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i'm a physician and read literally thousands of vaccine papers most are not properly controlled side effects are not looked into for longer than a few weeks cdc gets paid millions of options okay eric well as a physician you tell me what side effects have you seen and they've actually been correlated and well understood also as a physician you tell me all the drugs you prescribe on a day-to-day basis how many of those have problematic side effects we live in a country where 80 million people have insulin resistance and when they go and get type 2 diabetes we put them on insulin to treat it think about that in the catastrophic health consequences and multi-systemic problems from alzheimer's to heart disease to atherosclerosis that's caused by it and the problem is vaccination the fda has recused itself as has many institutions in uh public health from much broader far more problematic issues than mass vaccination and i don't see the mechanisms that are going to cause serious problems oh my god swine flu in 1975. we had uh getting with a guinea bray oh some some issues here for a few people one out of a hundred thousand or something like that and then that somehow was extrapolated to say all these things as a doctor you probably get a flu shot every year most hospitals require their staff to do that you know i'm sorry this is not the problem in medicine you are fully and keenly aware of that there are much larger problems from the way that drugs are developed and distributed i'm sick and for example as you should be that rem deserver is 5 000 bucks a dose and it was an orphan drug it was developed for ebola and then they somehow magically repurpose it to be a not really efficacious treatment of corona and apparently that's great but then all of the other treatments we have like ivermectin and vitamin d and so forth are completely ignored or trivialized or attacked when they're over the counter and are made at cost so there's much bigger problems in medicine you should be definitely aware of that i don't think vaccine safety or efficacy is the issue here the worst case scenario you're giving people a dud but for the vast majority of symptoms and side effects they show up in the first 60 days and it's very clear when these things happen like the rotavirus vaccine the the symptoms and side effects showed up in the first 90 days the mechanism is autoimmune stimulation and months later autoimmune diseases pop up for clinical relevance and no one can make the connection because they're not doing long-term controlled studies okay yeah well they do follow people in a normal vaccine trial for at least two years to five years depending on the vaccine like the ebola vaccine for example i think they followed for three years there and the incidence of autoimmune conditions was was not statistically significant yes for example with pfizer alone there are four cases of bell's palsy that occurred and in the astrazeneca vaccine there were some issues of there were some neurological issues that came up i can't remember the exact issues they had there but it's difficult to create a causal relationship here and say this creating autoimmune conditions i would much rather argue that a large chunk of the autoimmune conditions we have are environmental or diet related and there's a litany of issues that are coming there uh why because we've seen a much higher incidence of autoimmune conditions over the last 50 years as we've moved from a balanced normal human diet to a high carb low fat high sugar diets and everybody's getting insulin resistance and it's creating tons of autoimmune issues i don't think mass vaccination has caused that problem at all now it's certainly possible that it could be the case but then it behooves to look at the statistical significance of it and if it was the case then we should definitely be able to notice that in the data somewhere yeah exactly bell's policy was outside normal percentage there's only four cases and it was statistically insignificant what are your thoughts on gavin wood during the time you work with one another he's a brilliant guy and he's very good at writing code and he's very good leading engineers and people um people like working with him or they hate working with him he's very polarizing guy and i'm very polarizing as well so some days we get along some days we don't get along polka dot is based on principles from orbor's prowse with some changes that they made uh and so they obviously read our work and understand our work and you know i've worked on a polka dot related project we use parity substrate uh for polymesh so um i think they're one of the good guys in terms of blockchain companies they contribute to the space and they do good work there and there's been many missteps as i have made and you know markets litigate those missteps did polka dot really copy the cardano platform yes and no i mean there's inspiration from some of the things that we've done but there's a lot of originality there as well again this is an example of where when you can't deal with complexity and you have simplicity you always try to regress and say bob copied alice you know it's they clearly read the workforce prowess paper that's uh that's self-evident they freely admit that and they clearly made original contributions on the economic and uh other components of the that protocol so there's inspiration there there's inspiration in cardona from al grand uh there's inspiration in cardano from 100 other sources some that predate cryptocurrencies so i wouldn't say they copied us i think that there was inspiration there and you know we read the parachain design and there's actually some merit to para chains there's a lot of things that we'd like to play with and i think that's a feature not a bug when you say charles is polarizing you have to be really passionate in polarizing to be a change maker and a leader of a movement uh because your movement until it becomes successful and self-evident is going to always be viewed as the outsider and the underdog and you're going to be attacked and attacked and attacked and they say how dare you not follow orthodoxy so the kind of leader that you need to get the movement to mainstream is fundamentally different than the kind of leader that you need to manage your mainstream success so the things that made bill gates a phenomenal ceo and building up microsoft to become a dominant force were actually problematic when the name of the game from microsoft was being custodial and it turns out sasha nadella is a massively better ceo at that than bill was during the 2000s when he was kind of like the holstered emperor with steve ballmer so every era of a project needs a different type of personality and in the early days you really need somebody who's willing to endure a lot of suffering and pain and get his ass kicked and say crazy stuff and push and