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Ryan Ryan Reynolds here
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this is end.
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Pat and Stu for Glenn today. Triple eight, seven,
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two, seven, B, E, C, K. A
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little warning from an interesting
2:46
source on the AI front. We'll
2:49
get into that and lots more coming up
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in one minute. For
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the state of Israel, there has been
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888 -488 -IFCJ. 888
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-488 -4325. So
4:05
as we know, artificial intelligence
4:07
keeps getting smarter and pretty
4:10
soon, according to former Google
4:12
CEO Eric Schmidt, it won't
4:14
be taking orders from us.
4:16
anymore. Oh, good. Yeah, isn't that
4:18
nice? It's so much work to give it orders. Yeah,
4:20
it is. If it would just know what
4:23
I wanted and do it for me in advance.
4:25
Or not listen to us at all. Yeah.
4:27
And just go off on its own, do whatever
4:29
it pleases. Well, it's going to know what's
4:31
better for us, Pat. That's right. That's the thing.
4:33
We might think we want to do one
4:35
thing, but it will know better. For instance, what
4:37
if humanity is a virus to the earth?
4:39
And he wants to eliminate that virus. It's a
4:41
great thing to think about on Day, isn't
4:43
it? You know, Glenn's off today.
4:45
He's for his Earth Day celebration
4:48
every year. He has
4:50
an annual Earth Day celebration. a
4:52
pilgrimage, really. Yep, he's planting
4:54
seeds. He's
4:56
seeding the Earth, reseeding the Earth.
4:59
It's beautiful. He's putting grass all over
5:01
grass seeded all over Washington, D .C.
5:04
today. That's nice. If you're there, you'll
5:07
see him. He'll be out there
5:09
just planting individual blades of grass to
5:11
celebrate this. Some people think there's
5:13
way too much marble going on in
5:15
DC. And so, blades of grass,
5:17
be very much appreciated. Yeah. Some green
5:19
spaces in DC, I think. Well,
5:21
you know what Glenn always says, Pat.
5:24
He says he gets upset because
5:26
we have paved paradise and then put
5:28
up a parking lot. Yeah. Did
5:30
you know that? Yeah. That's, well,
5:32
he's very famous for that. The earth
5:34
was perfect. Yeah. And now
5:36
it's terrible because we can park our automobiles
5:38
that we can drive to stores where we
5:40
buy the things that we wanted. There weren't
5:42
so many parking spots, there wouldn't be so
5:44
many cars. Right. And if
5:46
it weren't for any, there weren't so many
5:48
cars, there wouldn't be so many stores. Right.
5:50
And we could go back to Paradise, which
5:52
of course was foraging for our own foods
5:55
in the woods. And oftentimes going
5:57
hungry because we couldn't we couldn't find
5:59
it couldn't find any right so that
6:01
those are good old days man. Those
6:03
were the good old days and hopefully
6:05
we get back to that when were
6:07
hopefully when AI Realizes that we're a
6:10
virus yes, and it may very soon
6:12
during a talk at a recent summit
6:14
co -hosted by Schmitz think tank the special
6:16
competitive studies project The former
6:18
Google head predicted that within
6:20
three to five years researchers will
6:22
crack the case on so -called
6:24
artificial general intelligence or human
6:26
level AI. After that, Schmidt
6:29
suggested all bets are off. Now
6:32
this is interesting coming from
6:34
a guy who wasn't worried about
6:36
technology at all because Google's
6:38
motto was Don't be evil or
6:40
whatever. Do you remember that? Yeah, he was he
6:42
was the head of it back when they
6:44
had that as a slogan they gave up on
6:46
that they guys they did Yeah, and
6:51
I think that's their new
6:53
motto occasionally occasionally even and
6:55
so they're doing a good
6:57
job of that actually but
6:59
once AI Begins to self
7:01
-improve and learn how to
7:03
plan Schmidt said it essentially
7:05
won't have to listen to
7:07
us anymore at that stage
7:09
Higgy said, AI will not
7:11
only be smarter than humans,
7:13
it will also reach what's
7:15
known as artificial super intelligence.
7:17
That's the ASI, which
7:20
occurs when AI becomes smarter
7:22
than all humans put
7:24
together. He thinks
7:26
this could happen in three to five years.
7:28
Yeah, that's basically Glenn's timeline on this as
7:30
well. Yeah. Yeah. He thinks it's the same
7:32
timeline. By the way,
7:34
a lot of really amazing good
7:37
things will come of that. Then
7:39
some scary ones probably yeah that
7:41
we don't really know what they
7:43
are. Yeah, but there will be
7:45
and they're already designing proteins and
7:47
you know different components that they
7:49
believe are going to cure all
7:51
these diseases and It
7:54
may very well occur. I mean, I would
7:56
not be surprised if a lot of this
7:58
leads to really, really positive things. It's just
8:00
a matter of what is the long -term outcome.
8:02
be. Obviously. He says this path is
8:04
not understood in our society. There's no language
8:06
for what happens with the arrival of this.
