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A.I. Fast-Food? | Missing Nature's Call, Prayer & The A.I. Takeover | The MJ38 Show #94

MJ38 Season 1 Episode 94

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Matthew and Justin talk about S****** Yourself as an Adult, The Power of Prayer & A.I. Fast-Food.


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Welcome in, ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls of all ages. Maybe not. MJ38 show. Episode 94. Matthew and Justin San Antonio back at home here for you. Hopefully you're having a great life. Let's make it a little bit better. How are you doing, bro? Excellent. How are you? Let's go. I'm doing well. We were talking about kicking around cans of thoughts and ideas to talk about. I'm one reoccurred my mind. Remember you mentioning it, but it was just the subject of nearly pooping your pants as an adult. As a grown man? Yeah, this was like I get a text message bleep. Oh, no. It's like okay. It's like topic podcast topic. Nearly shitting yourself as an adult. I was like, oh no. Is this like, where's this coming from? This is so near, miss. Here's the thought is just that, like as a kid, you know, when you're a little kid, if you shit yourself, you're just a baby. It happens. Babies are expected to shit up all the time, right? And I vibe like you're not gonna be mad at your kid if he. You know, you want to help him out. You know what I'm saying? Of course. Poor kid. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I guess, like. But then you slowly start to grow from, like, maybe like by the time you're 15, for the most part, your fans would be like, what age? Just. Yeah. What is that line? Kids are on? What age is sitting? Your face is not appropriate. Or like a little bit less, less leniency. Double digits. Ten less. Yeah. Yeah. Eight. I don't know, there's. They're just so young, you know? Yeah. When do you get off of diapers? I guess, hypothetically, you start potty training around, what, like 2 or 3? Okay. Yeah, but it's like a thing, you know, they're they're kids. And then. Yeah, it's it's going to be some shaky waters for a little bit. Yeah. For the next couple years thereafter. But so like 2 to 3. So then maybe like 3 to 6 maybe by like five. They're in kindergarten for the most part. You're hoping maybe they can go to school and like regulate that. I bet you definitely pack an extra underwear for sure. Think you just in case. Just in case. Oh, see, I don't ever think of. But I do remember being in kindergarten. I don't think I ever penalized, so I can't recall, I can't recall, I don't think so. I don't think so. Because I think if you if you got that, you know, if the experience happens to you, it's pretty. It would stay. I think it has some staying power and your mental depending on how you know, I think I may have peed myself for sure when I was maybe like five ish. I don't think I found myself. This is a funny thing to open the podcast. So I was like, what are you? What are we talking about? Topics, conversation. Okay, so since we're just on the subject, I guess, yeah. All right. We're there, we're there, we are there. Let's explore. Welcome. Nice I think so I think the last, like, forgivable accident. Okay. I could give myself you know, I was like. I had to be like eight and I. Okay, I see myself see you can remember that right? You remember this? Yeah I do, so okay. So, we were in New York, so we're, you know, there's New York food, by the way. Okay. And then hot dogs and what, like spaghetti with, like, sauce. Italian food. Yeah. Yeah. For sure. Okay. Heavy stuff. Okay. Go on. Okay. So we go tubing down the street because it's New York and it's covered snow and it's covered in snow. Okay. So you're tubing like an inner tube. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. We've got like some inflatable inner tubes, and then it's like, snowing and iced over on this hill that day, like, live on a hill, like, it's just like up the street, basically. It's like a thing they do. Yeah, I guess so. I don't know, we definitely I think we saw maybe other people doing it and I'm sure it's a thing. Yeah, yeah. Hill's slippery. So we go out there and it's like a a big ass hill dude. Like it was like a long street on a steep incline, you know? Yeah, yeah. So if you could get to a couple blocks of, of this uphill. Yeah. And then we, we did it like I went down maybe like three times. Right. And then on the second time I'm like, I remember thinking like, my stomach hurts, but the third time I'm like, going up the hill because I, me. And then we get to the top of the hill and I'm like, I gotta get down this hill. I gotta get down right now. 0 to 100. But I get like down the hill inside and just don't make it, you know? Oh no. Too much. Way too much fun. Oh, geez, Louise. But it's also embarrassed, right? I'm. It's not even in your home. It's strangers. That's stranger family member's house, I'm assuming. Probably. Yeah. You're just out there with someone. Oh, yeah, but of a different state. I remember my grandma was super chill and thought it was, like, funny. You know how many people know about this? It's scary. So when when someone else brought it up, I can't remember. I think my uncle brought it up one time, and I was just like, yo, come on, guys. Oh, it's eight. Give me a break. I think, Oh, yeah. I think he just she just told him that night, and he attached that to that memory that he has of us doing that thing. Oh my gosh, it's. Oh my God. Anyone any time anyone mentions tubing, going tubing or ski skiing. Bobsledding. Ski. Oh yeah. Well, yeah. My nephew shit himself. One time we were slain. Do. It was hilarious. Oh. The tubes. Oh we were. I know it is. Tubes. One time when you're sitting so. You know what stories are. Yeah, yeah, you're a kid. That's how it goes. Yeah. Okay. That's excusable. I think it's like, right there. It was like, right there. Yeah, right. It's right there. And you knew you tried, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. You were supposed to finish. And sometimes it's just so dull to you. Sometimes you just don't get the break. It's okay. It's okay. It happens. Yeah. So forgivable is that's what I'm saying. I think that's the less forgiving one right around like eight. After that, I'm being irresponsible. Yes, yes, I have one. It wasn't myself, but, one of my homeboys. Leave them unnamed. Unnamed. Homeboy. Gentlemen. Love you. Unnamed. First for the story. Freshman. You know, sophomore year? Yeah. Sophomore year in college. Like me and miss on my, middle school and high school buddies. We like, there's, like, probably a group of five of us, 5 or 6 of us. I went to the same college. So then the first year, freshman year, you're staying in the dorms. A couple of us stay together. And then across campus in the dorm life, I think you have to write as a freshman. You have to stay in the dorms. Yeah, I had to write. Yeah. So I think freshman year in the dorms. But then sophomore year we were living, like together, four of us in a four bedroom apartment. And, one of my homeboys just one night, just too much, you know, just that's that's it. Classic case. That's classic case. So you like two that one night too much Three's Company. It's fucking. It was a very fairly. He just, believed himself. Woke up in the middle of the night, change the shit, threw it in the washer and woke up the next morning and handled business. But, I remember hearing about that story. I. I was unaware of this. I had my own things going on that night. Oh, yeah. Okay. Yeah. I wanted to know what you're talking about. Oh, yeah. The end result. Okay. Got it. Too much. So me alcohol. Show me, college drinking, I think, like, too much. Like too much. But. Yeah. No, I'm with you. Too much power. Drink, head shot. It just happens. It does. Okay, well, I've never done that. Well, that was wrong. No, I lucked out. I know, but, you know, you never did pee in someone's closet, I blacked out. I really peed somewhere. I wasn't supposed to. I think, Oh, God, I think that drunk. I've definitely almost peed it because my dream. You ever have a dream where you're going to go pee? Yeah, yeah. I was like, yeah, you're about to pee in the dream for some whatever reason. Yeah. And then you'll have that flash, the real life moment where you're, like, about to pee and you're like, yo, yo, yo, like, turn that off. I gotta go to the bathroom, like, right now. That happened to me like, 3 or 4 times. Flip it. Flip the switch back on. I got to hop back into the matrix real quick, like, oh, God, oh, God, thank the dream. You got a system over us. Yeah, yeah. But yeah. Get the emergency red button. The override. But shitting your pants is a. Here we are today, like, 2 or 3 days ago. And here's my theory is that as a eventually you hope to get to a place in your life where you're, like, progressed past doing that, you know, for sure at 20, you know, in college, you're probably not going to shit yourself. Brace yourself. Right. That's like how we deal with it. Probably not. And then as you really fucked up, one thing is that the older you go like from 20 to 30, like maybe your stomach gets like more sensitive or people develop allergies or your I don't know, I think you start to take it for granted. I think that's what it is. Was that like your ability to make it to the bathroom? Okay. So in the morning when you're a little slower, you know, a little more aches and pains. Yeah. Like, I think you could just, like, because okay, so here's me driving to work, okay? Not driving to work, driving to daycare. And I feel like my stomach's rumbling, but I can't stop because we got to get to daycare. So we're driving across out of daycare, and I ate a decent meal the night before. And then it was I had cover and two lollipops. So full plate of food and then two like of the probiotic sodas. And I just felt myself. I did the coffee and the nicotine is in on the way there. And everything was just like, ready to go, bro? Yeah, it was like a vicious god. Dude is calling in the morning. But I had to make it to daycare. And then I'm driving back and I feel like there's like a ten minute stretch where I can't really stop for gas. And then I can get to, like, where the gas stations are close to home and they'll just line up. So I'm just trying to get to that little spot right there. I need like ten more minutes out of myself, you know? God it it was just tough, bro. It was finish. Oh. So it's cocktail brewing I pull into the gas is it's super hot about this is I want to like run you. Out with what? With what gait. Like from walking to sprinting. You have to find a nice, socially acceptable medium. A ton of gas. And again, there. It's no fast as you go. I pulled it out, and I. I think I'm doing like, what is intended to be a power walk. Okay. But then I realized that the strides of a power walk are leaving me way too vulnerable to my reality. And so I kind of have to let the situation get myself some nice posture. Okay. Some small steps. You keep it tight, okay? Keep it tight. So that's what I call a make or break moment. That's that's character defining I feel like I should do as a result your resolve. And so I step through the door real careful like, okay, let me give let me just get it in there. But there's a fucking guy and he's waiting to use the bathroom. Oh no. He looks at me. Buddy, buddy buddy. I'm so figuring out how to sell him that I've got it. I got to go first. I gotta go first. I gotta go now. That was an issue. You. We destroyed. Oh. Oh, good. Heavily for briefly that person. So he's got too much the head too much like, much like good. A bomb in an epicenter of a city. Oh, God. What? You said I'm rolling up on this guy. Dude, who was the guy? This guy. He's wearing a flannel shirt. He's, like 62, okay? He's a white guy with long hair. It's like, like a kid or like a mid 30s. He's like 30. Okay. You know, maybe a little older than that, actually. Maybe like 35. Okay. And he was just like a chill dude, you know what I'm saying? He could be a bro. He's chilling. He can be a bro for sure. Yeah. So hook it up, bro. I need some help as I'm pulling up on. Man, I hate to have to ask you this as I'm getting ready to give that speech up, okay? I look at him and he's he's on like a crutch. Oh, no. Oh he's he's giving he's a take forever. Even more reason to treat him like a like a person. Yeah, I tell him I needed help. You need help, I need help. I hate to see, but I will speedrun this. I didn't think I did the first wave alone. Okay. No. Oh, no. Okay, so he looks into my eyes and he sees what's going on. He's like, oh, this guy's fucked. Oh no. He's about to. So I'm traveling shuffling to him. He's like this, what's the what is this the bad way? No. Yeah. So, he stops me and I say, okay, man, I'll be really quick. No. What to do? You know what the fuck you. Oh, good. But it's fair. