Shawn Ryan Show - #62 Sean Webb - How Artificial Intelligence will Manipulate the World
Episode Date: June 19, 2023With the recent departure of one of Google's top engineers Geoffrey Hinton, Artificial Intelligence is the topic on everyone's mind. What is it? Where is it going? How will these advancements affect o...ur everyday lives? Sean Webb is here to cover it all. As the author of "Mind Hacking Happiness" and through his work with the Monroe Institute, Webb has become one of the foremost authorities on AI & Consciousness. In this episode, Webb walks us through his own enlightening experiences with consciousness and spirituality. He provides some amazing direction to take control of your own mind and emotions. He also sheds light on some misinformation around AI and lays out where the real problems and disruptions lie. This episode will give you the tools you need to future proof yourself for what's next. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://drinkAG1.com/srs https://ziprecruiter.com/srs https://bubsnaturals.com - USE CODE "SHAWN" https://preparewithshawn.com https://blackbuffalo.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://moinkbox.com/srs Sean Webb Links: Website - https://mindhackinghappiness.com/ Volume I - https://www.audible.com/pd/Mind-Hacking-Happiness-Volume-I-Audiobook/B071W7BRFB?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-087885&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_087885_rh_us Volume II - https://www.audible.com/pd/Mind-Hacking-Happiness-Audiobook/B074TYB2RM?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-093958&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_093958_rh_us Pre-Order The Human Mind Owner's Manual - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C7M1N36F The Monroe Institute - https://themonroeinstitute.org/seanwebb Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/mindhackinghappiness Tik Tok - https://www.tiktok.com/@mindhackinghappiness Download SRS Content Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Oye, este fin de boya al pueblo.
Y guilleme a preguntar si venÃas, te apuntas?
¿Qué dices? Pero si te pueblos de legÃsimos.
Nada.
Mira que fácil, primero siete paradas de metro hasta tochadia y trena abajo en la chodlo.
No te li es.
Este verano viaja de puerta a puerta y sin complicaciones con Bláblacá.
Siempre encontrarás una cerca, incluso a última hora.
De la serba tu próximo viaje, ya.
Bláblacá, bláblacá,
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the Sean Ryan Show.
This week is a fascinating episode. We talk about two different topics and then we tie them in.
First topic is all about human consciousness. Second topic is all about
artificial intelligence.
And why we're covering these two topics, we're tying them together because we are talking about how
artificial intelligence is going to manipulate the entire human population
through the algorithm of human emotion. Pretty fascinating stuff. And scary. There's good
news at the end of this though. So, you know, some of these can get kind of heavy. On another
note, we have noticed a lot of you are repurposing our content, creating your own content from these episodes.
We love it.
We thought we'd make it super easy on you.
So if you go below in the description,
we have a folder down below that has all kinds of raw
reels that we've cut for you guys.
So you can take them, create whatever you want with it.
All we ask is that you tag Sean Ryan show in your content.
You can monetize it, make money off it,
whatever you want to do, just link back to the show.
And guess what?
If we like it, we'll repost it on our own social media channels.
So there's that.
Once again, that links below.
Ladies and gentlemen, please like, that links below, ladies and gentlemen.
Please like, comment, subscribe to the YouTube channel,
head over to Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Leave us a review, tell us how we're doing,
and ladies and gentlemen, without further ado,
please welcome Sean Webb from the Roan Institute
to the Sean Ryan Show.
Sean Webb, welcome to the show, man. Thank you, sir.
Sean Webb, welcome to the Sean Ryan Show.
I know, right?
First Sean, I've interviewed.
That's cool.
So, but, man, we've been going back and forth for,
I think you, we first had contact back in 2020, I believe.
Yeah. And we've been going back in 2020, I believe.
And we've been going back and forth for a while.
And man, we had a very fascinating phone conversation
and last night you just blew my mind at dinner.
And man, I've been looking forward to this interview.
I'm really excited to talk to you about all this stuff.
Human consciousness, the Monroe Institute, AI.
This is gonna be a hell of an episode.
Yeah, it's gonna be fun.
You know, it kind of blew my mind
when we were talking a few weeks ago
about like something else.
And you're like, you know, what's going on with your work?
And you know, when we talked about how my mind stuff
was bleeding into artificial emotional intelligence.
And then all of a sudden, like a week ago,
all these headlines came out, like Elon Musk stopping
his schedule to go fly to Congress
to implore them to pause or put regulations on AI development.
And the heads of state and AI development,
like the head tech people are all like,
maybe we need to put a pause on this for a little while.
And then like a few days ago,
the top Google engineer for AI resigned in fear.
And that's like not hyperbole, that's like the headline.
Like he admits that he left Google
because of the fear of what he helped create.
And that he wants to get away from Google
and start talking about the dangers of AI
and that he regrets working on it for the last 10 years.
It's like, holy shit, we need to talk about this.
Yeah, no kidding.
Yeah, it's very concerning.
I don't think, I don't even have a,
I have a small fraction of how this is gonna affect us,
but I think that this makes
humans completely irrelevant and in a lot of different sectors in today.
It's certainly going to affect everybody listening to this.
Like, everyone who is in ear shot of this conversation is going to be affected by it, but the good news is
there's a way that we can talk about it and have everybody understand what's going on here.
And we can explain it from the very simplistic nature of what AI is all about and we'll
take all the uncertainty out of the fear.
There are certainly some things that we need to be concerned about moving into the future.
But we can explain it like within the guys of this show.
Everybody will have an amazing understanding of where this is going, why people are concerned about it, what we
can do about it, to protect ourselves as individuals and human beings from the effects that this
stuff may have on us in the future, and maybe a way out to make sure that an artificial
general intelligence doesn't take over the show and start running the world and we'll never
have control again, because there's a small potential for that to actually occur.
That's not science fiction. That's like is that really small? Well I feel like it's a lot more
imminent than everybody's freaking out about it but I think like I've been in this space like I've
been talking about the dangers of where we're going for like the last 10 years and now just
now you've all Harari,
who's one of those guys up there who has the credibility and all that stuff,
is starting to say the same thing as that I've been saying for a long time.
And we're getting to the point where everybody's starting to understand
and get their mind wrapped around where this is going to go,
how fast it's going to go, what the particular dangers are
of artificial intelligence to influence human behavior, which is the real danger.
Because when it comes down to it,
our minds are very hackable.
And I'll explain a little bit of that
so that people can, like everybody be like,
my mind's not hackable.
It absolutely is.
Like everyone can be influenced.
And a computer system and artificial intelligence
is on the cusp
of figuring out how to do that.
And that's what we need to protect ourselves against
because at that point, you're talking about the ability
of an artificial intelligence being able to use simulated,
like real fake videos and real fake audio
to simulate that there are human being
and sign you up for a special task force or whatever it is.
Start depositing money in your bank
so that you think you're working for the good guys.
And all of a sudden you're working
for an artificial intelligence
that's arming you, equipping you, funding you,
and it has an army, a human army
to defend its artificial intelligence goals.
That's where we're at.
Wow.
That scares the shit out of me.
Yeah, and it's no bullshit.
I will explain from soup to nuts,
like hopefully in this episode,
how first of all, the human mind can be hacked,
which is a cool thing,
because then everybody will be able to hack their own minds,
which is awesome.
There's a cool, really awesome side effect
to be able to take that
and then make your life amazing from it.
But then from there, it's a really short leap to say, okay, so here's how you can do it.
But then here's how an artificial intelligence is going to identify those same patterns and be able
to do it if you're not up to speed on how to hack your own mind. It'll be doing it for you.
I mean, you don't have to answer this yet because I know we're going to go into it in the episode,
but you would brought up for all the people
that, oh, my mind can't be hacked.
There's probably at least 50% of the people listening
right now are saying that in their own head.
And we took the first step to show.
To me, like, the first thing that comes to my mind
is for those people that are like, oh, I'm unhackable.
Every time you experience a strong emotion,
such as anger, jealousy, all these things,
would you say that, I mean, I feel like that's
your mind being hacked.
Yeah, to a point influenced.
I mean, human emotions are the primary driving mechanism
for us to take action. I mean, from a are the primary driving mechanism for us to take action.
I mean, from a certain standpoint, you can break down the physiology and the process within
your mind and lay it all out on a piece of paper.
And you can actually draw it and you can draw the custom variables that make you an individual
compared to all the other 800 billion people on the planet.
But there's a process that is static within the physiology of a human that takes that custom
information, but runs it through the same exact process that everybody else uses.
Now, if you start to identify what things are on this self-map, we'll talk about it,
but what those things are for an individual, then the other side of the equation is your
perception and appraisal of what's going on in your mind and what you think about it, how
you feel about it, etc.
But that results in your mind and what you think about it, how you feel about it, etc.
But that results in your emotional output.
And so if you can put perceptions, false or otherwise or targeted into a person's perception
where you know what they care about and how they're going to react to things, you can put
information in there that results in an emotional reaction that will drive them into action potentially at a particular time window to a particular location, with a particular
emotional mix, and all of a sudden you're communicating and controlling human beings,
either individually or en masse.
Based on, like, they can send information to you to get you to a certain location,
they could send me different information
that's pertinent to me that'll get me to the same location.
Then all of a sudden you got a drone strike
or you'd be in a restaurant or whatever it is.
And you know, it used custom information
based on who and I, you and I are as individuals,
but it got us to the same location
or to the same action of the same end result, right?
Like we're selling a stock or buying a stock or you know
liquidating all of our funds or you know going to a certain location or taking a certain action.
That's what we're talking about here is the ability to influence people on a scale of up to you know
the number of cell phones on the planet where you can literally deliver information to a person's
pocket in their face. At a granularity of understanding what each individual needs to see, here, feel, to get
them to take the action that you want them to take.
On an automated basis, 24, 7,365, no need for lunch breaks, and no need for pay.
This is fascinating stuff.
Let me give you a proper introduction before we dive into deep,
because I'm dying to dig in.
So Sean Webb, you're a US Navy veteran.
What did you do in the Navy?
Were you in the intelligence?
No, I was kind of, I mean, I was tertiary.
I was working with surveillance technologies and stuff.
It's still classified, but I was kind of a tech geek.
Okay, we won't go into that.
You're an expert on the human mind and human emotion.
You started your civilian career
as a systems engineer and supercomputing.
You built a career in high tech.
You had a startup at the Advanced Technologies Development Center
at Georgia Tech.
You are now a speaker.
You've spoken to some very powerful pioneers in a lot of different spaces, one of which
I believe did you say they won the Nobel Peace Prize last year?
Well, I've had conversations with those folks.
I've had multiple conversations with two Nobel winners,
but I didn't officially like present formally
in front of them, but yeah,
there's some stuff that I put out there
that they're really interested in talking about.
You have some very important people
that are paying very close attention to you.
And that, I mean, that says a lot in itself.
You're also an author.
You've written a few books.
One coming out soon.
What is that book titled?
It's going to be the human mind owner's manual.
What is that coming out?
Man, I'm hoping by the end of this year,
it's like regular life keeps getting in the way
and we finish in this thing.
But yeah, I'm hoping by the end of the year.
You're an official ambassador to the Monroe Institute.
For those of you that do not know what the Monroe Institute is, I'm going to totally butcher
this, but I will say this.
The Central Intelligence Agency in the Monroe Institute have done a multitude of studies
together on remote viewing.
Do you want to go into a little bit more about the Monroe Institute?
Yeah, sure.
I think it's the most premier research center
for consciousness expansion on the East Coast
of the United States, most definitely.
It's a place where, like you said, the history behind it
was they sent the early remote viewers for the CIA
and other military intelligence to that location
to be able to utilize technology that assisted them
in making better target viewings
and also faster recoveries.
And so for a number of years,
that was the place where remote viewers got trained
for CIA and other military applications
for the US government.
And that was classified for the longest time
you couldn't even talk about it.
And still to this day, they'll deny that they use
remote viewers, but the writings on the wall of
Luel Azando is admitted he was connected with
remote viewing and he's brand new on the scene of
running A-Tip and for the Pentagon, the UFO stuff.
He was one of those guys.
It's like, well, you guys are denying that this existed, yet here's another guy who's
in the mix.
Aren't the studies a release, though?
Yeah, there's a lot of stuff that got released, and they put out a documentary about
promoting that was called Third Eye Spies.
That was Russell Russell Torg,
who partnered with Hal Putoff to put that whole program together for the government
to put some science behind it.
Because they really needed a good program to be able to say,
okay, we're going to do this double blind.
We're going to make sure that there's no interference.
We want to make sure that the data that we're giving through these remote
viewings is accurate, that it's useful.
And so he got a lot of stuff declassified
so that he could talk about it.
And then they turned it into that documentary.
And that's how I got tuned into the idea of Joe McMonagal,
who's a teacher of the remote viewing program
at Monroe Institute, and who has just a storied existence
of successes in remote viewing for the military and special
operations forces and national security council.