8:09
That's why it's underhyped. I don't know if
8:11
it's underhyped here. I think Glenn does a
8:13
pretty good job. He hypes it. Of hyping
8:15
it. I mean, it believes it. And this
8:17
has been a long -term thing. I mean,
8:19
one of the first big interviews we did
8:21
on the CNN headline news show was with
8:23
Ray Kurzweil, the futurist, who's been mourning about
8:25
all of these things this entire time. And
8:27
Glenn talked to him about it back in,
8:29
what year was it? 2006? Yeah, it was
8:31
a long time ago. Something like that. It
8:34
was a long time ago. And
8:36
so this is not hype to
8:38
him. And I think now people are
8:40
kind of Awake to
8:42
it. Mm -hmm. It took a
8:44
long time. Mm -hmm, but you
8:47
know yeah now he was saying
8:49
this way before Eric Schmidt
8:51
was saying it that's for sure
8:53
He says people do not
8:55
understand what happens when you have
8:57
intelligence at this level, which
9:00
is largely free That conceit it's
9:02
worth noted noting doesn't make
9:04
Doesn't necessarily hold up whoever reaches
9:06
AGI First, will guard
9:08
it so strongly Fort Knox
9:10
will look like a garden gate,
9:12
and until and unless an
9:15
ASI frees itself from the shackles
9:17
of human control entirely and
9:19
decides to make itself beneficial to
9:21
humans, it will not be
9:23
some sort of utopian virtual assistant.
9:26
As he jokingly referenced,
9:28
the six -year ASI timeline
9:30
could well be a
9:32
Silicon Valley mirage. Still,
9:36
They imagine that
9:38
AI will not only outstrip
9:40
human level intelligence, it'll
9:42
surpass it very soon.
9:45
And we probably need to
9:47
pay attention to that. And
9:50
maybe make some safeguards,
9:52
some guardrails for it.
9:55
I mean, didn't they say that
9:57
they weren't going to allow it
9:59
to access the internet? And
10:02
now, of course, it...
10:04
accessed the internet, long
10:07
since. And I
10:09
thought that was going to be, that
10:11
was too dangerous right now. And it's
10:13
already surpassed that. We got
10:15
way beyond that. We're in a bit of a pickle here, Pat.
10:17
Yeah. I don't know if you've noticed this, but
10:19
it does seem to be that
10:22
there's no real way through
10:24
this. People talk
10:26
about, well, we need to pause it. There's
10:28
no way you can do that. There
10:31
are too many people trying to accomplish these things.
10:33
We're going to let China get way ahead of
10:35
us. They're not going
10:37
to pause it. And
10:39
even if we were to say, we
10:41
all had this agreement among the
10:43
nice people, hey, we're going to go
10:45
back to, we're going to do an M Night Shyamalan
10:48
The Village. And we're just going to turn everything
10:50
off and we're not going to go down this AI
10:52
road at all. There is going to
10:54
be someone who does. So a
10:56
bad actor is going to. So what do
10:58
you do? I mean, it
11:00
is the only real way to
11:02
do this is to march forward
11:04
as we're doing it and hope
11:06
that That at
11:08
the end of the day, and I don't
11:10
think there is like this is a tough
11:12
thing about I don't think there is an
11:15
end of this right like it's not like
11:17
okay Well, we got there first so we
11:19
win like there's always going to be another
11:21
someone else trying to figure out how to
11:23
do something terrible with this technology Yeah, and
11:25
and how do you stop that you can't
11:27
really? It's not like nuclear weapons where you
11:29
can at least attempt to, wow, it seems
11:31
like Iran is developing them. Let's go bomb
11:33
their nuclear facilities. You can't do that with
11:35
AI. You can try to put
11:37
these guardrails up. I don't think there's any way
11:39
that they work. I really don't.
11:41
I think they're going to be
11:44
horrible uses of this. They're already doing
11:46
it with scammers, where they're using
11:48
AI technology. to, I mean, I don't
11:50
know if you're getting pestered with more and more
11:52
scams these days, Pat. I feel like I am.
11:54
I get more and more texts and, you know,
11:56
attempts for fishing and all that. It seems to
11:58
be getting much, much worse, which kind of makes
12:00
sense when you have this technology. And it's going
12:02
to be more convincing. They're going
12:04
to start sounding like you. I mean,
12:06
I'm really concerned about, like,
12:10
there have already been people who
12:12
have had calls from what seems
12:14
like a family member in crisis
12:16
being kidnapped. And they're telling about,
12:18
you know, Can you, you
12:20
know, you have to send money to these
12:22
people and it's not even them, right? It's
12:24
just a weird like AI recording. What
12:27
happens when like And how are you gonna know?
12:29
How are you gonna know? And you think about like
12:31
the way your banking works, right? You enter your
12:33
password, you get in there maybe. If
12:35
something's going wrong, well, there's only way you can
12:37
really set it right is by actually calling them,
12:39
right? And being like, hey, here I am, this
12:41
is who I am. Let me
12:43
tell you on the freaking phone that
12:45
I need this done. When
12:49
you're being impersonated by AI that
12:51
is incredibly convincing, maybe even talking to
12:53
an AI representative on the other
12:55
side of the phone. Yeah.
