CSN EP-31 News with M (Solar flare, Spy cameras and new AI media outlet in 2024)
Crazy Strange DazeDecember 30, 202300:47:0464.63 MB

CSN EP-31 News with M (Solar flare, Spy cameras and new AI media outlet in 2024)

Welcome back everyone. See yes said episode thirty one news with M exciting. How's it going? M fine? How are you? I'm fine? Thank you very much for asking a first biggest solar flare in years temporarily disrupts radio signals on Earth. Now we've been paying attention to this for about twenty years. A lot of people don't realize what the sun can do to us. And what was the big event in was eighteen eighteen fifty nine, the Carrington event. Back then all we had were telegraphs, right, and then when it hit it was so far as electrical type instruments, yes, mechanisms in our needs. So what it can do, It can basically blow up anything electronic. So today in our world with all the sensors and things, motherboards, it would wipe it all out, so you would not be able to get in your car, turn the key and even start it correct because it's so overly electronic now from steering breaking, traction control computers to run the little motherboards that run everything in this car, and then the touch screens and blah blah blah and so on and so forth. It's really and we have a high We have a a Ciena minivan highbred and there's two electric motors in it and two batteries in it, and obviously a gas engine too, but like so much of it, it would just be trashed. It'd probably be we'd go outside and be smoking. But they But what happened was it was what they call a CME or a coronal mass ejection, which is similar to a the bomb that you can said nuclear bomb, yeah, but the it's about no. But there's a there's an acronym for it, the one where you can let off a nuclear bomb in the atmosphere and it's essentially a nuclear warhead strapped on an ICBM right of an intercon missile and it does go into space anyhow. But they just detonated about three hundred miles up I think, yeah, And it has a specific acronym I can't remember at this time, but it basically can mimic a coronal mass ejection of SAMMI. But this is natural, it's from the sun, so the kring can event. At that time, the only thing electronical mecan't like that electrical nature was telegraph. So what happened is the flare came down, it hit all the lines, it created fires everywhere, massive severe sumburn for those in the direct path of it. But it did catch all of the telegraph wires on fire and create a huge fire throughout like it was in the London area, I think over in Europe somewhere. But that's all they had at that time. So today something like that hit, it would the devastation would be significantly worse. Oh yeah, it would, we'd have we'd all start to death in a year. They say, if one hit closer to the east coast, say, and that's like two, it'll affect two thirds of the country, I believe, And that is an EMP. Oh EMP, that's the one. Yeah, that's what you wanted to say. That EMP is what would So that missile blowing up in the the nuclear warhead that would detonate, you know, seventy miles up over the United States, would create a EMP that would effectively like just stop half the nation maybe more two thirds maybe, And so they project a lot of like scary scenarios if that would ever happen, and you have to think that our enemies can you out in uh it's some big barge, you know, now to barge a cargo shipping container ship could be ten miles out in the ocean and just they just fire a rocket and yeah, the couple of them and like over DC over. You know, if they mass ordinated, that could hit the East Coast and the West coast and not totally destroy maybe because the Midwest where you know, nobody really cares about us out here. Yeah, the populations are on the East coast, West coast, the power brokers on the East coast, West coast, big cities, shipping, you know. But yeah, you can, so you can see that obviously if this happened. I mean, there's it's basically created by sun spots and the Sun's always releasing energy through injections, but they rarely come towards Earth. Most of the time they go away from Earth. So in this case, this one is so this one's actually aiming at Earth and it's quite large. So we're actually going through a solar minimum period. And the Sun goes through cycles every eleven years, so that means it flips its axis. So and then there's also larger cycles of every three hundred years where you go through solar minimum, solar maximum, things of that nature. So the last there was a mini ice age or what was you know, dawned and many ice age. That's when we went through a real extreme solar minimum. And so was that when was that when the United States was around? Was that like when there was a year without a summer? Is it that time period or is that more back in? No, No, there is, that's when it was. That's when that occurred because the year without a summer. What happens is when we go through a cooling period of the sun, the sun spots diminish, and then what happens is then you start to see more natural disaster. So there more earthqakes, earthquakes, earthcakes, earthquakes, volcano eruptions, you know, all kinds of things of that nature start to increase when the sun spots decrease. Yeah, so