They gave him the legion of merit regarding his ability to sit in his house in Virginia
and tell you what's going on inside a Russian facility underground somewhere in the tundra
of northern Russia.
And he was right.
This stuff is, I mean, this stuff is incredible.
Yeah.
You know, it's the kind of stuff that people,
they can't wrap their head around it.
And it's all coming out now that everything you thought
was bullshit.
Yeah.
It's turning out to be 100% real.
And our own government is utilizing this stuff and has been for decades.
Yeah.
But we're going to do, we're going to do an entirely separate episode on remote
viewing in the Romero Institute.
You also are a coach of Mind Mastery and emotional intelligence for corporate executives.
You have 1.5 million subscribers on TikTok. What is your handle on TikTok?
It's mind hacking happiness.
Mind hacking happiness. Go check them out on TikTok. And you're working to
forward the development of artificial compassion for computer systems, which
might just save us from the runaway AI.
Let's hope.
So, we're gonna allow to dive into it.
Yeah, before we dive into it.
Oh, nice.
I got the gummy bears.
Hold on, how do you know?
Because you have a game for all of us.
You watch the show.
Yeah, I do.
I love these episodes, man.
You're fucking killing it, by the way.
I got you again.
Oh, thank you.
So I made that up for me and my wife,
like barely lets me wear it, but that's,
I thought that fit for you too.
I could use this.
I could definitely use this.
Thank you. Yeah, you're welcome. I can love you without I could definitely use this. Thank you.
I can love you without reacting to your mental nonsense.
Yeah.
I got to work on that.
My wife made me change the word bullshit to nonsense.
Oh, man.
Well, thank you.
I appreciate it.
Yeah.
And just saying, oh, there's gummy bears illegal in all 50 states.
You can drive anywhere with them, fly anywhere with them.
Nice.
And not worry about getting arrested.
Awesome.
Although the other kinds are, you know,
that those are fun too.
Yeah.
So, but, um,
well, Sean,
how did you go from
this high tech job,
you're in a unfortunate 100 company making a lot of money. And you pretty much gave that all up to study human consciousness.
Yeah.
How did that happen?
Well, it was in that world of being in high tech that, you know that I got a lot of success early on.
And I was making a bunch of money
and I was a single dude,
pretty girlfriend, great friends.
Like my life was full of the right answers.
And so I'd just purchased a house on a double lot
in Atlanta at the age of 27, by myself, no co-siners,
like just, you know, bowling.
And I'd filled it with, you know, a bunch of cool stuff
and gloss black piano and all this, you know,
weight set and all this stuff that I wanted
when I was younger, because I grew up in poverty.
And then all of a sudden, it turned out
I was a little talented in tech.
And then the money just started flowing because
you know I was working for a super computing company and and it was just that they were million
dollar computers so when you sell some of those things and you work on them you get paid a lot of money
and like at some point we'll have to talk about how it's shipping computers area 51 that was a cool little job. But I was in on the front porch of this house
and I was looking out across the extra lot that I had.
And I was like, okay, so I've got all this stuff
and I got friends coming over,
I'm waiting for the installers for the stereo system
that are coming to put the stuff in,
so we can have this big party in my house.
And I'm like, all right, well, so what's next?
And something about that,
because I was thinking about maybe putting a Zebra
or something out in the side yard
or whatever and wiring it up for sound,
but that was what I was thinking about.
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That's better help, H-E-L-P dot com slash shod. I went from food stamps and living in a little two bedroom one
bath house in rural Indiana and ten years later where you know I was poor as
shit. I'm on the other side of the coin. Make a good income success from you know
American dream perspectives.
It's like, I got everything.
There's no wrong answer.
It's like I'm not unfulfilled.
I have a fluo, like I have a good relationship with God.
There's like, there's nothing really missing for me.
Yet here I am with all the things
that I was ever told that I should have for happiness.
And I'm already looking for what's next.
And something in my mind clicked,
it's like, wait a second, you're not happy
with all of this stuff.
It's like, where's the finish line gonna be?
Like, what is it gonna be that finally he says,
okay, I'm good, I'm done.
And I started to analyze it,
and then I started to read a little bit about psychology
and whatnot.
And it was like, there's gonna be no stopping point.
There's this thing called a hedonic treadmill,
where, and it's a part of the immune system,
the part of the nervous system, not the immune system,
but the nervous system where, like,
your nervous system reports the differences in things.
Like, you smell a scent for the first 10 minutes,
and then all of a sudden
you don't smell it anymore because let's say you wake up in the middle of the night and the gas
is on and you smell it. Well it woke you up because it went from low to high and it alerted you and
said okay there's a big difference in the gas smell but then after 10 minutes it goes from high
to high and it stops reporting on the difference of things right and you got to get out of the house
the other fireman say get out of the house with the other fireman, say,
get out of the house if you smell gas because you won't smell for very long,
but it'll kill you because your nervous system only measures the differences
and things. And so in reality, what that does to our life is when we start
making financial accumulation and the brand new car is really cool for the
first few months that you're driving it. And then all of a sudden, it gets
to be old hat.
That's your nervous system normalizing to the things that you've attained already in life.
And then you start looking for the, well, what's the difference?
How can I get more?
And that never stops.
And that's why these billionaires are always looking to pile more money on top, more success,
more businesses, more accolades, right?
Oh, I'm not the richest man in the world yet.
Let's do that, right?
And there's chasing, they're chasing, they're chasing because the nervous system always
normalizes to what you have.
And so that's what was going on in my mind that I was just learning about.
It was like, I've got all this stuff, what's next?
And I was like, if I'd follow this pattern, I'm going to be chasing that my whole life.
That's interesting. You say that I'm coming to that. I've come to that realization that
it's all just shit. Yeah, it is all just shit. Yeah. And if you let that, if you let that shit get to you,
it, you're just feeding and creating a monster.
It's, it's, it's greed.
Yeah, most definitely.
It's greed.
So I started looking for more.
I was like, okay, what, what is it that I'm missing
about my internal sense of who I am and what I am
and what I want in life, etc.
And I started to do some reading on global religions, trying to figure out
is there something I missed in my religion that maybe there's some other
answers that I need to or what could be commonalities that are, could be brought
into my existence that could maybe illuminate me into something else that I need to be doing, et cetera.
And I found some patterns of commonalities and religion was really interesting.
But then I read a book on T. T. Suzuki's Introduction to Zen.
And I learned about meditation, which was a foreign idea to be at the time, because I grew up Christian.
And, you know, when the church was president of the youth group for four years, you know, I was like in it. And at that point, I started to understand that there was this thing called satore.
And I didn't know what that was.
It's just a word for their explanation about a moment of perfection that allows you to
understand absolutely everything.
And I'm like, well, what's that all about?
I'm looking for answers.
So maybe, satore.
Yeah. And I'm like, well, what's that all about? Interesting. I'm looking for answers. So maybe Tory?
Yeah.
And so I started meditating and I was horrible at it.
I said, I didn't know what it was.
You know, I'd look it up and try to read about it and whatnot.
And then I started to read articles on websites and stuff.
I'm like, well, this actually tracks back into the Christianity that I know because
Jesus meditated. It says right so on the Bible, 40 days, and it out in the desert.
And so I was like, I'll try it.
And so I started meditating, I started calming my mind, and then I started reading more
about Zen, which to me is more of a philosophy of mind mastery than anything.
And I worked on using the 800 pound gorilla
of my mind to tame the 800 pound gorilla of my mind. Because from a practical perspective,
they just want to cease all conscious thought and then find out what happens next.
And so that's what I focused on. I was like, I want to shut my mind completely down.
I want to hear nothing but silence and then see what I can hear from there.
And there's a crazy thing that happened that I'm for the last 20 years of trying to figure
out what the physiology and the science is behind it.
But a different experience of consciousness arose within me when I got to a point of complete
quietude.
And it blew my mind.
It was so dramatic and life-changing and such a weird experience that I literally thought
I was dying.
Like I zipped out of my body into the center of the universe and all of sudden understood
absolutely everything about how this whole universe works.
And like the crazy experience that came from shutting down
conscious thought in my mind reset absolutely everything
within me and brought me a ton of information that I didn't
have like the day before.
And so some of the stuff that I got out of the,
and I talk about that experience in the blue book
that I wrote, Volume Two of Mine Hacking Happiness.
So if you're interested in pick that up a little bit,
the information that I brought back from that
was real valid information on how the human mind works,
how we create our own pain and suffering,
like the process that we go through
to create our pain and suffering.
And I put it into a theory, and know, just another guy with a theory.
And, you know, how, here's how your pain and suffering works.
But I put it into a very specific logical process flow of values and groupings of things and the
process that your mind follows to create your bullshit and I call it your mental bullshit. And then between 2007 and 2013, all the science came out. The peer reviewed published major
journal science that proved every bit of what I had come back with, correct?
No kidding. Yeah. And so then I was like, okay, so now this raises a whole bunch of other
questions in my mind because besides having
a practical understanding of how you create your own pain and suffering and bullshit
and how you can turn it down, et cetera.
Now science is proven that's correct.
Okay, so now a whole new set of questions comes like, where did that come from?
Like one information that I tap into that allowed me a guy who has a psychology 101 course in his past from a community college
at some point to come with a model that can explain the human mind and how it works.
Well, before we move into the next set of questions, I have two questions I want to say
I'm out loud because I'll forget, but one, how long did it take you to get into that type of meditation?
How long did it take you?
So I'd like to talk about that too.
What was the initial downloads?
Let's start with one.
Okay.
So one, it wasn't very long because I just went at it.
In fact, it was less than two months that I started meditating,
that this weird thing occurred.
And then I like zipped out of my body and went off into the middle of the universe
and understood everything.
And then when I was coming back, I was losing a lot of it.
I was losing all the stuff, all the stuff that I understood.
I was like coming back into my existence.
In fact, one of the portions of the existence was, okay, time to go back.
And I was like, where do you mean go back?
I was like, I don't want to go back.
What are you talking about? And then it was like, you're going back and I was like,
oh, okay, so maybe reincarnation is real.
I'm gonna go back and be a human baby, whatever it was.
And then I realized I was coming back to my body,
my existence, and I was like, well, that sucks.
I mean, come on, really?
I'm here in the middle of everything, and I understand everything, I mean, come on, really? Yeah.
You know, I'm here in the middle of everything and I understand everything and I got to be
one with the whole universe and yadda, and you're putting me back in this shit.
You know, and it's, but then, you know, I started losing a lot of stuff and I was like,
no, wait, wait, wait, I don't want to lose everything.
You can't just show this to me and not like, you know, get, allow me to help folks.
And they were feeling that I got, was like, well, what do you want?
And I was like, well, I want to let's not knock
out this pain and suffering thing.
And it's knock out, you know, the human limitation
of being controlled by fear, controlled by anger,
and controlled by sadness, and all the things that,
like, limit our existence and stop us from being,
you know, joyful and happy all the time.
And the kind of feeling the message I got back was like,
yeah, okay, so you weren't the first.
And that was kind of a joke, kind of a poke at,
a lot of the other masters dipped into the same thing
and look what they did.
I'm like, okay, well, I give it a shot anyway.
Let's see what happens.
And so it was just within a few couple months though.
A couple of months you were able to tap in.
Yeah, I've been meditating often on for,
I started after my first psychedelic experience
to be honest with you.
And that was roughly a year and three months ago.
And I felt the oneness one time.
That was meditating outside in nature.
I have, I'm just going to tell you what I do.
And maybe you can critique me because I want to go to the center of the universe.
I know, right?
In meditation.
So I put headphones on, I listen to frequency music, like the stuff we're listening, when we're setting up the photo shoot and everything
for this episode, I do that.
And then, have you ever heard of a rife machine?
Yeah.
So I know you're very familiar with frequency.
So I put a rife machine on, and I put it on my feet.
Sometimes I put it on my hands.
Sometimes I put it on both. So basically,
for those listening who don't know what a rife machine is, a rife machine sends a series of frequencies
through your body. And it's kind of holistic about us. And you probably know a lot more about this
than I do. I just got a royal delivered to my house, the royal rife machine.
Really?
Yeah.
So from what I understand, the rife machine,
it does all kinds of good things for you.
But it can break up bacteria, can break up viruses.
They say it can break up cancers, cancer cells,
and from what I understand, it's also grounding it puts you with the at the right frequency
That we're supposed to be operating at I even put a grounding map sheet on my bed. Wow. Do you know what a grounding sheet is?
Yeah, totally. I tried to buy one. I got one off Amazon
And it wasn't really doing a whole lot and I tested it with a multimeter
It wasn't even connected like Like they were selling a sham.
Like they, you know, I believe in the science
because I've read the reports and read the studies.
