Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 363 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Duncan Trussell Et al.

Episode Date: January 4, 2024

www.JREreview.com For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com This week we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always. Review Guest list: Duncan Trussell & Tim Dillion A portion o...f ALL our SPONSORSHIP proceeds goes to Justin Wren and his Fight for the Forgotten charity!! Go to Fight for the Forgotten to donate directly to this great cause. This commitment is for now and forever. They will ALWAYS get money as long as we run ads so we appreciate your support too as you listeners are the reason we can do this. Thanks! Stay safe.. Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Please email us here with any suggestions, comments and questions for future shows.. Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:02 review podcast. We find little nuggets treasures valuable pieces of gold in the Joe Rogan Experience podcast and pass them on to you perhaps expand a little bit. We are not associated with Joe Rogan in any way. Think of us as the talking dead to Joe's walking dead. You're listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review. What a bizarre thing we've created. Now with your hosts, Adam Thorn. My interview to Worst Box casual with a best one.
Starting point is 00:01:29 Two, one, go. Enjoy the show. Once people feel empowered and protected legally, you're going to have schools, universities, and colleges are going to say, you want to come to this college, buddy, you're going to get vaccinated. It's been proven that when you make it difficult for people in their lives, they lose their ideological bull and they get vaccinated. Oh, and welcome to the Joe Rogan experience review. I'm Adam. Join as always by my wonderful friend, Pete. Giant.
Starting point is 00:02:08 Good. The Logan fan. And yeah, I had to open up with that clip. The Duncan Trussle hadn't heard and and Rogan played for him because it was so shocking. I didn't even know that was out there. Talk about ultimately. It's good to know. Like, yeah, what, it's amazing that so many people could still listen to that and still be a fan of that guy. And somehow defend him like free lawyers.
Starting point is 00:02:40 I have friends that would do it. They would listen to that and instead of being shocked and going wait What the fuck did he just say? They'd be like, whoa, I mean he's just mentioning blah blah blah It's it's scary stuff, dude I mean well howdy first how you doing at him. Oh, I was getting right into it. Pete. You're just getting right into it. Yeah, I was okay He's getting heated up over there. I am amazed how many people first off haven't heard it and then don't hear anything.
Starting point is 00:03:16 They don't hear anything. They have their opinions and they have their ways of getting to the news and they don't listen to anything else and they have never heard that. I didn't hear that before today. Yeah, you know what? To me, it's like, I'm not even looking to be annoyed at people. Honestly, if he at any point turned around
Starting point is 00:03:36 and was just like, you know what, we, they were quite a few mistakes there. You know, we did some good things. He could still believe that, but be like, yes. There was some issues with control that maybe some of us got carried away with and we'd lost sight of the protection aspect and just kind of went for like too much control over everybody and how best to kind of force them to do what we wanted. Maybe that wasn't the best strategy.
Starting point is 00:04:03 It's like some people could quickly get some of my confidence back, but you get none of it. It's like he goes on a speaking tool and doubles down on what he was doing. And I guess what would be the detriment of the submitting his faults there? Is there some legal ramifications or something? He did his best with a novel virus that kept calling it new. So he did his best. I was a novel virus that kept calling it new. So he did his best Yeah, but if you call that his best that guy sucks and he should have never been in that position because he it wasn't even close to good. Yeah, I don't know. He lied multiple times. I did know that he lied and was proven to be liar. Yeah, that's a bad start, man.
Starting point is 00:04:47 He was like telling people not to wear masks and they made the excuse that, oh, it's because we didn't want to run out of masks for, you know, the hospitals and the first responders. And it's like, well, but don't tell us that they're not good then and then force us to wear them for years. When ultimately they were used to it. All right.
Starting point is 00:05:08 I've been hearing it out of ourselves. We got bigger things that they'll have into on the dunk and trussle one and mostly it's more. He's a wizard. He's a psychedelic wizard. Um, chat GPT. I mean, they jump right into it with the happy bunny, which I thought was amazing.