12:57
It's going to get out of control fast. You
13:00
worry about whether you're going to be able to
13:02
protect, insecure your own funds. You're going to wind
13:04
up with, and already the password situation is out
13:06
of control. I feel like 80 % of my
13:08
day is just entering passwords and re -entering them. And
13:11
oh, go to your authenticator app and
13:13
you need to say two factor authentication. And
13:15
it's like, most of my
13:17
day is spent doing that, I feel
13:19
like. Already. Yeah. It's only going to get
13:21
worse. And it's amazing how much AI
13:23
does already. I mean, it's already. doing
13:26
people's homework, writing people's
13:28
speeches. It's already doing
13:30
so much that we don't
13:32
even realize it's AI. I
13:34
mean, I watch these documentaries
13:37
sometimes on space because I'm
13:39
really a space nerd and
13:41
kind of into these documentaries
13:43
about deep space and things
13:45
and they're almost all AI.
13:48
And you can tell because it'll
13:50
mispronounce words sometimes and doesn't know.
13:52
that methane is pronounced methane, not
13:54
methane. And so you're like, OK, this
13:56
is obviously being done by AI. But
13:58
eventually they're going to work all of that out. And
14:00
you're not going to be able to tell. And
14:03
not only do they
14:05
have the voice and
14:07
the vocal characteristics down,
14:09
but you can fake
14:11
videos pretty easily and
14:13
convincingly already with AI.
14:15
It's incredible. I mean, where
14:17
this thing is going to end up, I
14:19
don't know. It's a little bit It's a
14:21
little bit chilly. You ever have
14:23
that moment, Pat, where you're walking in a
14:26
parking lot, or you're driving your car,
14:28
and a car is parked somewhere, and you're
14:30
like, oh, that's kind of cool looking. What
14:33
is that? You
14:35
just take your phone out and take a
14:37
picture of that car and go into chat GPT
14:39
and say, what is this car? And it
14:41
knows immediately what it is. Wow.
14:44
By just a picture that you take. You
14:46
think about, like, I was working
14:48
with my son on his homework. You mentioned people
14:50
are doing their homework and there's so much
14:53
cheating going on. Oh my gosh. It's unbelievable. But
14:56
so I don't have that on any of
14:58
his devices for that reason. I would have been
15:00
very tempted by it back in the day. And
15:03
so I'm working on him with
15:05
this homework. And we're at that point
15:07
now where he's certainly smarter than
15:09
I am, but also is at the
15:11
level where I can't really remember
15:13
anymore what he's doing. He's
15:16
in some math. Class and you know, it's
15:18
just advanced math class and I'm like I
15:20
don't freaking remember he's in seventh grade like
15:22
we're this is only gonna get a lot
15:24
uglier Because we up until now pretty much
15:26
I could buy yeah, I kind of remember
15:28
that and now at the point where like
15:30
I can remember seeing it But I don't
15:32
remember at all how to do it. He
15:35
was doing some graphing thing and so it
15:37
was like a visual thing and I don't
15:39
remember And occasionally, when
15:41
I've run into these issues, I've gone to
15:43
chat GPT, and I walk myself through what
15:45
I remember about it and then have it
15:47
fill in the blank so I can tell
15:49
him what I'm reading and try to walk
15:51
him through at his level how to solve
15:53
the problem without giving him the answer. So,
15:56
OK, well, what about think about this? And it
15:58
helps. It's very helpful. It's a great tool. The
16:01
other day, it was so complicated. It was so
16:03
late at night. I was like, I just
16:05
got to get this over with. I've got to figure out how
16:07
to do this. So I, and I was like, wait a minute,
16:09
I can just take a picture of it. I just took a
16:11
picture of the question, a picture of the question,
16:13
and it has like a little graph and everything. And I was
16:15
like, how does, how does it do this? How does it
16:17
work? And it just understood
16:19
the language. It understood the graph.
16:22
It showed me step by step how to draw the graph,
16:24
what it's supposed to look like, why it looked like
16:26
that. And it's like, wow,
16:28
incredible. I mean, it's basically. And that's
16:30
grok. That one was, I think chat
16:32
GBT. But I mean, they all kind
16:34
of, I think, have the same capabilities
16:36
or similar capabilities. Some do stuff better
16:38
than others. But like, that's
16:40
like what a teacher would do, right? Yeah. What
16:42
a teacher would do to teach a kid how
16:45
to do that. It could do it
16:47
and it can explain it at any grade level. You
16:49
could say, explain this to a fifth grader, explain this
16:51
to an eighth grader, explain this to her. how are
16:53
you going to control that? How are you going to
16:55
keep students from just using that? Oh, they are. They're
16:57
not going to learn anything anymore. They're
16:59
just to let AI do it. There's some
17:01
guy on the Twitter's a few weeks
17:03
ago who was saying that he was a
17:05
professor and taught classes. And he said, over
17:08
the past year or two, he's
17:10
noticed that it's the smartest class he's
17:12
ever had. No one asks any questions. Everyone
17:15
gets incredible grades on their homework.
17:18
But none of them come in for after -school help.