push and push but then that person duel paradoxically also has to understand their time is finite and prepare for custodians to come and help manage the successes as they come and hand those successes to them and if you do that well you have a beautiful well-balanced ecosystem yeah this one right here bill gates with the vomit you know there's bill gates that i knew and there's the bill gates of today i don't know what happened to bill the bill gates i knew was a vicious relentless capitalist who hated the lose and was extremely good at dominating a market and just winning and it could be internet explorer it could be office it could be windows proliferation and you know he just was really good at all of that somewhere along the way bill gates became a humanitarian and the game completely changed for him and he started wearing the sweater every day even if it's 90 degrees outside and uh you know doing his his thing and bill melinda gates foundation's so vast it's almost like a government agency at this point because it has so much money you wait tens of millions of dollars every day to go on melinda gates foundation he's like you don't normally do that in a charity that's a government agency that does this type of thing and he is really enjoying his retirement and he has a diverse set of interests now you can always debate are the use of funds adequate are they being used in a wise way is he focusing on the right problems and so forth but you know what he's a guy made all the money so it's his prerogative on how he spends it where he spends it what he does with it so the issue he has is that he doesn't seem to care at all about certain dimensions of public relations uh there's a perception and it's not a small perception of people believing that bill is part of a large new world order conspiracy to massively depopulate the human race and murder hundreds of millions of people now he can play the victim and say he's completely blameless in this but people are innately suspicious of extremely powerful extremely wealthy unaccountable people whose motives are not completely clear who operate in a not super transparent way and he's not accountable to anybody like a government agency would be and as a consequence he can do things that normal people can't and i see those things in africa for example the christian agricultural transformation agency a private citizen usually can't approach a government and say yeah i'm just going to create something to solve your starvation problem i'll pay for it and of course the prime minister here's the check for it get it done tomorrow here's the guy to lead it and when you have that kind of superpower if people don't understand the motives of the person with that superpower they're inclined to believe nefarious actions and activity if he was really cognizant and aware of how problematic that is then what bill should do is ditch the sweater and go on the rogan effect you know joe rogan and go and actually engage people and talk to real human beings not the davos crowd at the world economic forum and south by southwest and major elite parties and hanging out with presidents but everyday people contrast bill gates with elon musk elin is just as rich at this point and he is literally building a company to put neurological implants into your brain when we talk about build depopulating people with like nanobots and vaccines it's like it's out there like elon is literally drilling holes into people's skulls and putting into your brain that can influence your brain and people are totally chill with elon musk why because they get elon musk they feel a relationship with elon musk they kind of understand where this guy is coming from they see him in a way that they don't see bill for example bill had tremendous problems with the us government in the 1990s with the anti-trust issues as mark zuckerberg is now going through kind of a modern day bill gates and not once did bill go to the media and lament and really spill everything out and say god these guys suck and you know he didn't show humanity he did what all fortune 500 ceos do elon musk has problems with his fremont plant making teslas and he thinks this whole coronavirus lockdown thing is just horseshit so what does he do he goes to twitter and complains about it and then says if you guys don't get your act together i'm moving to texas and he follows through on it when you do those things it humanizes you and builds a relationship and people understand you at least enough to kind of get a sense of your motives and so when you do things like build missiles and rockets and you do things like make cars and solar power and batteries and these types of things uh it in a way makes that understandable and people are okay with it uh spacex if elon musk acted like bill gates would probably be one of the most conspiratorial companies a huge chunk of their revenue comes from secret government launches and projects with the air force and other things elon probably does hold a top secret clearance and is has access to a lot of very proprietary information that's a very very secret squirrel stuff there would be alien conspiracies to the max with spacex if elon didn't have that relationship i don't understand why bill gates people and bill gates himself doesn't get this and if he was just to go on joe rogan's show just to engage with these people just to actually humanize himself and get rid of the sweater and the polished demeanor and so forth a lot more people would trust him and if a lot more people trust him i think he could be so much more [Music] effective and this is actually a valid point here it says bill gates is a new world order thug if you are cynical you'd say the reason why he can't do that is that he's not genuine he's not a real person uh and that's the problem if you live in the shadows or you decide not to have transparency you own that label as george soros does and the koch brothers do and other people who work via proxy do you believe in aliens you know one thing i've noticed i won't tell you who in my company but there's a very high-ranking person in my company who is firmly convinced that uh aliens are a thing and uh it sends me stuff all the time on the latest and greatest and for a long time i didn't really care about it but i have noticed that there is a bit of priming that's happening in the global consciousness about the existence of aliens uh you had that 87 year old israeli guy who used to run their space program say hey there's actually this galactic federation and then you have all these ufo videos and then you have the air force actually talking about you have the creation of space force and these things so you know as a thought experiment let's say that you're a world leader and aliens do exist and you're trying to figure out how do i tell the world without creating chaos what would you do the most logical thing to do would be slowly but surely priming