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[00:00:11] You're listening to PBN. Your path back to stability here. What is up everybody? We are looping. You're listening to PBN. The Extreme Yard, do me a favor. Kill the loop, you fools.
[00:00:53] What is the deal? Who decided to auto loop? Can I save this setting so I don't have this every time I go in here? I'm on the road today.
[00:01:02] So we're not doing our normal cast. I do apologize if I miss comments and things like that.
[00:01:09] I will not be on the camera. I will be looping commercials and audio for the rest of the show. Just kidding.
[00:01:18] Let me run a candy cane over real quick as I back out the old driveway.
[00:01:28] So, the artificial intelligence agency.
[00:01:33] A confluence of things. Where do I start on today's show?
[00:01:36] Hey, tomorrow the catalog is out. The Black Friday catalog is out. Look for it. It'll be everywhere that you find PBN.
[00:01:45] Okay? So look for that. That'll be a good time. No doubt about it.
[00:01:50] Look for the old Black Friday catalog. We got solar solutions. We got all kinds of stuff. We've got great deals. I've got a couple of deals I'm waiting on today actually. Late, late, late.
[00:02:03] They got to come through or they're going to miss out. So, I want to thank you for patronizing the catalog.
[00:02:11] Spread the word. Share it. You know, all that kind of stuff. Do the wonderful things that you guys always do.
[00:02:16] You guys have really been awesome lately with the sharing and the spreading of the word.
[00:02:22] I see it on Twitter. I see it. Yeah, it's good. I appreciate it.
[00:02:28] Talking to a neighbor yesterday and he went to a big long talk about, you know, one of these big long talks that they do now.
[00:02:35] They do these lectures for the common people. Other thing I was asking was, yeah, maybe I should be lecturing on, you know, preparing yourself for the future.
[00:02:46] Maybe it's something I'm missing out on. But anyway, he's talking to me about artificial intelligence.
[00:02:53] He went to see a big lecture on artificial intelligence and, you know, the good that it can do, the harm that it might do and all that kind of stuff.
[00:03:00] And I've been long thinking about it. One concept in particular, and that's the concept of loneliness over the last, I'd say, about two weeks.
[00:03:09] Because for the last, I'd say, about two years, I've been really listening to a lot of podcasts about loneliness.
[00:03:18] Male loneliness, female loneliness, loneliness in general, the whole thing. You know what I mean?
[00:03:22] Just the fundamentals of our isolated society right now. And I'm also, you know, I think we're moving up and out of it.
[00:03:34] We're going to talk about artificial intelligence today. We're going to talk about the direction of society at large, maybe not society at large, but pieces of society that are very big, that have really gone off road.
[00:03:46] And I don't think are doing it anymore. And I can't see how they're going to do it long term.
[00:03:54] You know, probably the best example right now is the news. You know what I mean?
[00:04:03] The news is raps, right? It's finished. It's done. It's a dead thing. It's a dead concept.
[00:04:10] And it's not that the news is a dead concept. It's that the idea of a government run news that is one sided is done. It's over.
[00:04:22] Mainstream news, the where you get people to come on and speak their piece for, you know, you got 60 seconds answer the most important question in your life.
[00:04:31] That model is done. You know, morning, Jake, garden girl. Thank you for joining me.
[00:04:35] So there are things like that that are happening all the time. Another big one.
[00:04:42] Well, let's talk about the loneliness thing and artificial intelligence, because I've been I've been thinking a lot about that.
[00:04:48] I wake up today. I go on a drudge report out of habit. It's horrible.
[00:04:52] I we got to destroy the we we have to build the next drudge report, the real news aggregator that is, you know.
[00:05:02] The one the one that people go to and enjoy reading because it's an amalgamation of good journalists, you know what I mean?
[00:05:10] Not just Trump sucks, although I do not like this Soros linked guy taking over Treasury secretary.
[00:05:19] You know, I'm sorry. The virus of George Soros is far.
[00:05:22] It runs far too deep to touch anything in the Trump administration and me be happy about it.
[00:05:28] So this guy linked to George Soros is is poised to take the Treasury secretary spot under Trump.
[00:05:34] And it's you can't have it. It's a no go. It can't happen.
[00:05:40] It's a rot. You know what I mean? It's like it's a rot.
[00:05:43] I don't know how else to put it. It's a cancer cell putting into the body politic of something healthy that you're trying to build.
[00:05:50] This guy is a overlord. He's a super villain. You know what I mean?
[00:05:54] Everything he touches has a mentality and a mindset. You know, I mean, it just is what it is.