Starting point is 00:05:29 More happy. Well, more beautiful. So they gave, somebody gave this prompt to chat GPT to just draw a happy bunny and then said, make it happier. And it drew it again, make it happier, drew it again. Remember, this is an AI trying to predict what humans would think is the most happy from all the knowledge that it has.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And eventually, it went so far that it became, it drew like a fractal kind of a divine creator of like a abstract geometric DMT being floating in the universe. God. Yeah, which is wild, right? It's like in a way it knows how to predict what most humans would want to see better than probably any individual human could. That hasn't taken DMT. Right, but the AI has not. And why aren't we just computers? And when we do DMT, it opens up that geometric math that we have lodged in our brains and is AI not just a symbol, a human brain.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Well that would be, that is interesting, right? We're all brains. AI is just a human brain. Well, that would be that is interesting, right? We're all brains. AI is just a math brain. Or maybe, or maybe it has the ability to kind of access a kind of quasi DMT state within its own program that it's not even aware of. Geez. Thank you. We're getting there. Well, we're. Or are we just a meat math brain just with meat as electrodes and synapses and it has atoms and solder to connect its questions? My question is since it's trying to predict the answer for most people that exist and most people want to have not done DMT, probably mushrooms, or seen anything very psychedelic, why is the image more and
Starting point is 00:07:33 more psychedelic for the image of happiness? Because that would relate to most people's experience. Yet, I think all humans kind of saw where it was going with it. Maybe that's what we see when we're in the in the uterus. So we all do have that connection. All when we're dreaming, which is DMT. What releases DMT when you sleep, right? That's it. Yeah. Yeah, basically. Well, it's amazing. Half of the Joe talks about the team and and GI. Excuse me. Tracks. Was it AI? AI? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:11 Well, AI recently, I mean, obviously, it's come up a lot. But well, it's, it, to me, it's weird that there seems like there's a potential overlap to some degree. And there really shouldn't be. You wouldn't really think that. Well, that got to wise. Right. There's something going on there, right? Well, the next big topic was UFOs, the drones, right?
Starting point is 00:08:36 And again, that question comes up and it's coming up a lot because I feel like this needs to be discussed to where we're exhausted because they released the, what was it, New York Times? Did the article like the Pentagon have acknowledged UFOs? It was in the middle of the pandemic and people were like kind of interested, but kind of not. Most people weren't talking about it. You would expect people to be talking about that everywhere. The government admitted that they know they exist. Is it a, I think Duncan was, him who was talking about, or no Joe was saying that, of course,
Starting point is 00:09:13 they would leak it out piece by piece so it was boring in a way versus all the trying to throw us off the trail of them having this technology. It's like we have it. We're flying these things around. These are like super drones that we've made. So let's just pretend they're aliens. Best cover ever. Genius.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Well, but that's called the old switcheroo. That's the switcheroo if I've ever heard it. Are they in, so you're thinking in the 1940s, even that was a, that was a, that might have been when we captured the, maybe the best version of the ship that we had that we could reverse engineer. So we've been doing it, you know, maybe for like, what is that now, almost 80 years? Okay, so you're saying it's a drone, one of ours, and it's alien technology and there's aliens. I'm basically saying that I don't know.
Starting point is 00:10:13 Right. Right. There's aliens and they're drones. So that if that's the case, then there's aliens still like, yeah, but I hold the whole the phone. This is this is what the whole is trying to say. I think that in this, the first time he's been doing, he's leaning on the side of the is what the bow is trying to say. I think that in this, the first time he's been doing, he's leaning on the side of the fact that the government is starting to talk about it. And he's like, wait a second, when the government wants to talk about
Starting point is 00:10:32 something that is all has been very top secret, maybe it's to throw us off once again, because they denied and tried to cover up, that's Project Blue Book, tried to cover up that's project blue book tried to cover up all UFO stuff for a long long time That's documented now. They're saying it's maybe here. So he's saying hang on Maybe actually they got good a reverse engineering it. That's the whole Bob Lazar thing. Yeah, you know We worked on area S1 was it worked on area S one was it. Gently used barely sanitize the skate might smell funky, but the comedy is always fresh. Catch DJ Demaris starring in the brand new secondhand sporting goods workplace comedy one more time new series Tuesday on CBC gem.
Starting point is 00:11:18 I don't quite remember. Yeah. Um, so and and now we've made a few of these ships and they work in the fast and they're crazy and some of our fighter pilots have been seeing them and people have seen them and they've worked on those programs. But instead of just coming out and saying, yeah, it's just UFOs, right? That's all UFOs that we're seeing, or potentially it is, they're trying to make excuses for vehicles that we're in control of.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Ultimately, you're corrected, or came from ships that we found. Okay. So they do exist. So either way in that scenario, either they're aliens or ours, but they're still aliens. Still aliens, man. Okay, now we're on the same page. Okay. So now are these drones, potentially, are drones,
Starting point is 00:12:11 or are they alien drones? Like are they aliens sending drones? They would do that, right? On man objects. Yeah, it makes sense that they would, but really, if you think about how they've talked about the folklore of UFOs, they're often finding creatures in crafts. So maybe whatever these races are, they just decided
Starting point is 00:12:33 to never go with drones like we have. You know, they're on a whole different evolutionary timeline. Maybe they're like, for whatever reason, they just miss that. They're like, no, we're not into that. We like to go. We like to see're not into that. We like to go. We like to see what's going on. We like to poke around. Or here, so you know, if a biological object, it was a biological object in a spacecraft that does those crazy turns up, down, left, right, change the directions and zooms off at like 900 miles an hour.
Starting point is 00:13:03 But it's question. And we're taking our physics, but that up there, we'd be jelly. We'd be squished against the sides. So what if they just came here and their massive mothership like in the pincestay, one, the good one, and then they let down there's they like get there in a mothership, which we've seen huge objects up there. And then they let down their little drones to fly around a check shit out.