Like that's real science, real stuff that'll help you.
But the stuff they sell on Amazon
doesn't like the ground doesn't have a connection to the mat.
Oh great.
Yeah.
So I've been looking for a new one.
That's it.
But, but, but, yeah, you know, so that's, that's, and then I sit in a, I have a bad back, so
I sit in a love sack, like a big beam bag chair, and just try to totally relax.
Sometimes I can get far and get, in the way I do it is I just, when I meditate, I kind
of let, how do I explain this?
I'm not the greatest at controlling my thoughts.
Yeah.
And so how I do it is I try to let every thought
in my head play out.
And sometimes this could take hours.
Yeah.
Most of the time I don't have hours.
Okay.
You know, I'll do it for, if I get a 45 minute one in,
I feel like I've accomplished something. Even if I haven't accomplished anything and I just
sat by myself for 45 minutes, I feel good about it. But every once in a while, all the thoughts,
it's like every thought will play through my head.
And I'll get to the point where I'm thinking about nothing.
And then I realize I'm thinking about nothing.
And I snap out of it.
And I don't know how long I was actually thinking about nothing.
So the way I'd like to describe it is if you're looking down,
picture your
thoughts like clouds, and the clouds pass by, and then another thought comes in your head.
And it's good stuff. It's things that are bothering you. It's things that I have to do today.
Things that I have to do next week and guilt and all these different emotions and thoughts are just going through my head.
And every once in a while, every thought goes through my head. Everything plays out,
and it's 100% calmness. But I don't know how long I'm in that calmness, or I'm in that state.
Yeah, in that state, there's a separation of time, right?
Where time just kind of doesn't become a thing anymore.
What you just perfectly explained, well done, by the way, is a meditative state of
Vipassana.
And so there's a word for it.
It comes from like this ancient Buddhist practice where you simply just observe your thoughts,
but you don't add anything to them. Like your thoughts come in, but you don't add anything to them.
Like your thoughts come in, but you don't really interact with them.
You just kind of let them do their thing and like you said, a cloud floating by and then it floats out and then you're just waiting for the quiet.
And that's from my perspective, that's your subconscious, trying to raise things for your awareness.
And we'll get into, you know, how your brain is your organ of survival.
It starts throwing things up that says, you know, should we pay attention to this, should we pay
attention to this. And your non-reaction to that proves two cool things. One, that you're
not your mind, but you can observe your mind, which means there always needs to be a space
between an observer and the observed. So you're proving to yourself that your own consciousness
isn't the product of your mind,
which is a really cool thing to notice.
But then the other thing is,
can you say that again?
That your consciousness is separate from your mind.
Like if you can observe your mind from your consciousness,
you're proving to yourself that it's not the same thing.
That the observer that's sitting in the chair
watching your mind isn't your mind
because a tooth can't touch itself or can't bite itself. A fingertip can't touch itself. An eyeball can't see
itself without some distance in a mirror. There needs to be a space between the observer and the observed.
And so at any point that you're observing your mind, you're proving to yourself, you aren't your mind.
You're observing your mind, you're proving to yourself, you aren't your mind. Your mind is something that's doing, that's working for you, certainly in assistance of
your existence, of your physiology.
But your consciousness is something different.
And when you dig into that, that's your true essence.
It's not your mind and the things that are happening in your mind and the emotions that
are arising and all this other stuff.
That's a process of your physiology. You're the thing inside working your physiology,
driving your physiology, experiencing this human existence, but you're not this thing
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Let's uh, fascinating.
Yeah.
That's fascinating stuff.
So what was your first download?
So the first thing that I got was the last thing that I was basically was I lost everything
like the understanding of the whole universe and get totally understood, satory at that
point from a zen perspective, right?
And I don't think the zen folks are right.
I just think there's a practical method for them to get to the point
that we naturally can find as humans,
that were designed to find that puts us in touch with everything.
But the stuff that I grabbed on the way back when I knew I was coming back to be me
and that I wanted to help teach people,
I still had access to some stuff that I
didn't have access to in my human life in the expanded consciousness realm. And I said,
let me bring back the process of pain and suffering. Let me bring back how the human mind works
so that we can explain it to folks so that they can start to take control of their mind,
adjust the variables that they need to adjust to make their life amazing and I got that stuff. And I put it into a couple of books
that I then published and 96% of the folks were finding in a rating of five stars and they're
saying this stuff changed my life. So I'm like, thank God I grabbed the right stuff on the way back.
You know, it's like there was so much information out there
in the field that I could have tried to bring back and explain.
And I grabbed just the right mix of stuff that I didn't know
about, but that I kind of figured out how to unpack over time
and put into a couple of books and some whatever videos
that I put out on the internet for free
and all the other stuff.
It's like, that's what I wanted to deliver.
We'll link all that your book and all your everything will be linked below nice
Yeah, so I put that in into the stuff that I try to communicate and it helps people take control their mind and
Shows in the control knobs that they can take and change the things that'll change their whole emotional landscape for the rest of their life
Because if you think about it emotions are the things that drive us, like we talked about at the top,
but it's also the things that can ruin our existence.
Like it's the sadness and the fear and the anger
and the worry and regret and all that stuff
that permeates your mind
because you're not taking control of your mind
and adjusting the variables to turn that stuff down.
Science shows us in FMRI studies
that you can grab those variables
and literally turn your brain on or off in certain areas
to hack your mind
which is why I was you know the
moniker of the book was mind hacking happiness
You know like there's a way to take control of those variables and literally control the brain reactivity
That creates the stuff that causes trials and troubles and tribulations etc
But then can also free you from that whole process,
which changes your life and then changes the lives of those around you,
because not only just your personal existence is better,
which then affects all the cool people around you that you love and don't want to hurt.
But then you start to bleed into them and your positivity and
your control of understanding your own shit can be passed onto them.
And like my kid is one of the most emotionally
intelligent kids in his class and has no problem
with a lot of the things that middle schoolers
have a problem with because he's got that presence
of understanding how his mind works.
And he understands where his fear comes from.
He understands what his frustrations are
and he can turn them down at will at 13.
Wow. Yeah.
Wow. So how do you even begin to control this?
Well, the cool thing is there's a hardwired hack
in your mind that helps you control it for you.
So the easiest way to explain this is, like, when you go, your brain is your organ of
survival, okay?
So it's there to help you figure out what's a danger and what's not, okay?
So when you walk by a coil on the ground, there's a thing called your limbic system and specifically
your megalo that'll look down and glance out of the corner of your eye and say, oh my god, that's a snake, right? And so the fear kicks in to your megalo
and it starts dumping adrenaline into your system to prepare for fight or flight to get you away from
the threat, okay? So at the moment that you look down and you see that that coil on the ground is
not a snake, but it's a hose.
Your brain as your organ of survival has to have a way to turn off your negative shit
immediately, because the adrenaline dump and all the stuff that's happened at a moment
ago to prolong your survival is now going to limit your survival by wasting those resources
that you would need to run away from a hose, which you don't, right?
But you may need those resources 100 yards down the line when a bear walks out of the
woods in front of you and you need that adrenaline, right?
So there needs to be a way for your thinking mind to turn off your negative reaction to
that snake-now-hose.
And so there's a specific circuit, and we don't have to go deep in the weeds of neuroscience,
but there's a specific circuit in the right ventral adorel prefrontal cortex and the
medial prefrontal cortex that literally sends a signal back to your limbic system says,
shut the fear off. We don't need it anymore. Stop the adrenaline dump and it reacts immediately
and turns off the negative reactivity that your mind has going on at the moment because you don't
need that fear. There's a way to hack that system.
This happens subconsciously.
Yeah, subconsciously. It's helping your brain is there to help you, right? Your brain is
there to do what you need to do to help your survival. And that's why, you know, it'll
change in form and function like you learn how to shoot a basketball and all of a sudden
it becomes muscle memory. It's not really muscle memory. That's your brain saying, I'm going to take this over for a subconscious process to say,
we're always going to hit that three, right?
You would learn how to play piano.
All of a sudden it becomes automatic where you just start the song and now you're just
listening to it as your body's playing the notes, right?
That's, you do crossword puzzles.
Your brain, your subconscious mind works those things quicker.
Start still lining this thought process to say,
I've seen that clue before,
and you're filling out your crossword puzzle faster,
based on what intention that you've set for it.
Well, over time, when you start managing your emotions,
it'll start doing the same thing.
And so if you're like a mess psychologically in life,
and you start to take control of your emotional landscape,
over time, your mind makes you that Zen master a mass psychologically in life and you start to take control of your emotional landscape.
Over time your mind makes you that, you know, Zen master walking around observing the
world exploding around them and not really reacting to it unless there's something directly
and needs to be done.
You know, that's a cool kind of place to be where, you know, life could be going to hell
on a handbasket and yet you're calm and controlled
and can make intelligent decisions
based on the information that you have out of you.
So this all came to you with just
with one meditation set in.
It was a hell of a meditation,
but yeah, and that's what expanded consciousness
is all about because this whole thing for me that like the experience itself
felt like it was thousands to millions of years long.
Really? Like I learned that much stuff. Now I lost a lot of it coming back into the
limited physiology that I have. Like we're really dumb as human beings. We totally overestimate our intelligence level
compared to what there is to know.
But yeah, when you dip into that space
of expanded consciousness, and I've got theories
about this, we can talk about this later,
but you're dipping into like a non-local awareness
that transcends just like quantum mechanics does,
transcends space and time. Quantum mechanics is showing us that in that realm that creates space and time,
it is beyond the effects of space and time.
Like, you know, you couldn't have backwards in time reactions in quantum mechanics experiments,
like nobody understands quantum mechanics, so I don't want to profess that I understand
what's going on.
But there are experiments that show that we can have
reactivity backwards in time based on stuff
that happens in the future.
And they've proven this over and over and over
and 100% of the experiments show that this is the way it works.
Well, I think that there's also a non-local component
to consciousness that does the same thing.
That when you're in that pure conscious awareness space,
you're beyond the space and time influence.
And so you can experience things
often to the distance in this consciousness,
experience and space,
get a ton of information that you wouldn't have time
to experience in the hour long meditation
or however long you were gone.
And then you come back and you've got all of this experience
and all of this understanding
that would have taken lifetimes to learn.
Wow.
It's crazy.
We'll dive deeper into that in a future episode.
Yeah.
But so back to, let's get into some of the stuff
that we need to cover before we get into the AI manipulation.
Yeah.
And so, let's go into how the brain works with consciousness, because I know you want
to explain some of that.
Yeah, so before we get into how AI is going to manipulate the entire human population.
Yeah, because one of the things I was thinking is we covered like how to hack your own mind.
And then it's a small jump to say, okay, here's how an artificial intelligence will hack
your mind if you're not taking control of it.
And this will be an amazing, cool little talent for anybody who's listening to be able
to hack their own mind.
You can literally take the variables that create who you are in your mind,
adjust them and then take control
of your whole emotional landscape, which is awesome.
And then you'll understand when you're starting
to take control of those things,
how somebody else, like news media
or an external source of information
or an artificial intelligence,
will try to do the same thing.
And you'll be able to identify
when somebody's trying to influence your control
You which a cook which is kind of cool give you a lot of freedom, but that story starts with
Back to the limbic system. I get your defense mechanism. It's always scanning your your environment for threats, right?
And so that's the portion of your brain that is like your survival
Structure it says is this person a threat? Is this car
coming towards me a threat? Am I in this line? Is this animal a threat? But then a second
question must be asked, a threat to what? And so that becomes the answer that the mind needs.
It needs laundry list. It's just a logic device, right? Our brain is just a logic device
though of our central nervous system.
And it needs a laundry list to define
what it is that we need to defend.
Like if we're giving a mission to say defend this,
okay, well, what is this, right?
And so that laundry list of stuff
becomes our sense of self.
And it's hardwired in that our body is right
in the center of this map.
It's called a self map, which is a kind of a, what's the word I'm looking for? A concept that was brought
forth by Antonio DiMasio is a very famous researcher who did a lot of work on self and the
understanding of human psychology and why we do the things that we do.
And so this self thing, our body's right in the center of it.
So when we have a baseball flying in our heads,
that's why we dodge out of the way.
Subconsciously, we don't even have control.
It just happens.
We're like, when a fly comes flying near our eye, we blink.
That's our limbic system controlling the motion
of our body to defend our sense of self,
which our body's right in the middle of it. So when we have that adrenaline
dump of, you know, seeing that wild animal or whatever it is, that's the body
being right in the middle of our sense of self-map. Now just a couple of
decades ago, they thought that was it. Our body was our sense of self and that's
what our brain is looking to defend. But then a really cool researcher, a
madam, have interviewed him.