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Absolutely. He was. And he addressed my situation. Okay. He understands the urgency of the matter. I'm with you. My heart goes out to you. I'll be really quick. Oh, So funny. You just, like, pick up. Nothing needed to be said thing. He said he just knew. You can just feel it. Oh, it's so funny. You could just like there's energy in the room, you know, there's a story going on. And he was able to read the story as if he was like an objective person watching your movie. He's like, oh, I'm so. And then try to comfort you. Yeah. It's so funny. Do you have, like, a brace or, like, anything on his leg? Yeah, he had a bracelet, a crutch. And then our friend has a brace and a crutch. Oh, man. Right now. And I was just like, bruh, that's another reason I was like. Like, I was like, so funny. It's okay. I have to go so bad. Even though he's, like, hurting right now. I'm gonna ask him anyways. And then it's like, what are your best friends? Has the same kind of injury. And I'm like, And he just grabs me and dictates the conversation. He never was up, but. And then he. And then another character defining moment while you're waiting for him to go fast. Yeah. Oh, this in there. That's a heavy minute. That's a heavy minute. Two minutes. That was the closest I ever got. It just felt it was tough man. The close that happens. Like you take it for granted. Yeah. So that's that's on me one time. You need to give an extra pair of pants in your car because it's not if you're going to shit your pants, it's like, when are you going to shit your pants? Yeah. And you just you you you misjudge sometimes. And then I'll be, like I said, I had to go to daycare. You're at a time crunch. Life has obligations. Yes. And your body doesn't give a shit. Mother nature don't care. Eventually you're going to roll it. Now I do want you to. It's coming. It's like, how do I handle that thing for today? Oh, one. You should just over traffic. Yeah. You get in traffic. Unforeseen traffic right here at the door. Yeah, it can happen. It can happen. Anyone? Nixon. Some alcohol. Nixon. Some, some disagreements with your, you know, your digestive system. It can happen. It's like, oh, don't give me around Thai food. Yeah, yeah, it might, it might just send you there. Depending on your sensitivities, I think I, I think I have like, I think part of what plays into your dietary reactivity to things is like your ancestral sort of like what was able to what they were eating. You know, if there's something to that, people talk about that a lot, I think. So I think it makes sense at least. Yeah. Is is that your specific DNA comes from a location of the Earth or like a relatively traveled from. So I guess it originated in that place. And if it's the longest amount of time it's been there, I guess eating a certain type of food that the genes passed down from them are like predisposition to digest that kind of food. Really? Well, I would think so. Right. That makes I think I could follow it or that makes sense to me. Like logically, yeah, I'm sure there's science that maybe can back it up or might contradict it, but it makes sense as far as like a premise or. Sure. Yeah, a theory. I think there is ways to I don't know how they do it. I guess they just trace it back to because they'll do it through your DNA. Yeah, you do through 23 and me and shit or whatever. And it gives you like, you would do well with a vegan diet, bro. Or like they'll say, don't even say high carb diet. Yeah. I, I think that probably is like an accessory or probably an additional add on. You can, you can have with that DNA analysis. I think they do have companies where they do that. Yeah, yeah for sure. But I guess yeah. The question is, well, first of all, that's a jump because hereditary DNA was a jump like not that long ago that that was even something that you would, I guess, like inherit the experiences and like what the character was more than just like, blue eyes, blond hair, things like that. So do you believe in that? Firstly, yeah. Yeah, I think so. I think we could pass down some sort of, like, character or, like, personality traits and character quirks or that just makes them smiles and types. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. The show, descendants. Descendants, those you're trying to do. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Dude, I think we hit if we if we dramatize that properly with a good story behind it, like the main characters be completing their cycles and like to have the crossovers be hidden. I know it feels like when I'm watching someone, I'm like, this is fucking hidden. It's like I'm sing a song, you know what I'm saying? When you say something like, this is fucking hey! Yeah, dude. Anyway, yeah, we're trying do that shit. I'm with you. I saw the vision for seeing this. It was so good about. The problem is, is we have to, like, make that show happen. Yeah, it's a problem. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. We wish I have to have ChatGPT help us write the screenplay. I figured how to write a screenplay, write the screenplay, figure out how to write a show, and then pitch Netflix or whatever, whoever the fuck we need to pitch to get it out the door. Get it to pitch. Where do you start from here? We get it to pitch and then that's a different thing. Then it's just marketing. Actors are yours truly. Of course we're gonna be the main characters in this timeline and then we'll have like our ancestral backgrounds and maybe a couple other characters in the restaurant maybe, or actually like kind of connected to us have like them be another actual character in ours and then maybe their ancestors in a different, I don't know. So chopping it up. Yeah. But either way we can make a fucking hit because she like that is cool. You know what I'm saying? Yes. Yeah. So I think I can handle spicy food to a degree. I like Mexican food for sure. But yeah, some people might have a little bit more sensitivity. Yeah. In the department. So I think it might be like yeah whatever was maybe culturally, agriculturally agriculture, you know. So yeah. And I was I come from I think that's like part of it, of what was able to be grown in the area where you came from or whether you were whoever the line of you where we follow that back to. And I guess there's like small deviations in that just based on genetics and like, probabilities. Fucking rolling the dice. Yeah. No, like I said that that's how they say that's science. You know? But it makes perfect sense to me. That's really I'm I'm into it. So I'm buying what you're putting down. It's just I think that's why they still want to step in. Yeah. I think that show might be successful because that idea of hereditary DNA is something that we've just accepted. Maybe like in the last ten years of science, I would even say maybe like five years. I remember like five. I think it was around five years ago that was like that, a debate people were talking about. Really? Yeah. Whether or not, like things outside of the genetic dictators to like make up your just physical components or your physical makeup. Yes. Whatever the 23 chromosomes give you wasn't like experiences that people had had in that sense. But if then yeah, then the idea is like, however, you kind of like you started as a baby and then whatever you do in your life to to like your body or to your person or like who you become to some degree is going to like get passed down into your baby. That kind of makes sense to me. So like whatever, it's not really logically, but like philosophically, you know what I'm saying? That somehow what we do in here goes into what our kids do or who they are, you know? Yeah. Or at least a little bit. Or it's like, who are we? I guess, you know what I'm saying? It's like, are we the product of our parents version of that? That might just be like, how? Like it is the same person, you know what I'm saying? That's what the DNA is expressing. It's like a different variant. Something like that, I don't know. So that's the idea, is there? Yeah. I think they were trying to figure that out. Like five years ago, but I think we're pretty much there now where it's widely accepted. Yeah. Or like, I guess accepted the fact or the idea that there's more than just like the physical makeup of your body and like, maybe more abstract things could be hereditary, passed down through generations. Yes. Okay. Yes. That's right, that's right. Like alcoholism was kind of one of them where it's like, okay, is that a thing that gets passed down? Yeah. Does that run in your family. Right. And then I think part of so then the question becomes, if we've accepted that this thing is true, can you fight off the alcoholism even though you have it? And then your child would have a lower proclivity towards that alcoholism? That's the the next step of that question. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I think I want to say yes. You know, that makes sense to me, right? Yeah. Me too. Yeah. Because then, well, then that makes our life matter a lot at that point. You know what I'm saying? Because you really are like lineage. And yeah, I do kids and trying to make, like, the family tree better as it goes down, you know, like, not a weird way, but like that. I guess what you're thinking is that your, your DNA that you're passing on is doing better and better and better and better in this world, I think is like one idea that I've attached now to like, kids, you know, and I think my parents always said, we just want to see you do better than we did. I kind of like, feel that, you know? Yeah. For sure. And so if we if our day to day decisions and who we develop ourselves to become is part of the passing down, we become super important at that point. Yeah, yeah. Ending generational curses. Right. I've heard that term, you know. Is that possible? Yeah, I think so. Right. And I think, you know, we could express that idea and dramatize it in the fucking chosen, as I mean, or whatever the fuck it's called after the show we're talking about. Yeah, we're talking about making it. You'll see, one day we'll be like, damn, pod 94. They call that shit. Duh. They've been calling their shit. Yeah, a show that we like, the one that we're gonna. It's on playing watch. A lot of people write screenplays. Not playing some of our back pain. Hamilton. That guy just wrote that shit over time. Yeah. Over time. Doing his day to day, doing movies or working when he was working. Some of those of rapping, corny bars and rapping bars really sells it, you know, hard. And it's like, that's what I'm saying. Hamilton so interesting. Part of the reason it's phenomenal is because there's a lot of things going on that hit culture at a certain point in time. And the thing with The Descendants is it's people don't know what to do with that people, because that thing I just expressed about you could do things in your life to help your children not have alcoholism. Yeah, like your five spirits experience different patterns. Yeah. That's just now something that people could possibly believe without being like kind of woowoo, you know? And so people are still digesting that, and I don't think that it's very hard to be thinking like, what behaviors are my exhibiting right now in this moment of this hour of this day, and what behaviors do I want to exhibit? And am I actively pushing myself into that, those categories every single day? That's a difficult question that I don't think a lot of people are necessarily asking, even though we're all trying to be good people. But with that being said it, it's that important or it could be to you, you know if you get to a point where you really want a better life for your kids, like starting with yourself. Yeah. What. Change the, the the starting point for them. You know, I think ultimately it's like the, taking that mindset and adopting that truly and fully and accepting that is like the key or like the answer to it's like the what you can do here. It's like, that's it. That's like the maximized choosing to accept that then like sacrifice for that and towards that ideal, it's like the it's what all we can do here, you know. So it's like the maxed out expression of of life I think. Yeah. That's all we can do. Oh well we only get this one, you know, we're we're just like a small little blip. But there's like the generations and the, the Bible is like super about that, like that, that idea of, like the descendants of people and like, it's like the, the stories tie in and the echoes of the stories that happen. It's like a it's crazy. See, like the traits, the tracing of the lineages lineage. Right. That's what you're talking about. It's the beginning of a lot of the chapters. Right. So you like pointing towards its importance. If it's like constantly noted, you know, that's interesting. Yeah. It's like we kind of there