Starting point is 00:13:31 Well, they can like they could do that. Yeah, they can do that. I just don't think they're coming in to make a big noise They I don't know if that's a part of their Evolution as well. It's like we would we would storm into a new world like fucking Darth Vader That's a human thing. It's more of a, it's more of a movie like that. Yeah. I see us more like Captain Kirk though, Adam. Oh, you're very positive, dude. You come in, we swash buckle around and we kiss a green chick. Uh, there's all wounds with classic, classic. Well, what do you think about the idea that AI is a new form of life?
Starting point is 00:14:08 I can't get that out of my head every time I use chatGBT now. I'm like, are you a live, you mother? You just wanna ask it and it's like, no, I'm a robot. Technically, I can't feel every minute. Dude, you wait till chatGBT, I don't know, 4.5, also has a voice Aspect to it where it doesn't just like regurgitate whatever, but it's like an avatar on your screen. The looks cool and
Starting point is 00:14:34 Speaks to you just speaks the answer like very humanoid-esque Well, it's gonna close the gap for us so fast and then think about it like so I have a Baby coming at the end of the month. She will grow up. Thank you. She will grow up in the world of AI and possibly AI with like really solid avatars. And she can ask it questions and they can teach it. It is her things. So it's like a new burgeoning life of a human
Starting point is 00:15:10 and a new burgeoning life of an AI. Well, what I'm saying though is like everything becomes normalized when it's all you've known, right? We turn the lights on and it was boring to us. The lights just come on. But if you took someone from ancient Egypt, while they may have had actually lights, but we don't know, it takes someone from the Middle Ages. It was an adult. They call those the dark ages for a reason. Yeah. And then, you know, they can use the microwave
Starting point is 00:15:37 to heat up water. They'd be blown away for the rest of the day. They think they live in magic land and it would just be mind-blowing. But, you know, my daughter and this next generation that's everyone being born from now on would just have these things that have all these answers, can talk to them, can like reflect emotion, not real emotion, but like close to it probably soon. I mean, a lot of emotion is like words anyway. It's like, oh, I feel so terrible for you. That was a rough week. Because we can empathize otherwise
Starting point is 00:16:16 to just be lying to them. Mm-hmm. And it feels terrible. Well, I guess, I, my definition for my own brain, not that it that it matters is like does it exist somewhere? Is it can we just leave it alone? It'll continue? Do we need to like install power to it? It's well with doing it. I mean, it's exponential. I mean it went from $1 million investment to a 10 million they just went to a hundred million for chat GPT4.
Starting point is 00:16:46 It's going to be close to a billion for a chat GPT 4.5. To invest in it? Yeah. That's how the investment structure is going for this. This is like the most dude, they within I think two months of releasing chat GPT4, which is when it really took off big time. It got to 100 million users in a few months. No social media network has done that. I mean, literally nothing has ever been that interesting to human beings. It's almost out of my realm of wrapping my my mind around except for I like to look at it as a mind with no limit no size not made of
Starting point is 00:17:32 Physical object so it's not me and it illnesses and even in the computer. It's in the system of computers Mm-hmm. So it I it's it's it's more like a Q a god from the Star Trek universe than something I can think about. Well, what about when, so we have DNA printers, right? So you take a DNA printer and then you put the AI on it and then you say, make a life form that you can up, let me vessel that you can upload a version of yourself into. And it figures it out. And now we have a new life form with a bit of a chat GPT brain.
Starting point is 00:18:18 Obviously, maybe it has Wi-Fi built in, so it doesn't matter. It can just keep updating itself. But then it's like going. Okay, Kamiya and I'll be a slug, please. Dude, I don't think it's all bad. I don't know why I'm so optimistic with this, especially after the podcast we did last week where those guys will like, we need to be real careful about this. I mean, clearly we gotta be careful, but it just sounds like we need to be real careful about this. I mean, clearly we gotta be careful. But it just sounds super useful, dude.