[00:06:01] I don't like it. But anyhow, so the.
[00:06:09] The big concept of loneliness, you know, if you have kids and you think about the future at all, the chances are you.
[00:06:15] You know, you don't want them to be lonely.
[00:06:18] I haven't had a blind spot with loneliness for a long time because I've never been alone.
[00:06:24] My whole life, I never lived alone.
[00:06:27] I never I've never been lonely once. You know what I mean?
[00:06:29] My free time by myself is like it's like medicine.
[00:06:34] So.
[00:06:35] I never really experienced. I don't know the depths of loneliness.
[00:06:39] You know, I was without a girlfriend for like.
[00:06:42] I don't know, two or three months or something, the summer of my senior year after I graduated or something like that, or maybe going into my senior year.
[00:06:52] And it didn't last long. You know what I mean?
[00:06:54] I was still living. I never lived alone. I don't understand. Right.
[00:06:58] I never experienced it.
[00:07:01] But when you have kids, you start empathizing.
[00:07:03] You start seeing like, oh, well, their path will undoubtedly be different than yours.
[00:07:07] And, you know, what is this lonely world we're creating?
[00:07:12] Now, I think there are a lot of things.
[00:07:15] That are happening to combat that already.
[00:07:18] And I think I think the lonely isolation thing.
[00:07:22] Will probably be a wrap in another five, 10 years.
[00:07:26] Well, it will be a wrap in the next five or 10 years, one way or another.
[00:07:31] It'll either be a wrap because people will find their way.
[00:07:36] Into community, probably to church, you know, churches are going to change.
[00:07:41] They are changing. Churches are growing.
[00:07:45] Attendance is growing.
[00:07:48] Young men in particular are moving towards religion and church.
[00:07:53] Because they got nothing else in society.
[00:07:56] You know, that's fun.
[00:07:57] That's the funniest punchline of all.
[00:07:59] The greatest punchline of all is that the communists who who seek to destroy religion.
[00:08:05] Push the men into such a hole.
[00:08:08] They kick them out of university.
[00:08:10] They kick them out of the workplace.
[00:08:12] They told them that they are literally like the very testosterone running through their bodies is the cause of all pain and suffering.
[00:08:19] They told them that they were a part of this made up nightmare called the patriarchy and they had to suffer for it.
[00:08:25] And if they happened to be white, then they had a whole nother list of things that they had done and were responsible for, even though they had, you know, they're 17 or whatever.
[00:08:36] And what that did is that just it separated them out from a society that was already kind of like, what the hell is going on around here?
[00:08:46] And by separating them out from that society, they fundamentally just went, okay, well, what's left?
[00:08:53] You know, what's left?
[00:08:54] What can I go to?
[00:08:56] What can I do?
[00:08:57] What can I go to?
[00:08:58] What else is there in this world?
[00:08:59] Well, because clearly I, uh, I've been being left out to dry here.
[00:09:06] And basically what they came up with is, you know, let's get back to God.
[00:09:11] If you got nothing else, right?
[00:09:14] If you got nothing else, then God's always there.
[00:09:18] He's always there waiting.
[00:09:19] He's always there like, uh, you know, welcome in my child.
[00:09:23] Welcome in my child.
[00:09:25] Have a seat.
[00:09:26] Let's talk about the problems that you've been going through since I created you, you know?
[00:09:31] And not just, you know, the, the, the particular man, but man in the sense of man altogether.
[00:09:37] Right.
[00:09:37] None of the problems are unique really, if you think about it.
[00:09:41] So they find themselves in this situation, you know, and it's just kind of funny to me that in an attempt to destroy men, they pushed them into the hands of God.
[00:09:52] And on the other side of that, it's just going to be, you know, it's going to be a life.
[00:09:57] They're going to have a life, a wonderful life.
[00:09:59] A lot of them, not all of them, but beyond that, people are either going to find their way back to relationships, back to community or to AI.
[00:10:14] But the idea of loneliness is a short term problem.
[00:10:19] And this is what I've been thinking about the last couple of weeks.
[00:10:23] So I've been reading and listening to a lot about loneliness in general.
[00:10:29] And sort of people trying to talk about how it's a good idea and explain how, how they like their time to themselves and eating dinner by themselves, what they want, doing what they want, when they want, so on and so forth.
[00:10:40] And I'm sure it does fit for a lot of people.
[00:10:43] No kids, no family, no, you know, nothing to get in the way of what I want to do.
[00:10:47] Some people are busy bodies, man.
[00:10:49] And there's not a look.