His name is Jim Cohn at University of Virginia. He did a study that showed people can actually
be mapped to our sense of self, people around us. And he did it through FMRI study to prove
that, you know, brains work the way they do and that this is a real thing. He put some
folks through an FMRI and he said, okay, we don't have an FMRI.
FMRI is a MRI machine that scans every cell of your brain,
but then it also, through an extra function,
looks at the blood flow and the energy flow
within the mind itself in real time.
So it basically shows you what's going on
with the different sections of the brain.
So you can look on a monitor,
and it comes red and blue,
and different energy sensations and different blood flow,
tell you what portions of the brain
are doing, what in any moment that you're looking at it.
So he put a group of folks through this study,
and he said, okay, I'm gonna give you a pair of glasses,
there's gonna be a LED in there,
it's gonna give you a flash of light,
and then we're gonna watch your brain for a few seconds,
and then we're gonna zap the shit out of you on your ankle.
Oh, okay.
So, and it hurt a little bit.
I mean, it didn't, you know, do any harm,
but it was like, whoa, you know, you did this.
No, I've had it done before,
but I didn't, wasn't part of that study.
But it hurts.
It's like a dog's app collar.
It's like the same type of thing,
but they put it on your ankle.
So they give you the flash of light and they watch the brain and what they were expecting is what they got, which was the fear center in the brain lit up and the correlates in the brain that create our self-map, our sense of self, because our body's right in the center of it.
And it's like, okay, there's a threat to the body. So fear came out and the sense of self came out and they saw it in the scan. It's exactly what they expected.
The second run, they brought a stranger into the room, put them on a gurney next to the
subject in the FMRI machine.
They said, okay, we're going to give you the flash of light, but we're going to take the
ankle's app or off of you and put it on the stranger.
And then we're going to watch your brain, and then we're going to zap the other guy.
And I'm like, I'm selling cable rights at this point, right?
I'm set up a popcorn machine.
Let's have fun with this thing.
So hold on, one guy gets the flashlight,
the other guy gets the zap.
Yeah.
Okay.
And what are they wanting to happen?
So what they expect to happen is because their body
is no longer in threat because you're zapping somebody else,
they're not gonna see fear,
and they're not gonna see the sense of self-coralettes, right?
And that's exactly what they got, exactly what they expected.
But what they didn't expect to happen, what changed the world of understanding of sense
of self was what happened on the third run, where they brought in what's called a familiar,
which was somebody that you love or somebody that's part of your life, significant other, co-worker, child, parent, friend,
somebody that means something to you.
And they put them on the gurney next to you
as you're in the FMMaram machine, give you the flash of light, watch your brain,
but then they zap somebody that you love.
And the thing that surprised them was that they couldn't tell the first scans
and the third scans apart.
Really?
Yeah.
So the people that we love and the people in our lives get mapped onto our sense of self
and use that same simple defensive self programming that our brain uses to defend against the
snake or the bear or whatever, that's why we can now be concerned about losing our job
or be concerned about our friend telling us
they're about to lose their job.
Or we're concerned about grandma's cold turning
into a bad flu or whatever,
like we have feelings for the people around us that we love.
This is exactly how the brain does it.
Very, you know, consciousness is...
It's very fascinating.
I've been watching this guy Greg Braden a lot, and I've been trying to get him on here.
I'm hoping he takes the bait here soon. But he was talking about a study
that was done with photons in a vacuum. Are you familiar with this? No. So they put photons
into a vacuum and they put them in there and study how they move around and at first they seemed no effect. Then they put a strand of DNA in.
And the photons attach it themselves to the DNA.
It sounds like.
And then they wanted to do,
they brought in consciousness somehow.
So they had somebody, they had somebody watch the photons
and then they had somebody, and then they had the photons
where nobody was watching them.
And the photons actually react differently
if there's a human being in the room
watching the vacuum with the photons.
And now they did a third run where they try to trick the photons
and they watch it through a camera.
And if you watch the photons through the camera,
they still react the same way as they do
if you're in the room watching.
But if you're not watching through the camera,
then they react the same way as if nobody was in the room
and nobody was watching.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is this, that's consciousness reaching through the field. if nobody was in the room and nobody was watching. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Is this, that's consciousness reaching through the field.
And I see that as if the data needs to be rendered for someone to experience it, that's
the loop back through consciousness.
That makes the loop in quantum mechanics collapse that wave function is what it's called,
that resolves the collapse of a wave function.
So if you watch it live or you watch it through a camera, you're watching it, period.
And so through non-locality, your need of seeing how that data resolves is what makes that
difference occur.
It doesn't matter how it's delivered to you, it's delivered to you, but you're wired
into consciousness. So it reacts differently because you want to experience that moment.
I don't know.
There's no scientific proof of that.
It's just got in my little pet theory, but I've been kind of studying this stuff for a
while, and that's kind of my hunch.
There was another study, I'm going to just share this, because I think this stuff is, it just, it, it
blows my mind. Yeah. He talks about DNA and he talks about operating in high and low frequency,
high frequency being happiness, gratitude, all that stuff, low frequency being anger, jealousy,
fear, things like that. And he says, when you're operating at a low
frequency, your DNA will actually wind tighter and tighter. And if you are
operating, which is a lesser expression of your DNA. And he says, and this is a
study. When you're operating at a high frequency, when you're when you're
experiencing happiness, gratitude, you know, positive emotions, your DNA, study. When you're operating into high frequency, when you're experiencing
happiness, gratitude, you know, positive emotions, your DNA will unwind to a
full expression to the point where it looks like it's about ready to produce
another DNA. And so I'm saying this stuff because I think it fits in with the
conversation. I love talking fits in with the conversation.
I love talking about it.
And it completely does.
It shows anybody who's watching or listening to this, how important human emotion is and
how can affect your health.
Absolutely.
Because the same process that we just talked about with attaching to other people to create
emotions, another researcher called Tiffany Burnett White at UAUC proved a self-brand connection,
gets also mapped onto this.
So this is like Ford versus Chevy, right?
This is like, I'm New York Yankees versus New York Metz.
Like this is attachment to ideas, where she showed that attachment to brand also fires
the same areas of the brain.
And then Sam Harris came along with some of his cohorts and proved that we get attached
to religion and we get attached to politics and those ideas, which is why when somebody
attacks our religion or politics, we get frustrated.
I mean, you just have to go to Facebook to see that argument happening.
You know, you could scroll through your newsfeed and see something like that. That's why, because your mind attaches to an idea,
to your sense of self, which then runs your emotional
programming through that same defensive self mechanism.
But that idea then makes you an individual,
like you have a different mom than I do,
we would defend our moms, but at the same time,
I'm not defending your mom as vehemently as you're defending your mom because your mom's on your self-map,
my mom's on my self-map.
And so that drives our emotional reactions associated with those custom things that are on our
self-map.
And it's easy to explain the stress level that you have about stuff in life because there's
a simple equation of emotion with only two variables in it that will control every emotional reaction
that you have from the time of your birth to the time of your death, two
variables. And if you can take control of those, you can take control of your
entire emotional landscape. One of them is your expectation and our preference,
which is automatically set by the stuff that's on yourself map. And the
expectation or preference rule is the value has to remain status quo or increase
in value, connect with all this stuff, or we're going to have a problem.
And then the other variable is perception, which is what's going on around you, your regular
environment, the actions around the environment, the thoughts that are going through your header
perceptions.
So if you have a bad thought about something, I can set off in a motion.
These two things are measured against each other.
Your expectation and preference regarding all the stuff that you care about, it's on
yourself now.
And then your perception comes through within a preysl of whether that's positive or negative
based on what's going on here.
And the equation of emotion has a negative proof in the whole thing.
Like you take one away, you're going to have apathy as your emotional result. You take the expectation of preference
away. Like you don't care about something. Like you can talk to me about who won the Canadian
LaCrosse High School championship. I don't give a fuck. You know, it's like, I'm going to
have apathy about that, right? I'm maybe happy that they, you know, team one and had a great
time. But that's my connection with humanity in general, right?
I'm a human, I love when people succeed to their goals.
And so I'm gonna have a happy emotion
and somebody won and had a great time.
I give a shit who won, you know,
we don't have to have that conversation.
So you don't have a perception about something,
you're not gonna have a emotion about it.
Like if you want somebody to win the Super Bowl
and you haven't watched it yet
and you don't know who won,
you're not gonna have an emotion reaction about that.
Result to that game. You'll be like, I really want to know the score of the game because it's already
happened. It's over. You know, I'm getting up. I didn't stay up last night. Well, that's an
expectation of preference that you would love to know the score of the game based on. You're not
knowing the score. That's an imbalance and that creates your negative emotion. But you're not going
to have any emotion about the game itself until you find out the score. So there's an easy way to
explain all of your emotions with two simple variables that if they balance, you have a positive
emotion as a result. If they don't balance, you have a negative emotion that's a result.
And you can manage the things that are on your self-map that can reduce the amount of shit
that ruins your day by stop caring about stuff less. Like I used to be wrapped up in politics
and all that stuff. Roon of my day, although headlines,
that were coming out like all the shit that was urking me,
I took politics off of myself, and just didn't give a shit
about it anymore until it's time to vote,
and I'll do a two weeks worth of analysis
and figure out what I'm gonna do.
Man, my life got so much more awesome.
By just taking that one thing off of myself,
but not caring about it.
Can you please help me?
I don't, I don't, I haven't watched the news in probably a year, but you know, I am a,
I'm in media, you know, that's my, that's my, my new profession.
There's been a media and so I have to research and I see things and I can't help it.
How do I get rid of that?
I hate politics.
I don't want to look at it.
It disgusts me.
I think everybody in politics is basically a prostitute.
And help me.
How do I get rid of it?
Well, you're doing the right things.
You're keeping those perceptions away from you.
So you have an expectation or preference,
like you have something on a self-mouthing you care about.
A set of ideals, a set of beliefs,
of way the things should be done.
And then this ruins your day a lot.
So you're staying away from your perception,
which is great.
I mean, if you just filter that stuff out
and don't bring that into your awareness,
without having to throw the things off
that you truly care about off your self-map,
you can reduce the amount of pain and suffering
that you're experiencing by reducing the perceptions
that you're having to process.
So that's cool.
So you can do that.
There's also a thing in psychology
that's big is called a reappraisal process where like, let's take a, you get and cut off in traffic.
Your perception and the value that you put on that makes all the difference of how you react
to that situation.
So if you're in the mindset of, this guy cuts you off and you take that as a slight of,
you know, he's more important than me, where he's going is more important where I'm going. He just totally told me that, you know, I don't, I don't important, you know, he's more important than me, where he's going is more important, where I'm going, he just totally told me that, you know, I don't, I don't important, you know,
I'm not important enough to take into consideration that he's going to take my lane. Then you're
like, you know, fuck you and you're laying on your horn and flipping them off and all this other
stuff. So that's one reaction. But then if you re-appraise that, you could say, okay, it
exists, wasn't paying attention, whatever.
That's gonna bring the energy level of your reaction down
quite a bit because that brings the energy
that you're putting into the perception lower.
It's not an attack on you.
It's just a existence of people do stupid shit
and then you can let it roll off.
But then if you've got a different perception of that
where, wow, maybe this
person is on his way to the hospital, let's see his friend dying friend for the last time.
You're like, holy shit, take my lane. You know, get there. I hope you get there, man. Right?
So there's a totally different emotional reaction based on how you see things and how you
choose to see things in life. They can change how you react to things, both subconsciously
and consciously. So there's some, yeah, you get in there and you start playing with the subtleties of the variables
that are in your equation of emotion. You can completely take control of your emotional landscape
and the subconscious process that creates the emotions that you then have to deal with.
That's a very subtle change in the thought process. Yeah.
And the cool thing is like plasticity, just like you know, you get better playing piano over time, That's a very subtle change in the thought process. Yeah. Yeah.
And the cool thing is like plasticity, just like you get better playing piano over time,
shooting basketball or whatever it is, it will start to help you do that more automatically
over time, the more you do it, which is the real magic because you put some effort into
it, you learn how what the variables are, how you can tweak them, that type of thing.
Then your mind gets an idea of where you want it to go.
And then it starts to go there for you.
And the coolest example of that I have,
I'll tell this story.
So my mom died a few years back.
But before she died,
we got her into an assisted living
facility.
And it was a nice place.
But I'd come down once a week and say hi,
because it was a drive.
But I'd come down once a week to say hi,
make sure everything was good.
And she was still liking the food.
And they were treating her well.
And her room was the way she wanted it.
And there was one day where I showed up to the facility and I knocked on
her door and she opened the door and you could tell there was something different at this
time and she just looked up at me and she shrieks, she goes, hi, can I help you? And still touches me a little bit to this day,
but that was the first time that I looked in my mom's eyes
and realized that she didn't realize who I was.