the world to actually be okay with the existence of aliens and leaking more and more and more and seeing reactions like these ufo videos that could have been still stayed as classified but were declassified and letting more and more people talk about it from the edges and then gradually bringing into the mainstream so i'm not saying they exist i'm just saying that what's happening right now would be clearly evident with a with an effort to get people ready for such a big event hey charles do you think robotics and automation may replace human labor and have unwanted results yeah andrew yang certainly thinks though that's why all the ubi people are pushing really heavily for ubi because they say automation is going to kill us there is definitely three classes of automation i think within the next 20 years are going to have a profound impact on employment autonomous vehicles is one category eventually helper robots are going to evolve to a point where they're actually capable of walking and interacting so for cleaning jobs service industry jobs and these types of things there's going to be a huge impact there and three augmentation of skilled labor for the trades so the vast majority of things you do in the trades from carpentry work to plumbing work to electrical work if you're at a point where you can make fries uh or operate cash register as a robot you probably can do that skilled labor very well in fact many cases much better than a human being can you never get tired you make precise measurements you have very sophisticated optics and these types of things you don't have the independent thought so you have to be supervised and managed by somebody but that's definitely going to be doable 20 years that's here now if you sum up the jobs in those sectors and say well automation kill that you could be losing 50 million jobs in the united states from those three categories so i do think there is a big big issue with that in the problem with wealth distribution when you have automation a small group of capitalists will be able to buy that labor to replace human labor at a huge competitive advantage and that wealth will not trickle down because at least when you're hiring people there's trickle down if you have just robots there's no trickle down there's a hyper capitalization so usually you see ubi and wealth tax bundled together for uh these types of things i don't believe in wealth tax i think it's theft i think ubi makes sense when you have sovereign wealth funds it does not make sense in a deficit culture if you have a massive national debt what the are you doing printing money to give money to people makes no sense because the inflation is actually going to exceed whatever poultry handouts you're giving to society as a whole but if you have a 1.5 trillion dollar sovereign wealth fund like norway does distribute the dividends to your people good fiscal management won't debase your currency and uh it'll be do a lot of good you'll get a lot of velocity of that money especially for the poor people and really help your your economy so it's a it's a mixed bag [Music] have you ever heard of jacques fresco the founder of the venus project resource-based economy where blockchains play a very role he actually came to my alma mater years ago um c boulder he's dead now but jacques had a lot of really cool ideas and i think he was well ahead of his time and there's actually things like the open ecology movement and other things that are are kind of corollaries to what he was talking about and it's a really exciting thing to see this girl what's your opinion about deep mind solving the protein folding problem uh just another example of of when you apply really sophisticated very precise tools to a very well-defined problem uh you'll end up getting unorthodox solutions the nose cone for example on the shinkansen in japan was designed by genetic algorithms so there's all kinds of things that you can do um when you have these tools to solve real life human problems this is going to massively reduce cost of biological research and it's real beneficial especially in regenerative medicine so very excited about it so net win for us all what can blockchain do for filmmaking really interesting question there are a lot of problems in filmmaking um if you want to get a a roller coaster into you know some things that happen on the financing side look into the funding of the wolf of wall street from martin scorsese when you aggravate funds for these projects there's royalty problems there's organized crime that's involved there's all kinds of crazy things that happen so one side of it the crowdfunding and the distribution of dividends and the understanding of financial agreements between people who are making a project like a film uh that is something blockchain tech can be considerably useful for especially long-term royalties that come there there's just so many people been screwed throughout that the brokering of asset pipelines like the purchasing of music and audio effects and visual effects and these types of things establishing origin of intellectual property and royalty screams for that that's another thing i think blockchain can make a lot of sense with as well um so you know basically just the management of payment flows and royalties in ip that's where filmmaking probably get a big benefit from blockchain technology when powell i think that's uh real vision i was on before and at some point we'll ping him and play around with him did epstein kill himself absolutely not absolutely not i've been asked this question a few times and my opinion is that epstein worked for an intelligence agency he worked for them since the 1980s and he had a very particular job which was compromised so he had a good gig they put him up and gave him lots of money to live an exorbitant lifestyle and pretend to be a rich hedge fund guy and then his job was to get rich powerful people to go sleep with underage girls record it and then use the compromise to influence policy uh there's just no reality where rando can just have relationships with prince andrew and bill clinton and donald trump and bill gates and hundreds of other people in academia and policy and convince a lot of them to go and get compromised and all of his rooms were wired up for sound uh when it became clear that he was using young girls for this he suffered no consequences for a long period of time and he acted as if he was a made man and then at the very end of his life uh circumstances changed and like all assets of intelligence agencies or inconvenience he was cut loose and he knew he was going to die and then suddenly the day of his death weird stuff happened and somehow a guy who should not have been killed just kills himself magically uh he didn't kill himself at all it's that's an example of a very real conspiracy the other thing is the lack of media coverage tells you where power lies if you're an