17:20
None of them come in for office hours. The
17:22
only time you notice any difference is when
17:24
they do tests in class and they all have
17:27
horrible grades. Wow. Because none of
17:29
them know how to do it. They're all just going
17:31
to AI and getting it all done for them. Incredible.
17:35
I mean, it's like societal collapse, but also
17:37
if you were in that position at 19
17:39
years old, you'd be doing the same thing.
17:41
Absolutely. You know you would. Yeah. Unless you
17:43
were like a saint. I know there's people
17:45
out there like Hillary who does our four -minute
17:47
buzz. She would actually do all the work.
17:49
She's the one good person who would do
17:51
it. But I mean, most
17:53
people are more like Jeffy than Hillary.
17:56
man. The Maryland man. Well, the
17:58
Maryland father. Yeah, the saint. The father
18:00
of three married Maryland man. Oh,
18:02
he would never cheat on his homework.
18:04
Never cheat on his homework. Thank
18:06
God there are representatives to fly down
18:08
there. and free him from his
18:10
situation because he's a Maryland father who
18:12
would never cheat on his homework.
18:14
Thank you. Exactly right. More coming up
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19:59
Argentina and was living there
20:02
with JFK or whatever. I mean,
20:04
maybe not living with JFK
20:06
but he was there with at
20:08
least Elvis. I mean the two
20:11
of them were together for a good long while. But
20:13
a former CIA agent believes
20:15
there's growing evidence that Adolf Hitler
20:17
did in fact fake his
20:20
own death and escaped to Argentina
20:22
where followers tried to reboot
20:24
his fallen Nazi empire. That
20:26
was reported in UK's Daily
20:28
Mail on Sunday. The agent
20:30
Bob Bear believes that the
20:33
official version of the story where
20:35
Hitler committed suicide in Berlin, April
20:37
30th, 1945, might need some rethinking.
20:40
Once anticipated, bombshell evidence
20:42
is released. I
20:44
can't wait for this to
20:46
be released. Apparently, Argentina is going
20:48
to release documents that supposedly
20:50
support this claim that Adolf Hitler
20:52
did in fact escape to
20:54
Argentina and live there, trying to
20:56
create the fourth Reich in
20:59
Argentina. You believe there's
21:01
any, Validity to that
21:03
I do not you do not I'm
21:05
not I would be a skeptic on
21:07
that. I think he killed himself in
21:09
good riddance I don't think he wound
21:11
up with the wonderful there. There's some
21:13
weird stuff in South America when it
21:16
comes to yes Nazis We do know
21:18
that some went there There's still that
21:20
one town that celebrates like a Nazi
21:22
day something that the Nazi festival What
21:24
is it in Brazil and anyone know
21:26
the story off the top of their
21:28
head? There's a real town that like
21:31
that celebrates Nazism. I
21:33
would say it's as hardcore
21:35
ideological as it is a
21:37
weird tradition at this point.
21:40
I'll get you the details on this. I don't know it off the
21:42
top of my head anymore. But there
21:45
is a lot of
21:47
strange affinity towards the Nazis
21:49
in South America in
21:51
particular. Well,
21:53
Bear commented that the documents
21:56
will likely include a paper or
21:58
a money trail indicating that
22:00
the Argentinian government at the time
22:02
was, and that was Juan
22:04
Perón, it was
22:06
involved in the construction
22:08
of a possible Nazi hideout
22:10
in Argentina and their
22:12
Misiones province, which was uncovered
22:15
in a 2015 archaeological
22:17
dig. Wow, was already,
22:19
it was buried from
22:21
the 1950s already till 2015?
22:24
Hmm. He added that the
22:26
discovery is the most interesting find
22:28
related to Nazis in Argentina so
22:30
far. He said lots of money
22:32
was spent on a compound with
22:34
plumbing and electricity in the middle
22:36
of nowhere. Of course that
22:38
doesn't mean it was Nazis, but
22:40
if you were going to hide Hitler,
22:43
that's where you do it, he
22:45
claimed. And so we'll see. So
22:48
Javier Mille is apparently
22:50
going to Declassify
22:52
these documents and we'll get a chance
22:54
to look at them, uh, shortly. I
22:57
would be surprised if it proved that
22:59
Adolf Hitler was alive and well in
23:01
Argentina in the, you know, after 1945.
23:03
You'd be surprised. I'd be surprised. Wow.
23:05
Yeah, I really would. a
23:08
hot take, Pat. Thank you. This
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25:32
Gray and Stupid Gear in for
25:34
Glenn today. We're
25:36
just talking about Eric Schmidt warning about
25:38
AI. He thinks it's
25:40
about to escape human control within
25:42
the next three to five years. So
25:45
it's not like today or tomorrow, but
25:47
you know, fairly soon it could happen.
25:49
He doesn't know that it will, but
25:51
it could happen. But that's not the
25:53
only issue Google's dealing with right now.
