election cycle. And now the Senate is up for grabs. Now, I've run for this Senate seat before, intentionally, as a... protest to some of the things going on with medicaid expansion in new hampshire and i did determine the outcome of that race that is a it is a successful strategy now what's interesting in this senate race here in new hampshire is it's one of the toss-ups and it's one where republicans are putting a lot of weight they're putting money behind john e sununu Now, there's kind of a long story here. Even when I ran against AOD, I wasn't running against AOD. I was running against Sununu Control, which is why... Republicans pushed Medicaid expansion to begin with, which was to protect Kelly Ayotte's seat. They believed that at the state level, Republicans needed to expand Medicaid, which my view is, well, if you're going to mess with the state for some politician's career and for this federal position, then I'll just interfere with that race. But Johnny Sununu is really at the heart of technocracy. He was a US Senator before. In fact, he was US Senator right before I moved to New Hampshire. And I remember watching C-SPAN live when he flipped his vote. He originally came out against TARP, the bailout program, the seven hundred and seventy seven billion or seven hundred plus billion dollar bailout of the banks. And then he flipped and then he ended up becoming the chair of the Oversight Committee. And so he also voted for the Patriot Act. He voted for Real ID. So when you've heard me talk about technocracy and what's been implemented over the years and how every time there's an emergency or some kind of crisis, we get more surveillance and more tracking. And Johnny Sununu has been behind most of the major pieces of legislation. So even though he hasn't been a senator... since, you know, whatever, two thousand nine, two thousand eight. He put in place the big framework. And then what did he do after that? He then went on to become the chair of a finance board for the WEF, for the World Economic Forum. And then he became a lobbyist in Washington, D.C. So this guy illustrates everything about technocracy that we're trying to stop and raise awareness about. And so I figure this could turn out to be a race that determines the control of the U.S. Senate. And the prediction markets are narrowing. You know, it's fifty three forty seven now, excuse me, but based on all the dynamics. the odds are tightening and tightening and tightening. And this very well could be a big race for that. And so this is an opportunity to get people to start to understand about what technocracy is, why it's so important, and to understand why At the end of the day, both parties are the same. The other person in this race, the Democrat, Chris Pappas, is a typical Democrat party line technocrat, voted for the CARES Act, voted for the Genius Act, voted for the Clarity Act, voted for all of this stuff, which we expect because he's a Democrat. But there's no difference. between these two people. And you can't vote your way out. So my whole thing isn't, hey, vote for me. I'm going to fix Washington. Nobody can fix Washington. But I want to use this to raise awareness and to help promote the idea that people can take back their own sovereignty. So I'm going to be educating people the same as I am now on how you can exit the dollar, how you can use Freedom Dollar instead of stable coins, how you can exit the healthcare system with OSR, all of these things. But my message isn't the same. And so there's no, like, this isn't a, hey, give me money so I can run ads and manipulate people and try to lie for some agenda and then tell you that, oh, well, I'm going to be able to go in there and reach across the aisle, which is a ridiculous concept. The only thing more absurd than partisan bickering is bipartisan compromise. Right. There's no, you know, these politicians are like, well, you know, we need a grown up in Washington, D.C. Look at the look at Congress. I mean, there's the protect. They protect the Epstein files. They're involved in insider trading. We have we're marching to forty trillion dollars in debt. This isn't a one-party enterprise. There is no solution. And there's nobody even addressing a root cause. Everything is a surface-level argument. And in the end, we're just going to get more surveillance. We're going to get more tracking. And so, anyway, that's the whole point behind this. So it's not going to detract from my message. I'm doing this because I actually think it can help. But I also think... So this is why I've been working on all of these websites from the technocracy Atlas to OSR, to own nothing to the air and day show.com to freedom forge. The reason I've been working on getting all of those done by the end of this month, so we can bundle them up on a D Googled phone and give people an exit, give people a platform to take control of their money, their data, their information, their health. Because if we don't build an infrastructure that can scale this year, by twenty twenty seven digital IDs will be implemented across that will cover more than fifty percent of the entire population of the world. And we're obviously, again, seeing digital programmable currencies and everything else. It's moving fast. It's moving faster than we are resisting it. So anyway, that's the whole idea behind that. And so if you do support