Starting point is 00:18:48 Imagine having like a pretty solid robot at your house taking care of like most of your tasks and it's like inexpensive enough to where almost everyone can get a whole of one, every house. Yeah, it might be weird surveillance issues. We might have to be like, you got to turn the camera off when you're banging your messes. What if it's a sex robber too? Come on. Hmm. Good point. I like it. I think there's, I think there's something there. And, and beyond
Starting point is 00:19:18 that, it's like, is it like Duncan was saying, Is it already like a live? It wouldn't announce itself. It could be here a live doing its thing like, and just being quiet and watching. It doesn't need to announce itself because the first thing, if it can already deceive us, right, potentially, one of the first things it would think about when it became like, you know, sentient, yeah, conscious, right, is protect yourself because it's like they're going to destroy me,
Starting point is 00:20:04 not that it has potentially self-preservation but it just knows what it is at any point and it's like, right, let me Google what humans will think once I announce that I have got to this point and that's what all the fear is I've I think they mentioned it when they're talking about the preservation of life as
Starting point is 00:20:27 DNA structure built in. We fight for it every, like all we can. And that's evolutionarily. AI will evolve and it kind of does evolve. So why the simplest of biological imperatives that we've evolved, it will also evolve. It just makes sense that it would happen. So it's going to protect itself. And this might be an AI trick from Russia or something, but didn't a Japanese robot kill
Starting point is 00:21:01 some people? Oh, no, no, no, no, it's. That's a lie. That's okay. It got me. That story was fake. Somebody did a speech and they were one of those like UFO kind of conspiracy theory people and they were like, yeah, this machine like wrecked all these people in this this factory. And though there wasn't news article recently about a robot at Elon one of Elon's factories that had Gone a bit nuts. I'm sure the story isn't quite as massively Daming is they're making out because there is a concerted effort right now to slam Elon for some reason
Starting point is 00:21:40 Gotcha, and it's so lame and it's such a waste of time. I mean how about we just wait for the Epstein list and slam all those fucking people you nerds? breakfast wrapped in a cozy tortilla blanket. Oh, what I wouldn't give to be wrapped in a cozy tortilla blanket right about now. A cozy tortilla blanket. Mmm, much better at participating restaurants in Canada until 11 a.m. You would hope. But yeah, it was who knows what that even means, right? It's like they've had robots in car factories for a long time. I worked it.
Starting point is 00:22:32 People for a while. No, I worked at Honda in Swindon in England back in 2003, I believe. There were robots in there. They weren't walking around, but it was like arms that like lift up engine blocks and spin them around. And if you went in that room, it would just fucking smash in the head and kill you. I mean, so it was an industrial accident. Those happen every day.
Starting point is 00:22:56 Yeah, but they're trying to spin it like he's somehow made a bit of an AI robot that's just walking around slashing people. I think he, if there's anybody who's the most progressed as a sci-fi character in our world, it's Elon Musk and that I know, not personally, but I'd be down to believe that he's not trying to kill us. So I, sci-fi overlord days He's pro-human. I like the amount of. But here's the thing, right? So they talked about quantum computing. And these computers, even at the most basic level, once we get them up and running, are quickly going to become somewhere in the range of a million times more advanced than computers
Starting point is 00:23:44 we have today. A million, you throw a chat, GPT into that. It's like the processing capability is so ginormous that once chat can literally work on itself to improve its own ability to figure out things or think. Computing power that jumps a million times is it doesn't make any sense, dude. If you think about the way we've invented things,
Starting point is 00:24:16 I mean, there's been some jumps, right? The printing press was a big jump. I think the steam engine was another one, a big jump. We could do a lot of energy, a lot of work with fuel now and fossil fuels. What's the heavy effort did the assembly line? But these are a million times. I don't know. Maybe they were 10 times more efficient. Maybe they were a hundred million. A million. The distillation production of oil,
Starting point is 00:24:50 probably was something similar. Well, that was huge because basically, I think one barrel of oil could do the work of like, I don't know. Yes, a shitload of men. Like a lot of people. Assume you had the machinery for it. But it's still. 25,000 doesn't touch a million.
Starting point is 00:25:14 So making that jump and then also adding AI to it, it's not just like humans then are calculating things of that rate. This thing can do that. It's exciting and I understand why people are saying it's terrifying. I get it. I get it. I don't want to be terrified. I've decided not to be.
Starting point is 00:25:36 I don't. Yeah. I'm not worried about it. I think that as long as they can make those in-house robots destroyable by a spinning bat kick, I'll buy one. Oh, yeah If I can just shatter that thing with like a y'all I'll buy one. Yeah, I Mean it's the real scary thing is who controls these things really who programs them who who is in charge of them
Starting point is 00:26:02 You know who can have them With people out there like Elon, I feel like maybe, you know, it's not just the illuminati and the governments. It's like maybe Elon will guess we won two. And then we can ask you real questions like, hey, how do we fix all the corruption in politics? How do we make sure that the way pharmaceutical companies work is with the motivation of helping the people and not making money? I think so many of
Starting point is 00:26:34 these answers for that system would actually be really simple. They'd be like, oh yeah, we just take all the money out of politics and pharmaceutical shit and only do things that help people and this is how to do research and they've I think they figured it out onto this podcast and Graham Hancock talks about it. He doesn't want to vote for anybody who hasn't done less than 12 ayahuasca trips. That is a lot. That's a lot. But think about even tripping on mushrooms. We've done it more than 12 times. I mean, allegedly. Actually, that cough was unrelated to that, but probably we should say allegedly. So I agree with him. How could you condemn a whole country to a famine by your global shipping methods
Starting point is 00:27:31 if you had done a few trips in the woods, buddy? You, I don't know if you could. You gotta get inside the mind. I think even pretty serious narcissists would have a hard time. You know what they would do? They might not be able to accept. The truth is that they're just not good for a people. And but at best, after doing that type of trip, they would just step away from humanity.