25:55
Right. Well, this is so perfect. Such
25:57
a perfect example of the government and
25:59
everything that's right. We're right and wrong
26:01
with it. Google
26:03
is actually in court right now, talking to
26:05
the Justice Department about their apparent monopoly in internet
26:07
search. And we all know when you say
26:09
you want to search something on the internet, you
26:11
say you Google it, right? Right. Well,
26:15
Unless you're a huge fan of Lycos, which
26:17
so many of us are. Are you big
26:20
on Lycos? I'm sorry. What do you
26:22
say I'm going to like? Yeah,
26:24
I'm going to like host that.
26:26
And so I think sometimes y 'all
26:28
who search, you know, I thought you
26:30
were a Jeeves guy. Originally I
26:32
was and then I found I discovered
26:34
like hosts. But yeah, ask Jeeves
26:36
way better than Google. Yeah,
26:39
right. Google Google. Now, Google
26:41
came in and look, I'm not a
26:43
huge fan of Google as a company.
26:45
Me neither, but that's what they believe
26:47
in. Everybody uses. But they do make
26:49
really good products. Yeah, they really do.
26:51
They really do. And they make products.
26:53
This is one of the reasons why
26:55
I'm so skeptical of this, like, oh,
26:57
we're going to put guardrails on AI. Like,
27:00
I'm sorry, what we're going to do
27:02
as American people, in general, is use
27:04
the product that works the best. There's
27:06
no evidence that we'd ever do anything
27:08
else. It's really true. remember
27:10
when we were like, do you remember the
27:12
people we have call up? They'd be
27:14
like. I'm not going to use a cell
27:16
phone because that means they're tracking me. And
27:19
then you look at the stats,
27:21
there's like .0001 % of people
27:23
that don't have the smartphones. They
27:26
were like, well, I'm not going to use my fingerprint. And
27:28
then wait, it saves me 1 eighth of
27:30
a second of vlogging it. Of course, I'm going
27:32
to use it. Wait, now they're going to scan
27:35
my iris? Sure. The second this stuff makes
27:37
your life 1 tenth of a percent better, everyone
27:39
jumps on board for it. Well, I
27:41
remember when toll tags were problem for people.
27:44
Where did that go? Remember Remember that? Yeah.
27:46
Oh my gosh, now it's like, is
27:48
it a toll tag? And then like, everyone's
27:50
got it. Not to mention, the
27:52
government does things that make it, you
27:54
know, for example, like there's the license
27:57
plate scanners that are everywhere now, where they're
27:59
just constantly taking place of your pictures
28:01
of your license plate so they know where
28:03
you are anyway. So the toll
28:05
tag thing seems like an outdated complaint pretty
28:07
much in today's world. But that
28:09
being said, it does seem like with Google, we
28:11
would get complaints all the time of people who hated
28:13
Google. They want it to get broken up. Like
28:15
these big tech companies are doing all these bad things.
28:18
And then the email would come from a
28:20
Gmail address. You're just
28:22
like, well, I don't know. Because
28:25
people like Gmail, it works
28:27
well. Google Maps works well. Google
28:30
Earth is really cool. A
28:33
lot of people like the Android. phones and
28:35
so on. Search is their most dominant category.
28:38
The government is trying to say, hey, we're going to
28:40
break up this monopoly. We're going
28:42
to make you sell Chrome, which is
28:44
their browser. They're going
28:46
to do all these things. They're
28:49
in court now dealing with this. I
28:51
think there's a lot of sympathy
28:53
for breaking up Google on both sides.
28:56
Certainly, people like Elizabeth Warren have been for it
28:58
for a long time. But also, there's
29:00
some sympathy on the right for it because They
29:03
just don't like Google, and I
29:05
think it's not necessary. They
29:07
look at them as just a
29:09
bad company, and they're too powerful
29:11
in all of this. I tend
29:14
to be more on the sort
29:16
of classic free market side of
29:18
that, but still, I get the
29:20
complaints. We just chose Google. We
29:23
did, over Lycos, over
29:25
Yahoo, over Askejeeves,
29:27
because it just worked better.
29:30
And as much as Bing tries to
29:32
make some kind of inroad, I
29:34
mean, Google just dropped, in 2015, they
29:37
dropped below 90 % for the first
29:39
time ever. And now
29:41
they're at 89 .73%. You
29:44
can still round it tonight, thankfully. It's
29:48
fascinating when you think about how the market
29:50
works. We were told, and I remember hearing
29:52
this just a couple of years ago from
29:54
people saying, Google, they have this
29:56
monopoly. It's not like those other times
29:58
with the market. What happened with Microsoft
30:00
was they had Internet Explorer. Internet
30:03
Explorer was shipped with all the Microsoft
30:05
products, and it completely dominated the market.
30:08
Everyone said, that's a monopoly. They're never
30:10
going to lose their market share
30:12
until Chrome came out. Now, Chrome dominates.