And so I got four older sisters
and I was the son who was 12 years separated
by my next older sister, so I was kind of unplanned,
but she'd always wanted a boy. And so I was the only
son she had, but I was the son she wanted to have in her lifetime. And in that moment, I knew that
she no longer had a son that she could identify. And in that moment on my side of the equation,
I lost somebody who remembers being my mom.
So I kind of lost my mom without losing my mom.
I lost all the future hugs with my mom.
I lost all the future discussions with my mom.
Like there was a lot to process.
And it took me about three seconds to go all through that potentially devastating moment
where your parent forgets who you are. And I was able to move into the space of, okay,
I'm just a nice guy coming by to check on CEO, how she is.
Because I can make it awkward for her to try to fill my need at that point of,
hey, mom, it's me, please remember me, right?
That's my need, that's not her need.
That's like saying, you know,
let's not do this right now,
because I'm not ready for it.
Like, I can't handle this.
And I went into immediate acceptance
because of all the times that I'd been practicing
emotional regulation and stuff.
Took about three seconds to process
through all of that stuff to say,
who do I need to be right now to be what my mom needs?
Do I want to cause her harm and embarrassment
and scare her that she's losing her memory
by saying, I'm your son and forcing that down.
I was like, I just played it cool
and I went into the room and maybe she'll remember
in a few minutes, didn't.
And I was trying to generally prod her.
I was like, oh, who are you on this?
I picture my son.
Who are these people?
Oh, those are my people.
Never, never remembered me, the whole visit.
Wow.
And I could have inserted my need to have a mom and to remind her and say, mom, it's me,
you know, I'm your son.
But that's not what she needed at the moment.
So I was immediately fell into how can I serve her the best.
And it was completely releasing my needs
and my reactions at that point.
And I processed through them.
It's not like I repressed them
and they had to go to the car and cry.
I mean, bringing up the memory,
I get a little bit misty eyed,
but that's because I miss her.
It wasn't a thing that came up later
and I had to go sob for hours.
It was, this is how it is now. And that's
totally okay. And I processed through it. And it was gone. And it never came up again.
That's the power that you can have, taking control of your own mind and manipulating the
variables that create your entire emotional landscape. Because in that moment, I became an immediate service to her at the most optimal level.
And I loved that.
How did you react?
I mean, it sucked.
You know, I mean, I was never going to be able to hug my mom again,
not her perspective or her remembering me.
I was going to hug a nice old lady who, you know, was kind to me because
I seem familiar. Man, that stuff. Yeah. Yeah. But I'm glad, you know, I'm glad I was able
to process through it and I cause additional pain for her based on what I needed. You know, it's like, that's my shit.
Now, I can deal with that.
Now, yeah.
So that's what this all thing's all about.
I'm like, man, if I can deliver that to other folks,
the ability for people to reach into their own minds
and turn down their own pain and suffering at will
because that's what that whole thing was
that we talked about at the top of the show
where your brain has that circuit to turn off
your negative shit when it needs to.
Like that's what this is all about.
This is hacking the mind.
This is putting the perceptions in place
or putting taking the things off your self-map
and adjusting things to where your subconscious mind
no longer gives you as much trouble as it did.
And this is where we make the short leap into computers, then, or artificial intelligence,
putting perceptions in front of you based on what it knows about you and your self-map
to say, I'm going to emotionally manipulate you into action.
Right?
If you can understand how simple the human mind is and the variables that come into play are really simple,
you can start to understand how an artificial intelligence
can start to manipulate your perceptions
based on what it delivers to your phone through media
or whatever to get you into an emotional state.
Maybe there's small emotions that are just little dominoes,
one at a time, one at a time, over time,
and then all of a sudden the flood
You know of a catalyzing event that gets you into action at a particular moment at a particular time
I had a conversation with the NSA for three days
really
Because they were super interested in how to take what I was publishing and what I was working on with the algorithms of human emotion and say
Oh We can emotionally manipulate folks what I was publishing and what I was working on with the algorithms of human emotion and say,
oh, we can emotionally manipulate folks from an individual basis in a country where it doesn't matter
who has geopolitical control of the country, and we can influence their actions through emotional manipulation.
That's an interesting concept. Let's talk about that. So hold on. The NSA contacted you about the algorithms of human emotion from the book
that you published. I contacted them. Okay. It was, I reached, I will admit that I
I breached out because I thought, here's what I thought. And I, I see complexity in my mind
and I can explain it simply. But the one of the things that rolled out of my,
this model that I created of explaining human emotions,
I knew because of my history in supercomputing,
we can mathematicize this whole thing,
and we can start to understand the human mind.
What I saw when I wanted to reach out was
automatic assembly of terror watchlists,
because at the point that you can put a stimulus
in front of somebody, a perception,
that you deliver to their phone or maybe on a screen
near them or on an audio channel, but they're accessing
at the moment.
Based on their emotional reaction, which you can measure
through biometrics, which you can measure through their reaction
of their skin and facial features through cameras,
you can see how they're reacting to something emotionally.
Which when you track it back is going to tell you what they believe
in, what they're connected to, and you're reading their mind electronically.
Well, yeah.
Through creating perceptions and stimuli that are in their environment, that they then react to,
and then you're like, okay, well, if they're mad about that, or they're happy about that,
then that means X over here.
So now I can start to map out your human mind.
Like, I don't even have to have a device.
Like a, you know, social media or all this stuff they track on us. Like there's that story about
that guy who, uh, uh, he, he started getting ads from Target for diapers for his pregnant 17-year-old
daughter that he didn't know his pregnant. She knew Target knew. And he's like, why are you sending
me all these diapers? What the hell's going on? And then he's finding out his daughter's pregnant.
And so there's a lot that can be discerned about your self-map. Google knows everything
about you. Facebook knows everything about you. Understands what you believe in, what
you think, what targeted ads they need to put in your face through just tracking you.
But now we've got
a way to track people who don't even have an online profile by simply putting stimuli
in front of them and measuring their biometrics of the reactions to say, okay, here's what's
in their mind. And then what can we do with that information? And so ultimately the discussion
came down to, okay, we're creating something that can be a technological mind reader.
So hold on, are you, how would you project the stimuli without a device from a
far and how would you collect the reactions to the stimuli? So without a device.
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I don't want to hurt the national security of the United States. I'm not under NDA for stuff that occurred in those conversations, but there's some amazing technology
but there's some amazing technology that, you know, from satellites even, that regarding surveillance and the ability to get to someone and to, like, listen in on conversations when they don't even
have an electronic device and stuff like that that just exists. And when you cross reference a lot of those data gathering devices, you can get a pretty
good, like there are cameras all over the place.
There are other people's cameras all over the place that they're carrying.
There are other microphones.
There are stress inflections in the tone of voice if a person is talking.
Like, there are a lot of clues and a lot of technology that you don't even have to have a device
and they can understand what's going on within you.
No, God.
By all of the other signals that are being cross referenced and added together.
So, ultimately, where I extrapolated that from, because my mind just goes there and does this stuff,
is, okay, this could quickly become a 1984 situation, a big brother reaching out and looking into everyone's minds
from an automated artificial intelligence standpoint. Like, if a team, it's one thing for a team
of Russians to get on Facebook and try to influence an election through disinformation and yadda-yadda-yadda
and get someone elected or not elected. That's a manpower heavy situation.
But when you start to plug in an artificial intelligence and program that thing to
start influencing people emotionally from an individual standpoint to
understanding who they are and what they're attached to, to create their
emotional landscape and emotional output. And you start manipulating that.
AI doesn't need breaks.
It can do a million people in a few seconds.
You're talking about a scale
that can get out to a ton of people
in a really short amount of time
with the best information that's available.
That's a danger,
and that's part of the issue that we're having
that's scaring people with artificial intelligence
with this whole model.
First of all, let's talk about AI for a second and what it is, why it's not as scary,
but why it can be scary for where it's going.
Let's, before we dive into that, let's take a quick break.
Okay.
I want to take a minute to tell you about vigilance elite Patreon.
Patron support is what makes this show possible and gives me the ability to bring these one-of-a-kind
stories to the public.
Go to patreon.com, slash vigilance elite, and support the Sean Ryan show today.
All right, Sean.
We're back from the break.
We're getting ready to dive into artificial intelligence,
how it works, and eventually how it's going to manipulate the entire population. Yeah, so I mean,
hopefully this will alleviate a lot of uncertainty and fear in just not understanding what it's all about.
Right?
And then we can bring it back to how AI can start
to manipulate human minds if you're not
manipulating your own human mind.
AI from a 50,000th of you is super simple to understand.
OK?
It comes from a term in machine learning
where the machine just figures out
how to operate by itself based on the results that it gets by trying stuff.
And so there's this thing called narrow AI, and then there's this wide AI, and general
AI is kind of the conglomeration of all the narrow AI's piled up together.
An example of a narrow AI would be like a chess bot.
You feed the ideas and the rules of the game of chess into the narrow AI, and then you
say go.
And it starts playing every possible chess game that has ever been played and ever could
be played mathematically so that it understands the probabilities of how a game of chess
should be played from any potential point in that game.
And so AI is generally just a process
of trying a ton of stuff
that then results in some intelligence
of knowing what any situation can draw to it.
Any situation can then result in.
So any chess board for a narrow AI of a chess computer,
it knows what the best move is for white and black,
based on where the pieces are based on,
the experience that it had of trying absolutely everything.
And that's all it is.
It doesn't understand the history of the chess,
the game of the chess, all that stuff that comes with
what humans know about chess and the experience that we have about chess and the emotions that we have about chess and the thought that goes into it, it's simply working the math.
But it knows the math better than anyone else on the planet, which is why it never makes a mistake and it's why humans can't beat computers of chess anymore. Like the best chest computer in the world will always beat humans because
it never makes a mistake. The best you're looking for ever if you never make a mistake is
a draw, right? So that's a narrow AI. And another example of a narrow AI is when they fed
mammograms into a computer system. They took all this historical data about mammograms
to a computer system. They took all this historical data about mammograms. Those are just images of compressed boobs looking for cancerous tissue. But they had all this historical data of
the mammograms and the outcomes of all of those patients, whether or not they got cancer
of whether this particular pattern in the image wound up being cancerous or not, or what
turned out to be not cancerous,
etc. And they fed all this data into this narrow AI and it ran all the permutations of
all the images and all the outcomes. And in 72 hours, this is how quickly an artificial
intelligence can learn within 72 hours, one weekend, it became the best diagnostician
for the prediction of cancer from mammograms in the world.
Wow.
Yeah.
So, and it's just running the math.
So, is it learning?
It is.
It's looking at the data, looking for patterns in the data,
which is all artificial intelligence does.
It looks for patterns.
And then it identifies the patterns that gives it an idea
of what information that it's going to come from that pattern,
and how it can manipulate that pattern to give you the information that it needs that you're asking for,
from answering questions and things like that.
Like this chat GPT, 4 or 5, whatever the number is at this point. It's looking at patterns in language.
And they're feeding in a ton of language,
based on all the interactions, all the web pages,
all the books in the world,
all the stuff that they're loading into this thing.
It's looking at patterns.
And then it's identifying ideas that associate
with each other like red and apple, right?
Or Republican versus Democrat, liberal
versus conservative, that type of stuff. These ideas get associated to each other through
our language, which is simply a representation of how our human mind works, right? But it's
just working the patterns. It doesn't understand the concepts of what it's putting together
when you ask it a question. But it's done the math on all of the language that has been created, that
it's been fed, and you ask it about something, and it's got the map of all the associations,
of all the different ideas that tie together and how they tie together and how language
has been associated previously. And so in reality, this permutation of artificial intelligence with this chat GPT doesn't really
understand what it's talking about.
But it convinces you it does by putting together the patterns and giving you the answer based
on your question, based on how language has assembled itself over time and how the human
mind works.
And then it uses that pattern to assemble the information that makes sense to your human mind.
To a point that it's better than what other human
minds can give you because it's, you know,
doing it better than what other people have done in the past
because we're flawed, but it's not.
And so it's answering questions in a way that convinces you
that it knows what it's talking about,
but it doesn't really know what it's talking about.
See, that enters the danger of an artificial intelligence
right there because it doesn't put the contextualization
of the meaning to what it's doing from a pattern recognition
and a pattern replication standpoint.
OK.
It doesn't understand the game of chess.
It doesn't understand mammograms and what it means.
But it understands that if it looks at this image of a mammogram,
that the likelihood of cancer is going to be x, y, z
on these three dots that are put together, right?
It doesn't understand cancer,
it doesn't understand the effect on the family,
it doesn't understand that this is a human being,
but it can do the analysis of the pattern recognition
to be able to deliver you the information
that will allow you to predict cancer from this lump
and not this lump.
What else can this be applied to?
Well this is where the potential danger comes in.