is it something like you know, tides in the moon, how the Moon's gravitational pool can affect our Earth. The Sun obviously is a giant. Yes. And then obviously because that last sunspot was like six earths the size of six earths, right, the one that just Yeah, what I read was that the last sun spot was I mean, I'm just saying that because natural disasters earthquakes, hurricanes, Yeah, but the last time we went through that solar minimum period. Yes, there was a cooling period on the Earth. Was the Mani ice agent the last hundreds of years, but it was like five hundred years. I think I'm starting to remember. Yeah, I think you have an increase in all those things. And then yes, we had that super volcano that hit that erupted what was the name of it, I can't remember, but it erupted in Indonesia and then it created a nuclear winner winner because the ash was so hey, I don't even think it was a true like not enough to like kill animal. Well, obviously it did its its damage, but not like an extinction level events. No, not extinction, but it's still around the world and affected weather. Yeah, it was so dense that it created it like grayed out the skies. It had acid rain. Yeah. It was actually funny because it was around the time of Mary Shelley. So if you remember when the Korean War and yeah, remember how dark it was. And they said that when she wrote Frankenstein, her and her friends, I mean, she was from a wealthy family, so they went up to that castle. Yeah it was it was actually where Lord Byron was exiled. Yeah, but they she said, I guess she was just somewhere in eastern Europe, so it wasn't as gloomy as it is. It is gloomy, but I guess there was so much death and so much things going on that she wanted to escape it. And they were wealthy, so they were able to just kind of get away. But when it had it was so dark in the nuclear winter. The acid rain was killing crops, The darkness was killing crops, the cold was killing crops, tons of famine, lots of people dying, lots of disease, so you know, it just intensified all of that. I remember you pulling up when you were telling me about this a couple of years back. I don't even know how long, but it was real interesting seeing people's journals and diaries from that time. You know what they were talking about. And it doesn't come back to me, but I remember being like, holy crap, that's real. And it really affected the United States and it took I never remember learning about that. No, it took that cloud a year to go from Indonesia to the United States, and then in the US it was downed the year without a summer, and because it again it was so cold, colder than normal snow, and so we lost a lot of crops. And you remember back at that time, everybody was a farmer, so that's the only way you survived. So if you lost your crops, serious trouble, lost them everything. Yeah, I mean, I wonder how the animals didn't have their coats for the winter because it frozen. You know, it was snowing in June and then and then you know, hey straw yep. So it was a terrible time. So so that's how bad you know, a colder period could be. And then if you're you know, of course the Carrington events not related to that sects. So it's showing you when the sun cools, you have very dramatic things can happen in the not economy but well ultimately in the economy, but it can happen in you know, the environment. But then the Carrington event was just a direct solar flare hitting a city. And just so people know, these are happening all the time, and like Class five is the big the biggest or something those are. I mean, it's just that where it's coming from the sun, it could be going the opposite direction. You can be going into space instead of coming It could be hit in Mars. It could be hit, you know. So we're often lucky. We're rotating whoever's wherever the sun is shining on that earth on Earth at that time, where that is that ejection is coming to. When it's am towards us, they're gonna get it. So, I mean, I guess the point kind of is, you know, everybody's talking about global warming and things like that. Global warming is actually better because then there's less the sun spots come more rapidly. Yeah, because the sun is so hot, like it's sweating, it has to release all this energy, but it doesn't so often, and they're much smaller. When the sun cools, then you get a big one. So and they've been science has been saving for years. They aren't seeing any sunspots. Look at the sun. You don't see those black dots anymore. And they go by cycles like when the poles shift. You know, you said the axis, Yeah, every eleven years, every eleven years. So that's the cycle they're talking about over there at on the ap This article that I'm gonna kind of we're already you know, biggest solar flar in yours temporarily disrupts radio signals on Earth. So yeah, so my point was the Sun is nearing the peak of its eleven year cycle, the solar cycle, and maximum sunspot activity is predicted for twenty twenty five, so that we're assuming that's the peak or the end. Are they projecting a peak? When did the cycle start and when does an end? I guess is the question that's not answered in this this article. And then there's also, as I mentioned, cycles