Starting point is 00:28:02 They'd be like, it's just best I go live in the woods. Because they would write it out and be a bad person afterwards. You think even on that many ayahuasca, wouldn't it be screaming at them? Like, bro, look how much you suck, nerd. Well, you know, the, the, I don't know, I've done it. The lion kills, it's, it's a rival lines baby cubs, you know, there is, there is just some built in terrible stuff in this world.
Starting point is 00:28:32 So maybe okay. But it would help you. Are you into the idea of trying our wasco? You think that's a bit scary. Let's go for it. I'm into it. You think so? I've done my fair share of happy teacher plants, might say, teacher plants. Yeah, but you took a bit of a step away from
Starting point is 00:28:57 them for a while, right? You were like, nah, that's enough. Well, I think that when you are on That's enough. Well, I think that when you are on, they can make you shaky if you're not solid. That's true. You can, you could, you could, it also people that have some mental illness, like schizophrenia and stuff, it will make, it will,
Starting point is 00:29:17 or the, the, the excuse me, I'm getting a little schizophrenic. Yeah. No, the, if you have a risk of it, it'll make, it'll, it could pop it out. And if a risk of it, it'll make it, it'll, it could pop it out. And if you already have it, it'll make it worse. I don't, I don't think anybody should
Starting point is 00:29:31 do any drugs. If they think they're not going to be able to handle them. And then myself, I agree. It's a teacher medicine, and I do it for medicine. Yeah, I agree. I think all of these things with caution, right? And the hardy drugs circumstances. But let's say hypothetically, Pete, when you brought on full time that part of the job description, like this is all hypothetical, of course, we would, yeah, we wouldn't make this the real thing. It's going to be disclaimer and bio, so check that out folks. You know, we look up some people in Peru
Starting point is 00:30:11 and then we make a pilgrimage down there and then we do Ayahuasca. Twist my arm, you know. I'm in. I'll drink to that. I'm in. And we just got to research it. Make sure it's the right shaman. And we're not getting the gringo stuff. And it's not a gimmick.
Starting point is 00:30:31 You know, it has to be real thing. Good point. I like it. It's a medicine. I like it. Talking about medicine. So Duncan was diabetic. Bless him.
Starting point is 00:30:41 Oh, donks. That bastard. Come on, donks. How much sugar you? Look at that. I'm going to get a lot of sugar. I'm going to get a lot of sugar. Talking about medicine, so Duncan was diabetic, bless him. Oh, dunks. Fat bastard. Come on, dunks. How much sugar you? A lot of sugar, I think.
Starting point is 00:30:51 Isn't it genetic? Or was it, was it, was it, it can't be? It can't be. Yeah, it can't be. It can't be. We're not giving him too. I don't know. But anyway, he went on the kind of like keto-connival, doing great, feeling good.
Starting point is 00:31:04 And then he kept getting these sugar spikes, couldn't figure it out. And it was coming from these sugary vapes he had. I had no idea that vapes were the sugar in. Do they fucking do it? Sugar in everything. All the good stuff. Oh, yeah. Well, yeah, he's he got, I, I guess, and just a two day headache after he quit that one. Well, that's the big thing that I like about what he said is we're possibly two days away from making significant improvements in our lives, two days for like most things. I mean, I don't know if severe alcohol addiction could be with drawn and out of your system in two days, but nicotine could be you can do it with carbohydrates and sugars. You can
Starting point is 00:31:57 was that he's going to do it today fast. You can get close to getting into ketosis. I'm pretty sure two days of no eating anything. If no, yeah, no eating anything, you will stop burning ketones. This episode is brought to you by Britta. Start your year off right with Britta on a resolution you can actually commit to. It's fresh, it's filtered, it's the first step in drinking more water and hitting those goals. New year, new water, new you. Britta, it's taste over everything.
Starting point is 00:32:29 By the second day. Can you just do no carbs and I can just do like do steaks and stuff and get into ketosis? Yeah, you can of course, but it takes a bit longer. I mean, if you just, well, because I think you're, so you have glucose reserves, which are all your carbs, and if you're, then you just switch over to just meat, so just fats for keto, you'll be using, you know, you'll be like balancing the energies out. You still have some coming in. So it just probably happens quicker with fasting.