it, please go to day.com. I'm not asking... For money, I'm just asking to see if there are any people that believe that we should try to defend free will. Or if you think, well, let's just give it another try. Let's see what these Republicans or Democrats are going to do. I'm interested in seeing the barometer of where people are. And I will be doing some media interviews. on this shortly i can't say who it's with yet but uh uh they have been booked and it'll be interesting to see the reaction nothing from the local press here in new hampshire which is interesting because again i've i've successfully done this before so if the local press isn't covering it then that tells you something it certainly is newsworthy um and so you just wonder who who they're in the tank for so anyway enough about That side of things, you know, the previous episodes, you know, we did the Oasara episode before that, and I'm doing a complete overhaul of that. It's really... You're going to be able to interact with the chat bot and do everything interactively from not only researching medical tourism opportunities, but even going through the process of setting up a medical trust, figuring out how to cancel your insurance. I've added something like four hundred different case studies and examples of people who have lost their insurance and horror stories about the health care system in the US. testimonials about medical tourism abroad so by the time this is ready to go by the end of the month it's going to be significantly better than than any of the things that i've shown you so far all of the sites will be fully um production ready the other thing i want to say is that i am planning on um moving this podcast to once a week and keeping it on Thursdays at six, just because it's a lot of time doing it twice a week. And I think we'd get more participation if it were just one day a week. I think we'd have more interactivity. It would also give me more time to promote the show. And then I'm going to restructure the show as well. So I'm going to focus on... It'll probably end up being a four-hour podcast. I mean, they end up being that way sometimes anyway, but I might structure it where there's a guest. Then there's a segment where we're going through what the updates are on the tools. Because once they've launched, then there's an element of each of the websites that's about driving community reaction. And then I'll be doing a lot more... We're structuring the chat so that we have people, they're thematic, and we're bringing people on to talk about specific issues each time. So starting next week, we'll be doing this at Thursday only at at six p.m. And I see we've got deadheaded here. And anybody else who wants to hop on, happy to hear your questions and comments. But I do want to say, before we do that, because I was going to show you some of the things that I'm working on with AI. I'm going to show you just one thing, just in the interest of time. And then we'll see what happens with the Q&A. But I have been developing, I have a whole suite. I have probably to create content, whether it's create memes, create the outline for the podcast, to automate the podcast preparation, the emails, the tweets, all of the stuff, the slides, all of that has been automated. In fact, a couple of episodes ago when I did the Technocracy Atlas update, That was AI generated. That was my AI generated voice. So I was testing. I mean, I could tell the way that it handled the expression of numbers, but it's pretty close. But I've been working on a lot of tools and it's gotten to the point, and as I said with the interview with Mike, where what it is, is I have all of my own data in the system. So, two hundred and fifty hours of podcasts that I've done my podcast, but then the podcast that I've been on, then the books that I've written, the articles that I've written, all of that is in the system. So now when I use my environment, when I use Cloud Code, I'm searching my own information. So when I go to create a song, what I do is I create the content first. So I'm going to show you a song, a music video that I just created today with the revised version of my... music video generation system and so the way that the process works is when i go to work on a song the song is based on the content so i'm actually interacting i create like a music advisory board where it's just like yeah i may have like you know bruce springspeen i may have like five or six different people uh looking at music from from different angles and then different people with working on different aspects of songwriting and everything else But we start with the content of the actual website itself. It actually searches the content, the structure of the entire website. So I'm like, okay, I want to work on an anthem for Technocracy Atlas. And as I'm going through and thinking about it, I'm like, look, this Technocracy Atlas is really about... bringing all of the generations together, right? So it's not just tech people. And we have a lot of division amongst the generations. But in reality, everyone should be opposed to what's going on in the Epstein files. In fact, in reality, there are about five hundred people versus the rest of us. That's actually literally how this thing is structured. And it's a network of of people um in different places with with different backgrounds but they do have