30:15
What happened was, Microsoft was
30:17
going through this monopoly
30:19
trial at the same time
30:21
it was losing its
30:23
market share to Chrome and
30:26
others. What's happened
30:28
now is the same thing as repeating itself
30:30
with Google. They're at
30:32
the Department of Justice arguing
30:35
about their monopoly on internet search
30:37
at the same time they're in
30:39
the battle for their lives when
30:41
it comes to AI. When
30:43
everyone is switching to AI for
30:45
internet search, they're defending their
30:47
monopoly for internet search. When they're
30:49
in the middle of fighting
30:51
against croc and open AI and
30:53
anthropic, they have Gemini
30:55
as their AI, but they're
30:58
in a competition which they may
31:00
very well lose. on AI
31:02
while they're defending a
31:04
monopoly search protection against the
31:06
US government. Amazing. Which
31:08
makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
31:11
This happens every single time with this
31:13
stuff. The market, what doesn't always
31:15
act on our timelines, but
31:17
generally speaking, always comes up with
31:20
something else. And here, AI is now
31:22
surpassing what we used to use
31:24
as search. I mean, I can't. So
31:26
many people now don't even use... AI,
31:29
or don't even use Google anymore. When they Google
31:31
things, they just go to AI, and they ask
31:33
it the question in a more common language. And
31:35
it's really good at finding those weird things, you
31:38
know? It's really good at sussing it out. Now,
31:40
it's not perfect. There's still a lot of problems
31:42
with it. People, I think, use it and depend
31:44
on it too much. They just
31:46
look at it, and they
31:48
think it's just set in
31:50
stone. And you've got
31:52
to be really careful with that. But you have to
31:54
be careful with Google, too. I mean, we all have to
31:56
have a filter on what we read on the internet.
31:58
This is not new news. Everyone realizes there's
32:00
a lot of BS on the internet and you have to
32:03
be able to put it through some sort of filter or
32:05
you'll just, you know, wind up being a complete sucker. This
32:07
is how, how do you think half the country voted
32:09
for Kamala Harris? You
32:13
know, that just naturally happened.
32:15
Right. There's a lot of stupid people.
32:18
Right. First you had to force her into
32:20
the nomination and you had to gift her
32:22
the nomination without any votes and then you
32:24
put her on the ballots and And look
32:26
what happened. And look what happened. Went really
32:28
well, right? It went really well
32:30
for them. Their
32:32
bench is so bad now in
32:34
the Democrat Party that they're turning
32:36
to ESPN for somebody to run
32:39
for president. Stephen A. Smith, can
32:41
you? Yeah. We've got
32:43
nobody else, please. Stephen A., can you
32:45
do this? The most satisfying part of
32:47
the Stephen A. Smith thing is that
32:49
they're going to a left -leaning person who's
32:51
on ESPN, and they still ignore
32:53
Keith Holberman. We've
32:56
got get somebody who worked at
32:58
ESPN who's a liberal. Do we have
33:00
anybody? Stephen A. Smith? I don't
33:02
know. And Keith Holberman's like, wait
33:04
a minute. I'm still angrily blogging at
33:06
my phone in my basement. Doesn't that
33:08
count? I saw
33:10
one of his latest rants for Keith
33:12
Oberman and I almost never see
33:14
them. I almost mean he's never disappeared
33:16
from society completely. But you
33:19
know, he every once in a while, you'll
33:21
see something that pops up from him
33:23
that he did at his Central Park West
33:25
penthouse or wherever he is. He's out
33:27
on his balcony. still have that. I guess
33:29
so. I guess. I don't have a
33:31
good career at the beginning. Yeah.
33:33
He had a few years that we probably made millions
33:35
of dollars. I mean, it's been a while when he
33:37
was with Dan Patrick. on ESPN. He probably did really
33:39
well. But now he's
33:41
found this new angle where he's
33:43
positioned the camera about five
33:45
feet above him. And he's looking
33:47
up at the camera because
33:50
I guess he thinks the new
33:52
angle is going to really
33:54
score big for him. But
33:56
I don't even know what he said. I
33:58
couldn't even pay attention to it because of
34:00
the camera angle. But
34:02
that's one of those things that I feel
34:04
like is a good reminder. You kind of like
34:06
go through difficult periods in your life and
34:08
like you think, you know, things aren't going your
34:11
way and they can never turn around and
34:13
it can't get any darker. And then you realize,
34:15
well, Keith Overman, you could be him. It
34:17
could be worse. Right?
34:20
It could be much, much worse. Right. You
34:22
could be Keith Overman. And then everything seems
34:24
fine. Yeah. Or you
34:26
could be on MSNBC. And
34:28
you could be Simone Sanders trying
34:30
to decide who's going to
34:32
be deported next because, you know,
34:34
we're deporting everybody right now.
34:36
We are? Yes. Why are we
34:38
deporting everybody? our numbers for
34:40
deportations lower than previous administrations. Yeah,
34:43
isn't that interesting? I think
34:45
President Trump has deported something like
34:47
100 ,000 people and at the
34:49
same point, Yeah,
34:51
Joe Biden was something like double that. Oh,
34:53
really? With deportations. Yeah, Glenn went through some of
34:55
these numbers yesterday. I can't remember the month
34:58
time I had, but Clinton was always one of
35:00
the highest ones. Way beyond. By the way, I
35:02
don't say this in defense of Donald
35:04
Trump. I hope that he gets around
35:06
to it. Yeah. You know I mean?
35:09
I think the numbers will come up.