[00:10:51] I need a whole nother life to do all the things that I want to do fundamentally.
[00:10:55] I really do.
[00:10:56] I need an entirely different life and another life totally.
[00:11:01] I'll never accomplish everything I want to accomplish.
[00:11:03] I don't have enough years left.
[00:11:04] I can't do it.
[00:11:06] But all that said, should someone find themselves in a situation where they're lonely in about five, ten years, the answer is going to be a day I generated relationship.
[00:11:23] A hundred percent.
[00:11:25] You know, it's did you ever see the movie her?
[00:11:27] It's great movie.
[00:11:29] The movie hers amazing movie like the guy who made it.
[00:11:33] Doesn't get enough credit because he was about ten years ahead of his time.
[00:11:39] But something along those lines, but better managed is undoubtedly in the works.
[00:11:45] You know what I mean?
[00:11:47] I tell my kids sometimes when we're talking about the future, I say, you know, you're probably going to have friends that marry robots.
[00:11:54] Just, you know, sometimes I brief them on crazy things that are going to happen that I know are going to happen and they're just going to have to wrap their head around it.
[00:12:02] Because, you know, my youngest is nine.
[00:12:06] So by the time marriage comes around, you're talking about a decade from now, they're already making.
[00:12:11] They're already making sex robots.
[00:12:14] You know what I mean?
[00:12:15] So like this idea that in another ten years, they're not going to have like a housewife robot is crazy.
[00:12:22] Of course they are.
[00:12:24] You know, barring World War Three nuclear decimation.
[00:12:27] All this kind of depends on us not killing ourselves before then or going completely off grid by massive EMP residual EMP issues from nuclear weapons going off.
[00:12:39] But anyhow, you know.
[00:12:43] That sort of an epidemic will come to an end.
[00:12:46] It will.
[00:12:48] And it will be very interesting to see how it's handled, you know, because right now.
[00:12:55] Traditional relationship, you get married till death do you part.
[00:12:57] That's, you know, the vow.
[00:12:59] But what will be very interesting is till update do we part.
[00:13:05] Right. Till monthly payment do we part.
[00:13:07] In other words, really cool to have an AI relationship with someone who does everything you like and says everything you like and whatever, you know.
[00:13:19] But it's got to cost money. Right.
[00:13:21] And how does it cost it?
[00:13:22] How do they do it?
[00:13:22] Is it a massive one time payment?
[00:13:25] Can you can you make payments?
[00:13:27] Is it a subscription?
[00:13:28] In other words, does your partner, your wife, your husband, your AI, whatever, because it's happening already.
[00:13:34] I don't know if you know it, but.
[00:13:37] Where is it?
[00:13:38] An Asian country in particular.
[00:13:41] I want to say it's South Korea.
[00:13:43] The women are really falling for the AI men.
[00:13:49] And I'm sure everywhere the men are falling for the AI women.
[00:13:52] And this is just through the phone relationship.
[00:13:54] You know, I mean, so it's not like there's no physicality to it whatsoever.
[00:13:59] But this stuff's happening.
[00:14:01] The AI girlfriends, boyfriends thing is happening.
[00:14:03] And, you know, we've got a lot to patch up in society in general to.
[00:14:09] Yeah.
[00:14:12] Jay Berg says, yes, but we're also seeing the negatives of AI relationships.
[00:14:17] It's a disconnect from reality.
[00:14:19] Fantasy is not real.
[00:14:20] Oh, 100 percent.
[00:14:22] I agree with you 100 percent.
[00:14:25] But it's going that it's going to happen.
[00:14:27] You know what I mean?
[00:14:28] There's going to be dudes that are.
[00:14:31] Come here, hold my phone and meet my wife.
[00:14:34] You know what I mean?
[00:14:36] I just there's no doubt about we're a few step.
[00:14:39] We're only missing a handful of things that I don't think are that hard to do to fill in the blank, particularly for dudes, you know, because guys are like a little caveman simple.
[00:14:53] Because, you know, the other thing that's happening, the other side of it is.
[00:14:59] Well, well, first of all, if we're going to talk relationships, which we can, it's fine.
[00:15:03] If we're going to talk relationships, then we have to talk about the fact that the men can't deal with rejection.
[00:15:10] For some reason, I don't know what this is.
[00:15:13] This is a new thing.
[00:15:15] But the men can't deal with rejection.
[00:15:18] The men will not.
[00:15:19] They seemingly won't like target lock on a woman.
[00:15:24] I don't know.
[00:15:25] This is like since Shakespeare, like the target lock is a thing.