weren't a lot of people back then and I'm sorry I gone I don't know, I'm just saying like, it's like a I don't know, I guess there's a subtle regardless of whatever you think about the like the literary accuracy, historical accuracy behind some of the stuff. It's just like even the illusion in this crazy book. This crazy book has a, like an illusion. And that's like they're hyper realities, other hyper realities that are realer than real. I was just saying about the concept the other day, that's just realer than real, bro. It's like part of what they're trying to express in these realer than real stories is like one of them, for example, is like the story of Ruth. It's like this. It's like a really small little. I think it's only like four verses or four chapters, and it's really small. And she's just like, a person who's outside of, like, the Israelite, the like the chosen people of Israel. She's like an outsider. She marries in, her husband dies, his brother dies, and then she ends up staying with the mother in law. And then, like, it's just then them too. And like a part of it is like the embodiment of what are her actions and her choices, her and her actions that she chose to embody and behavior that she chose to enact was like in line with the it's like doing the right thing, more or less, you know, saying to a degree, it's like, I'm gonna honor my commitment and I'm going to then like this, oh, this this lady, she's like widowed, you know, I'm so she lost her husband and both of her sons is my mother in law. Like, still, technically, you know, I'm saying whatever I'm saying, like, stay with her and, like, do the right thing to a degree. And then she ends up having, like, the lineage of, just like through happenstance, circumstance ends up having a child and then being like the great grandmother of, like, King David. No saying more or less. And like, just like that type of idea of, like the it's deeper than brown hair, blue eyes is deeper than smiles and quirks and habits and prone to alcoholism. It's like those things are tangible effects. But I think there's even like a grander scale of like you're energetic. It's like a expression of who you are, you know? It's like you're the goodness you can do, you know, say if someone was like, truly, if I can like, like the Spirit of God could be upon someone, you know, I'm saying if you like, remedy yourself and put yourself in a position like you can be somewhere down your line, you can have someone that's like a fucking king, or have someone that does something crazy great. You know what I'm saying? That changes the course of history or something like that. And that's realer than real. That's realer than real. That's realer than a documentary, you know what I'm saying? And documentaries like, people embody that energy and we love it, like go on, man, you fucking do the thing. You chase that dream, you do that, whatever. If it's like righteous, I guess I'm aimed at the, at what we can commonly deem as like a good good, like a good moral like goal to strive for that helps all people, you know, more, more or less a North Star 2.0, yeah. Everyone's like, that's a worthy goal. Strive for has what's up? But then we're also prone to know if someone's not doing that to like, man, I fucked up, bro. That was beautiful. Yeah man I appreciate it. That's why. And that also like was I love that it also was a really well articulated version of like why we say that it's worth it. Like it's worth it. It was kind of like a brand or like a I, I just do it. Yeah. Exactly. Right. Why just do it? Because it's worth it. It's perfect. It's fucking perfect. Yeah. Like I love it, you know what I'm saying? But I was just thinking about, Because. Because somebody asked me the other day, they're like, I don't know, it was like a young kid at work. Okay? You know, I don't need whatever it was. No, no. Yeah. It's someone asking you something. You know what I'm saying? Oh, damn. Oh, dear. And we're in this. This is the fucking vibe. We're spooky. And I'm going to saying until he comes back, he would surely back up into being no. And when I go. So anyways, this kid was just asking me about like, praying for people and like, how do you how do you like, how do you just jump in there and, and do that with like saying prayers? Yeah. With like, confidence. Like it feels like you're like you're good in there. Hey, how are you doing that? And I was like, it's like Wilson, when you say. Something else just takes off talking. Yeah. For real? One of my last prayers, too, like, I had a. I just took, like, a breath. I was like, I just need to breathe. While I was praying. I just felt like the presence of breathe, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah. Hard. Stop right here. Yeah. Period. Yeah. And then, like, continued. But it was crazy. It was crazy to watch myself do that. I'm like, yo, you just picked it right back up and got back up in there like Kyrie you know. And he's like hold it hold on. So it's cooking. Yeah because it's like I'm saying like I don't like it. Like you just said. Sometimes I just get in there and something happens you know. So like just walk it was kind of a I was like, well that was wild. And I don't know if he was like it. I think maybe that happen even after he asked me this question, because maybe it like but he was asking about praying for like someone specifically like in the, in like a one on one setting. I was like in general, just like in general. Okay. For like a lot of people. Yeah. And then I guess he even said that he had tried to pray for like a group of people one time, and he kind of, like, choked up and had a hard time getting through it. And but I think he wanted to be someone that wanted to pray for people. And I was definitely just like talking about that's what I was wealthy. I kind of had a head start all the way to the point where he's like asking me more questions, where he gets to, I don't know what he's like. So one more thing, bro. Like, how do you, how do you. Because he'd already asked about music, a podcasts and, like, all the shit we're doing, he's like, how do you do it all? Or how do you keep doing it every day? Like what? What gets you to get out of bed and still, like, go hard and pull up and pull up a rack. And I'm like, on one hand, like, you haven't even been here very long. So I don't know how you got to that question so fast, but maybe you're just feeling that in your life. You're like, it's a hard time to pull up a rack. And that's kind of like where I go to. And then I'm just like, the only the answer is it's worth it. Like, just like the brand. I'm like, it's worth it. That's it. But then that simple is that simple. It's that simple. It's that simple. That's all right. But I don't I don't know if those words what I should have just. I might have sounded like a guru, bro. It's worth it. No, you said it. It just walk away. No, no, no, I should be able to digest that. But then I got to this point where I'm like, how do I to me, I'm like, I just want to present this thing. It's worth it, but you're not going to get it, you know what I'm saying? So how do I articulate what I'm trying to say there? And then you did it. Perfect. Let's do it. Yeah, yeah. That was one perfect example of. I was if you want to come in on the feature. Right. You could have been by. Yeah, it's coming with the crazy 16 out of nowhere. But that's why it's the brand. It's because it's the answer to a tough question. Yes, we're all dealing with it. Yeah. All dealing with this shit. Yeah. Like why? Why go hard? Why do anything. Why fucking care about what I'm doing I because I give him the answer and then it kind of hits me even harder. I'm like, that's what? Like, you just asked me about the podcast and just asked me about the music. Like, everything I just told you about, is to, like, answer that question of like, how do you got how do you do this every day? And that kind of tricked me out that I was like, hold on. I got like a cannon for that question, actually, like, my career is built on that question. Like, hold on this. I need to get this question every fucking day. How do I put myself in a position where they ask me this every single day because my whole career is the answer. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like identifies purpose. It's like, oh, that's what your podcast is about. Because I can say it's like culture, slice of life. We're talking about stuff not like it's comedy, it's current events, it's life, it's spirit of truth embodied in two human beings. But this this brand is predicated just on, at its core root of like, it's worth it. We're going to pursue it. And we think that you should feel the same way about life, which ultimately is like, that's why we're doing this. Yeah, yeah, you get super meta with it. But like maximizing your output into life in like, a Christ like manner or like at least in the, the body of the themes of the motifs that's and surround themselves with what is the Christ like motif is to do this thing at the highest level so that maybe it can can be born through your lineage, just just maximum output, like maximum faith, just trying to be obey. Like it's not asking a lot, you know. But it is. It's ultimately like the hardest thing in the world. Everything. Yeah, it's all the time. Someone's always watching. Yeah. And but then that's the thing is like why do it. Yeah. That's the, that's the whole I was trying to get to that question before we started talking about the Christ like nature of lineage, too, is like the cause of what it's like, why not just chill? Why not just, enjoy life? Why not just take it easy? Yeah, take the immediate gratification or the the quick, quick, hedonistic pleasure. Yeah. That that that pursuit. Yeah. Why not? And then the answer is like. Because it's worth. Because if you really going to make it, make it, make someone answer, you know, quite simply the that's it. That's I mean, that's all you need, but we don't or we need more than that. We need more than that. I could say even in London, it's like it's crazy to see, for even like the reading the Old Testament, one of the common themes that's like, reoccurring is just like the people of Israel are super stubborn, they're super stubborn, and they're super stubborn like these. You literally see Moses like part the seas are, you know, you let you see these miracles like, you see the fucking plagues in Egypt. You see all this things happen and like, you're still not, like, completely convinced, you know what I'm saying? It's like, yo, I'm down. I'm in. Like, I don't need to see anything else. Like I'm if I saw one, if you see one of those things. But it's like I don't it's, it's like a commonly reoccurring thing. But I think this is like part of what we're dealing with here is like, we just forget and we're just so we're so into the game, you know, I'm saying like, we're not we're not out here with it. We're we're right. We're down here with it. We're in here sometimes, you know what's that was just you just gave me $1 million worth the game. I'm sitting here just being like, just just, what's the word? Absorbing that. And I saw Moses part. You saw Moses part the seas. Like, what are you talking about? Like in your own life, bro? Yeah, right. Just thinking about, like what? What miracles have you seen in your life in the sense that, like, felt like Moses part of the season, something crazy happened that you can't explain. You can't explain no logical explanation whatsoever, right? Right. Like, I've got a few people's got people who have a couple. Someone might have a couple. Yeah. So the point where, you know, you and maybe even further on that metaphor to like, travel through to a new land based on, like, a miracle, you know what I'm saying? That you would deem a miracle most of your life is get up, go to work, go to sleep, watch Netflix, make eggs like it's a lot of the similar executed get gas. Yeah, you're doing a lot of the same shit. And it's sometimes like sometimes in that game a fucking C part and you walk through it. And that's not every day the portal opens up and then you're in a different world now. Yeah, bro, you bump into somebody or something happens and I think that's representative of part of the season and trying to make a mark of when you like, you get to a promised land and like you got to remember that shit. You know what I'm saying? Because I don't know, man. This is it. This, this game we're fighting or like, for entropy we're fighting and sin that we're fighting is the spiritual warfare of like, not, I don't know, being healthy enough and wholesome enough to, like, treat our life like it's a journey. Because when they talk about your life, it's it's like it was a journey. You know, they did this and they did this. The story. Yeah. Yeah. But you're not treating it like that when you're in it sometimes. But you