within cycles, so even though it flips every eleven years, there's also larger like a three hundred year cycle. And that's like when you had things like the Carrington event that way actually around the nineteen Guiturn of the century in nineteen hundred and eighteen eighties or whatever whenever that happened. Yeah, that was eighteen fifty nine, didn't it? For like fry, someome animals and like cattle, I mean like that. I'm not sure about that, but I know that, you know, but like livestock, But you could say that, you know, that was probably towards the end of that cycle, because obviously, you know, I can't remember that it was eighteen something was a year without a summer, so you know, I thought it was like seventeen nineties, or something. It might have been. I don't remember. It wasn't it during the Revolutionary War Maybe it wasn't It was somewhere around that, So that tenure, yes, But I'm saying, but even more after the solar minimum lasts hundreds of years, so you know, it'll beyond anybody's most people. You know, people's multiple, multiple generations that will experience that. But we definitely So really, although everybody talks about solar you know, solar warm you know, climate change and global warming and all this stuff, you really got to be more afraid of the cooling, the cooling than the warming, and the fact that, yes, this has happened throughout history. So back then it wasn't cars. Cars didn't create the temperature, the climate change that was happening back then because there was no cars. You know, So how are we we think we're you know, we're pretty pompous. Yeah, to think that, you know, we are the ones that are creating climate change. I'm not saying, well, I'm not saying we don't pollute. We definitely pollute, and we cause harm to the planet, but we don't We're not big enough to make an effect that's going to impact the sun. Right, A lot of these are driven by the Sun and the cycles of the Sun. You know, our pollution on Earth isn't going to affect this. Yeah, I mean geologists have gone back to a certain period in time and its facts that at one point in time the Earth had twenty times the carbon monoxide than it does currently. Yes, and it was probably I think even around the time of the dinosaurs, because you know, you've got to remember basic science, right. We breathe out carbon dioxide, breathe in oxygen. Plants breathe out oxygen. So yeah, if you want it to be green, you want to net zero, you want to is that the goal of all the weather junkies is a net zero and so we would have no trees. Well, actually we don't, all be dead. Would be dead because if there's no carbon ttosphere. Yeah, if there's no carbon dioxide, we're not breathing anything out and nothing's creating CO two for the plants to take in and reverse to oxygen for us. So we'd all be dead in a zero a perfect zero CO two world. Want so, But on a lighter note, so during the fifteenth when this happened, and expect more, I guess we can also, I mean we might be treated to some really good northern lights, you know, auroras, so in the coming days. So look out the window at night and see if you can see in the northern lights. That'd be cool. Man. But on this one article we were found this pretty amazing. It says the size of the temporary gap is wider than sixty earth sixty earth sixty earth, like I said, six zero, and it says extraordinarily at this stage of the solar cycle, this phenomenon, known as a corona hole take took shape near the Sun's equator, actually started on December second, and it reached its maxim of them with almost half almost five hundred thousand miles within twenty four hours. Wow, that's enormous. And it says, but since December fourth, the solar void has been pointing directly at the Earth, and experts initially predicted this to be the most recent hole that could spark a moderate geomatic magnetic storm that could trigger radio blackouts and things like that. And it could do that, but it also could do much more now because this is the must much more and the much worse there And don't panic people, because scientists are monitoring this. They always do. We've got a couple research satellites, I mean at least pointed at the just for the Sun, so it's not we're going to know if it's coming. So scientists are now monitoring this sun spot region and analyzing for a possible outburst of plasma from the Sun also known as that coronal mass each other. So if we get hit with one of those big ones, it will be in a Carrington effect, like depending on the severity in what country is you know, what side of the Earth is facing it at that moment. It could be like an EMP event. It could be worse than I discussed we discussed earlier. It could be much less. God willing, it will shoot in the air space and just ear it'll go towards Uranus anyhow, So just something to check out. Man, it's really interesting and we've been fascinated by it for I don't know, twenty plus years because it's a viable reason to maybe have seventy two hours worth of food, but you probably should have more. Don't become and knocking on my indoor, people, But I mean again, us being people that question everything and trying to understand things, it's just kind of like, well, you know, because