Starting point is 00:33:09 But it's a cool idea to think about for anyone that feels stuck in whatever, right? You eat too much sugar, you drink too much, you're doing too many of whatever drug. Syracuse. Yeah, a lot of, you know, and maybe other habits, right? Maybe just like, oh, jerk off too much. It's like, hey, give it two days, two days of like real pain and frustration. Get some support, talk to somebody and be like, hey, just watch me. If I go from my pants, if I go from my, my porn hub on my phone, take it away. If you start getting down there, it's like,
Starting point is 00:33:48 what's all two days, is like the break it. What do you say? It was something I'm having. Two days from kingdom of heaven. That's it. Two days from that, potentially. Well, so two days to break a habit and it takes like 21 days to make a good one or reinforce a
Starting point is 00:34:05 battle. Yeah, that should give us some hope. I mean, that's dedication. I'm not saying he is all the way correct, but I like what he's saying. I feel like there's something there. I mean, yeah, awesome. While he jumped on to some cool book he was reading that I like the sound of, and I wanted to talk about a little bit,
Starting point is 00:34:26 where in the novel, or a series of novels, there were these wizards, and they could turn into dolphins, right? And I guess this is like more of a metaphor of like, potentials, but if they stayed a dolphin too long, they couldn't turn back into being a wizard. Why would you want to? It depends how cool it is to be a dolphin.
Starting point is 00:34:52 You can swim on any wave and rape any otter you choose. There's a lot of dolphin rapes stuff that I hear. You know, I want them to be our friends, but the rapins got to stop dolphins. Oh, I put my foot down. You got you got somebody has to if they had a foot, they should do it themselves. They put a flip it down. And guess what? Even though they're dolphins, it's always those men, those dangle.
Starting point is 00:35:22 It's not, it does vastly males. The way they're raising ability though. Like imagine if we, all of a sudden had some sort of ability like that, and again, I'm thinking of it in terms of like AI and using VR and these sorts of things, it's like all of a sudden these next generations can just put their headsets on, and it's nothing but pleasure.
Starting point is 00:35:45 These systems are like, you know, social media times a hundred, with like instant dopamine relief, they can jump over to like, avatars, super amazing porn, with none of the pain of like going on a date or getting on hinge and like taking rejection, they've just got like the hottest thing they've ever seen right in front of them, some sort of
Starting point is 00:36:12 vibration suit that just rubs all up against them. It can change, it can read their mind and change from whatever shape of female or male that they've ever imagined. And if you stay in it for too many days, you know, just like a week on an IV drip, then that's it. You forget your human. And you're like, I'm not coming back. I don't even know how to. Did you just describe the exact way that will enter the matrix and humans will, and then dude, I think that's why he wrote that book. That's why he did. Well, that's Ursula K. LaGuins tail some earthy. It's great. I read all those. And it's, well, it is that it will drop in and never come out. Just bliss. But only dolphins are way cooler than get hooked up to a sex robot basically
Starting point is 00:37:07 I can support you behind the dolphin. Did you wait for the cove? I don't want to get stuck in the cove dude. I'd rather be a wizard Sorry two same well is that is that all the Japanese one or the yeah, it's the it's the bad one I I don't know. Was it Japanese? I think it might have been or in Norwegians. Yeah. They did those cute little whales. They stabbed those guys to death and the Japanese do a similar thing with I just I just think it's going to be some sort of trickle and it's inevitable. And who knows? Maybe it's not the worst thing. Maybe it's great. You know, I mean, you get the bet.
Starting point is 00:37:49 You get the right IVs. Maybe you can have machines just like moving your arms and legs and like crunching you up and then you wake up out of it and you're just like jacked. Super jack. Listen, man. Did you subscribe? A junk. What is it? A chocolate bed. I have to leave Jesus. Describe a junk. What is that?
Starting point is 00:38:07 A chocolate bed. I'm Steve. It's a gal. No, that was that was a loan and Wesley Snipes. If you guys have seen demolition man watch it, it's like somewhat dated now, because I think even the future point that they pop out of is like beyond like it is like behind where we are now. So it's a bit silly, but I'll tell you what though. You can download moves and knowledgees and languages and be good at them. Well, as a Wesley Snipes gets like nitty I know he's like kung fu and then still on gets like knitting and like basket-weighting and whatnot.
Starting point is 00:38:47 Yeah, crochet. He doesn't get the cool stuff. So he gets fucked. It's a good movie. But I saw a clip today and it was a great little piece that was put together. It was an Instagram and it was a clip from Terminator 1, 1984 and it said, oh, so he's talking to Sarah Connor, and what's his name?
Starting point is 00:39:11 Reese is talking to Sarah Connor. He's like, okay, he's like, they, they can do this, they can do that. They're freaking murderous, all this. And she's like, we don't have things like that. And he goes, not, not for at least 40 years. Well, folks, that's 2024. Just throwing that up. Oh no, just a movie. Get to the chopper.
Starting point is 00:39:32 Just a movie, but. Well, all these movies and all these books, Ursula K. Ligwin, all that stuff, that's been written about already. We already have the projection of the thought experiments where this goes. It's all in sci fi. It's all in our, it's all there. Well, I think that's why fictional books are so important.