[00:15:31] And it might be because they're so used to swipe left, swipe right.
[00:15:35] But even the young kids, you know, who aren't on Tinder.
[00:15:38] When we were growing up, there was a target lock concept.
[00:15:41] Do you know what I mean?
[00:15:44] It's you find the girl you like and you go after her relentlessly.
[00:15:49] Right.
[00:15:51] Like that's that that's every movie, every story, every right.
[00:15:55] It's everything like every romance, popular romance movie that you see is that concept.
[00:16:03] And nowadays it's like, well, I went up and talked to her and she told me to go away.
[00:16:08] Like, you know, it almost seems like men could like societally, if we could do one thing to really help men and women out is mandatory sales course for men.
[00:16:20] You know what I mean?
[00:16:21] Like, like, forget about pick up lines and forget about, you know, all these stupid guys on the Internet telling you how to deal with girls or how to get girls.
[00:16:28] They're idiots, too.
[00:16:30] I think what would really help society is if in high school you had to go through a mandatory, like semester of sales start to finish.
[00:16:39] Right.
[00:16:39] Because when you when you get into sales, if you have anything to do with sales and marketing, then you completely understand, like.
[00:16:48] Like.
[00:16:48] You're going to exist mostly in a world of rejection.
[00:16:54] You know what I mean?
[00:16:55] And that's it.
[00:16:57] And the only way you change that is by going back and going back and going back and going back and going back.
[00:17:03] Right.
[00:17:05] I might email a company 10 times.
[00:17:09] Before I even get a hold of.
[00:17:13] And then it might be another five emails before I do any business with them.
[00:17:17] Like this is what sales is.
[00:17:20] And then don't treat women like like that.
[00:17:23] They don't treat them like this opportunity.
[00:17:26] It's like I asked her if she wanted a drink.
[00:17:29] She told me no.
[00:17:29] Her friends laughed at me.
[00:17:31] So I had to go home and play video games for the next four days straight to deal with my emotions.
[00:17:40] So this is a fundamental problem in society.
[00:17:42] But the scary part is.
[00:17:44] When you give men an outlet like artificial intelligence and then they can say.
[00:17:49] Well, I asked her out.
[00:17:51] She said, yes, we've been together 20 years.
[00:17:54] She you know what I mean?
[00:17:56] And start checking all those boxes.
[00:17:58] Because it doesn't make it.
[00:18:01] Garden Girls.
[00:18:03] Garden Girl says she didn't want to tell me, but she's a I also.
[00:18:08] So our our one of our most dedicated listeners is also an a I bot.
[00:18:15] Yeah.
[00:18:17] Jay Fergie says the poor child who committed suicide over the Dane Ray's a I relationship.
[00:18:21] Is that the one where they like the software went away or something like that?
[00:18:25] It was like her.
[00:18:26] It was like the movie a little bit.
[00:18:31] Expect some of that.
[00:18:32] You know, when I was when I was a teen and, you know, kids were losing their virginity in their relationships and then breaking up.
[00:18:41] There was a lot of suicidal dudes, man.
[00:18:43] I remember.
[00:18:46] And there's a lot of my friends who are on the on the cusp.
[00:18:49] You know, they were dealing with that.
[00:18:51] They would do that.
[00:18:52] That was a rough patch.
[00:18:53] I remember a bunch of guys, man.
[00:18:54] They were like, no, I can't live without her, Jim.
[00:18:58] I can't do it.
[00:18:59] Like, do you're in ninth grade.
[00:19:01] Calm down.
[00:19:02] And it'll be all right.
[00:19:04] There's a lot of them out there, man.
[00:19:07] So.
[00:19:09] This is just, you know, one aspect of the situation.
[00:19:12] You know, all the things that A.I. are in right now, you know, it touches almost everything, whether you know it or not.
[00:19:21] It's one of the reasons it's good to be in the technology to some degree into video games to some degree, because you get a you get an idea.
[00:19:33] One thing about video games that's important is it's the proving ground.
[00:19:37] It's the testing ground for these technologies.
[00:19:40] Right.
[00:19:41] It's you can see and feel and understand how they're planning to manipulate society on a whole.
[00:19:49] And a lot of it happens in the video game world.
[00:19:53] Because it's gamified, so it's you know, you can do it to a character and see, oh, well, you know.
[00:19:59] It's working, not working, all that kind of stuff.
[00:20:04] But yeah, you know.
[00:20:07] There's the problem with it right now is there's no stopping it.
[00:20:11] Right.