investigative journalist think of the prizes you can win in the accolades you can get calling truth to power and showing that some of the richest most powerful people in the world were pedophiles or abused young innocent women yet no one has any appetite to go and be an investigative journalist and dig into the story despite the enormous draw it would have why because the people who own the mass media companies were also complicit with what epstein did and they buried that and that in itself is a story so he is the symptom not the root cause and he worked in a larger structure and we don't know what that structure looks like but this is not a new technique it the playboy mansion famous people would have sex in the grotto and they were secretly recorded and those secret recordings worked their hands into the cia and i think it was the 60s and that's why playboy got away with a lot of stuff so this stuff this stuff does happen now it's not illuminati stuff to this question right here you see that illuminati crap is real this is what's called trade craft it's what spy agencies do so when you are thinking about recruiting people to workforce by agency you have your agents who are loyal people and they work for that country and they're super vetted and with the agent's job for human capital human intelligence is to go and recruit local assets and you have four dimensions you can recruit them it's called mice so you recruit with money so you bribe people you can recruit them with ideology like your communist state and they believe in capitalism and they hate communism so they want to come in you can attack them with ego that's the ian mice and uh that's where you know some things happen like maybe they get turned down for a promotion or something like there's cases in the soviet union where prominent scientists were trivialized and passed up and they still knew a lot of government secrets and so they got compromised that way or you can develop blackmail on them uh so for example all the time israel in the united states they monitor iran very very closely to try to figure out who's gay and who's not gay and they have a whole beautiful network of the homosexuals in that country why because it's a crime in that state and if a particular government official is having a secret gay relationship if that was to be publicly revealed it would destroy his career probably get him executed so that's an example of compromise and there's ways to either passively find it where it falls in your lap and you use that information or actively create compromise uh for example there was a chinese spy uh recently who was sleeping with a u.s congressman and absorbing information out of him i forget that the name think it was selwell or something like that one of these congressmen floating around that's been compromised well epstein is an example of a classic intelligence operation you have a lot of wealthy prominent people those prominent people are globalists and they do business with everybody if you compromise them and you have leverage against them then they're probably going to work with you and uh you know give you information on a regular basis or if they're in a position of policy making change policy to benefit the will of your country russia does this china does this a lot of people on the left for example believe that there's compromise on donald trump in russia uh that while he was there for the miss universe pageants these other things that there are sex tapes or other such things whether they exist or not it's historically been done by the fsb in uh in russia and chinese do the same thing we call them natashas yeah there we go eric swalwell that was the congressman who got compromised by the chinese spy are you sure you want to be saying this stuff well you know the cat's out of the bag we live in a mass media market and uh you know i just list chris baker on the roman experience the head of diligence he who's the former cia guy these are open secrets they're all known and it's called trait craft and people understand when them think of the world economic forum and their agenda everyone will own nothing do you believe we're in for hunger games society without the games um i i think these globalists that go to the world economic forum the vast majority of them are people that just love hearing themselves talk they've never worked a real day in their life a lot of these people inherited their money their trust fund babies uh or their prominent powerful politicians that have no moral core and they just look for the flavor of the week they were big big gung-ho people with communism back in the day and they're big gung-ho people with socialism always been and they keep telling us how great it all is and the great reset is the latest incarnation of uh what these people talk about but you know at the end of the day you gotta implement the policy and to implement it's real hard because many start taking money or jobs or power away from people things fall apart but when you're rich and trust fundy and you have no accountability and you can fly anywhere on a private jet i mean i remember going to davos um this year you couldn't fly in to davos because the airport was so filled with private jets and everybody there was talking about how bad climate change is when they flew in a private jet to go to davos and they stand at 10 000 square foot mansion it's like there's the hypocrisy there is extraordinary to me absolutely extraordinary charles coinbase referred to you as a pothead you guys have the link for that i was not i was not aware of that charles why did cardano opera ethiopia before nigeria which is africa's most populous country and largest economy we opted for ethiopia because that's where the african union is based and there's a lot of programs that we felt were uniquely well suited for what we were doing with cardano especially in agricultural technology uh there's a nice ict base in nigeria and frankly you do ethiopia it's very easy to expand into kenya into nigeria and those four countries alone constitute 400 million people that's a big chunk of the continent about 40 of the population my director of african operations is half ethiopian uh and half english and so uh it was uh it was kind of an easy fit we understood what we were getting into we saw the dynamics of the country the other thing is ethiopia is the only country in the world currently led by a cryptographer the prime minister actually was a infosec expert who broke codes for the intelligence agencies in ethiopia during the air train war so there's very few people around at the head of state level that you can have a computer science conversation with about your papers and actually gets what you're talking about you see a blocks cipher or stream cipher or these types of things so it was a good combination of of just luck and coincidence combined with the right environment population and also ethiopia's