can. Yeah. It takes a conscious push for sure. That's David Goggins. Stay hard, motherfucker, stay hard. Subscribe, motherfucker. By the way, subscribe. See you on his life. But you. Right? Yeah. Yeah, we did a good. But that's it. Oh, yeah. But that's that's. I think that's what he's like pointing to is like, stay hard to fuck in. That's a difficult. It's like Seal Team six is like your life though, you know it's is every day. You got to be like with precision and come correct and be like locked and loaded. If you want to complete the mission, it's every day and, you know, no days off. So yeah, every day you're in is bitch dog. I'm sorry. Like you're this you have this a fucking life subscription, you know, say we're we're subscribed. Like, you know, spiritual realm. We subscribed to life, and now we're just in here. We wake up, we have to go to sleep. We have to go back to the motherland or wherever the hell our mind goes whenever we go to sleep. And then whenever we're not in the motherland sleeping, we're here, you know, it's like a weird little. And we need to go there. We need to go there. If you don't go there enough, you're gonna have a shitty time here. It's like, damn, damn, you balance that and then you go eat. You're starving to death, and you gotta not shit yourself to things. We're all dealing with them. Like, I'm not sure if we subscribe for it or so I signed up for it. Maybe. Maybe not. But we're here regardless, so we gotta make the most of it. It's like, why? What should I do when I'm here? And why should I do it? It's like you should make the most of it. Go as hard as you can at the highest good you possibly can because it's worth it. That's it. That's all. Jump shot, I say. That's what the Bible is trying to say. I think part of what the Bible is specifically trying to say is like, and the way that looks is like the ultimate level of self-sacrifice and doing like the treating others with the most love and respect and whatever, you know. Yes. And then self-sacrifice, the high screw and things will be terrible. It'll be bad. It'll be worth it. Yes. That's like the part of the Christ like nature is like the torture him, you know, so you're not Christ, so you won't get tortured like Christ, I don't think I think that's part of what he's telling the brothers when he's like, that's why, like the book of Job, too, he gets, like, tortured to a degree, you know what I'm saying? I mean, he's still like, no. Extremely virtuous. Never. He never. Yeah. For me, virtue is for real. Yeah. Dude. The devil, I guess I haven't I haven't read it, but I'm pretty sure the premise is like, the devil, more or less is arguing the fact that, like, the only reason that he's so chipper and uppity and spiritually devout, everyone walk away is a fucking dripping a steward on my ass. He's wagging on me because he blessing and that's it. It's the only reason this is because you letting him score 40 a game. If it wasn't for scoring 40 a game, he wouldn't rock with you. Human way of Jersey. He's like, oh fuck you bitch. I guess I don't know until they fucking show. But then he blesses him at the end. Yeah, you could have gone directly to animated. That would have been the. Yeah, yeah, that was awesome story G dub. Let's go. Yeah. Because his job slagging us. Yeah it's done with like a really nice robe or something. Yeah. Yeah. You feel me. But that's part of the premise of his his story too. So I like that. The part where it's like, virtuous ness and extreme punishment where like, paralleled, because that's what I'm trying to point is that's I think that's what they say when you decide to commit your heart to Christ, like you're going to feel the, new level, new devils, because it's like the problems get harder on you because you're getting closer to the truth, because you just. Well, it's like, what does that mean? When I believe in Jesus, life is going to get harder on me. It's like, what are you pointing to? You know what I'm saying? Why would the why would that even happen? That's a question. It's like, because spiritual warfare is real. I don't know, because, you're getting closer to the truth of the game. The matrix has to like, prop itself up more to try to keep you retained in here as you free yourself from your earthly bonds. Yeah. Trying to keep you on the on the down low. Can I keep you down here, man? Yeah, I think that's the I don't know why I would do that. The entropy or it's truly a matrix that wants us like Bluefield, you know. Yeah. I think it might come from, I don't know, maybe also control. They want control the future. Predictable outcomes, predictable people. You know. Yeah. Keep it simple. Keep us down here, keep us entertained. Oh. Whoa. That's a that's a thought, right? I guess if it's like, even if it's just a predictive analytical AI program, it would still gear the simulation towards less energy output, more predictability. Yeah. It might not be like a person who has like a desired outcome even. It could just be the way a machine operates, you know, might costly to have all these free minded people, but you just glitch your way in there. You just like eventually it just like assigns you to a different folder. Lucky person. Yeah, it's like a deal. What? This fuck. You know what I'm saying? It's like I can't. I can't explain the code that comes through here. I need, like, okay, I have a folder of people, similar problems. I call them lucky people. Or like, this person keeps pushing for money. It's like, I'm just going to push this person into a rich person, rich person folder. And some people's lives just flip like that, you know? Like you study law for a long time and you're like, you think you're like being a lawyer doing the bar exam, but really you're like sending a specific, code output into the algorithm of, like, the matrix life itself, of life itself. Okay. And it's like you're not that. And so it like pushes against that. And as you attain more identity, like, no, hold on. I've been studying law for like four years. Like I'm a fucking person of the law. This is what I do. And it's like, no, you're the fucking person. That was a volleyball player that didn't make it in college, but played at the D2 and had that bad breakup. And you're like, no, I'm not like, I look different. I feel different every day. I'm a different person. And then eventually life just like has to give you new code. It's like, okay, this is the code that we have to process this. Now you can have it. Yeah. I was like manifesting to a degree, right? Yeah. Kind of. Yeah. And the idea is that you have to like, yeah, more or less push yourself into a thing that you're not until you are that thing. Because on some level, like there's a system that is trying to process you and it's like that's not you like it'll send one line of code to stop you. That's easy. But eventually that becomes costly too. And it just writes new code for you. But that's I think that's why there's the resistance, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah, yeah. But, but that's the whole thing here is that you can send the new code over and over and over and over and over, and then it will have to, like, shift you. And I think sometimes people are just like successful people are trying to point at that. And that's I don't know, that's like kind of a conspiracy. Weird way to look at it, you know? But we brought up The Matrix and then it makes sense in that realm. Yeah. Yeah. And and it could be as simple as as simple as that, I guess, you know. Yeah. It's trying to control people because we have no one knows what the future or the future holds. Exactly. You know, we're all dealing with that too. We like we don't know exactly like we're trying to make our sacrifices today so that the features like, better for us. Yeah, we're talking about job. We go far off. So the job though the thing that job is tight. You hold it down and then I guess the other side holds it down no matter what. It's hard man has it. Yeah. That's what it looks like. And then all of that back to like why does he do that. So because it's worth it. It's like the most worth worthy thing. Like he is worthy. It's like what. What are we talking about? You know what I'm saying? Oh, I think that, so then I'm talking to this kid and I'm like, should I bring up job? Okay, okay. And, I think I just say something like, eventually, like, at one point, you're going to look at yourself and say, that's who I am, and that's what I did, you know? But that exists every day for me. Like. And not only that, but I'm like built up. My whole personality is built on this idea that it's like a worthy thing, like it's I was like, it's become my identity is ultimately the thought I should have gotten to with him. But I had it later because I'm trying to be like, it's just like what I do now. Like, I and also like, I wouldn't betray who I am at that point, you know what I'm saying? It's who I am so much. It would be weird for me not to like, I can't. I can't even imagine a reality where I'm not doing this, you know? And I was wrong. I think I lost some ass. I just left it at, like, It becomes who you are. And he was like, all right, bad bro. And, like, walked off. Yeah, but it was a weird conversation to have at work and then also put up with the crazy has a prayer the next day. And I was like, I don't know what's going on here, man. I'm just try my hardest because out here, that's it. Just try my hardest, dude, we had, it was so we had a moment yesterday we went to, Rosario's. Yeah, the the new one or whatever. They. I guess they moved locations downtown. I said it's in a bigger spot now. It's nice. It's huge. But we went down there, it was like, we didn't even. Or I guess we or the wife had forgotten that it was her aunt's, her aunt's birthday. So, like Saturday night, she like, hey, we're going to Rosario tomorrow, okay? Her and just little Mexican food, you know, had some Molly. It was fucking bad ass, man. It was good. Real savory. Spicy chocolate chicken. It's like it's like the sauce that comes on the the A5. Oh what was the chicken like? It was just like a song about a dish marinated. Marinated. It was like a whole, not a whole chicken, but it was bonus. And it was like, oh, maybe chicken breasts. I don't want to say it was white. It was white meat for sure. So it was like a chicken breast in the middle of the shit. Yeah, it was like a chicken breast covered in the sauce and like some rice and beans. You slice it up or you get, like, shredded it with your fork. Pretty much. Well, it was fire. It was gas. They did. That was funny too, because the little one was asking us about like, what's your favorite Mexican food? And I was like, shit, I don't know. What's a good question? That sounds really good. That's a question. Yeah, the mole is fired. I think I said that I was like, that was one of my responses as far as like which a very Mexican food. And I was like, well, I love enchiladas. So the, the fucking super versatile. There's so many different kinds of other ball dude. Kawhi Leonard. Yeah. The the fucking fire. They're the two way player. But I was like I never had like a true Malay. I don't think. And then we went to Rosario I was saying like some all I would try this shit. And they had like mole enchiladas. Soon I was like, oh like it, it's a lattice. That's a knock at the regular bullet. And then it was a we went to it's like a really it's in downtown San Antonio. So not a lot of parking, you know what I'm saying. In their particular parking lot for that restaurant itself, there's maybe like 12 spots, maybe 15. And then it's like downtown. So I had to go find parking somewhere or parking on the street. And then, we were driving around, we saw a parking lot, and there's like $5 parking all day. It's like, oh, hell yeah, let's go pulled in. That's a pay. It's like $17. I was like, oh, what the fuck did bastards. I don't know if it's like they forgot. Are they being assholes know? Oh yeah they are. Fuck. I already parked. You know, I was I was going to pay it and someone did do that. I saw someone do that. They turned 17. Yeah. And then what? Wait. Hold on, hold on. Okay, well, what happens then? We pull out, I gotta fuck this. Where I doing this? And then we're just going to go drive around again, and then we pass the passenger Rosario's parking lot. Oh, I thought you park there and then this was happening to you, Like they didn't try to pull the trick on, you know, I. What do you mean, like 5 to 17? Yeah, yeah, I know, yeah. We we pulled in, we we parked there and then. Oh about to pay. No not 17. Yeah. No it was a, there was a kiosk. It was just a little QR code. But there was somebody else like another truck of a family who was also God was I'm following, you know, we both pulled in. We both are assuming it's $5. We both find out it's not a $5. Yeah. It was like a fuck. And then they ended up buying the