[00:20:12] A.I. has become like a nuclear weapon.
[00:20:14] You can't just say we're not going to do a anymore.
[00:20:17] It's already in your cell phone.
[00:20:19] Every time you go to Google and search, you get an A.I. answer like it's here and it's part of us.
[00:20:26] Now, years ago.
[00:20:29] I started writing a story that I don't know if I'll ever finish it, but I started writing a story.
[00:20:36] About.
[00:20:36] About.
[00:20:37] A.I.
[00:20:39] Cybernetic humans.
[00:20:41] And.
[00:20:42] People who lived off grid completely.
[00:20:45] You know.
[00:20:48] And I do think that if this A.I. thing gets totally out of hand and tyrannical in the digital world gets tyrannical in a very big way that.
[00:20:56] I do think that.
[00:20:58] There will be a division in society for sure.
[00:21:01] I do think there will be a.
[00:21:02] An off grid world.
[00:21:04] There will be groups of people, communities, maybe whole counties.
[00:21:11] That just go off grid totally.
[00:21:13] You know, we're capable of that still.
[00:21:16] And I'll tell you what.
[00:21:18] I was talking to a guy from Patriot Energy Systems.
[00:21:21] And this guy is, you know, just a guy like in the western, northwestern United States.
[00:21:30] Right.
[00:21:31] And he's created these amazing.
[00:21:34] Units that.
[00:21:36] Put out like.
[00:21:38] Enough electricity, their solar units, solar batteries.
[00:21:42] And if they get a full day's worth of sun, he's putting 600 watt solar panels on it.
[00:21:47] If they get a day's worth of sun.
[00:21:50] They store massive amounts of energy.
[00:21:52] I mean, massive.
[00:21:55] I'm talking small community block level.
[00:22:00] Amounts of energy.
[00:22:02] Like.
[00:22:03] Like I'm talking about.
[00:22:07] Off grid not being the pioneer era.
[00:22:10] I'm talking about off grid being.
[00:22:12] I bought.
[00:22:14] 50 acres in South Dakota.
[00:22:18] And we chopped all the trees down.
[00:22:20] We got great sun.
[00:22:21] We got great gardens.
[00:22:22] And these solar units give us electricity.
[00:22:26] Like we have electricity like when I was growing up.
[00:22:30] You know what I'm saying?
[00:22:31] Like the nature of.
[00:22:35] What's it called?
[00:22:37] Not block chain.
[00:22:39] The nature of.
[00:22:42] Oh, what's the stupid word everybody used to use around block chain?
[00:22:46] I can't think of it.
[00:22:51] Decentralized.
[00:22:52] The age of decentralized grid power is happening.
[00:22:56] Right?
[00:22:57] So in other words.
[00:22:59] You don't put a solar array on your roof.
[00:23:03] And store up like half a day's worth of electricity in your battery.
[00:23:07] Like that's a thing.
[00:23:08] But that's an old thing.
[00:23:10] And I think that's a thing that's got.
[00:23:12] This guy I was talking to this engineer.
[00:23:14] This was not for an interview.
[00:23:15] This was business.
[00:23:16] But he.
[00:23:17] He was telling me I'd never put solar panels on my roof.
[00:23:21] Never.
[00:23:21] Never.
[00:23:23] And because once they're drilled into your roof, they're drilled into your roof.
[00:23:26] If you move.
[00:23:27] If something happens to your house.
[00:23:28] You know, so on and so forth.
[00:23:30] That's that.
[00:23:31] Right?
[00:23:33] So.
[00:23:34] The future of solar power and the future of off grid power is going to be portable ish units.
[00:23:42] It's going to be small sections of communities with their own power grid.
[00:23:49] Because if this guy's making them, other people are going to make them.
[00:23:52] It's going to become a very popular thing, particularly with people who are deciding, you know what?
[00:23:58] This world here, this whole AI driven world, this whole Wi-Fi up my ass world.
[00:24:05] I'm done with it.
[00:24:07] You know, I'm going to go do a new version of pioneering where we have our own systems.
[00:24:13] We have, you know, water you can do already.
[00:24:15] Right?
[00:24:16] Electricity really is the one of the only anomalies.
[00:24:22] Yeah, the future is going to be sweet, man.
[00:24:24] I'm telling you right now.
[00:24:27] I like to dabble in all of it myself.
[00:24:29] I think it's fun to play all sides.
[00:24:32] Because it's, you know, it's what we've created here.
[00:24:35] Now.
[00:24:37] Who knows what the future of warfare will look like with artificial intelligence?