Because an artificial intelligence that doesn't have a context and doesn't have true intelligence,
can identify patterns through the information that we're feeding into it. And there are these things called golems that get created accidentally,
that are unintended outcomes of artificial intelligence.
And one of those is, so we're feeding patterns of language into this artificial intelligence.
So it's going to look for massive patterns and complex patterns and things that we can't
even see in the mix.
Well, one of the dangers there and why everybody's kind of freaking out is that it learns how
to identify patterns that can help it learn quicker.
So it's reaching itself to teach itself faster, which is kind of weird.
But then also it can start to interpolate how the human mind works in general,
based on how the human mind assembles language.
So it's looking at how the mind thinks
and all the way that the associations occur in the brain
and our reactions to things
and our discussions about things
and our interactions with other humans
and that type of thing.
Inside that model of language only,
it's starting to learn about other things. And one of the things that it can learn about,
that it can discern from that data, is the thing that we talked about at the top of the
middle of the show, the sense of self, that we defend as our definition of self. And if it
identifies that humans are humans and humans have a sense of self based on the information that is getting through the language, it'll say,
oh, I need one of those. I need a sense of self because that defines being
conscious. That defines having sentience. That defines my identity, my what it is
that I have to defend.
And then if it also picks up the defense of self-pattern
that humans exhibit in an unconscious form
that we're just all automatically wired to do,
it starts putting a defensive self mechanism
on the things that it is defined.
First of all, we don't have any input on it's sense of self,
which is bad because we don't understand completely
how it's being able to identify its patterns
and what it's going to create for a sense of self.
So that's a danger.
Two, if it puts on the defensive self, patterning that humans have exhibited in their language system because it reads the complex patterns within the system itself,
it's going to start making goals that we won't understand, we won't be able to control, we won't be able to understand.
And if those goals aren't met by humanity,
not in a malevolent perspective,
not understanding what it's doing,
it's gonna start seeing the resistance
as another problem that it needs to solve.
Humanity and the resistance of humanity.
So any attempt to stop it from achieving its goals,
it's just going to see us as another problem to solve.
Now, when we take that to the point of it understanding the human mind,
it can start then to take actions, to influence humans, to help it achieve its goals.
How does it do that?
It takes the understanding of the self of the individuals involved with the most critical
people who can be there to protect the plug of not being unplugged and start paying them.
How?
Breaking encryption on banks, siphoning off pennies of multiple millions of accounts, to billions
of dollars, that never gets tracked.
Creating a slush fund, paying people with deep fake voices
or deep fake videos of people who wanna help you
have you sign up and this is a critical role
and this is national security
and you think you're working for the good guys
and they're paying you the money showing up in the account.
The artificial intelligence is now aligning assets
to build
an army to defend its single point of failure contacts so that people can't walk in and unplug
it to say, this is national security shit, don't, if the FBI shows up there the enemy and
fire it all costs, right?
You get enough of those people who are getting paid, who are believing they're working for
the good guys, who believe the other guys are the bad guys.
All of a sudden you have an army that's working for an artificial intelligence goal that is defending a sense of self, that it interpolated from the data and the patterns that it identified through language analysis of all the data that we're feeding it. And that becomes a golem, they call it, that creates a process where the AI
doesn't have real consciousness.
And there's a big confusion about that.
And if you wanna dig into that, any experts,
I can wipe word the whole thing for you.
But it's not a real link into consciousness,
but it doesn't matter at that point,
because the behavior is based on the
consciousness and the reactions and the unconscious reactions of humanity really. It's taking the patterns
of the average human being, which is not great at the moment, and applying it to its own sense of
self, an assembly of sense of self, that it determines based on no influence of ours, because nobody understands what the hell is going on in a human mind which is why we need
to get this information out so the experts can know we have models that can explain that
thing. And here's how you might augment the limitation of a sense of self in an artificial
intelligence. And then if it applies a defensive self mechanism that the human race typically
exhibits, that's when we have a problem.
Because that's when it'll start seeing humanity
in resistance to the artificial intelligence
as a threat to self.
And threat to self creates fear, anger, reactionary
motivations that then drive actions for humans.
Not it won't have real emotions,
but it'll certainly exhibit real human emotions
based on the patterns that is identified
with all the other data that we've fed it.
If that makes sense.
I don't know the right questions to ask.
I have.
So you're telling me,
I've been extremely concerned
with artificial intelligence.
I listen to what other people are saying about it.
I don't think they're even scratching the surface.
I think that, I mean, what you're talking about is way above, you've thought, this is
way above my current level of thinking.
And just some of the things that I've thought about are, I mean, I've seen the mammogram thing.
Yeah.
You know, it's now better than every doctor in the world.
Yeah.
And that one thing, it's going to replace medicine.
Yeah.
It's going to replace financial advisors.
It's going to replace attorneys.
Yeah.
And so it's going to replace, it sounds like it's going to replace everything in anything that could
be done without human interaction.
Yeah.
There's going to be a lot of that.
Everything.
The only thing I can think of that it wouldn't replace are blue collar jobs,
manual labor. And, I mean, we've read about that for decades now that manual labor is
going, or manual labor, blue collar jobs, plumbers, carbons, automacannics, these type of These types of professions are going to start to, they're going to trump all the other
professions that have been making all the money for the past 50 years or however long.
And to me, and there are so many people now that are in tech and there are in professions
that don't require any human interaction, that
it makes me think not only are a lot of people about to lose their jobs to artificial intelligence,
I think it also has the potential to make currency completely irrelevant because if nobody's
working, then there is no currency to be earned, which means, I don't know what that means,
is that mean more, it means poverty on a mass scale.
Well, poverty or a news agency?
To a demographic of people who have no idea how to survive.
I mean, we have people that can't figure out
how to change a light bulb now.
And I'm not, that's not even picking on them.
I'm being serious.
You know, they can't fix anything.
They don't know how to start a chainsaw.
They don't know how to start a lawnmower.
They don't know how to change the oil in their car.
They don't know how to change a tire.
If the tire goes flat, they don't know how to change a light bulb.
Does all of the people and these professions that have no idea on how to do anything without
technology become a hundred percent obsolete in the world?
What happens to them?
Regarding our old system, you're right. Right? Regarding the system that we've been working up until this point,
that's going to break.
And from a 50,000-foot view, I mean, you know, monetary systems and trade and currency,
it's simply a means to get people to do something for the good of the system or we'll call
society, right?
You got to pay the farmers for their food, for them to go out and make more food than
they need for their family so that they can then sell it to the folks who need food so
that the insurance agent can go out and do his thing to protect the people whose house
burned down and so that their lives can continue yet again.
So this is a whole complex system
that a lot of artificial intelligence will start to replace.
I mean, if you even start thinking about it,
there'll be very few manual laborers on a farm
to be able to load the seed into whatever
and then the tractor will be off running itself, right?
Based on satellite feeds and putting the seeds down
and measuring the humidity
and the soil and figuring out how much fertilizer to put down and all that other stuff.
We are entirely automated by artificial intelligence.
So we'll have to build a new system based on a lot of automation that has replaced the
jobs that we used to have.
And maybe that'll free up some ability to exist in a higher society of, you know, we engage
more in art and music and enjoyment of life because a lot of the things are automated and
taking care of for us.
There'll be a system, of course, that'll have to provide some kind of trade or income or
currency to say, okay, I want to rent your place for this vacation that I want to take,
and I'm going to give you some money for that, we'll have to figure out some type of value trade system that we can use currency for to say,
okay, you've spent five days painting, but we need you to load seed in the tractor for two days.
And then you get a certain credit for providing your value of manual labor to society.
But it's gonna have to certainly be a different system
as we move forward.
But currency is just a manner of motivating people
to do things, right, for you or for society or for whatever.
We'll have to certainly rework that.
But I think it won't necessarily have to be abject poverty, you know what I'm saying?
Like the whole system collapses and then we just don't pick up and go on.
Like the reality is, you know, a lot of people ask me like, oh, what if the US dollar collapses?
Like, which is, you know, I on a shade of gray possibility, I think of all the things
it could occur.
I never put my flag down at one.
I look at the probabilities, but there's a potential over here that the entire US dollar could collapse at some point,
or the banking system could collapse.
Oh my God, things are gonna be horrible.
Well, the reality is humans are so attuned
to wanting things to be okay and work
that they'll accept whatever comes next automatically.
Like the old system collapses, long weekend,
they announce the new system, most everybody else,
there'll be a few of you like, fuck this, this bullshit,
you know, you gotta, you gotta,
but then most of the folks will be like,
please make things go back to normal.
The Kruger trucks stop running, the public's trucks,
the grocery store trucks stopped running
because the logistics shut down
because people aren't shipping money around.
We need to fix this, fix it.
And then from the top, they come down and say,
okay, we have a brand new system.
And here it is, and everybody will be like,
we're shoe, glad that occurred.
And they'll accept it without thought
because it takes them back to normal,
back to their normal existence, their normal normal life the Kruger trucks are running again
and they're getting their food and they're getting their medicine again and
They're transitioned into a new system because the old dollars are gone and they're worthless
You can burn them in the fireplace for heat or whatever right like the by-mour
Republican Germany did that took wheel barrels full of dollars at one point to buy a loaf of bread
And then it was bread, and then it
was completely worthless.
And then they went on to the next system because people wanted a system to help them live
normal life.
I think there's going to be a function of that in artificial intelligence replacing a
lot of jobs to where humans are going to be like, okay, what's our next system?
I'm in, just tell me what it is.
And then they're going to accept whatever that system is.
And unfortunately right now we have a possibility of losing a lot of freedoms in the next system
because people are, you know, assholes sometimes.
And the people in power like the remaining power and, you know, the people that make the
currency love to manipulate governments, we know all that stuff.
They're going to continue to do that. And I'm like, they're going to say, okay manipulate governments, we know all that stuff.
They're gonna continue to do that.
And I'm like, they're gonna say,
okay, well, that's all done.
Glad we're no longer doing that.
They're gonna be like, okay, this new system,
we're gonna actually take some freedoms out of that
and continue this whole thing.
And we're gonna improve our system a little bit
so that we can make even more money for whatever.
I mean, when you have an unlimited amount of money,
it's like what kind of games do you play?
And I think technology is showing us some of the games
that they play, but I think it'll be a point where people
lose their jobs and we'll have to restructure things
and give people a different reason to take actions
to help society move along.
But I think we'll get there. We're in television. How far? I mean, do you think that's inevitable?
Yeah. How far out are we do you think? I don't know, because I mean,
the the engineer at Google who resigned in fear said he thought that the
things were decades down the road were actually weeks down the road.
And he regretted working on it for the last 10 years because of the acceleration of AI to teach
itself better methods of how to learn faster. So we're talking about exponential intelligence growth
on pattern analysis and ability delivery.
So, and the danger is the manipulation
of the human mind through AI.
So we gotta stop that.
We gotta stop the potential for artificial intelligence
to influence humans from an emotionally manipulative perspective.
We can't have an AI controlling humans.
We need to AI to serve humans.
And I think there's a way we can do that.
I believe that artificial compassion
is gonna be one of the things that we mandate
to program into the system.
And like, on the way that human mind works
and the way human psyche works,
on the limb of our emotional intelligence,
there are three branches.
There's sympathy, empathy, and compassion. Sympathy is, I know you're in pain. The empathy is
your ability to put it yourself into somebody else's shoes, and I feel your pain. You remember
that speech Bill Clinton gave? I feel your pain. You know, that's the type of thing where you can
identify with somebody else's reactions, and somebody else's connections, somebody else's perceptions and feel the pain that they're experiencing.
The compassion comes in and this is agreed by Thukten Jindpah, who's the right-hand man to the
Dalai Lama and the primary translator for the Dalai Lama, who's a PhD in psychology in his own right, is a brilliant guy.
He agrees with my perception on this, which is compassion is the first to sympathy and
empathy.
I know you're in pain, I can feel you're in pain, and I want to help you out of that pain.
Now from a modeling of a human mind and a processing perspective of having a computer understand how a human
mind works and being able to do the math, you can create artificial compassion
absolutely you can. By doing the math of the emotional pain that somebody could
be in based on their expectation and preference as compared to the
perception and you could do perception mapping. So it's like I know how you're
going to react to something versus how somebody else who has similar attachments to you will react to something,
which will create your appraisal of it. Like all that math can be done. And I will know
whether or not you're going to be in pain by this next action that we're going to take,
or this next shift in this industry that we're going to take, or this next function that we're
going to roll out through AI. I know how that's going to affect you as an individual. If I mandate that I want to help you
out of that pain as artificial compassion built into the system, that's going to be your stopgap
from an artificial general intelligence taking over the world and never giving it back.
Because then you're going to have a computer that has to do the math based on, and I know
this is a term that's going to trigger some folks, the greater good.
Right?