we were old enough to remember, you know, everything was supposed to freeze. In the seventies, Time magazine had to cover this, says, oh, the whole earth is going to be cover and then it was gonna get cold. So every generation they weren't making enough money on that, that whole gimmick, the ice age thing becoming ice age, so they had to switch gears. Yeah, but that's what I mean. I mean, I know that we are and look the hysteria global warming is creating new industries like fake meat exactly right. And I guess you know cars that electric cars are so bad with the rare earth minerals, it's so bad for the planet that this whole push they're looking like really just past all the bad stuff. Ten times worse than a gas guzzler, you know. And then China's basically it's slave labor in Africa for the rare earth minerals to make these batteries, these components. Yeah, I mean, I mean it's really not good and it's toxic. It's that ship's killing the planet. Well, I mean the cars itself are okay, it's the batteries, right, So when the batteries go just like imagine I mean everybody has a cell phone. Say it's front ended and its back end. Yeah, but everybody has a cell phone today, and you know you're not supposed to throw your cell phone battery in the garbage. They have specific places you drop those off. Why because the batteries are toxic and they have to be handled in a certain way. So imagine a vehicle that has the whole thing is battery, so that you can because you have no gas. And then when that thing goes I mean again, you have this large battery that you have to get rid of. And then the battery itself is more toxic than the gas released by a combustion engine car. And then also the amount of material and resources needed to get the battery, I mean people forget about that. Like mining, you have to use big machines, big you know, yeah, diesel machines, diesel trucks to carry it all the minerals and different things and you know diesel. Yeah, so everything to get that rear. So the carbon footprint is gigundish, yeah, just to get the resources to the battery. I remember when Toyota was making the hybrids and made fun of your sister, like O seven when she got her rainbow car, her shoots rainbows out its tailpipe, you know, And that was just a hybrid in it. They only made them in Japan, so for the US market, they would load them on these diesel fricking you know, guzzling giant freighters and just putting up and then the battery again because it does use a battery, yeah, and the batteries though, so you have to use basically gasoline diesel. Yeah, I told her at the time, like my gas guzzling suv. You know that has terrible gas mileage. You know, you your footprints larger than ten years of me having this truck. It's a fact, and to this day it still is. But it's just everybody feels good, we're saving the planet, but we're not. We're actually the rare earth minerals the mining of that. And then how do we dispose of these batteries safe? You know, Let's just get Elon Musk on the phone and have them shoot them into space. Put all them batteries he's putting on this earth, and he can go and fly them bastards out into space. And that's like the only thing, yeah, because they create more time. You're gonna have to hollow out a damn mountain and store them all in there until we figure it. Batteries create a toxic you know, elements for the earth. So so there's really no winning situation. The thing is like least wars, and plus people don't even talk about it's virtue in politics. Plus people don't even talk about the fact that our power grid is unable to sustain Yeah, right, like I read somewhere, I think it was, our power grid would have to be five hundred times the size it is now to if everyone in the US had to convert to an EV car just because think about it now, I mean, not everybody has an electric house. Some people have, you know, they have partial electric, partial gas, things of that nature. But you want to turn everybody's home to one hundred percent electric, You want to turn everybody's car to one hundred percent electric. We don't have the power plants for coal. Power plants have been shutting down because of again the climate and the environment. So then all you have is natural gas plants. And then nobody wants nuclear. We have some, but nobody wants to create any new ones. So where are you gonna get all this power from? So are you going to are you willing to? Then, you know, use half the power in your house and your daily needs so that you can charge your car up. And then you don't even have the infrastructure. Within the US, there's very few electric car There's more and more showing up, but it's not enough. And then you know, and people have to wait. Some people have to wait a half an hour to charge your car. Then you have lines, So I'm like, you couldn't. So what are you gonna do? Leave three hours early for work so you can charge your car and wait in line to charge it? You have to sack man. So I mean, it's just it doesn't make any sense. I mean, you're just not going back to power plants. And one thing we did not touch is that most power plants now have a motherboard that like the substations things are not the power plants themselves, but the grid, you