bullet. Okay? I was like, fuck that bullet. Look at my cock. Go, go have a fucking press. My luck gotten of go for no deal and no deal, Howie. No deal. They were just creeping up next to Rosario's parking lot. And then, just like, literally the front spot, the first spot is open. Oh, yo, this fucking home with Dick. Marshawn dog. Yo, it was great. And then hit. Yeah. Then we were, the pass and all the food was like a 20 top. It's like a 20 top. We had it was probably close to 20 people, if not a little bit more. And then I'm sitting in the middle, a cousin or her aunt sit across from me, and then they're passing out the food and then me and the wife, and then maybe a couple of us were like, gonna pray. And then we're like, group prayer, y'all. I'm not the brother. I'm the what's the food, y'all? And then just fucking rip that shit dog just ripped it nice. Cal ripped in junior dark. Just 30s to he. Yeah, that was just a quick a of the bars. Yeah, yeah, it just happens, bro. Yeah. It's like the more you do it, the better you get. Of course, with anything. And it's just like I have a couple things I like a, I go to standard like, like reloads and freestyling, you know, saying where's like prayer, freestyling more or less. Dude, I told that kid when part of when I was talking to him, I'm like, I'm also a musician, which I'm like, I freestyle. I used to freestyle a lot, and I'm a it's a weird. It's a weird correlation. But if I'm in there like freestyling, but I don't have to rhyme and I don't have to, like, it's just like a build with cadence or have to worry about a beat drop or any. That's it. Yeah. No, it's it's super. It's like it's acapella. Like basketball by yourself dribbling on the sidewalk versus playing like in a game, you know, maybe it's a little more pressure for some people than that. But, but I was trying to point to the same thing. It's like freestyling to some degree, for sure. Dude, that's 100%. What? Yeah, you're generating this jumping in there on the fly? Yeah, more or less. And you're like asking, asking, just trying to be open to, you know, I was trying to let the sort of ones podcast, if I can open it up. I think it's what most people are trying to do when they're having conversation, having genuine conversation with someone. You can tell when like two people or have a genuine conversation with each other, and you can tell whenever you are in a conversation with somebody and they're trying to fucking sell you something, or you're like, like Steve was talking about last time when you're like a fucking timeshare, it's like, dude, this guy's just a fucking prick, bro. I don't want to have any business to do with you, bro. You suck. You suck so hard, dude. You fucking suck you. You're a piece of shit. Yeah. Having to deal with that. I've never been in one, but yet Steve's recount is just, like, exactly what I would expect. Yeah, right. They got to make some kind of play. You're better. But, yeah, it's all psychological. It's all psyops the whole time, from start to finish. They're going to hold you for six hours, I promise you. I don't know what they promise you, like a $200 voucher or like a free meal. It's like a I tell you, I feel like it's got to be around like $1,000. Like of a promise. Maybe like $500 value something because people something to pull you in for and the. And they know it. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. It's like more like $1,000. Okay. Yeah. Three hours of your time you're going to get. But it's in the form of like trips and comps and this and that. You get to stay a weekend here and there. So. Okay. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. They pull you in for three hours and they're just going to start nice rather longer. Yeah. Me too. But it's like right. He said three I think he said even I think he said I was like two and a half. Okay. But I could be mistaken because my mom has done a couple of them for sure. Really? Yeah. I remember her telling me I think them a buying one because she's like, I've been to enough of these to know when I see a good deal, like, mother fucking got you. They got you in the long run. They got you. So, okay, let's keep on knocking on the door and then we'll present them a little fucking rookie offer that that is a good deal relative to the fucking big boy offers we're throwing out there. Yo. That's gnarly. That's. I don't even know the the perks and benefits or the usage or anything. I think she's used it before. I don't know, I'm assuming it was a good deal though. Regardless, whatever. But she's done a couple that she's mentioned that they are like fucking 6 hours to 6 hours. Yeah, South Park makes a of it in an episode for sure that all the episode. But it's like a six hour ordeal okay. So three's threes like a little more manageable. It's like a fucking long movie. I love it with a long movie with six different. That's a shift. That's a shift shift. It's a work shift. It's a work shift at a book shop. You know, you're going to have to you got to put the polo on, you know, put on your work face, gel your hair back. You're going to have to fucking. Hello, hello, hello. You got to do the thing, you know, six hours of sitting through a fucking presentation of someone trying to sell you something that's like $10,000 that you have no intention of buying. So that's the gamble. That's. That's the situation. We've built $1,000 for six hours of your time with. If you lose the game, you pay 10,010 x. It's like, how would you not do that? I would kind of do that, I think, I think I do it for fun. If you presented it more like that, afford to buy your mind training. Yeah. Before for your mind it'd be. It'd be That's good, that's good. That should be good for people who are trying to build up their, like, confrontation. That. Yes. They sit there. One of those. Yeah. Don't give in. You just sit with like, what are your homies who's a hard motherfucker and who just not shook? And it's just stone cold. So cold that is soaking his energy and is sit in the pocket of Uncomfortability. It is being, I want to be nice to this guy, but he's asking for $10,000. Yeah. It's like it's it's easy to turn that down like that. That's easy to say no to or should be. It should be. It should be. But it's it's like a desire. It's all a sigh of the whole time. That's why they're trying to. That's what they're built on. Their foundation is built on trying to fuck you and I fuck you over. Exactly. But trying to overcome that obstacle that is, is there. Just like socially. No one out here is trying to write a check right now for $10,000. Maybe after six hours of convincing and schmoozing. And I can give you a little bit of this in that whatever incentive for a room cover stay or a voucher, you'll get that at the end. Of course you get it at the end. Rich cousin dude, it's like timeshares. You kidding me? It's like $10,000 to own a house for like four weekends a year. Something like that. It's like, yo, 10,000 might be late. I think he was saying it might be higher. They could be higher at 20 grand. They'd be trying to. They were trying hit, you know, 50 grand if they hit you. The one big lick. By the time you realize this was a dumb idea there in Tennessee to another sucker is going down, I don't know, might have been a good deal. Anybody? Good deal? I'll talk to her more about it next time I see her. I was like, hey, I was talking to Matt about some shit on the podcast about timeshares. Like, is it worth it? Like, it's like after you've had it. Hello. What do you want? You buy? I forgot what you guys. She's had it for a couple years now, I think. Yeah, long enough to at least have the opportunity to travel to it a couple of times. So we'll see you TBD. It's funny that your question was, was it worth it? Like that is kind of like a deciding factor delineating factor. That's the factor for like why do we do anything. You know the factor for buying. Yeah. With the sacrifice is justified. Oh that's it, that's it. Oh hey that's life for having that common liking to not weird when you're about to go to sleep. Laying down versus fully logged out of the game into the other conscious realm, like in between that transition. I remember just thinking about that. I can't remember if I was just like thinking about it or if I was on Joe Rogan talking about it in my mental. But either way. So the idea that why, why, why are we doing things like because it's worth it, right? And what does that even mean? What what does something mean to be worth it? It's like then the sacrifices were justified. It was the transaction was balanced. That harmony there, at least subjectively, I could I could settle with that. I'm good. If everyone receives that same level of subjectivity. I think it's objectivity. 000, good. So it's crazy because you're like, in my world, I'm like, in the world, right? Know there is harmony. You know, like it's a subjective harmony. Yeah. If it's true. Yeah. If everybody feels that same level of subjectivity. Yeah. From all from like the individual to like the family, community, country, world, whatever. Right. Some things, just like we agree on, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. And then once you get it, I think if or especially if it pulls the same emotion out of everybody and we like that happens. You know, I think the types of people pray like sometimes people pray like for someone is sick and like there's a moment where like they're like, wait, disagree or more or less like build this energy up or what? Who disagrees? Like the people praying for the person and like, you know, when I was almost like going through a rough surgery, a lot of people were praying for me and they were kind of saying like, no, like, don't take because like, it feels like you're taking this kid from us, you know? So, that was weird because, like, we're losing the battle. Yeah. Right. So they're praying, like a different, you know, in the name of, like, God, who is like the the generator of the code, you know, like, don't don't do this. Okay. Yeah. And, and what were just objective harmony, like, from the lower level. Right. So then if, if a community or a group of people say like subjectively, this is not what's happening right here. We believe in this. We believe in this like it becomes objective reality in that sense too. I think when people pray, they can kind of do that same kind of thing where if enough people agree that's reality, even when it's not reality, it'll become reality. And you see that in politics too. If enough people agree this is reality, you watch it become reality. It's to some degree, you know. Yeah, it has reach at that point. Yeah. And that's that's a weird thing that happens. Yeah. But I, it plays into the code thing we're talking about, just like submitting code to the matrix. But then also just, like the nature of, like, what is like, who's the best rapper? Is that completely subjective, or does one person at some point like when. And it's more objective than subjective in reality, you know, like, as for because it's hard to. Like maybe we'll never know. But I think that the bridge between subjective and objective is kind of it's it's closer than we think, you know, because we have input. We make reality. Yeah, yeah, for sure, for sure. And yeah, you could be dramatically off with like your if someone is like I think fucking Lamar or who what's his name the ball the ball the, the the dad LaVar ball LaVar right. Yeah. He's the best player of all time. Best player of all time has a it really believes it and like legitimately believes it. It's all of a legitimately believes that. Then like everyone else who has access to the same data set of available NBA players to choose from are going to say, you're fucking off your rocker friend. You're not even close. What are you what? You're in an insane asylum as far as we're concerned, in this realm of reality, NBA reality, you're in a fucking insane asylum. Leonardo DiCaprio smoking cigarets. You're crazy. You're cracked. Yeah. You're cracked. So there is something like. There is like you can be just so, so far off with your own subjective opinions of things that, like, we kind of deem you like a crazy person, like a psycho like that, like, but the place for those people, we put them in a fucking in a room in cage thing. Yeah, some Sutter Island shit. Okay, so there is a there is an objective reality that we all are agreeing is happening. I think one thing that all of that points to potentially is harmony, like you said, like, that we harmony is real and we do gravitate towards harmony because it's like, you know, whenever the sacrifices are justified, it's worth it. Yes. For whatever. That's the that's the branch down. I guess it makes sense. You want, your body wants what's it called? Where you just want to be, like, as they say, equilibrium. Yeah. Equilibrium and homeostasis. Yeah. Yeah. You're