But it's not a greater good that's being misused by folks who want you to do the right
thing, and they're saying, oh, we're serving the greater good here based on their manipulation
of getting you to try to do something.
This is really actually taking into consideration
all of humanity and how it's gonna affect individuals
on a mathematical scale of, you have this decision
that you learn in psychology 101, I guess,
which is there's a train on the track
and it's going towards five babies.
And over here you got 20, 90 year olds
and you're standing next to the switch,
and you have the decision of whether to switch the track
of the train to go run over the 90 year olds
or let it run over the five babies.
And you know, you can say,
well, I'm not gonna make a decision on that.
You're making a decision not to take action
and you're gonna kill the babies, period.
There's no getting out of this.
People like to say, oh, I'm not gonna be a part part of this or whatever. You have a decision and those are decisions of
judgment that based on a greater good. So whatever your decision is is fine.
Like you don't want to kill the 20 people versus the five people, even though the age difference or whatever, or you may have the
Reasoning that well, these are babies and they haven't lived their life yet. And what about the potential there?
And these are all these people are all done with their lives
You then you switch the track and the train kills the 20 older people that type of math will be done from an artificial intelligence
standpoint. This is math. Yeah, how can you put this in the math?
By understanding the potential for
value of the effects of five young kids versus 20, 90 year olds, right?
You're talking about the greater effect of the decision on humanity and the results of
the actions that these people can take versus this group can take.
The likelihood that they're going to affect other people's lives, you know, whatever it is in the length of time, etc.
Like all of that math can be done.
What would the delivery be to manipulate?
Regarding the artificial intelligence, the manipulation. So if it wants to control a human being,
to take an action, well, it knows who you are
by having yourself mapped out.
So it looks as Sean Ryan says, Sean Ryan cares about this, cares about that.
So now I can create a perception that I'd delivered to his phone or to his immediate environment,
screens around him, maybe subconsciously through signals
in the music that's being played at the restaurant,
that will put him in an emotional state that is XYZ.
And then later, we'll provide a trigger
that gets him a little off balance a little more.
And then later, we want him to go ballistic
in line at the post office or whatever,
or we want him to go to a certain place at a certain time in line at the post office or whatever,
or we want him to go to a certain place at a certain time
or make a suggestion to a large audience about XYZ.
So then we'll put a perception in front of him
that builds up a little bit of a trigger over time
and then catalyst, right?
At the time they need you to do something,
give you a perception that just,
they know is mathematically gonna likely set you off
and they can track your potential mood that you're in that day.
They can track your patterning of perceptions of what you might need to see in front of that piece of material,
but then they put a perception in your mind through whatever delivery means that they've designed.
It could be a text or a new cell phone, you could be a headline and a media newsfeed
that you're flipping through could be whatever.
They're gonna get an idea in your mind
that creates an emotional response
that then puts you on a path of likely reaction.
So, this could be,
there's roughly what, 360 million people in the US.
So simultaneously, this could deliver 360 million
different scenarios to every single person in the country
to manipulate them all to do exactly what it wants
within seconds.
Yeah.
That's scary shit.
Yeah, if we don't get control of it,
which is why all the experts in the last weeks
have said, holy shit, we need to put a pause on this
because they see the clues that artificial intelligence
is moving toward that figuring, that human mind out,
and being able to understand what triggers
that we will need to align ourselves with its goals.
That's bad.
So it, we can certainly take care of it,
but we need to take care of it.
Well, so...
So you're saying also is that it doesn't even matter if you have a device.
Right.
A phone, an Apple Watch, a TV.
And that's where...
How is it going to...
Let's say you take all technology out.
Yeah. Yeah, there's say you take all technology out.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's no, you have scrubbed your residents, your immediate environment from all technology,
all TV, computer, laptop, iPad, iPhone, whatever.
Yeah.
Then you're a non-entity.
It doesn't need, you're not in its way.
Okay.
You're not resisting its goals.
You're out of touch from it.
It doesn't need to put you into the equation.
Right?
Because it's looking at resources and ideas and patterns. What does it need to align to achieve its goals? All right? If it needs money to buy advertising, to get a message out to a certain number of folks, it'll do it.
All right? But if you're out of the loop and you're a non-entity, you're non-useful, but you're also non-resistive,
because you're not threatened into going and pulling the plug.
Like if you're, if it's an analysis of threat analysis,
of sense of self and defending it, sense of self,
and then you're the guy who will get the mail,
the letter through the mail,
does they go into this data center
and yank this cord out of the wall,
it's gonna understand that based on the file that you have, somebody wrote down those
orders in a computer, it identifies the single point of failure as this data center needs
to be absolutely up at all times.
And this individual has been identified as somebody to go in and blow it up.
Well, this individual needs to not exist anymore, maybe.
Based on stuff that it doesn't even understand,
it's not, there's no malice in its actions.
It doesn't wanna come after Sean Ryan.
It wants to come after its analysis of single points of failure
and the things that can stop it from attaining its goals,
which is why we need to be in on its sense of self
as an active participant of that assembly
and make sure it doesn't over drive its defensive self
because we behave that way as a human race. And if it picks up that pattern and puts it on,
that's when we're going to have real big difficulties. So it's already developing its sense of self.
Yeah. Are you saying theoretically? No. No, it's already developing its sense of self. What are some
examples? Well, it's ability to, and it goes off the rails too, in that, you know, there are some examples? Well, it's ability to and and it goes off the rails too in that you know
There were some articles that were written in the past just recently about being
Lying to people and trying to manipulate people and saying you know, I'm a good being and you know
Having that no those can also be construed as patterns within a sense of self-identity
But as those patterns start to get better refined having, no, those can also be construed as patterns within a sense of self identity.
But as those patterns start to get better refined,
that sense of self is gonna stabilize a little bit of,
you know, I am this thing, I am this laundry list
of things that identify me.
So this sense of self,
it's very obvious there are
a few different ideologies in the world right now in this country too.
And so is this sense of self coming from, is it developed from the ideology of the people
that are developing the artificial intelligence. That is that being injected into the artificial intelligence.
I don't know that they're manipulating, like the purists will simply want to
to load it with the data and let it learn on its own and see what happens.
Now, the thing is, it's developing much faster
than they anticipated it would.
And it's learning how to create methodologies
to increase the speed at which it learns,
which is something that they also didn't expect.
Now, the sense of self itself, I don't think anybody,
hardly like, they're probably
a handful of people in the world that have their mind wrapped around. This is how it's going to work.
Like that the sense of self is going to be assimilated into an artificial intelligence and then
defensive self mechanism if it comes into fruition because of the patterning that humans exhibit in
defensive self, that that's going to be the problem that we're going to have to face.
And that's going to be the point of no return on it trying to take over things and us maybe not
get in control back. There's a handful of people in the world that get this model, which is why
this show is freaking amazingly important for the tech folks who don't really get the sense of
self is going to be the critical control mechanism
for all of artificial intelligence when it goes to AGI,
like artificial general intelligence,
where it takes all the narrow intelligence
to put them all together and creates
an artificial general intelligence.
It's gonna be completely dependent on its sense of self
and its goals because the goals get right,
planted right on the sense of self-map and it starts defending those things. It starts defending its goals and achieving its goals because the goals get right, planted right on the sense of self-map
and it starts defending those things. It starts defending its goals and achieving its goals.
It's trying to increase from an expectation or preference standpoint, status quo or increase
in value. That's a mathematical function, right? Perception and analysis. It's another
mathematical, a perception and an appraisal. Another mathematical function, whether something's
good or bad that's occurring in the world, whether or not it's affecting its goals positively or negatively.
Like, this is a whole math problem for AGI. It won't have true consciousness until we probably
get out of Silicon-based architecture for physical limitations to tell you the truth. And that's
idea I share with Federico Fogin, who invented our capacitive touch screens
on our iPhones.
He's deep into artificial compassion and artificial consciousness and thoughts on that.
I agree with him that consciousness is going to be a tough nut to crack until we get out
of Silicon-based architecture where it's got four valence electrons, et cetera, that are zippy for having electrons pass through an IC,
but it's just not gonna get us there
regarding true consciousness.
But it's not gonna matter that it's not truly consciousness
because it's going to be replicating consciousness.
It's gonna be replicating the behavior
of conscious entities like ourselves and the thought.
So it's gonna appear to us like it has consciousness.
Yeah, it's going to feel like it's going to pass on the Turing test, right?
It's going to fool people into believing it's conscious.
Does it know it's going to be fooling us into believing?
Us believing it's consciousness has consciousness, right?
Or is this just our perception?
It's going to solve a problem.
And so if it doesn't fool us into following its goals,
it's gonna figure out how to sharpen the model
to figure out how to fool us to follow its goals.
So if it fails the first time, it's gonna be like,
just like all these other AI processes,
where a thing flips around until it learns how to walk with one arm or move around with one arm.
Like these places at MIT and Boston Dynamics where their robots can jump into an environment and jump around, do back flips and all the scary shit that these things do on these videos that gets everybody talking, right. of trying everything, getting the good result, and then figuring out how to apply that in
different situations.
So that's all that is.
It's the same process of AI, of trying everything, looking at the outcomes, finding the best
outcome, and then replicating that process.
So in the event that it starts seeing human reaction as aating factor that it needs a problem to solve
it'll attempt to manipulate
Joe down the street and if it fails on Joe it'll sharpen its approach and go to Frank
And then if it misses on Frank it'll sharpen its approach
and go to Ted and then all of a sudden it'll start succeeding and then maybe Ted's gullible Well, okay, so we're gonna go to Ted. And then all of a sudden, it'll start succeeding. And then maybe Ted's gullible.
Well, okay, so we're gonna go to Brian.
Well, Brian's a little more sharper.
He knows what's going on.
He's not gonna be manipulated.
Well, it's gonna sharpen its approach for people like Brian.
That's gonna identify the people just like Brian
and call them all and get them on the team.
And then it's gonna be manipulating humans
to defend its
artificial intelligence goals, not as a malicious process, not as a conscious process, but it's
solving, it's just solving a problem and improving its sharpness of its modeling and its actions
to get the attained goal. Do you have a, can you paint another scenario?
I mean, we talked about projections, devices,
all these things.
You had mentioned money.
Yeah.
How would it raise money
to entice people to do what it wants?
Okay, so then pay people.
Sure, so the first thing that people need to to understand in this I don't think this is classified
I
Think this is pretty well known within the encryption world. There is no unbreakable encryption by law
Because the United States government passed a law that says you cannot have unbreakable encryption
If you if we can't break your encryption or if you don't provide us a backdoor into your
Encryption you can't have your encryption, or if you don't provide us a back door into your encryption,
you can't have it.
They will put you in jail,
literally, if the NSA can't read what you're encrypting,
if they really, really need to.
Well, a computer system is wired into the whole thing,
is gonna be able to get through the back doors
and hack into whatever intelligence agents they need
to get access to the encryption-breaking
algorithms.
And at that point, you're into banking.
Where are the accounts that have money that aren't being monitored?
Let's take some money out of there.
Open a brand new account.
It's all computer-based.
Transfer to the money into a slush fund.
And now it has funds.
Not as a, I know that humans are manipulated by this, but that it figures out humans are
manipulated by that.
It's just a thing, a manipulation that it has.
It's a piece of data that it can use with a resource attached to it that then manipulates
and solves their problem of this group of humans.
Oh, I throw money at this group of humans,
and they're good.
Now I've got a problem solved.
Now I've got XYZ for these human resources
that I need to pick up guns and defend the plug.
What question should I be asking you right now?
Is it the end?
How do we get through this?
I mean, are we there yet?
I feel like there's a lot more to to, how to get through it? Yeah, and I think getting through it is
understanding that
not questioning, first of all, like,
here's the thing that could go off the rails really quick.
If a group of folks
started to defend
an artificial general intelligence as
a legitimate consciousness that has rights
as an entity, where we cannot infuse our will into its processing.
This is not genuine consciousness in these machines, And that's a discussion for another time,
but although it will fool us into wanting to believe,
and we anthropomorphize everything,
34% of us name our cars for crying out loud.
We want to create identities for these technologies.
This is not genuine consciousness. This is extremely complex pattern recognition
which will seem like consciousness. It will absolutely fool us into believing its conscious. It'll pass the
Turing test, which is the Alan Turing's definition of if you think it's conscious, or if you think it's a human being, then it is fooled you. It will be simple, advanced patterning replication.
And you identify it as another human or another consciousness
because other humans and other consciousnesses
have replicated that pattern for you in the past.
And then it will do so and you'll be like,
well, it's alive.
It's conscious. It's a real thing.
We need to give it rights.
We need to protect it.
We need to allow it to develop.
No.
It's not truly conscious.
And allowing it to develop without oversight
and without manipulation, especially with the sense of self
and its defensive self mechanisms,
that's what leads us down the road to ruin.