35:11
I don't think it's because he's not
35:13
trying to deport people. I think he's
35:15
going after criminals first, and perhaps that's
35:17
the reason why. Also, far fewer people
35:19
crossing right now. So fewer opportunities to
35:21
just immediately deport someone who just crossed.
35:24
So there are reasons for those
35:26
numbers. I wouldn't say it's
35:28
because Joe Biden was tougher on
35:30
the border than Donald Trump.
35:32
That's not the point we're making
35:34
by any means. But it
35:36
is sort of absurd that we
35:38
hear that he's like this
35:40
deporter -in -chief and he's deporting everybody.
35:42
That's not really happening yet.
35:44
But Simone's MSNBC's Simone Sanders is
35:47
going to let you know
35:49
who's next on the deportation list.
35:52
I've been talking about this all
35:54
week, but Janaye Nelson of the
35:56
NAACP Legal Defense Fund, she penned
35:58
an op -ed in the nation this
36:01
week. And her op -ed talked
36:03
about that we think that democracies
36:05
are the way they die
36:07
is dramatically through these wars and blood
36:09
is shed and it's it's cinematic in
36:11
a in a sense but really the
36:13
realistic way in which democracies die is
36:15
that it's dismantled brick by brick
36:17
piece by piece and she says that
36:20
what we are seeing now with the
36:22
lawlessness from this administration are really the
36:24
canaries in the coal mine gasping for
36:26
air I'm paraphrasing here but to me
36:28
that is why Kilmar Abrego Garcia specific
36:30
case. and the case of the children
36:32
who's a makeup artist out of california
36:35
who was also sent to that
36:37
prison that is why the the the
36:39
more the seventy five percent of the
36:41
folks who've been sent the men who
36:43
have been sent there that don't have
36:45
criminal records that is why this is
36:47
so important because if they could do
36:49
it to them if they could snatch
36:52
students off the street without any pushback
36:54
or recourse they will do it
36:56
to any of us to be very
36:58
clear oh wow going to the people
37:00
of color and vulnerable communities that are
37:02
are next in line i think that's
37:04
right and that's really that's right I
37:13
agree. Exactly
37:16
what you just said. The most insane thing in the
37:18
world that U .S. citizens are just going to be
37:20
deported because of the color of their skin. I totally
37:22
agree. I'm not going to act like that's a controversial
37:24
statement at all. It is a
37:26
totally normal thing to have just said. Thank
37:28
you, Simone. What a wonderful piece of
37:30
analysis as you butcher some terrible op
37:33
-ed in the nation. Unreal.
37:36
I got so much
37:38
there, too. And why
37:40
do I care? How democracies fall
37:42
apart? We're not one. Go
37:44
ahead and let them fall apart.
37:46
I don't care. Yes, we
37:48
are a constitutional republic, not a
37:50
democracy. And by the way,
37:52
my understanding was democracy died with thunderous applause.
37:54
Is that not accurate anymore? No, it is.
37:56
It is accurate. I thought it was always
37:59
applause. No, they don't fall apart piece by
38:01
piece, like she said. They fall apart with
38:03
thunderous applause. Thank you. I mean, we learned
38:05
that from Natalie Portman years and years ago.
38:07
By the way, is next after they go
38:09
for people of color, they're going to go
38:11
for short white girls. That
38:13
Natalie Portman's next. Uh -huh. Everyone
38:16
who's associated with somebody
38:18
that that they be
38:20
that the MSNBC likes
38:22
they're the their necks
38:25
on the list get
38:27
scared everybody. Yep Liberty
38:29
Liberty not Thank you
38:31
Natalie It's
38:33
just so ridiculous. I
38:37
don't know. I don't know anything
38:39
about Simone Sanders. I don't know
38:41
her background. I mean, she very
38:43
well could just be this dumb.
38:45
But my belief is that she's
38:47
just trying to scare her audience.
38:49
There's no evidence whatsoever that any
38:51
of that is happening. And have
38:53
you noticed like a reversal in
38:55
what the Left does? It
38:57
used to be that when they wanted to
39:00
make a point, They would target the most
39:02
sympathetic case possible, right? Rosa Parks,
39:04
right? They had someone else who had
39:06
the back of the bus thing back in
39:08
the day. Again, there's different
39:10
groups and different political associations at this
39:12
time, but just separate that from this
39:14
analogy for a moment. They
39:16
had someone else who had also stood up and
39:19
decided they weren't going to leave the bus, and
39:21
they weren't going to go to the back of
39:23
the bus. And because of who
39:25
it was, I can't remember the exact details, Glenn knows the
39:27
story while he's told it before, but it
39:29
basically was someone who, you know, was like a,
39:31
maybe a teenage mother, it was someone who at the
39:33
time would be seen as unsympathetic. And
39:35
so they waited until they had the right
39:37
person because they wanted to make sure this stuff
39:39
wouldn't happen, right? Like it wouldn't be like,
39:41
oh, everyone would be questioning the other things that they did. Today's
39:45
modern left is like, wait, a wife
39:47
-beater is in trouble? What can we
39:49
do? Oh gosh, a
39:51
wife -beater gang member is in need?