know, the junctions, the substations, things like this. So f an emp did hit or even just the Carrington effect, you know that level which wasn't good, wasn't It wasn't like the top no, but it wasn't a burn your skin right like some burn, but like that, that's the problem. Man, if one hit the States, we wouldn't even be back up with electricity they estimate for about a year. Now. There are some older from like the twenties, I think in the East Coast, yea like New York where you know the well. The problem with those is getting the replacement. They're just like an old but the vacuum tube like the lamps and old radios had little tubes in them. So there are some power stations that have that. But I remember it was I think in the eighties when I was doing more research on this. That is no I read back and something happened I think in the eighties and as for a cat and there was a coronal mass injection that hit over there and it knocked their power system out because again it was hit the power lines blew things up. But because they had antiquated systems, and again it was that tube, not not the t but it was a tube like it looks like a light bomb. They needed that. But unfortunately, since it was such old technology, nobody makes it, so they had to specifically source someone to make the old equipment so they could replace what they had, and I think it took a year, so they were without power. They're probably hard to find if they're not mass producing them, which they wouldn't, but you'd think they'd have to keep a certain amount of inventory. Yeah, for themselves, because if the regular fuse, if they had if in Africa, if they had this uh, if they had that tube or whatever it was, they needed the parts they needed, they could have been up and running like within a week. But because they had to wait for the manufacture of it, they couldn't be. But like you said, if you have modern technology with the motherboard, that thing is gone with me. You have to get any motherboards which would be gone. But I think you'd have to start all over it. But I just think about the plant that made the motherboards. Yeah, the plants would be it's down. But I mean, but I think it burns more than this. That circuit it goes again, goes through the line and it goes there's nothing that like. The wires will be fried like anything copper. It's you've never seen like. But depending on an outlet go you know or blow. I mean that is like everything's fried, everything's melted. Everything. You can't really the outlet, but the power line, all the wires, the wire can be up to a certain degree. But sometimes it could be the wire could be okay until you hit that point. There's certain sections that you can cut away, right. Yeah, probably the majority of it may be okay in your house, but I mean just the logistics of replacing and getting parts and plants back running up to get to make the parts, you know whatever, like the inventory. If it's got metal in it, it's had this, it's run through it. Right, But there are ways that there are ways, Yeah, you could protect like like you said, Faraday cages or of some of your electronics are power grid and even what's his name, Mitukaku, the physicist, he went to Congress to try to Oh yeah, him and his peers, like three hundred of these guys, smartest men in the world in the United States, they went to Congress, they testify, to try to tell them, you know, it really wouldn't take that much money for us to secure our power grid against either the mp ORM and they wouldn't. They wouldn't even didn't even want to listen to it. The money. The bacon. Yeah, they're like, we're also greasy bacon in the pant pocket. You need to find you know, the funds for it. But then you know, we don't waste billions, that's how so many other things. So we're ruled by a bunch of idiots. We're governing to buy we get the government we deserve. I guess honestly, it's been this way for a while. But so, I mean, I hope everybody kind of takes it seriously because it is a potential problem. I mean, if you live in Florida, you know how to deal with the hurricanes. You prepare for them. Now, you know the golf course at Golf Coast. You're used to hurricanes, so you prepare for it. So maybe start thinking about something like this. Even a minor event can be a real pain in the butt, you know, like the ice storms back in the nineties with half of Canada and half a New England Pennsylvania, he didn't have power for like months. Yeah, I remember that. That was kind of crazy and that kind of like And one thing though that's different now is you know everybody does almost all their banking and everything electronically, so you don't understand that that would take that out as well, because you know, you can't go run your credit card because they wouldn't be able to check the bank to see if you have any money. So that's what I'm like, the dude with extra toilet paper, like, what are you going to give me from? But that's the that's your give me your credit card. Your fallback for that is cash, physical paper cash that most people don't want to use. But what does the military say, triple redundancies. But you can't really have that in currency because all you have is digital currency, which you know