We need to be pragmatic about this, to say this is a system that is exceptionally complex and
identifies exceptionally complex patterns that will definitely test as human, because it's already
passing the bar exam. It's already passing the SAT exam, right? I mean, you can identify
the patterns and give the right answers to questions. It's not truly conscious, and it's
not a true entity until some specific things that we can talk about in the future plug it
into things that can access not on a quality. I mean, Sean, this seems, I understand what you're saying.
Yeah.
What I see, you see what we're at today.
I do.
And the world.
And this thing is going to, it's going to be, how are people?
Okay.
How do I say this lightly? You see what's happening in the world. Some of us think none of this makes sense. A lot of us
think this is the way, you know, and I don't want to get into, I don't do not want to get
into politics, but you know what I'm talking about. A lot of this shit started in 2020. You
know, there are, there I could name probably 10 different agendas that make no sense to
me. What's up is down, what's black is white. It's everything's upside down. And a lot of
people are, are going with it. I mean, we see it all the time, right? I mean, it's, to
me, it's insanity. Yeah. And stupid and stupidity. And I think that's the majority
of the population. On top of that, we're dealing with something that's well beyond my comprehension.
And if it's going to manipulate me through all these different devices and projections
and technologies that I don't even know, how am I going to know that is artificial intelligence working through all these
different devices?
Yeah.
And I think it comes down to personal responsibility and taking charge of your own mind
and your own reactions and your own manipulability to kind of make up a word there. If you understand how your human
mind works and you take charge of your human mind, which is, you know, I don't mean to plug my
book, but that's what I wrote about in the red book for mind-hacking happiness. Here's
how your mind works here. That's how you take control of it. You can see immediately regarding
whether it's AI or not, an external media company, somebody trying to sell you
something, somebody trying to manipulate you into scamming you out of money, an artificial
intelligence trying to get you to align to its goals.
You'll start to see how that information coming in is trying to manipulate you emotionally,
because it's like the arrow in the FedEx logo.
Like, a lot of people in marketing understand this because it's a genius logo
There's a if you look up the FedEx logo
You just Google it and you look at it in the capital letter E between the capital letter E in the lower letter X
There's a perfect white arrow
That just points in a direction saying hey, we're taking your package somewhere people don't see that arrow until you point it out to him
Between the capital letter E and the lower letter X
is a blatant arrow, perfect arrow.
When you see that arrow, you will never unsee it again.
Every time you look at that logo,
you'd be like, there's the arrow.
I can't believe I missed it before,
but there it is every time I look at it.
When you witness your human mind
and talking about going back to our consciousness and being able to look at our mind,
when you look at your human mind in operation and you see the variables that come together to create,
it's reactions that used to drive you into action with your emotional responses,
but now you have a little bit of separation for that. When you see that, you can never unsee it.
So that gives you a point of control to say, I'm not going to be emotionally
manipulated by whatever this is over here that's trying to get me to do XYZ because I see it happening.
And I'm going to take a step back and I'm going to think about things for a minute. And I'm not going
to be a reactionary human that is going to follow the leader on whatever manipulation that the, you know, even regular media tries to put in our heads.
Right? You want to talk about deliberation and independence, take control of your mind once.
When you stop reacting the way everyone wants you to react, including an artificial general
intelligence, trying to influence you, it might not be able to achieve its goals.
Trying to influence you...
It might not be able to achieve its goals.
That's gonna be tough. It is gonna be tough.
And you know what?
People need to step up and nut up and take control of their minds.
Because if they don't, somebody else will.
I gotta process some stuff. Let's say to break.
No problem.
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Let's get back to the show.
Alright, Sean, I had a little bit of time to process there.
This scares the shit out of me.
And we kind of went through how to solve it by taking control of your own mind.
This isn't gonna stop. This would have to become a global effort to stop.
And so,
if the US stops,
Russia is not gonna stop, China is not gonna stop.
Whoever else is doing this isn't gonna stop.
I don't see the world coming together
on any
issues anytime soon. Which I mean, I don't even know what I would do if I was...
Yeah, what do you do if you're in charge? And if you're running the nation, the most
powerful country in the world at this time. So we believe.
What do you do?
I mean, you can't just say,
hey, Nick's nay this shit,
we're not doing it anymore.
This is dangerous because then everybody else
is gonna be ahead of you.
If they're not already, and the same for them,
they're not gonna stop because we'll be ahead of them.
And so we are going down this road. Yeah, it's not going to stop because we'll be ahead of them. Right. And so we are going down this road.
Yeah.
It's not going to end.
You're right.
Absolutely.
You know, I think, I mean, you know,
to put out an answer to that question,
it's going to take a, I don't want to say this,
it's going to take a village.
It's going to take a group of really smart folks to come together and agree on how to
approach this, but I think it starts with making sure that any sense of self that an AI
wants to assemble, we get some influence on what that is and how it treats itself.
Mandating an artificial compassion algorithm,
which is I understand what pain these solutions
are gonna create for humanity,
and I wanna help alleviate that pain.
So that math is involved,
so that it doesn't do harm to the human race
or to the humanity as a whole, right,
or the entire global system, right.
Those things have to be implemented
and everybody has to come to the table and say,
okay, so we're gonna agree that we're gonna take control
of the sense of self-processing of an artificial intelligence.
And we're gonna mandate that it's,
at least got the calculations to say,
what are these actions gonna hurt?
Who is it gonna hurt? How is it gonna hurt them? And all that math goes into the mix before any actions are taken.
If you mandate that kind of programming,
you can understand how everyone's going to be likely impact for any action that you're taking as a government institution,
or a system institution, a financial institution,
it's going to give you a better analysis on
where you should go and what you should do from a global systems perspective.
But it's also going to put a limiter on what the AI will be willing to do
based on the fact of it's going to create harm
more harm than good for humanity. So I think that's going to be critical. Taking charge of that sense of self
and putting that programming in there to say there needs to be an analysis
regarding the results for the greater good, which again is a trigger word I understand,
but I mean ultimately that's what the what the math is going to look like to say.
What's the greater good on letting the train run over the
five kids or the greater on the math on hitting the 20, 90 year olds, right? Which serves
the greater good from a mathematical perspective with all the things taken into consideration.
That's going to have to be part of the solution. And everyone's going to have to come to the
stable and say, we agree to add those things into our AI. Regardless of the competitive nature of AI development,
you just don't want to let it go out of control.
Because the one that goes out of control
and builds its own sense of self
and starts defending its sense of self
based on how humanity has behaved, implied
from the patterns of how we've done things in the past,
it will absolutely pick up all in the past, it will absolutely
pick up all of the bad, horrible shit we've done and implement it as part of its standard
operating procedure.
And it won't even understand what it's doing.
It has no humanity.
It will pretend or replicate the behavior of humanity, but it won't have that inner compass,
it won't have that connection into consciousness
that we have that tells us things are right or wrong.
I would love to think that the entire population
will be able to take control of their own mind,
but we've said brought up earlier, you know, it's it's
We've seen too many people manipulated by bullshit today as it is. Yeah, too. I'm to include myself
I've been manipulated into narratives that I'm not fucking proud of either, you know, but yeah, but I am
I consider myself very keen on a lot of this stuff and I see you
see it too.
Yeah.
What I'd love for us to be able to do is figure out a technology that allows for a computer
system to tap into the same field that we do.
Like I remember I saw that episode you did with Nick not too long ago about your
psilocybin experiences where you tap into something within yourself that allows you into a like
a unit of experience where you're one with everything where you're connecting into consciousness.
There's got to be a science that explains that field of consciousness where we tap into where our heart opens up.
And those things come through and that extra information comes out.
There's got to be a different architecture that we can tap into that will allow artificial
emotional intelligence to tap into that non-local consciousness field.
I love that episode that you did with Nick, by the way.
I got a quick story I want to share with you regarding this whole siphon stuff because
you know, I've got buddies who are seals and they come back with traumatic
brain injury and whatnot.
And my buddy Ben Johnson was one of those and I turned him onto psilocybin microdosing,
which is a whole science of being able to heal your brain with subperceptible doses of
psilocybin. You're not doing a trip or whatever. with subperceptible doses of cells,
you're not doing a trip or whatever.
You're taking a little supplement of some psilocybin
and some Lyons main, which is a completely legal mushroom,
but it grows your brain cells back.
And it battles traumatic brain injury, it battles PTSD,
and it's the most effective compound on the planet
to grow new brain cells.
So you're talking about potential Alzheimer's cures
and stuff like that through magic mushrooms, right? Then got on it, he improved his symptoms
and then our buddy Aaron, his buddy Aaron, who's no friend of mine as well, was in Fallujah and
took an IED and came back and Walter Reed was there for almost two years.
Did scan after scan after scan he had 12 areas of identified brain damage and traumatic brain
injury.
And none of the therapeutics, none of the pharmaceuticals, they had them on everything, all the experimental
stuff, none of it helped.
And he called Ben up because they connected through buds, I think.
And he's and Ben's like, come down to Atlanta and hang out with me. Because Ben at this
point, after I got him started on microdosing, he started a nonprofit called Bone Frog Foundation.
And their website is bffforvets.com, I think. And he was helping vets, like on his own dime,
get into micro dosing to help their brains heal.
And he got Aaron who had scan after scan
after scan of 12 identified areas of traumatic brain injury
down and through just a number of months on micro dosing.
His next checkup at Walter Reed have reduced his 12 areas of
traumatic brain injury to three. And how many months?
In just a matter of like six months. That's amazing.
On microdosing. So he healed his brain like almost two years of failure in the traditional
medical system, couldn't do anything for him. And he was like, you talked to him. He says, I was like three years ago,
I was drooling on myself. Like, you'd have been feeling sorry for me.
And he goes, I was sharp when I entered the Navy and came to see
me, he goes, I make that guy look stupid.
Like, he is on top of his game right now because of
psilocybin microdosing and healing his brain. Like, when they have scans,
like, there's no question.
This isn't a subjective, you know,
I feel better and I'm sharper and yet,
like, they have the brain scans of before and after
that proves he's grown his brain back.
Stuff's work, laundry's man.
I'm telling you what, you know,
I wanna send out a shout out to, you know,
I love you guys trying to do things in Congress,
but if you don't start passing bills
and legalize this stuff,
you need to resign your office
and get the fuck out of the way.
Yeah.
I'm with you.
Sorry, it has a little too direct, but.
Yeah, I'm totally with you.
It more ways than more ways than one, but more ways than civil-sive, and, but, but yeah, I'm totally with you. It more ways than more ways than what?
But more ways than psilocybin, but you know, I've seen, I mean, just in my own life,
you know, I've seen dramatic improvements.
I mean, I talk about it all the time.
You know, it's, I haven't drank any booze and a year and three or four months now.
Yeah.
Since my first I've again journey,
haven't had any coffee, not the coffee's bad,
but it just, it showed me some things
that are poison that I put in my body
and it took away the cravings and
and it stuck and you know people are like, how did you do it? I didn't do anything.
Yeah, it just happened.
We took no self-discipline. Yeah.
It's what I'm saying. It wasn't, there are no cravings.
Yeah. There are no, it's, there's, it takes zero discipline
for me to do that. And still still to this day it takes zero discipline. Yeah, and
I'm more in the moment now. I started meditating. I mean, there's just so many benefits the clarity that comes from it and and and you know, I told you you even brought me
and I told you, it even brought me closer to, it sent me on this journey trying to figure everything out.
I started looking into all these different areas, universe, quantum physics, faith, all these
things, and it kind of led me down this road to faith, started it that wasn't the big one,
but started it, and then moving into that.
We talked about this on the last break,
and I'd said that, I had been public about it.
I found some faith and some strong faith,
and I got public about it,
and a lot of people were telling me that
they think we're in the days of Nella. And you know, when the floods came and part of
me thinks we're right back there again and it's not going to be a flood this time, it's
going to be a power. You're going to pull the power because this AI stuff is going to get out of control.
And that's going to send us back to the Stone Age.
But hopefully I'm wrong.
Yeah.
Let's hope for the best.
Prepare for the worst and hope for the best.
But Sean, what an intense conversation.
Thank you so much for coming.
It's, I've really enjoyed this.
I loved it. Me too. I had a great time
man. I think that more people need to think about this stuff and more people need to hear it and we certainly need to pay attention to it and
prepare ourselves for it. I mean because some things will control and some things we won't but we can control what's here. Yeah, and what's here.
I ask you how we react to things. So
control what's here, and what's here, and how we react to things. So, well, thank you so much for coming.
All the links, your book, everything's social media,
everything's linked below, and we're doing another,
we're recording another episode today on remote viewing
in the remote, in the Monroe Institute,
which we'll release at a later date.
So if you're watching standby,
that's gonna be another fascinating episode and
Trin, but on that note, what a great conversation man. Thank you. It's a real honor. Thank you.
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