very pan-african view so once you have a solid base of operations it's incredibly easy to go to kenya nigeria and ghana and rwanda and uganda and so forth and it's nice you know 107 million people that's not insignificant uh is john o'connor still in ethiopia yes he is despite the civil war that's how committed our people are they don't really care what's going on diseases wars uh internet being shut off safety at risk we tell them go home they say no way in hell they stay there um i had to pay some special forces people to build an extraction plan for my personnel there so if something gets really bad we have people lined up to go and get them out but i i mean that's commitment and they're there because they want to be there and they're they're going to see it completely through to the end would you be able to be friends with high influence people such as the clintons knowing they're involved in this i will never be friends with the clintons they're scumbags absolute scumbags and there's a lot of people in the upper echelons of society i have no desire to be friends with or know or interact with i will never be in their clubs they'll never invite me to their clubs and i would reject if they did i'll never join the bilderberg group i'll never join any of these things because you know what that's the world it used to be what we're trying to do is build a better world today where you're in charge not a small group of elite people who presume they have the right to run society so no way know how i'll i won't pick up or return the phone calls and call a spade a spade bad people are bad people i don't care if they have wealth and money don't do business with them thoughts on the end of the cardano effect that one broke my heart i funded 76 episodes i mentioned this in the earlier part the episode and the foundation did the rest and they applied for funding the community decided not to give it to them and i think that's a loss for us all i don't think they were asking for too much i just think that they needed to do a few more rounds to explain what they were providing guys we live in an era where joe rogan makes 100 million dollars with his podcast and ben shapiro makes tens of millions of dollars with his podcast podcasters can make an enormous sum of money look at pewdiepie it's more of a question of well if you're going to ask for that much you need to present a strategy that produces proportional value so how do you get 100 000 regular listeners for example uh how do you get you know real kpis for cardano that's the kind of conversation we need to have it's okay to ask for a large sum of money it costs a large sum of money to build tesla it costs a large sum of money to do rna treatments to cure cancer and these types of things but your ass has to be proportional with value provided or potential value provided and then it's up to the funder to decide if that risk assessment makes sense in hindsight probably would have been better to ask for funding a little later when the funds were a little larger so by proportion it was lower like a million or two million dollars for the fund and i'm sure the foundation would have been happy to cover their costs uh long term if not i would have been happy to cover their costs but i'm not happy about it i i think the show added a lot of value to our ecosystem i know rick and felipe personally i've met them and spent a lot of time with them i think they're both great people and they're quite ethical and it's a critical piece of infrastructure for the community management component of our ecosystem and they're going to be very difficult to replace [Music] you're comparing a very niche podcast to joe rogan well no you know joe rogan was very niche at one point you know he was fear factor guy i mean if you while watching fear factor a show that got cancelled because he made women drink donkey semen um and somebody told you 10 years from now this man is going to have the most culturally relevant podcast in the world with 30 million viewers listeners every week people think you're insane big things don't start big almost always they have little beginnings and if you're going to ask for a lot of funding or more funding than people think you need to be bold and ask and say this is what you're getting so your point about being a niche and small podcast they'd have to go and say this is how we get it to be not so nishi not so small and how it's going to grow like ben shapiro for example he's starting to broaden out from being just a conservative podcaster uh to basically being a media empire he's making his own movies r-rated movies he hired candace owens he's expanding his investigative journalist team and he's like an anti-new york times in that respect and he has the freedom to do this because his subscription base has grown to a point where tens of millions of dollars of revenue come in every year so he's one of the fastest growing media platforms around and he's in many ways living up to what glenn beck tried to do with uh the blaze will the ben start that way no you know ben was just a guy he was working with breitbart and these other people but he had the wherewithal to understand how growth works and that's the point why are you wearing clint eastwood clothes because sometimes i'm good and sometimes i'm bad and sometimes i'm ugly [Music] ben shapiro is making r-rated movies i know that's crazy it's crazy have you seen on netflix the social dilemma i have not seen it yet everybody keeps telling me to watch it honestly just not had the time free masonry what's your opinion so on the great courses uh there's a course uh on conspiracies and secret societies it's 24 episodes long i would highly highly encourage you to uh to watch all that and the freemasons are mentioned most of the founders of my country and signers of the declaration of independence and constitution or freemasons or related to freemasons there's a long legacy there i am not a freemason can't take the oath [Music] what is your opinion on scientology does it hold any truth it's a dangerous cult yeah it's started by a megalomanical person with narcissistic personality disorder and they sue anybody who attacks or criticizes them and they engage in all the standard behavior of splitting up families and causing people to have fruity crazy beliefs and getting financial control over people and generating compromise on people so if they leave their reputation can be destroyed i you know there are religions with wacky founders that kind of turn into reasonable institutions mormonism is an example of that you know setting the golden tablets and the craziness aside of the founder the mormon church has evolved to a point where it's become a productive mainstay of frontier society in utah and other places and um mormons are great members of society there's no problem with them and mormon families can live happy lives and the doctrine of mormonism has gotten to