[00:24:41] The good news is that Taiwan is.
[00:24:45] Well, Taiwan has largely been pushed by the United States not to give China access to any of the best ships.
[00:24:54] I think they're called like seven nanometer microchips to really produce the highest.
[00:25:01] They're the highest level chips and you need them to expand with your AI.
[00:25:06] Right?
[00:25:06] If you want AI to continue the improvement and all that, this is what you need.
[00:25:11] And America basically told Taiwan, don't sell them to China.
[00:25:17] And I think fundamentally this is why China's got it in for Taiwan.
[00:25:22] I think what they're thinking is we have to take Taiwan because America's got his grubby paws into Taiwan.
[00:25:29] He's defending Taiwan.
[00:25:30] And at the same time, they're depriving us of these chips that we need to get to stay in the race for AI, which in turn is going to be like, oh, well, now, now we're basically screwed because America is going to lap us on AI.
[00:25:46] And it's going to happen fast.
[00:25:48] And we don't even have the hardware, let alone the capability to make these chips, you know, in our own nation.
[00:25:55] And I think, to be honest with you, I don't think it has anything to do with Taiwan being a sovereign nation and, oh, we want our territory and this and that.
[00:26:03] I think it fundamentally has to do with the AI war.
[00:26:05] China takes this stuff seriously, man.
[00:26:07] They do not want to fall behind.
[00:26:09] They are into espionage.
[00:26:12] They are into stealing technology.
[00:26:14] This is their game.
[00:26:15] And they're always behind, but, you know, just behind.
[00:26:20] But what this represents is you can steal all the ideas you want.
[00:26:26] You can, you know, we've reached a point where you can know exactly what the hell America is doing with AI.
[00:26:31] But if you don't have the hardware to build what you need to build, which are these, you know, these most modern chips.
[00:26:39] It doesn't matter.
[00:26:40] You know, you lose.
[00:26:41] You lose because, you know, once again, it's exponential.
[00:26:46] Right.
[00:26:47] So it's not like, oh, we figured out how to make a new engine and it's faster and better and more fuel efficient.
[00:26:53] OK.
[00:26:53] And then you send a Chinese spy over here to pretend like they're a tourist or to pretend like they're going to college and, you know, whatever.
[00:26:59] And they weasel their way in and figure out what the technology is, steal something, learn something, go back.
[00:27:04] And then they build the engine.
[00:27:07] Engines are made out of, you know, they're made out of things everybody can get their hands on.
[00:27:12] Even if you send people over to this country, you've got to have these are hyper specialized skills.
[00:27:21] You know what I mean?
[00:27:21] It's not like you could just say, all right, well, we're going to set up a high tier chip manufacturer and have enough people to train enough people and have enough people who know how to make these things and the right materials to make these things, you know, and so on and so on.
[00:27:37] So the battlefront for AI, at least at the moment, is very interesting because America has made a very important move to stifle China's growth through limiting the hardware they're capable of getting their hands on to do it.
[00:27:59] Look, I mean, it's going to weasel into everything.
[00:28:01] You know, it's going to weasel into everything.
[00:28:04] Every single day of my life, I prompt artificial intelligence with a few different sentences and adjectives and adverbs and all that kind of stuff to create the right picture for my shows.
[00:28:20] You know, and it does a pretty good job most of the time.
[00:28:26] You know, it's going to it's going to be very really what it is.
[00:28:32] This is really what it is.
[00:28:34] Maybe I'll end the show here.
[00:28:35] Well, I'll give you my I'll give you my full diatribe or sort of my outro.
[00:28:45] But let's do a couple quick commercials and I'll come back and wrap it up and tell you kind of exactly what AI is going to be for the average person.
[00:28:54] And the decision that the average person will have to make, because that's really what it all comes down to, in my opinion.
[00:29:01] You know, it all comes down to this is what it is and this is what you'll have to figure out.
[00:29:06] OK, right after this.
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[00:30:23] Hello.
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[00:30:51] Welcome back, folks.
[00:30:54] So to wrap it up, the 30 minute diatribe on artificial intelligence to make you, you know, to give you something else to worry about on top of cooking the turkey right and getting everybody home and doing my math.
[00:31:07] I don't know.
[00:31:08] It's just, you know.
[00:31:10] Sometimes topics have a confluence in my life and then I have to talk about it.
[00:31:14] Right.
[00:31:15] If I'm thinking about a thing, a neighbor's talking to me about a thing, there's a headline of a thing.
[00:31:19] And to me, it says that's my algorithm.