crypto. People talk about crypto, but that's digital as well. And if your computer went away and your internet went away, so but your banks better, there's like a paper trail too. Yeah, well if you had like a million dollars in the bank, but hard copies were proof because you're all digital. Yeah it's on my phone, Yeah, it's backed up on my thumb drive. All that shit's gone. Man. But then that's why the importance of having it, just a little bit of cash because if things go down, because I even remember, here's a more modern example was what a couple of years ago when there was the ice storms in Texas because of the windmills, and then the power went out and everything went out, right, So I saw pictures on whatever Twitter at the time or whatever it was where stores were just saying cash only, yeah, because they can't run your debit card because there's no electronics. And even if they have yeah, so going bad because it's perishable. But but they'll only sell it to you with cash, right, so they're cash only, and a lot of people didn't have any so that's they don't even have the paper. Remember credit cards used to get run with that weird yeah, with that triple copy and car carbon copy paper. Run it with this hand. But but even then they didn't know if you had money on your car, right, it was just you know record. Yeah, it was just a record and they hoped you did so. So that's something you should just keep a little on hand just in case, because there could be something just like that. I know a lot of you people don't have like basement that you have an apartment. I mean, you can still have a couple of weeks of food. I mean, start with cans man, just canned food. Start with rice and can food, dry beans, stuff like that, and won't take take up your whole kitchen, no, you know, and then just take care of yourself, make sure you're not in a bind, and don't poop in the hallways. Okay, we heard all about that in New York during the UH one hurricane, right, people were pooping in the hallways. I don't think it was disgusting New Jersey, Jersey and all that. Yeah, don't poop in the hallways. Guys, dig a trench out back or something. Get smart, join up, team up with your partners, your your apartment mates. Yeah, or even like you were saying, stuff clean, man, it could be a talking about about the money again. Is I remember reading in Sweden they were like one of the first countries in Europe to try to get rid of paper good digital. They wanted to be one hundred percent digital, and they forced all businesses to change all their cash registers, all this thing, and they became and they got their goal one hundred percent digital. And then they started seeing threats like cybersecurity threats. Oh yeah, and then they said, oh crap, you know, if we get hacked as a country, nobody would be able to do anything because you can't pay your bills, you can't get to grocery store, nothing, because everything is digital. And then they tried to convert back, but people weren't were less willing because they were so used to the convenience of no cash, and then they also didn't have any of the equipment, so they screwed themselves by not again, so they're forcing companies and businesses they forced out of pocket to get the POS systems that they had before that they got rid of. Yeah, and then some of those you have to make it's like renting those systems. So people weren't willing to go back, and now they're like, we've kind of screwed ourselves. So again, if you don't have some kind of backup, then you have no you know, contingency plan in case of an emergency. Yeah, I guess we're at like thirty two minutes, so we're going to either move on or keep going. Subject. It's it's really important though, I mean just not for E and P S or anything, you know, just any natural disaster, you know, so prepare to be able to take care of yourself and your family. It doesn't take just buy a couple extra cans every time you go to the grocery store or something. Man, it's that easy to start. And don't let them outlaw cash, yeah, because then you'll use cash, Like do what's Catherine Austin fit say, Cash Friday cash Friday. Yeah, man use cash on Fridays, especially local merchants. Man, they all appreciate it. It's not that five percent in uh five percent. Yeah, well that's one way you can, Yes, one way you can support your local businesses is using cash. Some of them may not want to take it, but they don't understand that. You know, when you whenever you get a discount. Now most places, we've been seeing that everything, seeing that more pay with cash, you get like giving us a discount, yep, because most people forget when when you're a merchant and you take a debit card, Visa or MasterCard, they charge three to five percent exchange fee. So you don't see it as a consumer when you go buy something if it was ten dollars excluding the tax, and you say, oh, I pay ten dollars, but the merchant does not get ten They get ten dollars less three to five percent of an exchange fee that master Card and Visa keep. So some of the it. Yeah, and some of some of these merchants run it's such a low profit margin that they only make three to five percent profit. And grocery stores are terrible. Yeah, they're around