a point through a series of evolutions to a point where it's not really problematic or harmful to people scientology will always be harmful because it's a death cult around a singular founder and it was all about ingratiating the founder and enriching the founder and that dynamic is still present it has nothing to do with building people up it has everything to do with tearing people down and making them part of a broader whole organism and i have very little respect or tolerance for organizations that do that so i don't think it holds any truth at all and i think it's at best useless and worst harmful and the fact that they sue people who criticize them it tells you everything you need to know crazy religions do that not real ones thoughts on psilocybin mushrooms and spirituality oh well uh i think that uh psilocybin has been used for thousands of years by shamans and uh other religious figures and rituals michael pollan covers this actually in his book how to change your mind which is probably the single best interaction of psychedelics uh in modern literature and uh it really gives you a sense of who all the key actors were and you know where that entire industry came from from the creation of lsd to the experiments at harvard in 1960s and the hippie movement to the dark ages to the resurrection of psychedelics at johns hopkins um say we will about spear out spirituality component of it tremendously beneficial for the treatment of depression tremendously beneficial and uh depression and post stress disorder and other things many cases they're showing that people actually can be taken off of antidepressants altogether after receiving just a few therapies with the guided therapies that they're doing with the johns hopkins experiments it's one of the key reasons why excuse me one of the key reasons why organ uh decriminalized uh psychedelics just because there's so much evidence that's coming and i think we're heading towards global decriminalization in the next 10 or 15 years followed by a renaissance of research charles hoskinson who's your favorite philosopher by far bertrand russell i also really like albert camus i think combining both of them together is difficult like an unstable element but it has uh wonderful results if you can pull it off charles had he played baldur's gate three i took a look at it you know as a game developer i i have the ability to look at these things um uh larian studios makes it the guys who do the divinity series and uh they uh they do just phenomenal job with all the things they do it's an early release it's still a little rough and there's a lot of work the game needs and unfortunately game system they have in the play system they have doesn't fit so well with fist edition dungeons and dragons and i think it's quite unfortunate they weren't allowed just to use the divinity uh game mechanics because they're much much better for how they approach making games uh but all things considered it's um if they keep working on it i think it's going to be a very solid asset i think it's unfortunate that it exists within the boulder's gate milliere the reality is that that's a closed story and if you're going to approach it they should redo the games remaster the games as a trilogy one of the biggest mistakes bioware and these other guys made with baller's gate was not having throne of ball be a stand-alone new game as opposed to an expansion pack of baldur's gate 2. that is really amenable to a trilogy and they just didn't do that so i think it should have been remade as an entire group with a single studio peter jackson style and it's real sad that they didn't do that charles you really have to learn to open up more it's hard to see where you stand on an issue that's a good thing um i try to stick with just to the facts and things that i've analyzed to a point where i feel comfortable stating it i don't really go and say oh well you know it's what i believe raw and you must believe this too you know i just try to say okay well here's where it's at all things in life are nuanced and complicated and there's more to the story than any one person's opinion and the reality is that wisdom and truth take time to arrive to and that's the miracle of age you know age takes from you youth you get weaker start getting more pains i have terrible gout and got it creates problems at times i didn't have that when i was 20. on the other hand i have a lot more wisdom than when i was 20. so you lose something but you gain something and i think more people need to acknowledge that you ever do a game with the godot engine i've actually received a lot of people's um recommendations to do something with godot it's uh it's a cool game engine i actually had a chance to take a look at it uh open source engine a lot of adherence and it's really nice for indian small games babylon js is also a pretty good game engine as well and i like the physics engine that they have there and also it makes sense to build a game in javascript as an open source project i don't think godot is a viable competitor though to unity or unreal i mean just how you handle asset pipelines and how you handle uh the curation and project management of a large scale triple s title within those ecosystems is much more evolved and refined than what you see with godot and also with performance and cross-platform capabilities there's just nothing to match those two in cryengine as well say the easiest of all three of those is unity but godot is definitely useful and um i you know if i was an independent open source game developer you know making my own games like basically games or something with escalon series i'd probably use godot or something like that it's a good engine charles made video games before i still do i own a video game company i just bought legends of valor and we're doing a remake watch the earlier parts of the episode yeah yeah there you go tony you know how to ask these questions don't you it is unfortunate we live in a time where people feel fear in discussing certain topics that ought to be discussed are those hell raiser cubes in the desk behind you yes they're called lament configurations and they are have you seen lord of the rings in 4k yet not yet i am absolutely planning on getting them and absolutely planning on watching them uh it's going to be a lot of fun to watch uh lord of the rings and 4k because they redid the hobbit as well and they somehow managed to reconcile the remake and remastery uh with the 48 frames per second shot that they did jackson is a master and if given enough time and money he can do anything you should have seen they shall not grow old his remastery of the world war one footage for example what he can do well you cooperate with a hollow chain team try to read the green paper and code i i tried to engage with them the community was not very friendly or amicable and i just gave up you know pro tip you know if you want somebody