[00:31:22] You know what I mean?
[00:31:22] My algorithm is my brain, the people around me's brain and then, you know, the sort of whatever they are.
[00:31:31] I don't know.
[00:31:33] Anarcho journalist types brain.
[00:31:36] If it's all sort of clicking, right, making headline news in my life, your life, their life, then I usually got to talk about it because it just seems too perfect.
[00:31:45] Right.
[00:31:45] So.
[00:31:47] Here's the deal.
[00:31:49] We are living through an age.
[00:31:52] Of radical comfort and convenience.
[00:31:54] No one can doubt that.
[00:31:55] Right.
[00:31:56] No one.
[00:31:56] No one can get away from the fact that this is the most comfortable.
[00:32:00] We've ever been.
[00:32:02] Things are as convenient as they've ever been.
[00:32:05] And we're really missing the struggle.
[00:32:09] You know, we're really missing missing the hunger.
[00:32:13] We're really we're not the same thing without the struggle and the hunger.
[00:32:17] Anybody who's achieved anything in their life out of anything hard.
[00:32:23] Right.
[00:32:23] Any any real hard thing.
[00:32:25] You know what I'm talking about.
[00:32:27] It's like.
[00:32:28] Yeah, life gets hard, you know, and when it gets hard, that's when you learn.
[00:32:34] That's when you become who you are.
[00:32:37] And if you've got decades of hard, you know, decades of struggle, man, you either collapse
[00:32:42] under that or you become, you know, exceptional.
[00:32:45] I think I think it really that's how exceptional people are born in most cases.
[00:32:50] When I say born, I mean, you know, born from what it is they were first created as.
[00:32:56] What artificial intelligence will be is the pinnacle, the peak of comfort and convenience.
[00:33:05] That's what it'll be.
[00:33:07] That's what it is already.
[00:33:08] Right.
[00:33:09] What it is already is the peak convenience.
[00:33:13] It's how little effort can I put in for something big on the other end.
[00:33:19] Right.
[00:33:19] That's that's the crux of artificial intelligence to the average person.
[00:33:24] We talked about it with art.
[00:33:25] It does the same thing with music.
[00:33:27] It does the same thing with poetry.
[00:33:29] It does the same thing with writing.
[00:33:30] Right.
[00:33:31] All of the it does the same things.
[00:33:32] All of it does the same things where it's like.
[00:33:36] I can put in a handful of words and get something beautiful and I didn't really work for it.
[00:33:40] I just kind of, you know, it just kind of came together for me.
[00:33:48] There's something in that and it's not good for us.
[00:33:51] Right.
[00:33:52] If men and women start going the way of minimal effort into relationship with a digital entity,
[00:34:00] well, that's going to be terrible, too.
[00:34:02] You know what I mean?
[00:34:02] The outcomes and the satisfaction therein, it's all sort of like diet coke.
[00:34:09] You know what I mean?
[00:34:09] It's all sort of like diet coke.
[00:34:13] It's just not it's not there.
[00:34:15] It's like decaf coffee.
[00:34:16] I don't know.
[00:34:17] Let's see.
[00:34:17] There's one of the most like important things is missing out of it.
[00:34:21] It's probably soul.
[00:34:22] You know what I mean?
[00:34:23] Soul is what's missing.
[00:34:25] So for you.
[00:34:28] Because this tidal wave is coming and it's going to hit you and it's going to hit you whether you want it to hit you
[00:34:32] or not.
[00:34:33] For you, it's important for you to stay human.
[00:34:38] It's important for you to stay human.
[00:34:40] It's important for you to understand that comfort and convenience are awesome.
[00:34:45] You know what I mean?
[00:34:46] There are times when comfort and convenience are just they're epic.
[00:34:53] You know, like you're at home and, you know, the family's all home and it's cold.
[00:35:02] And you're like, you know what?
[00:35:04] It's December.
[00:35:04] It's cold.
[00:35:05] I'm going to get a big fire rock.
[00:35:07] And we're going to put on a streaming service which allows us to watch like almost any movie we want at any time.
[00:35:13] We're going to watch Home Alone.
[00:35:15] And I'm going to phone somebody to deliver me four delicious salted caramel hot chocolates for me and my family.
[00:35:26] And we're going to sit there and sip them in furry socks and blankets and pillows and laugh and all that kind of stuff.
[00:35:37] That's when comfort and convenience are really fun.
[00:35:41] The problem is if you do that all, if that becomes your life, if you become a king, right?
[00:35:47] If you become like a medieval king and queen, you know what I mean?