trying to, like, exist in that zone as much as possible. That's why I like a uncomfort zone exists. So that's part of the reason. Like we fight entropy and shit like that, you know. And so but that's going on I think at a broader level too, like that. That's what's going on here, is that, we want harmony is like gravity. So even at this core level where like Harmony is that there's a little, like a little whiff of harmony. I'm chillin. But like, also when we get down to, like, just ideas and, when someone has that kind of crazy opinion, it doesn't get this harmony. Like, we all hear it. We all feel it. Like that's that's wrong, bro. You know, like, I can't agree with you. Yeah, we feel it. Yeah. It'd be much easier to be like, I like that player a lot, or like, yes, but no, I see your case. Yeah, right. Like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. You fucking Michael Jordan. Yeah. Kobe Bryant, we can LeBron James am I okay I see we're coming from I see your case. I can read that book and like I can follow it. Right. It makes sense. So I think but yeah when you get it where you're saying well that's a funny idea too. But the underlying a bigger idea, I think that carries that one is that, like Harmony is just real. Maybe that's and then like music sounds good when it's in harmony. Whatever. Like there's a lot of instances where we like it. All right. But I think that I don't think we factor that in, you know, that really what we're trying to do here is just like, make worthy sacrifices that keep harmony. Yes. Facts. Facts that we love, that. Yeah. We love that we're striving for. It's like the perfect garden. It's like as good as we can do here. As good as we can do here. Yes. That's it. Because we all have to. We're all just people man. I'm not just dealing with that shit. Yeah. Everyone's got their own stories. Everyone got their obligations their families you know. You know choose that. Yeah. Their upbringing. Upbringings like fuck man. Everyone has different starting points. But we're all dealing with that core issue of being a human, not knowing what the fuck to do here. Yeah. Having to figure out what's a worthy sacrifice for me. Yeah. What do I enjoy doing? Well, what would be a worthy sacrifice? Because there's no don't make sacrifices. That's not. It's not an option. It's like, that's it. You have to make it. Yeah. Go do something. You're here. I guess that's kind of what Joe Rogan's been talking about when he talks about, like, universal basic income UBI or whatever. Yeah, yeah. So, yeah, idea of giving everybody's like a paycheck to to to sustain their life. Give food, pay for water and gas, whatever. But then yeah, then it's like, what are we going to do with your time? There's something there. And we're dealing with that now regardless. We're always deal with it. But I guess it might be a little bit I don't know. What do you think it'd be easier than it is now if you had universal basic income to, like, pursue a passion or pursue a, something else. If you had not as much of a time pressing obligation to your regular guy to keep the lights on job, man, it's a complicated question. I might open it up. Actually, Joe, I think they might open it up for us. For sure. Part of the thing is, it's very difficult to monetize a craft unless you're extremely lucky. That's just reality. And I can say those words and you can say, I'm extremely lucky and I fucking get it. And so like, part of you might just be like, nah, that doesn't even factor in decision making. That might be, difficult to make money off of this. I think I can do it. We need to make money off of it. Yeah. UBI. Right, right. But that's. I guess that's the thing is, like, at that point, the investment would be, are you just going to live on enough to get by, or are you going to try to like, progress further into having Money Kingdom Bill, then that's like a split decision between job, career ladder or pursue your passion at UBI. But for us, we could just take UBI and Hope because we've already, like, gotten to a point where everything right where we're trying to go, what we're doing. But you got to factor risk in at some point. I mean, like, if you can, to totally be like, you're good. It's not a risk you have. UBI, rent's paid. I can eat ramen. I'm cooking. We're good. Then fucking. Yeah, dude, hope there's gonna be a lot of homers that come out of that that swamp, you know what I'm saying? So people that fucking really take us probably artistically to another level, if you give them that much fucking time, if you give people that much time to just be creative. Yeah. That expressive that, that will, that will, we might go through. We might go through a renaissance. Right, bro? We might go through a renaissance, something like that. 2050 or some shit, 2050 Renaissance, 2054. You're a genius, dude. That's revolutionary. That's the innovative thinking right there, for sure. And that'd be crazy. Yeah. So, with that, I think so we would be able to do well with that, but would it be good for society? Is another question, right. Because because it's hard to find purpose and people. I guess what the argument is proposing is like, if you give people UBI, take away their jobs and then let people find their their identity, their self-worth, their value in doing something and being good at something and providing a positive benefit to society and communities, being a barber or whatever. But it's like we don't need our being, I guess, out of the discipline. Different levels of like, oh, jobs that might be like might be lost in this in like whenever AI takes over some shit, like, we don't need people like kiosks or a fucking McDonald's. We don't need people. Please order on the app. And you know what I'm saying? At some point we're going that's going to I'm not sure how how far it's going to reach, but that's going to happen. Like that's a metaphor of like a McDonald's McDonald's worker. Like the AI is going to do that for a lot of other shit, too. And I'm sure like the true depth and like the, the width of that, of that strike, we get asked that GPT, it's like, how much are you going to fuck us up? It's like, oh, you're done. Like, these jobs are all obsolete. That's what I'm saying. They probably tell us, like, we might kill a lot of jobs. That's what I'm. I was trying to make that argument about AI the other day, and then people find the value in those jobs sometimes. But given the chance to have their own free time that might be able to pursue something else is what we're proposing. Kind of yes, I see I see what the the bargain you're making is, is that but some of those people might have too much of their identity in that job. It might be like too far gone, I guess, is what I was saying. I'll be able to find purpose or be a little bit more lost. And he follows. I would take mushrooms. Yeah, there we go. I think what he's pointing at is like, I appreciate that would take much. By the way, I'm with you. I'm with you just because, because it's just difficult, as he's saying, people won't win that fight. That's what he's saying. It's like I don't a lot of he's not saying like, people are too far stuck in there. I need to change. It's impossible. He's saying, like they won't win the fight and I think we could win that fight. You know, I've seen myself win that fight. And that's part of why I myself go towards a brand. It's worth it because I'm like, it's possible that you could rewire yourself more into the person that you'd like to be, rather than the person you're predisposed to be. And, and that that shit's important to me to express because I was in the position of I'm in the predisposed and I don't want to be here anymore. And it seemed like magic. That's what Jordan Peterson is talking about. Magical transformation. Yep. Different game. No different. I view the game differently. Yes, the rules have changed. The game has changed. Or like the goal or whatever. Like the the different dungeon. It's like, okay, now I'm on a different a different dragon. Now it's like a different. It's a different man's a demon fucking. Was it The Witcher or whatever? Like it's like just different demons. Yeah. Or different types of monsters that you have to fight. That's why what it feels like now as an adult, for sure, but juxtaposed also with, like, Pinocchio is like Jupiter wishes upon a star for Pinocchio to be a real boy because he's a doll. But that's like magic happens, like literally becomes a boy. And that that is a metaphor for something that happens in your life when you, like, pursue these things. But then, like you said, the demon, like he goes to the belly of the whale, it's like literally the worst thing that could happen, happens. And then he's got to rescue his dad even though he's scared like the thing that gave him life, which I think is like kind of a metaphor you have to pursue for the ideal that pursued for you to exist. It's like it's almost not even your ideal. That's like, well, whose ideal is it? And then it's like, Jesus Christ. Like we get pointed to that. So there's like, something of the spirit of your father. Yeah. Yeah. Like he had to go get his father. It wasn't like, optional. He didn't say, like, well, I'm a boy now, and he's gone. And I guess that was his parting sacrifice. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Like that was his boss who thought of him. Well. I think there's even a name Monstro, as what it's called, right? Yeah. Monster. And so they call them Kingdom Hearts, I think. I'm not sure if that's the actual whale's name, I think so I was like, Dumbo, so I can nostra. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So all that's what is that pointing to? What is you know what I'm saying at this moment, I'm just using it to reflect the magical transformation happens. And that's kind of why I like my identity is predicated on preaching that thing, you know, don't preach or not preach and preach his word. Who wants to get preach that? Preach, but be a witness to that. There we go. Yeah, yeah, I testify. So, Uba. What? Help me in this position for sure. But other people would say fine. Okay. So. Yeah. So what's their thing? You know what I'm saying? Like what happened in your life at more of a core level that you could serve a purpose to, that you could serve that you could steward. So an idea like, could you pursue an idea that would get you there, you know, and the answer is ultimately, yes, but we are kind of like, it seems like more or less like manicured into the matrix. And they want and that's like, I'm not being trying to be weird. I'm just saying, like, we want to just be be who we are. We want to suffer our own habits, you know, just be here for the day, but just get through the day. Survive. Yeah. Just survive. Yeah, totally. How do you plan to survive? Totally. Thanks, man. Are we over to the for the intro to. We need to get wrap it up. Yeah. We, I think we have maybe, like, 15 minutes. Okay. Nice. Yeah, we could do another part, like 15, 20. I love this role. Yeah. We're cooking, so we're out there today. Sorry. We're cooking. Started with. No. We get we're no, we started we just transition dog. Yeah. It's just one string. It. That's just one conversation. Yeah. Talk about poop. Let's talk about God. Finish test job. Tell him it's worth it. It's worth it, man. UBI I think so, yeah, Joe's is. I guess because if you're a barber, are we gonna be able to take that away, I guess, right? Is that like a field of of profession? Them is in danger. If anything, I encroach on it. I think the biggest argument for jobs that will last is things predicated on subjectivity. Yeah. Like it's all art, right? Yeah, it's art for sure, if you have to judge it. Like, do I think this is good? Then those are probably last, because I don't think I is going to be very good at making what we deem good for a while. Not quite yet. Like, how would they know? You know what I'm saying? Trends change. People change. Fashion changes. We see something. We like it. No one expected to like Timothy Champlain. Now he's like a heartthrob or something. He's like a fucking skinny white kid. Wonka. Yeah, bro. And now he cooks. You know what? I'm saying? Oh he's cooking. Yeah. He's cooking. So, like, I think things just happen, you know what I'm saying? It kind of like redirects, maybe what we. What was the trend, you know, and how a robot came up with that? I mean, if I was doing that kind of shit, we're pretty super fucked to. Who knows, I think who knows? Ass. Pretty crazy ass pretty fucking crazy, man. You can make some crazy shit with AI. Yeah, and it's just getting better to, like, in the, in the, in the metaphor of, like, a barber, an AI barber, like or like a fucking just I don't know what how they even do that. Like, have a fucking robot actually do it or put like a helmet on and it just fucking does that shit for you. I don't know, but I think