a commonality regarding technocracy and authoritarianism and so it's really all of the rest of us against them and so i'm like well look we're putting putting together these tools and you think about something from the standpoint of doing an investigation like this people bring different expertise to the table i mean boomers maybe have expertise and this is obviously a general generalization i see deadheaded keeps entering here Hey, how are you? Good, good. Sorry, I had a little bit of mic issues there. No worries. I wanted to just get through something, and I want to play this music video, and then we'll do the Q&A. Yeah, sounds great. So the... So anyway, based on the content of the website, then I'm like, look, I want this to be something that is applicable for all of the generations, right? So maybe boomers can help with FOIA requests. Maybe Gen X is good at using GitHub or whatever. Millennials and Gen Z are better at TikTok and social media. And so you think about a crowdsourced intelligence platform platform like what we're trying to build with technocracy atlas you could see how everyone could work together and chip in and do their own piece of this and so so i took all that information in and then i played around with you know how do you come up with a song that would resonate with with different generations and anyway i ended up going through a couple hundred different songs and ended up tweaking all this and this turns into a a song it's the starting point But again, all based on the content of the site and then the kind of direction and the message. And then the system for doing music videos is now it's evolved. So there's another advisory board with people that have different aspects. I'm running it like you would run an actual movie studio where I'm bringing in simulated expertise in a variety of different areas, but then also having expertise in the different areas. models that are being used for creating images and then the images are turned into video and then you stitch those videos together. And the video models historically, in the past, they've only been like five to ten second clips. And I actually found one. There was one released just yesterday called LTX-II. And what is amazing about this model is It's open source, open weights, and it's fast, and it's inexpensive relative to the others. So some of these videos that I would put together, depending upon how many retakes and everything else, some of these videos cost a hundred dollars, maybe even two hundred dollars on the high side just to pay for access to the video model. The music video you're about to see and the process that I went through, it cost twelve dollars to make. in compute power. And so I'm going to play this now because this is the most cutting edge thing that I'm... I mean, I'm working on a lot of things, but this is kind of like, as you've seen me do a lot of videos and content in different formats. And I always say when I do this, look, I'm testing. So part of this is going to be, we're going to be able to look at, okay, here's what I did a year ago. Here's what I'm doing now. And I'm telling you, by the end of this year, you'll be able to do full-length movies. Well, maybe not full-length movies, but episodes or ten-minute videos just by typing in a single prompt. I can see this just based on what I've been able to create. So this is a music video... for a song called Truth Cascade. And this song is essentially the anthem for Technocracy Atlas. So if you're watching, I encourage you to take a look at the video and match it up to the others that I put out there. And then you can judge for yourself whether you like the song. Started with one photo, one connection, one name Ran it through Google images, reverse searching, no shame Found three more photos, found a flight log, found a date Cross-referenced with public records, now I'm up to weight Tagged it in the Discord, someone found the company, someone else The board members, the donations, the chain Now we got forty-seven people mapping the campaign One becomes, two becomes, ten becomes more Truth has a net rock effect we can't ignore Every connection reveals ten more doors This is the cascade, this is the score Truth cascade, watch it domino One investigation leads to another one We extracted the GPS from the location from the property records found the LLC from the shell Truth is exponential once it leaves your head Every whistleblower empowers ten more instead This is the cascade, this is the thread Truth cascade Watch it dial me, no one investigation They try to compartmentalize, separate the scandals Keep the connections hidden but we're digital vandals Taking down the walls between their separate lives Watching the cascade reveal the enterprise truth cascade watch it dial me no one investigation Cascade Cascade True cascade Started with one photo Ended with five hundred connections That's the cascade That's the power so there you have it there's um well let me see if you can okay yeah so that's it so that's the newest uh the newest video newest song but i actually i think it's the best one it's definitely the best video so far that's not even my favorite genre of music and even when i was playing around with genres i was actually mixing and matching artists and i was trying to figure out how how do you get a song It would resonate with multiple