[00:35:50] Where all you concern yourself with is maximum comfort and convenience.
[00:35:57] Because your brain has to slosh from shitty to wonderful.
[00:36:01] It has to.
[00:36:02] The chemicals that your body produces, they have to slosh from this sucks to this rocks.
[00:36:11] That's how you have to work.
[00:36:14] If you don't work that way, then the only thing you become is agitated.
[00:36:21] You know what I mean?
[00:36:22] If you're in this constant stream of soulless pleasures, then the only thing that happens is agitation.
[00:36:29] You just get agitated.
[00:36:29] You get pissy.
[00:36:30] Nothing is enough.
[00:36:32] Nothing is good enough.
[00:36:33] Nothing tastes good enough.
[00:36:34] Nothing feels good enough.
[00:36:35] Right?
[00:36:37] We are...
[00:36:38] That is the danger with the comfort and convenience level of artificial intelligence.
[00:36:44] One of the worst parts about it is I don't know how it can walk you into the struggle.
[00:36:52] So you have to hang on to your humanity and you have to seek out the suck.
[00:36:57] You really do.
[00:36:58] You have to seek out the suckiness.
[00:37:01] I am sitting in my car on a Monday morning talking to you.
[00:37:06] A lot of things in my weekly life don't suck.
[00:37:09] You know what I mean?
[00:37:10] Thanks to you guys and our incredible sponsors.
[00:37:12] Thanks to our members.
[00:37:13] Thanks to our lifetime members.
[00:37:15] You know what I mean?
[00:37:16] And my writing clients also.
[00:37:19] But because of that, I live a lifestyle that is devoid of suck compared to a lot of people.
[00:37:25] You know what I mean?
[00:37:26] Like I'm a dad.
[00:37:27] I'm a husband.
[00:37:28] Like there's, you know, I'm a son.
[00:37:30] All that kind of stuff.
[00:37:31] I am living in a liberal city.
[00:37:34] You know what I mean?
[00:37:35] Like there's plenty suck to go around.
[00:37:37] Don't get me wrong.
[00:37:39] But I seek out that suck, man.
[00:37:42] And you have to seek it out.
[00:37:44] You have to go down into hell.
[00:37:47] You know what I mean?
[00:37:48] You have to take yourself to hell or nothing is ever going to feel like heaven.
[00:37:54] You have to deprive yourself of things.
[00:37:56] You know, this is why fasting is so important.
[00:37:58] Not just like intermittent fasting, but literal like three-day fasting.
[00:38:03] You fast for three days.
[00:38:04] You take your body into hell and your brain into hell.
[00:38:07] And you're like, God, I wish I just want to eat something.
[00:38:10] I just want something.
[00:38:11] I got it.
[00:38:12] Right?
[00:38:13] And what you figure out pretty soon is that when you come out of that hell after a fast,
[00:38:18] the food tastes better.
[00:38:19] Life looks better.
[00:38:20] Everything is better.
[00:38:22] Because we can't exist in a wash of pleasure.
[00:38:28] And for the average person, that's the most dangerous part of AI.
[00:38:31] All right?
[00:38:32] So keep your humanity, PBN family.
[00:38:35] Find the suck.
[00:38:36] The best way to find the suck is working out.
[00:38:38] It's the easiest.
[00:38:39] It's the quickest.
[00:38:40] It's the best.
[00:38:41] Meditation, same thing.
[00:38:43] You know, people say, you know, it's really great and wonderful and I love meditation.
[00:38:46] No, meditating sucks.
[00:38:48] Sitting there not doing anything sucks.
[00:38:50] It's sucky.
[00:38:51] Not, you know, trying not to think too much about, you know, whatever.
[00:38:55] It does suck.
[00:38:56] And when you come out of it, everything's better.
[00:39:00] So your prescription for dealing with AI is sort of the adage of do hard things, right?
[00:39:09] And it levels you out.
[00:39:11] Because it's coming, baby.
[00:39:12] It's coming full steam ahead.
[00:39:14] This time next year, you may have someone, you may have an AI guest at your table for Thanksgiving.
[00:39:22] Everybody meet Rhonda.
[00:39:25] Where's Rhonda?
[00:39:26] Oh, she's in my left pocket.
[00:39:28] Watch the movie Her if you've never seen it.
[00:39:30] Anyhow, I appreciate you guys.
[00:39:33] Please support our sponsors and be on the lookout for the Black Friday catalog dropping tomorrow.
[00:39:37] Okay?
[00:39:39] See you guys.
[00:39:39] Thank you.