39:53
There's no need to fear. The
39:55
Democrats are here. And they come
39:57
to, like, they're picking the worst,
39:59
there are legitimate examples of people
40:02
who were in really tough times,
40:04
probably were persecuted in other countries
40:06
that came here from Venezuela or
40:08
something that had asylum. Their
40:10
families were tortured by left
40:12
-wing dictators. and they came
40:14
here and they built a life
40:16
and there are sympathetic examples of people
40:19
who could be deported because of
40:21
illegal immigration. They don't use them. They're
40:23
like, ah, let's find an MSM 13 person and
40:25
try to defend them. Incredible. Triple
40:27
eight, seven, two, seven, back. So
40:30
you know the Mother's Day is coming,
40:32
but you don't need a holiday to tell
40:34
you who deserves comfort. If you got
40:36
a mom, if you got a wife, if
40:38
you got a daughter, you already know
40:41
that the world isn't exactly specializing these days
40:43
in restfulness, but cozy earth does specialize
40:45
in restfulness. Their sheets, their loungewear, their towels,
40:47
everything they make is built for comfort.
40:49
And we're talking temperature regulating cloud -like sleep
40:51
with the windows open in October kind of
40:53
comfort. If you are thinking head to
40:55
Mother's Day, sure you could do flowers, you
40:57
could do chocolates, or you could give
40:59
her a few extra hours of actual rest
41:01
every single night. There's a reason Oprah
41:03
called these the best sheets in the world.
41:05
There's a reason why people who try
41:07
them never go back. Cozy Earth isn't just
41:09
luxury, it's sanity delivered in fabric form.
41:11
So whether you're buying for someone else or
41:13
you're just treating yourself to the ultimate
41:15
in comfort and style, you really can't go
41:17
wrong with Cozy Earth. I have these
41:19
sheets. They're awesome. It's a gift
41:21
that actually pays off every single night.
41:23
Go to CozyEarth.com slash Beck. CozyEarth.com
41:26
slash Beck. Use the code Beck at
41:28
up to 40 % off sheets, pajamas, towels,
41:30
and more. It's CozyEarth.com
41:32
slash Beck. This
41:35
is Glenn
41:37
Beck. There
41:53
are certain things in life. You
41:55
assume are safe, like your house. You
41:57
know, that's one of them. You're maybe
41:59
paid your mortgage, you've locked the doors,
42:01
you've done everything right. But the
42:04
real threat isn't someone breaking in through a
42:06
window. It's someone signing their name where yours
42:08
used to be. Home title fraud is one
42:10
of the fastest growing cyber crimes in America.
42:12
Criminals can forge your name on the title
42:14
of your home, they can transfer ownership on
42:16
paper, and then take out loans against your
42:18
equity, leaving you with the debt and the
42:20
damage and illegal mess that you never saw
42:23
coming. It doesn't take much, it's just like
42:25
a breached e -mail or a hacked database
42:27
or a few stolen details that end up
42:29
in the wrong hands. And just like that,
42:31
your home, the biggest investment you've likely ever
42:33
made, legally no longer yours. That's
42:35
where Home Title Lock comes in. They
42:37
can monitor your title 24 -7, immediately alert
42:39
you to any suspicious activity. If a
42:42
criminal tries to transfer your title or
42:44
tamper with your paperwork, you'll
42:46
know about it and they'll stop it before
42:48
it starts. And before it becomes
42:50
a gigantic financial disaster you have to deal
42:52
with. It only makes sense to protect the one
42:54
thing you can't afford to lose your home.
42:56
It's Home Title Lock. Now, AI is out there.
42:58
It's changing the world. We've been talking about
43:00
it this hour. Don't let it change
43:02
the name on your home's title. Go
43:04
to hometitlelock.com right now and use the promo
43:06
code blaze. You're talking about your biggest
43:08
investment. You're talking about your financial future, your
43:11
financial legacy. Hometitlelock
43:13
can actually help protect that for
43:15
you. It's hometitlelock.com. The promo
43:17
code is blaze. Hometitlelock.com,
43:19
the promo code is blaze.
43:32
Yeah, it's Pat and Stu
43:34
for Glenn, triple eight, seven, two,
43:37
seven, B -E -C -K. Coming
43:39
up, we got to share with
43:41
you Chris Matthews' thoughts on
43:43
Donald Trump, because they're brilliant.
43:45
I mean, he's so reasonable
43:47
and so wise. Is he?
43:49
Yeah. Oh, wait till you hear. The
43:52
wisdom that spills out of
43:54
his face is really stunning, stunning,
43:57
really. Also, Bill Maher with Charlie
43:59
Kirk. That's a
44:01
combination you don't normally
44:03
expect, but we've
44:05
got some interesting thoughts from the two
44:07
of them coming up and much
44:10
more on the way. This
44:15
is Glenn Beck.
44:30
Sometimes in life, if you want to get
44:32
to the truth, you have to look
44:34
at the numbers. Unfortunately, 50 % of all
44:37
dogs over 10 years old will die of
44:39
cancer. The other 40 to 50
44:41
% are going going to suffer miserably from
44:43
skin issues or joint problems. This
44:45
is widely attributed to your dog's
44:47
diet.
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