to engage with you especially a larger cryptocurrency be helpful and open so you know i'm sure there's interesting things there but um there's just not for me because i don't have the time and there's 3 000 projects to look at and i've received so much great support from ergo and the waves community and the zen protocol community and dozens of others i'd rather spend my time with novel ideas there than ones that aren't super welcoming do you think the new dune movie will be any good yes i think danny velanu is a modern-day stanley kubrick and i think dune is going to be phenomenal it's going to be a beautiful movie will you integrate legends of valor with cardano so how likely we'll do non-fungible assets i might actually do an in-game currency for games in the game because there was gambling inside the game there's dozens of things we could do and i will brainstorm with you guys the community when the time comes for that and we will definitely pull something in nice poncho well thank you still in communication with sergey nazarov yeah we talked to him do you like boxing i absolutely do what about vr charles well there's another example of where um unity has so much of a lead on people um you know when you look at godot or babylon versus unity your support for emerging platforms like um oculus and the htc vive and these these types of things is much much much better than it is in these open source engines and you know it's just sad but that's the way the economics works if you want to do cross-platform deployment on playstation xbox pc mac linux and vr and in the browser you're going to have to use technology like that what is waddler up to these days writing papers and uh working on pluto's actually we're at a very pivotal moment and plutus is just about to go mainstream so he's going to be a busy guy he's uh he's doing good work we're also getting him a few post docs and graduate students related to the work he's doing got to create a legacy and make sure there's some academics trained to carry that on thoughts on the rise of the china u.s cons conflict looks like we're headed for a thucydides trap how is caitlyn long i i think she just did some sort of marksman thing she hit something like a thousand yards away or something like that she's a badass that woman's uh one of the most amazing i've ever met and i really love the work that she does have you ever seen a silicon valley from hbo telling me my lamborghini needs doors that open like this instead of this any doors that open like that nope never seen it is it possible to create an ai that can distinguish truth and lies we call that a veracity metric or a veracity agent and yes it's done all the time the intelligence community dang well you're still live i went to lulz to get a hot water heater came back installed and was going to watch the recording well what type of hot water heater did you get did you get a gas heater did you get an electric water heater is it tankless a tank you got to give me more information man have you heard about tesnix open source hydrogen engines i have not and i will look it up writing it down right now i always find out the most interesting things from my community you have a tankless propane there you go pearl pairing and proparine accessories does vitamin d help your gout you know my problem is that i was unmedicated i'm supposed to take aloe pyranol and uh i finally threw in the towel and the gal got my ankle and said all right i'll take it but right when you're getting on allopurinol it usually causes another flare up and i'm dealing with that right now uh it's not pronounced htc vive it is vive with the sound of i i prefer it my way gout issue quit eating red meat no i will never stop eating red meat and that's not the primary source of purines you bastard i eat too much shellfish that's what's doing me in that's where the purines are coming from i will die on the hill of red meat what do you think about joe biden does he understand crypto i don't think he understands much anything he's very old man i think the people around him uh understand a lot more janet yellen is going to be the treasury secretary that's an interesting one charles why do other pos chains like polkadot need slashing well cardano doesn't need that for staking because we carefully design the economic model and it's completely unnecessary to implement that and you're just hurting your community by doing so we don't need punitive measures to make the system work well and the fact that we're working without them is a demonstration of that yeah how the hell did they end up with person of the year because they did the thing that the media cared more about than anything else they defeated trump that alone was all they needed to do didn't have to campaign he did what mckinley did when he was running against william jenning brian back in 1900 or whatever uh he just basically was the not trump option and because he won your man of the year he could murder children in the street at this point he'd be a better man because they hate him so much i hate trump so much um charles thoughts on tulsi gabbard if you're using a bill to ban trans women from competing in female sports you know this is an example of a conversation that needs to be had and um our society is living in a really bizarre world where certain topics you just are not allowed to have a conversation and work through uh to pretend like it's settled and there's no controversy is an insane statement and unfortunately it's becoming the standard as opposed to the exception of the rule and douglas murray actually wrote a lovely book called madness of the crowd specifically on this topic among other topics in the uh the new social justice stuff uh and uh racial justice and economic justice and these other things that exist and it's just bizarre there's so many inconsistencies floating about um and things change so quickly like you can be in the middle of a supreme court confirmation hearing and then you hear sexual preferences now not pc and webster's dictionary has to suddenly change overnight the dictionary just because oh god i guess we were out of date everything's a little crazy right now and bills like that they are uncomfortable but what they do is they force the conversation and we should not be afraid to have that conversation and anybody who tells you otherwise they're not people you should listen to i mentioned this thomas have you heard about the breakthrough view and human longevity research in regards to high oxygen environments lengthening telomeres upwards so 20 after six sessions it was 20 to 34 depending upon the particular person and they actually measured the telomere length uh pre-during and post by taking people's blood uh looks really promising the science was done very well uh and i think it was well constructed study out of israel i'm going to buy a hyperbaric chamber try it out myself and i actually go ahead