in that in that realm, you might be able to, I don't maybe I could use that because you could definitely use AI like Jordan Peterson was talking about it in one of his podcasts. Someone asked him about large language models, lambs or whatever, like what they call them. And like the I think, Grok and ChatGPT. There's a couple other different ones that are in the popular meta of forefront of AI interfaces to use to research things and to help you study and he's like is like they are incredibly helpful, incredibly helpful. I use them every day. I remember where I was when I heard that, and it made me laugh. Right. It's just like it's but it's it's just a tool. So if, you can help, you can definitely use it for inspiration. That's that's the thing if like, I think, I don't know if I itself would be able to I guess I can answer your question. Like, with that in mind, I don't think because humans do that humans like to fucking literally just go the opposite way, just to go the opposite way. Sometimes we like to be like, no, I don't want to. I don't want to do that. Rebelling is dope. Yeah. What's like a it just happens. You know, I think it's just like a constant theme that's occurred through generations, just like like the whenever people are in their 13 to 18 year range, like they're maybe trying to step out of what their parents are doing or what other people are doing, commonly trying to not listen to mainstream radio music or whatever. And part of that exploration process of like finding out your personality and kind of who you are is like, I don't know, experimentation and like, you're just trying to figure out what you align with, what makes sense. But I lost myself in that thought. What was I before the. You were getting into damage. I was something like an in that bitch that this photo. Oh well it's finally I find people I see other artists raw. Yeah. You come back. It always does. Yeah. One thought that I had that I was keeping on the burner because I'd lost it, but then I found it. Yeah. Was there, I think the third and final thought from Harmony is real. It's like, Harmony scales beautifully. Like when when we, instruments are an incredibly good harmony with each other. It manifests as beautiful to us. And I think that that's one thing that is like. That's like a benevolent nature of God or the universe. Is that like, the more harmony that exists, the more beautiful things will be. And that's, another reason why it's worth it. Yeah. Another thing that it points to is, it would be the, the expression of life that you would exist in would be the most beautiful. The moments will be beautiful. I think we all. Don't you want to cry? I'd say that's art. Like, don't you want to feel that beautiful? Yeah. Right. If that was happening with your life all the time, like with the story of your life was such written that you were like, oh, my, this is. No, this is in, like, everything kind of like making sense and foretelling and foreshadowing. And it's like, I think that's what we all. That's why movies are super dope, because we all kind of long for that. Like subtly in our mind, for our life to matter to, for it to like, make sense, for the sacrifices to be justified facts. And then the more then. So then you can route that back to trying to be in harmony with like your true who you are and trying to exist on that level. So you have harmony with yourself and then finding that compromise with the other players so that you have harmony with them and then in line with your tasks and responsibilities, then things will beautify. Yeah. Is if it if it didn't, then it would be like, is it worth it. You know. Yeah. You feel it. You feel it. Yeah. Yeah. It'll be known to you I think I was, I was tracing back the thought I was just losing, but it was, we're talking about the people like to rebel. The 13. Yeah. People like to rebel. And that's like a human, a naturally human thing. And I think I can really do that. I can't really emulate that. I can't emulate the. Unless you program it, unless you program it to do that. That's the percentage rate, right? Yeah. It's like at a certain percentage rate, it's like, let's just do a random point 9% every once in a while. It's going to fucking just do some rebellious I guess it knows like 30% of all population between this age group at 20% rate of this depending on location and like fucking DNA and who you are and stuff like that, you're this percentage likely to have this percentage of rebels watch it in the media plays out at scale at four X, because it's just different and different and it's novel. And that plays into the factor. Yeah. So then they're getting 30% of radio airtime for time scaled what was popularity. And then and then it calculates for that when it makes your radio fucking I playlist and it's like, okay, we need some of that shit. That's not really good, but it's on the new and everybody's kind of into it. The kids like it boom. And then the club goes up because it's novel. People are like, oh, this is what they're listening to. Okay, I see what you oh, wow. They're really going down to that. This is it, Like that's and that's the fucking. It could predict that. You know what I'm saying? Yeah it does. Now at some point I kind of upset boom boom boom boom. Don't know bro. Where did that come from? Where did that come from? You know. So yeah that that's that's the thing. Can I do that. Absolutely. But on some level will they be able to predict like what is what, what do we like. What's the rebel thing that we're like that represents me the best or like they've got the hottest sound or they might get there. So if we program it man it might get there bro. It's scary. It's scary to think about because we're thinking at this level, there might be other people who are thinking at this level of who are programing it, like on the forefront and trying to make this shit the most real and the most all encompassing. It's have a bigger fucking problem. It's like, what's the best wine? It's like whoever has the best argument, you know what I'm saying? It's hard to. And they might come up with really good arguments for why it's the best, you know. But ultimately, like people like, our boss said, someone can I can taste that bottle. You say it's the best, and then I can taste the bottle that I like for different reasons, and I enjoy it more. Like I literally like it better. So it's like, you can't tell me that it's the best. It's better. Yeah. It's. You can't tell me. It's not in my world for sure. And then then the question is, is he more right than the machine is right? And if more people agree with him, like, you're right, that's fucking bullshit. This is really fucking good. There would something would happen there, you know? And so that might be something that happens is like the you will get a baseline meta and it's I provided and you have, you know, basic income and you can be a unique basic bitch now yo bitch. Or you'll be doing you'll be doing the rebel stuff, which is gonna be a real war. There's just AI rebels that are like, hey, fuck the mainstream, you know what I'm saying? Let me get you a quick fade. But like. It's just so much cheaper. It's just so much cheaper. Yeah, yeah, that would be what people would argue done in 30 minutes. Yeah. 30 minutes. I mean, what am I an idiot to do? Two. Yeah, baby, sit through a shave or some guy's arms shaking. And I have an ex right there. He's fucking smoked a cigaret. He's like. Fucking. Oh, like I tattoo artists, right? Oh, now you're in their domain. Their dog is the questions. Oh, if you could just make the picture and it's like a fucking dope picture in the AI generated, then I could just has the fucking pen or the whatever the the ink, the needle, I guess. Oh, yeah. I'm saying the tattoo gun. So that's going to be a revolution in ink. Some more e holy paper industry gone. What will become hard is getting hand done. Tattoos. It'll be dope. And the idea of do it through. It's cooler if a human did it, but it cost more money. That will become the new capitalism. It might be a sign up for everything. Humanism. Yeah. You humanist. Yeah, well, the humanist party. Yeah. It's like, well, your uncle is wealthy enough to be a humanist. I mean, well, my family can't afford to be humanists. We gotta eat the government cheese. It's going to be like a whole fucking. We gotta get the whole country fair. The way I get it, right, it don't exist. Don't exist. But that's. What do I think that that might be. One thing that saves us, though, is that an industry that we built on humanism, like it sounds better when someone does it all. The music is like pretty good nowadays, but like, there's a real person making music that's fucking amazing. The fact that he makes music this as good as his I make music is like cool in and of its own self. So it's like Garner more. Everything will be dope or he's going to be strange in 20 years, bro. In 30 or 20 years, that could be the future that we write in. Descendants of what I feel like we should do a future because it's fun to imagine people like that shit. Yeah, it's a cool that's a cool universe for things to be. I just, I like maximizing oh, it's going to get maximized. That's the thing too. We started talking about. I'm like I said, I don't want to be like as someone who scared, but I think it just makes sense logically that AI is going to get rid of a lot of jobs. AI is going to be crazy. It already is. And we've been talking about it for a long time. It's crazy, and it's the rate at which it is getting crazier. It's getting faster and faster. So it's getting it's already crazy and getting crazier faster every day. And it's been like that for the last three years. Two years at least, for sure. This is like, yeesh, yeah, Joe's like, I got a 60, 40, 60, 40 chance. We make it out of this one. We're good. Damn, bro. 40% chance. We're just like, done. Yeah, we're just done as a human species. So it's like every once in a while, a comet's going to hit the dinosaurs. Like, I don't know what to tell you. Like Jesus coming back before that happens. I'm fine with that, bro. Yes, this is the end of times. End of times, bro. He's coming. I'm down for that too. I'm down for that. Sometimes I feel like. Could be any day now. I think that's maybe this are supposed to feel, I don't know. I wonder how long they thought that. Yeah. Right. I don't know I don't know man. Yeah. Scary for sure. I have one one. This is my order of order and chaos right here for I. Because it's really crazy right. But how are they using it. I think it will shrink departments. But like in what literal way. Right. But I think like the furthest I could reach right now is do you think a McDonald's could be completely run by AI operated systems? No. People, if they put the money into it. I think with a limited menu. Yes. That's kind of crazy, right? Yeah. See if they could proof of concept that and then in ten years have rolled out 50 of them. Like we just have a basic McDonald's. We have five items in like a couple other things, you know, say five main things to order and couple of other things all automated. You don't have to have any workers. You pay zero overhead for for labor. You pay one person $20 an hour to come and clean it or make sure everything's working properly. Check it once a day for an hour, two hours a day. That eliminates 90% of your labor, 95% of your labor like that for 95% of your stores. Well, I guess I guess also the question is then trade off of profit versus like the limited menu. And then also it's like class or not client but you know, say whatever. The social feedback from the society of people like okay, McDonald's sucks now fuck McDonald's. They lose everything. It's like, oh shit, okay. We lost like 30% of market share. That's not worth it. I'm not loving it. It's not? No, I'm hating it. You guys suck. You guys are terrible. Yeah, but I think you could with a limited menu, you could make it happen and make it profitable. Yeah. Someone's gonna up to the first company that gets bloody to the wall too, because then it's going to be like, well, this is industry standard now. You know, I'm saying look what it's the stock. Shares of that company are creating ripples in the stock market. And we are a fucking entity. Watch. That's going to happen. Guaranteed. Bet it's going to happen in the next. What what year we in 25. Yeah. In the next year. Do what I'm saying. I think by 2026 is going to be a fully automated AI. McDonald's. You can go to just one. There's AI with one $2 menu. Yeah. You know it's meant for labor costs. Oh fuck. Do they come back with you're fucked. Everyone's fucked dude right. Everyone's cooking. Anything we take, it's on the fly. Yo. Oh, dude, they said me chickens and McDonald's and hot spices and, like, small fries and fries and nuggets. That's it. Five things at your core. Five. And you got some drinks. Those. Those