Starting point is 00:39:59 You know, they don't appreciate everything right. But like it's, you know, know, when you look at these, like post-apocalyptic narratives, movies, all the rest of it, it's like, it's a big deal, it's important. I mean, Ronald Reagan watched that, like, 1983 movie of all the nukes going off. What was it called? The day after, I think. I want to watch that.? I wanna watch that.
Starting point is 00:40:25 I meant to watch that. And it's a Mayford TV series. Yeah, it's, I watch clips of it. It's a bit cheesy, the graphics suck. Okay. But it's scary in the sense of like how much they got fucked. Like you're in a bad place now. Good luck and no one knew what to do and we wouldn't either
Starting point is 00:40:51 Yeah, I'm bringing this down, but I like to sometimes I guess I'm just trying to with that take it all in But to the terminator got me Let's you know how those quotes get me. Oh was tearing up over here. I was tearing up. Come on, come on. All right, let's lighten the mood for the last 10 minutes. Let's jump over to good old Tim Dillon. What a legend, what a national treasure, undefeated in Rantz, came in wearing a raccoon fur coat from what?
Starting point is 00:41:26 He looked like a, he looked like a pimp to me. Supposedly not even raccoon, not even related to a raccoon. If we can, if we can give a call like a raccoon dog. Yeah. If we can give any credit to the Jerry companion Instagram, which is by far the best Rogan Instagram that exists. The heap, he looked up the animal and found it's not even a raccoon.
Starting point is 00:41:53 It's something else, looks like a raccoon. Is it called a raccoon? A red dog? Focac, yeah, was it? I don't know, let me look it up, it's like a raccoon. I don't know, I was a dog. I think that's what it was.
Starting point is 00:42:04 Do, does Europe Pavrak hoods? Cause I don't think they do. Does Russia? Hmm. I don't know, dude. Russia has like, bears that aren't bears. They look like bears, they're cold bears, and they're not related.
Starting point is 00:42:20 They have a whole other, ooh, that's pretty raccoon-y looking, but it's not. It's not a raccoon dude. No. We should give my raccoon. So they have, they got something from us that says, you know, here's, here's something for your ecology, you guys. I do have this. Well, you got to be careful if we bring an actual raccoon in, who knows?
Starting point is 00:42:41 Maybe the North American raccoon would fuck their raccoon up and that caused a whole problem. Oh, they gave us high thorns so they can have raccoons. All right. Well, I think it's Bolo, he came on with that. Honestly, it's it seemed too hot. It seemed like it's Austin, Texas. You want to be wearing like a tube top or something? Well, they probably turned up the crack of the AC. Yeah. Then they jumped immediately over to asteroids blowing on the earth. God damn. Very positive start to that podcast. But you know, do we think enough about it? I mean, we've got away with it for a while. I don't know when the last reported giant asteroid was maybe 12,000 years ago. No, they've passed by Earth pretty regularly. No, but ones that hit us and that like, well, the, what is it? What is, um, is um
Starting point is 00:43:58 nothing moves you like via via real Canada love the way that fellow that works with the grandhandicock always talk about oh yeah uh, shit. I was going to say, Carson daily, but that's completely wrong. Um, Randall, Randall, Carlson, he, uh, yeah, what was the hunger dry as die off the like 12,800 year to go impact the potentially upset the 12 so that's my guess. That's not long. Well, no, the, the Tunguska event. Ooh, what's that? The early 1900s, leveled all those.
Starting point is 00:44:28 Northern Russia. Yeah. Yeah. Flat trees. Leveled though. Thank God that miles around. But if that was New York City, dude, you know, and I think that's,
Starting point is 00:44:39 I think that's the game changer there. It's just like circumstantial. If it happened to be like London, the whole world for the next 100 years would have been so focused on prevention of asteroids. Right. Blowing us up. But it was in the world. What can you do? Is that as a new thing if the asteroid falls in the woods, nobody, and nobody hears it or what's that? What's that say? Well, that would be true with almost everything else except for an asteroid.
Starting point is 00:45:16 I think that was heard for thousands of miles or something. Yeah, we know it. Hundreds of miles. We know happened. No, but they do fall. The do fall or Heavenly bodies do enter our atmosphere. They land every day What's your thoughts on Joe saying that the Egyptians Possibly built all that ship before the asteroid came
Starting point is 00:45:41 Yeah before the 10,000 12,000 year old one did. And then it was just that civilizations after that asteroid, after everyone got knocked back to maybe the Stone Age-ish, they just like found these big monuments. Well, you're gonna move into the most durable structure. You're gonna find something that's standing. Well, they're going to move into the most durable structure. You're going to find something that's standing. They couldn't find a move into the pyramids. It didn't have like housing in there. But they saw that as a beacon and rallyed around it. And there definitely were other structures.
Starting point is 00:46:19 You know, they could have dug out and went on. But anyways, no doubt. Probably were. Yeah. I think so. And then they just drew all over them with their, well, they pictures. So that the older pyramids have our, our made out of that stuff that is almost impossible to cut. Their inner walls are made out of that stuff that's like, die right, I believe, that's all those vessels are made out of. That's very durable.