and take a look at my biological age and see if there are improvements as compo as a consequence of it ah so well mike tyson fight again yes he is negotiating with evander hollyfield and we're going to have a tyson holly field exhibition tyson is going to crush him huh uh you know i think he's got a perfect thing going on here or uh uh he says tyson should retire gratefully tyson uh has been uh you know in and out 14 years and what he's done is he's found a way to uh basically have reasonable entertaining fights that are low stakes and they actually accomplish what boxing has become boxing is not a sport yes it's an olympic sport and people do it millions of people for exercise and there's competitiveness and so forth boxing at the highest levels is entertainment it's cafe yeah you know it's not quite world wrestling where it's staged but basically you create a narrative people take sides in that narrative and they really get excited about it there's cultural pride like when pacquiao was fighting marquez and they were like oh yeah yeah that's our guy you know they shut down all the philippines for it and people just fight for that person so the athleticism the actual technicalities of it these none of that really matters too much it's all about the story it's all about the narrative it's all about uh the entertainment value for it so tyson has moved from i'm a contender in the sport of boxing to i'm an entertainer in the sport of boxing and 1.5 million people signed up for pay-per-view myself included at 50 bucks a pop that's 75 million dollars to uh to watch that exhibition and we got to see snoop dogg as a uh announcer and god he did a great job and i really enjoyed it it was a great fight and it was uh well done he lost a hundred pounds trading for the fight he got in good shape uh you know these uh you know two minute rounds not bad not bad at all i think uh 50 year old boxers can comfortably do that and not get hurt charles you should get a float tank i own one and love it i am getting one are you a pro wrestling fan no but i understand it and actually if you go to wisecrack on youtube and you guys google kfape kfabe and actually watch that video on pro wrestling it really puts it all into context you actually understand why it exists and why it's popular and what it's all about and i do love macho man randy savage it's great you know mike tyson actually makes a million dollars a month from his marijuana plantation it's pretty crazy i have an idea for an nft game but i'm not a gamer where can i learn game design in theory uh coursera has a specialization from michigan state university it's the top two game program in the world i highly recommend that one and there's also course on gamification from ken weisbach out of penn state well you're asking about a different type of meditation let me show you something i just got i am a huge fan of brain computer interfaces and devices i have a muse at home i have a neorhythm just got a mendy i was part of the crowdfunding campaign and i just bought a brain tap how about that so we're gonna try it out see if it works so um every time they come out with a newfangled device i always buy it test it a lot of them are duds some are actually quite helpful but one of these days we'll have the perfect device to get you into a flow state and manage meditation well there you go one of these days will ship it to us they were supposed to ship mine in november but i guess we'll have that in december this guy spends all that aid in a buy no no i i have bitcoin lots and lots of bitcoin it turns out that when you join something way early in the day and it goes to the moon you have a little bit of disposable income on the wim hof method i was going to train with wim hof earlier this year in march unfortunately coveted ended that so roll it over to next year but i will go train with him in amsterdam or wherever he does his seminar and we'll have a lot of fun and he has a cell phone app now you can use for the wim hof method is it worth doing a master's in program with no background knowledge my recommendation is harvard university has something called harvard extension and they actually have a programming a software engineering certificate that they do and i think that if you really want to become a software engineer you have a bachelor's degree and you're a client take the free course that they offer cs50 on edx you can get through that go do the software engineering certificate that they have it's a graduate certificate and you'll get where you need to go with that and a significantly lower cost if you really really really really like it you can continue on complete a master's degree and yeah at harvard extension it's open enrollment you'll have a harvard degree but they're really persnickety you won't get an am you'll get an alm from harvard but it's in latin so no one can read it anyway are you familiar with hemisync in the monroe institute i am not so that's another thing i'm going to write down here we go this is why we crowdsource knowledge you see this is another cool device this is a something from apollo neuroscience i use it every day you put it on your wrist it vibrates for 30 minutes and it actually helps with heart rate variability calms you down and puts you in a more relaxed state it actually works okay any connection or plans in south america large chunks of cardano is made in south america in fact the whole rosetta library for coinbase was written in uh buenos aires by a firm called atex we have a great latin and south american team we have people in mexico people in costa rica we have people in south america and peru and ecstasy in chile and argentina so it's uh it's great team and actually some people in brazil great brazilian community there's a lot of wonderful people there so yes and i love south america all right let's do one more and then we'll cut it better make it good guys up trying to really find a good one all your base are now belong to us that's an old one it's a very old meme where can i start to develop my mobile application ideas i'm in college i think probably the best thing you can do is buy a book from big nerd ranch and they have a nice training program that exists there but there's also some free courses on udemy and coursera and other places that you can have but they have a great pedagogy for android applications and just follow it end to end do the tutorial and build something if you actually have programming inclination you can get through that entire curriculum then you'll definitely be in a great position to build something significant and meaningful and it covers the whole thing conversion control systems to continuous integration to setting up proper acceptance criteria and qa doing test driven development uh the life cycle of the software how to plan on agile sprints for feature development and so forth a lot you have to learn to a project like that goodnight everyone