are easy. It's got enough. Those are. Those are easy. Yeah. Dude. Oh, yeah. Drinks. No problem. No. Yeah. It's fucking put it on and you have to hit that like it registers, it hits its own button. It was like. It was like up there hits its own button and it fills it up. It puts a lid on it. Yeah. And the system some solid delivers it out. Some of it might not be solid. There's no way to do it. There's a way to do it. Yes, but I think within the next year, maybe maybe 12 to 18 months, we might see the first fully. I, I guess McDonald's would probably be my, I guess, my guess for the first restaurant to like, venture into that or fast food restaurant, I guess to experiment with that. They feel like the number one. Yeah, right. Yeah. They're trying to make the most money. They're trying to be the most, like, ingenuity. You know, I'm saying try to be a little different. Yeah. They have. That was the most wiggle room, I think, to true. True, dude. Yeah. So we get there. That's. There it is. Right. It's like we just showed that I can eliminate human jobs like. And blink of an eye. That's just one example of something that I'm like, I think that's going to happen in a year. And then it's like now it's affecting us. And that's just I mean, in ten years we might feel it and there's people that'll never feel it because they're in the right job and they're there and they're making their salary and they have retirement and a pension, and they're going to get through their life before this is like completely, I think, shaking up all the job opportunities and industries. So we're good for a while. But it's like, you know, imagine what the car industry went through because it was like they started making a just a few in a factory. So like the innovation of the conveyor ship line, right? Yeah, yeah. And then having people like Detroit was like predicated on this industry is booming. And we've got these lines and we're just building cars and they're dope and they're awesome. And the system works too, like where we are now with making cars. I don't think it's the the industry changed so much, and I think that's going to happen for like that, but like all of our jobs. But then the scary thing is like Michigan is like doesn't exist anymore. It's not a booming. No, no, definitely not to the degree. Right back when it was Motor City, that happened to every major city and they all left, right. Because it was cheaper to do labor elsewhere to make cars. Yeah. Is that kind of like what the thing was, I think, yeah. We, I on some level took extra perks to also have our labor be cheaper and sourced in other countries. And so we were like made that exchange and the government did it to like, help our economy. But then at the same time now all those American jobs were gone. And so I think that if that happened in like ten of the major 20 cities, it would be weird as fuck, dude, I'm weird as fuck for life. Yeah, like the Amazon warehouses get efficient enough to start incorporating AI and they start losing ten, 20, 30, 40% of their workforce across all Amazon's across America. That's a lot of people working at Amazon. That's a lot of fucking people, dude. Yeah Amazon has a lot of workers. And now our job opportunities will be more at McDonald's. So same thing happens with them too with like two, 2 or 3 companies are doing that. Yeah. But if Waymo can do a pizza delivery you know that feels more like ten years away. But that's a that's a solid you're not getting ten years is probably a year to ten years, ten years, maybe some crazy shit right now we'll be fucking 40, bro. We still got hope in this life. Where's the human? We're so fucking human at 40, dog. We still got ten years left, baby. Yeah, yeah. So we got somebody cooking out there like, you know, life got real weird when I kind of hit, you know, this, like they probably said with the internet, you know? Yeah. Like, our kids are like, you know, like, like our parents having us in the early 90s, early to mid 90s, it's just like internet was coming available around, you see, like that. She was like new emails were fucking new. You got mail there. She was popping like they built a dynasty off it. But the dynasty of that fucking little drop right there. Little stuff. Yeah, you you may mail, mail bomb on. Yeah. Sorry. Please. Okay. I heard it in my head. I needed to hear it out loud. We are crazy people, but we have, oh. We were talking about some stuff. Dude, we're in fucking ten years. But, yeah, our parents seeing us, we're just babies. But then we grew up on the internet. So now your baby, our future babies are going to be growing up with us. Shit. It's just. I mean, normal in ten years. 15 years. We have a 12 year old. She's, like, grown up with this. I guess she's kind of like. Like us with cell phones. Yeah, I'm saying, like it wasn't there. But now she's going to see the growth of it and like, see it coming in like right around her middle school time, I started to be like, okay, this is part of it. Yeah. On on the most base level, it's like them just having a laptop that we didn't have as a kid, you know, like they get they can use it. Yes. You can use a calculator whenever you want. Like you don't actually have to know math like that. Like it's not like yeah. Question. You know, because we didn't carry on calculators, you know. But like I think they'll use AI like that where it's just like they just have like a search engine that actually works crazy. They can literally look up anything at all and have pretty much the answer to everything if they ever have to. Like school is like questions you don't know the answer to. You're like, I like the same reason why. Why do I learn math? I always have a calculator. It's like that applies like, why do I have to know shit if I can know whatever the fuck, let me look it up. Those aren't the worthy things to study anymore. History. Are you fucking dumb with just fuckin Thomas Jefferson? Yeah, I'm. I'm saying. Yeah, there's the ability, the abilities there, the abilities everyone needs to be. It needs to be enacted. It's like we have so much resource and tool now to fucking scavenge for all the information in the world. But we still need to, I guess there's utility in knowing how to research something or knowing what's it, what questions to ask, how to think critically, and then how to. Also, the other thing I'm learning is that like, there's a I think and I think Jordan Peterson mentioned this as well, or alludes to this with the large language models like, it teaches you how to like, ask questions or teaches you how to, like, get to the meat of what you need. You know, I'm saying how to find the vibe. Fuck the menus I need to, like, directly correlate. How do I get the what's the least amount of words I can use to get the results that I need? The most direct like line of communication I can like? What? What do I really want? You know, out of this fucking brainstorming session I can do with this ChatGPT like that is definitely being used in colleges now and for the past, however long it's been out. So like by the time or 12 year old is going to college, like she'll be a Pi now and like and I think she's using it now per se. But like she definitely will be like soon. Like again. Like that's going to be a normal thing for them. But it's you need to it's just a tool. You can't it can't be the substitute. That's the thing. It can't be the full substitute for school I guess, or for information. Yeah. So I guess it hypothetically could be if you're able to like, have the discipline and like the maybe if you have some extra guidance to help you figure out what's the study, what's worth knowing. Yeah. What's like actually going to help you out. Like what historical lessons you can take away from certain books or historical figures that can actually help you in your day to day life right now? And like, definitely like money stuff like finance and accounting and stock markets and how to trading or whatever, invest. You could do that shit for sure. But as a school kid, yeah, formal school is like almost unnecessary now, but there is some sort of loose handling. You need to take care of this tool with. There's a lot going on there, right? Yeah. It's crazy kind of job. Do you want. Yeah. What are the prerequisites for that job. You know sometimes you have to go to formal education but regardless it will be culture is going to be weird. It's gonna be strange. Super weird 20 years, 15 years from now. It's very strange. And I mean, the thing is, is like tight CFA decides who is going to win a lot of these cups. It was like, there's like a documentary about it, right? I feel like I've talked about a while ago. Yeah. They were like slanting aims and letting people the hand of God, you know what I'm saying? Like soccer has been corrupt from time to time. And FIFA was the people that owned like the league and the broadcasting rights and shit like that, and they were the ones corrupting it. But what they were doing on some level was presenting a narrative for a thing that you were watching, and then presenting a narrative for a thing that you're watching is going to be what the culture is already to that, to you. In a subjective lens, it's like there is a narrative that people are like. It's like, I guess everybody likes Drake. The first time he came on the radio, people are like responding positively. They're playing it all the time. It's like I can hear the song everywhere, you know? I guess I guess what people are rocking with this, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. So there is a narrative of Charlemagne or whatever is a mystery to this element. Yeah. Like you just see his podcast all the time or like he's the meta. Yeah. I'm saying like he's like a, he's an actor. Now that I know. You know what I'm saying, right. Like he's in the meta of pop culture and society. Okay. Yeah. Oh, me. Yeah. Okay. Got you know, Charlemagne, I was like, Charlemagne better. He's the better. Podcast for, like, hip hop, you know? But yeah. Charlemagne. Right. It just gets presented to you. And so it's like, I think the I will do that because FIFA already is doing that. Like the companies just going to adopt the AI, they're already presenting a narrative to you. Taylor Swift is the best. They're presenting that narrative to you. And then like, are we going to agree with that? There's going to get really good at doing that. So I think it's like, will that happen? Will I take over our culture and tell us what to do? It's like, yes, absolutely. Businesses already do that. It's like they're just going to yeah, it's it's not a stretch. Yeah. And it might not be that dramatic but I think it might look like you know have you, did you see the fucking Yeah I know you've seen it. The movie with Michael, the TV show with Michael B Jordan, TV show, Michael B Jordan. What's it on? The one where they have the discs in the back of their head and they can pull them out and put them in different bodies. So Netflix altered carbon? Yes. It's not Michael Jordan, is it? No, none of it is a different movie. Yeah. Like, it's the guy from, Anthony Mackie. I don't know the actors names that are a result of altered altered Carbon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's like, move your consciousness to a different body. Yes. More or less. Yeah. But we're talking about we're dying. So right there, I'm reticent. I don't get that. Fuck, fuck. Michael Jordan. We about, It's such a death thing when you remember. Now, fuck it. It's a bit of a no. It always comes back, though. It always does. Well, the thing about ultra carbon that's dope is, changing your consciousness. Oh, yes. I'm with you, sir. Thank you. Okay. Yeah. Do you know what he's like walking through the culture and the society? And then it's like the hotels are run by AI, and it's like a projected image of someone trying to get you to come into the hotel. Yes. Yeah, I think that that that's a scary thought. That's like the worst outcome they could get there, I guess. I think it's going to feel a lot more natural than like that. You know what I'm saying? It's like, are we there already? Kind of looks like billboards and commercials on everything. Like you're kind of already there, you know, will it get more weird and more integrated like probably probably. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Hold on tight. Where the humanists start the Humanist party here. Right here. We love people. People I love you guys. Thank you. On other people are some shit man. We're strange but we love us. We love ya. Love everybody. Love thy neighbor. Love thy self. Love God with all you got. That's it. It's worth it. That's why. End of story. Need I say more? No, they're gonna need more. So I will let you talk. We'll be back next week for the rest of our lives. With that. Yes. Gonna be so.

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