generations. Is that even possible? And I find that to be catchy, even though that's not normally my favorite kind of music. And definitely the video is better in terms of the transition between scenes and actually remaining consistent with the whole visual identity. throughout the whole thing so anyway um i'm glad to see leah leah likes it and you know love your love your feedback on this but but that was so much easier and again that cost me twelve dollars to make um and now that so i what i spend most of my time doing is refining excuse me my own automation tools and my own processes. So I start there rather than, you know, so I always, when I tackle something, it's like, how can I do this better? And how can I do this in a way that's more automated? But it's changing so rapidly that even since I started doing music videos, this is a completely different set of video models, image models. Completely different process. And I literally just found out about this model. It was just released yesterday and I was able to implement it. In fact, I can run it on my own computer, on this NVIDIA computer that I have. The only reason I didn't run it locally is that it's busy processing and doing OCR on all the Epstein file documents. so if uh if it wasn't running it's been running now for two and a half days straight it's got another i think day and a half to go so that computer's been completely occupied but i may be able to generate these videos for for free moving forward so what a breakthrough um just in terms of of what's going on with these models and Mike and I talked about it, but a lot of these are open source. These good models are all open source, and a lot of them are from China. So again, these are things that you can, in some cases, download on your own computer. But even if you're not downloading them on your own computer, they're fairly inexpensive to use. So that's about it. So yeah, going to be switching to just... Thursday, running for Senate, moving very aggressively on all six sites. You're going to see them. I'm usually working on two at a time each day, all day, and kind of working my way through iterating, but they will be done. Well, they're never going to be done, but I mean, they'll be... production quality by the end of January. And then the daylight phone is coming. We're shooting for... We'll probably start taking pre-orders in the middle of February, probably start shipping in March. So a lot of the big push too is to get all of these done so that they're pre-installed. on the de-googled phone along with the xeno wallet and along with vp.net and and some other solutions and so that's that's kind of where i'm focusing the effort on on getting all of that ready to go and then the only other things i would say is there are some events coming up i will be in mexico around i think it's november the eleventh through the fourteenth at mineratopia and then march sixth to the seventh i'll be at the parallel society conference in portugal spain which is actually an interesting interesting one uh sterling luhan and his group is is putting that together so um very excited to to see about that these are people that are obviously interested in or have already exited the system in fact i won't even know most of these people which which is good because sometimes going to these conferences it's always the same people this is going to be uh a new thing altogether so with that uh so hey deadheaded there you are before before you jump in on this i will say i'm already downloading the uh the links that you sent me so uh i think the first one there's seventeen hundred books well i love it that was more for mike than than you that's a huge site Well, yeah, so while we're adding sacredtext.com to our system, whether we put that in Technocracy Atlas or not, I definitely will download all of that information and then all of the other information at least. I'll check on the status of this, but it's great because every time you're on here, I get these things started, and so we're expanding the data set. Well, before you do Arrowhead, take a look at the site. Yeah. It's like a nineteen nineties site. I remember it. I remember it from the nineteen nineties. Okay. Enough said. We don't have to bring up old, old history. Exactly. Um, but, uh, great talk with, uh, well, congratulations on running. I, I, we, uh, we were watching, uh, wife and I on Monday and saw that. So, Good job. It's needed. I'm glad you've taken one for the team, so to speak. Yeah, I mean, hopefully it will raise awareness. The interesting thing will be, will it... How much radio silence will I get? And I'm going to say this. If the New Hampshire press is listening to this because they are aware of it, most of them follow me already on social media and they've not covered it yet. And if you're not covering it because you are being told to ignore it, that will be something that motivates me to run even more. Because in twenty sixteen, they didn't cover it much either. And it and it changed the outcome. Larry Sabato, who does that crystal ball. where he tries to predict everything that's going on. I reached out to him too. I'm like, guys, this is an important thing. If you already know, Sununu's already down two or three points. If I get my name on the ballot, it's over. But again, I don't need fift

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