that. So you know, if you give them cash. Well, gas stations don't make money off the gas. Yeah, so if you tape, that's why they have the snacks and the drinks and a beer and loto. But if you pay them cash, then they'll actually maybe make a profit rather than not make a profit. So you actually support your local business by giving them cash. Always try to support your local business. So moving on, what's up next there? Number two is camera. I think you want to talk about that. Oh yeah, I read quickly that and we'll link to this. It's just a little video about it, but it said spy cameras disguised as household items are for sale on Amazon. Now this is happening in Europe, I guess more than it is here. Maybe it is happening here, but this little video talks about it being in Europe, and then some girls going to court suing because they built a camera. Amazon been sued before for selling those or something. I'm not sure, but the camera looks like like a hook that you would hang your clothes on, or a robe or something like that. Forthroom, yes for the bathroom, so you can hang your robe on it or your towel. And somebody was videoing this girl while she was using the bathroom, and they said, also there they're disguised as an alarm clock that can show you footage. They said they were trying to the way the ads are on the site is to say, oh, you can catch a cheat spouse or something like that. Yeah, exactly, the little teddy bear thing yep. And then are saying some of them are described as you know, like USB chargers or jump drives, and then some of them are even disguised as like smoke alarms. So that's a good idea. Would I often thought about that. It's like I just put a camera in that too perfect. Yeah, it's okay if you know that it's there, But if you're somebody trying to spy on some security reason, it's not like I mean, I guess it's you know, yeah, for security reasons, they're usually in the middle of the room or towards a wall, or they're out in the open. They're not in little tiny rooms like bathrooms or kitchens. But now that they're disguising these things into more like things that look more like common everyday things, you as, like going into the bathroom, you're kind of like, I don't know if I trust going to the bathroom because you don't even know a flower, like a picture with a bunch of flowers on the wall, and it's going to be camera in there. Yeah, so like the creepy But apparently this is happening a lot in Europe in the UK, but who knows, it could be coming our way as well, but just be on the lookout for that. And then interesting too because Airbnb and all these you know, people turn on the TV it's an auxiliary channel and they see their spouse in the bathroom, ping, what is going on? Have you ever seen those videos? Yeah? It's mortifying, man, Like I really don't want to use Airbnb, Yeah, because of that crap. You don't know who your landlord. I don't trust anybody, I mean even a hotel. But at least they're a business. But then we have this other report will link to it as well. It's apparently there is a new news channel that's going to be created that's going to start in I think February of twenty twenty four, and it's all AI generated. So it's going to be AI will be developing the stories or writing the stories, and there's gonna be AI newscasters who will be an avatar will be created for a newscaster. And then and I was telling you, I saw the China or already had a like a beta going of this, and it was like they did even the research for how she should look like. It was a cross section of what people find attractive. So those are her facial features, that's her hair color, her lip fullness, you know whatever. Even the voice was a compositive, like multiple people marched together, you know, kind of Yeah, the perfect newscast, right. Even then, uh, what we used to call them back in the day, the measurements, Yeah, thirty six, twenty eight, thirty six or whatever they have that even down. Yeah, and it's creepy. I mean it looks almost real, but it's still creepy knowing that it's all the eye. Yeah. But then you don't there's nobody vetting these This is an entire AI you know, news program run organizations. And they said, well, some people are concerned that it's technology gone crazy. But they're like, but but don't don't worry. But it'll be all right, because they said, there's trouble the information comes from trusted sources and there's fact checking. Yeah, we we have a lot of faith and a lot of fact checking that goes on, right, it's not so is it AI's fact checking fact checking AI? You know, just like liberals fact checking liberals. So it's like that's your news. Here's your mainstream news right there in a freaking nutshell. And then media mass Matters is like, dude, the fact the watch dogs. Yeah, but they said, I guess operation this is going to come out on like Pluto and to to B and you know a couple of places right now. But you know, if they're starting it now, it will expand to other places. So my concern is, yeah, so if AI creates a story, you know, is it real? Who knows, you know, in the end, what's its agenda? Yeah, But but if it creates a story and then it gains traction, it'll end up on Twitter and all these others, right, and