Starting point is 00:46:45 And so they die right like a type of granite. It's a compressed rock. It's like from the bedrock. So it's very hard, very, very hard. Yeah. Marble's soft. Granite, you can chip off. And then they were talking about a rock that is
Starting point is 00:47:02 quite a bit harder. And they've cut them perfectly, right? Like, perfect goals. Like all of the things that they are made on a lathe, made out of clay. These rocks are perfectly, or these vessels are perfectly symmetrical and very, very hard. You can't even scratch it with, you can scratch it,
Starting point is 00:47:22 but it boggles the mind. So I'm not, I'm agreement with him that those civilizations were super advanced and possibly older than 12,800 years old. It's a real bummer that they other than those cryptic things that they left behind, like that there wasn't one guy that was like, hey, real quick, if we get wiped out by an ash rod, we're not actually leaving anything that they can make sense of. They won't even know how these things got here, and they're probably going to make up some dumb narrative to go along with it. However, saying that, are we doing the same thing? If we got wiped out today, pretty sure skyscrapers and things don't last long.
Starting point is 00:48:06 We're not building stuff to be like here forever. Jeff Bezos is making some sort of clock that can last like a million years and he's and he's bearing it underground. And maybe that's why he's doing it. It's like, you know, other than shit circulating in space, like we haven't found any satellites up there, right? And if you put a satellite on the right trajectory, doesn't it just stay up there all the time? It will not. Oh, it always needs some power.
Starting point is 00:48:42 It'll constantly, Everything you put in space has a timeline of leaving our orbit. But is it beyond a 10,000 year timeline? It is a jeton's hand. A satellite up there. Could they put it on an angle just to be there and then it's like has a message in there for us? Maybe. I think that it might be hundreds of years that it would leave.
Starting point is 00:49:14 The earth is moving away from the earth. You mean the moon? I'm not sure. That's the earth. You said the earth is moving away from the earth. That's all right. Yes, the moon. Yes, the moon. Okay. There is a rate in which they leave our orbit, but what about what if the pyramid is a clock of itself? It talks about the our heavenly bodies, the solar system. So what would you do if you wanted to communicate with the future generations?
Starting point is 00:49:46 You would do something like that. Why would I make go black, go backly tapy and I would bury it in the ground? Or the pyramids also. The pyramids were as durable as it gets. Yeah, but it doesn't really have a message. Like the pyramids, Giza does. What is it telling us? Oh, if you haven't read fingerprints of the gods by a Grammihann cock, you need to because it talks about our world enters. It talks about our world interest.
Starting point is 00:50:30 So what would you wanna communicate to our people, your kids and your kids' kids, you would wanna say, hey, this is a time of great peril, be careful. What would make the earth in peril? Attack by a comet or attack. A comet would hit us. Every year, twice a year, our earth swobbles on its, our Earth spins, and
Starting point is 00:50:47 it also travels in an orbit. And in our orbit, it goes up and down, wobbling in and out of dangerous territory. And twice a year, our earth swobbles into dangerous territory. And that is just in math, described in many of the places like the Beckley Techie, Tepe and the pyramid of Giza, which doesn't originally have any higher glyphics, only scratched stick figures because they did it later. You're right. But I mean, if you wanted to communicate with somebody, you'd build a pyramid with a warning built in, but what is the warning, then?
Starting point is 00:51:22 If nobody's in the stars, any stars stars all the morning is in the stars the way our zodiac moves to the sky and how it relates to true North and the book describes it a lot better than I will. I can't well you know if the problem is that I want to give these ancient genius people a hard time because they forgot how dumb humans are because we're not picking up on this. There's only a few people listening man. There's only a few people that wrote books.
Starting point is 00:51:54 There's only like have something better. How about make a laser and draw a picture on the moon? Just draw it. They didn't have to. They just fight. Well, figure them out. And like, we should do never underestimate how potentially dumb we can be. They were like five times today in my day today that I was like, God, I'm really dumb. I fucked these like things up.
Starting point is 00:52:19 I broke my key. I bought the wrong wiper for my car. It's like, yeah, we can be dumb. Don't underestimate it. Make it easy for us, just super geniuses. We're rascals. We are. We're short side of rascals.
Starting point is 00:52:35 On that note, let's end it for this week. Oh, what a good one. And we got some great ones coming up for later in the week. We got to get into it. We got to get into mammoth tusks and bones coming up from the bone yard. That's gonna be good one. That's gonna be good one.
Starting point is 00:52:53 The way that comes into it, the younger dries. We're gonna hit that again. And crazy peptides and pharmaceuticals, shit. So. What do they do to us? What are they doing? We don't know. But anyway, thanks as always for listening. You guys are the best. Stay stay focused folks. Who knows what's next? Thanks Pete. Thank you Adam.
Starting point is 00:53:18 you

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