then nobody's gonna people are probably not gonna take the time to go and fact check it and go, yeah, but where did the story come from? And then if they did, it'd be like, oh, it came from Channel one. I. So like if they go back and look at the media through history, like okay, al Gore. According to al Gore, there's on fire. And I mean he got his billions out of that hole fricking carbon tax and all that. Al Gore created the Internet. He did. He's a brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. I don't know why he has to go around and give speeches on climate change if he created the Internet. My point is that he said that it's facts that New York will be standing in two foot of water or whatever the baloney was. Even that dumbass AOC was like five years ago or whenever she came on the scene, said yeah, New York's going to be underwater in five years, we're all going to die or ten years. And then the Greta you know that mule ticket. Oh my god, it's ridiculous. And now what are they going to go back in history? This AI is going to be like, oh, humans are terrible, they're killing the earth. How do they quantify if New York is not? So it gathers its information from information, and so all these people are bold faced liars and full of shit, don't have facts. They just say stuff. So it becomes it's just like this whole woke culture. These aren't facts. The percentages of I don't want to go down the hole. Okay, I'm not going to go down there. You'd think half this country was filled with these fractional minorities, you know. Okay, I'm just going to say it. Transgenders. Like half the people in this country, this population, are transgender. That's why all the commercials, all the media, all the rights like they have. They're like, that's this whole fricking lie of a movement when it's the percentages are so small, less than one of the world or something half a percent globally, aren't you So if you can just make shit up, what's AI gonna do once it gets more powerful, It's gonna get rid of us because we're destroying the earth. We we're terrible. If you look at world news, there's wars everywhere, this famine and at any given time there's six wars going on. Right, we just don't hear about it. I mean, we're just terrible. They're gonna it's gonna be Skynet. Like I said before, it's not even funny. But like you said, AI gets when they get those robots that like pining people by mistake the other show, and they're all gonna detach and come after us. But like you said AI gets its information from the internet basically, you know, by doing somebody wrote, an individual person wrote an algorithm that says, go out and get this, get this, get that. But again, where where is it getting it from? It? What's its news source? You know, it says trusted sources. But you know that's that there's not one subject to interpretession. You know, interpretation yea, because you know, yeah, everybody you could say you trust this source, and I could say I don't trust that source. So you know, but then who I mean, I it's the who's the programmer for this AI? You know, is it gonna triple check it's you know, it's uh, you know, it's story. I mean, is it gonna try to find at least three other independent sources that are coming to the same reporting the same you know, event or story or whatever. Probably not, No, okay, I You've got to rein me in sometimes because people are probably like, shut up, Nicky, just let her talk. So that's it for that one. Just so be on the lookout. I mean, that's starting February. No, I don't know about February. Sometime in February of twenty twenty four, and I would guarantee you that that's just the beginning, not the end. So you know, you have to be even more careful about where you're getting your news from because of again, if it's a story repeated on social media, where did it originally come from? What was its source? An AI written document? Yeah, so I mean if you're not questioning your news outlets or where you get your information by now, I mean you certainly are gonna if this starts to become the norm. I mean, that's it's just scary. It just scares me. Yeah, we're going to live in the middle of West Virginia in a little holler like a hatfield and McCoy like log cabin. I'm telling you it's going to happen. No. Well, like they say, knowledge is power, So the more you know, but you have to be you have to discern. You know, you can't just take everything at face value. Absolutely, I agree, one hundred percent. All right, folks, we're wrapping it up. Hope you enjoyed News with M on Crazy Strange Days podcast and please remember to five star, rate and review wherever you've listened to your podcasts. We appreciate it very much, and also check out the new podcast that I'm dealing with a longtime friend of mine. It's Chasing Bad Now. That is a little different than what we usually do on Crazy Strange days. It's going to be true crime and conspiracy theories and full disclosure it there is some adult language and themes, so I don't know if you want to bring the kids along for the ride. So that is it for us. I've been mixed strange. That has been m good night, good night everyone. P Daddy, Daddy,
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