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The only board game where the goal is poverty, and we are all forced to play. Joined with Co-host "Rage"
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The only board game where the goal is poverty, and we are all forced to play. Joined with Co-host "Rage"
The speaker discusses their working theory about a novel called The Worthing Saga and a chapter within it that involves a geopolitical strategy video game set in the future. They believe that technology has led to the destruction of mankind's morals and life direction, creating a caste system. The main objective of the game's player, Abner Dune, is to intentionally cause the system to implode. The speaker ponders if this concept is similar to what is happening in reality, with economic collapse and societal decadence. They also discuss the potential use of AI for data aggregation and surveillance, drawing parallels to Orwell's 1984. They speculate on the implications of AI and the potential loss of privacy and freedom. The conversation also touches on the concept of glasnost in the Soviet Union and its implications for freedom of expression. It's a working theory. My working theory is that I keep, man, there's a couple of pop culture references that I keep going back to for whatever reason. They just, they're bouncing around in my head like a pinball. And the Worthing Saga is one of those novels. Orson Scott Card, one of his earliest works, in my opinion one of his best. There's a particular chapter in that having to deal with this game, a geopolitical strategy video game. And it's set in the future. It's like, I forget, it's like 4000 AD or something like that. Mankind is colonized space. So you can imagine how much video games have advanced at this point. Now you have what they call shell AIs, which are multiple AIs all interacting with each other to construct this game world, which almost down to the elemental level replicates the real world at any given point in time. And you can set it in any time period. You can change technologies available. Think sim, not sim cities, civilizations. Think civilizations on fucking steroids. Yeah. This is not a new concept. It's just been extrapolated to include AI and some other things. The game itself isn't the draw for me, because I see things going that way anyways. That's not the point. The point is the game that was played and the objective of the player being Abner Dune. Abner Dune is the, he's the main antagonist and he's also a protagonist. Okay. And that he sees that mankind's morals and basically life direction is just been destroyed, wrecked by technology. To a greater extent, it's the life extension technology, which allows elites to basically outlive everybody forever. And as a result, no, there is no movement up the economic ladder anymore. You are where you are. Technology has created a caste system and the only way that he can proceed for mankind to get out of their current slog, which is a death spiral, according to him, although it's arguable, given the world building elements present, the only way to get out of it would be to intentionally cause the system to implode. So this, during this game, I think it's set in like the 17th century, Germany is at war with France. And I don't know, there's like, there's other elements in there. It's very, very similar to like, say, World War One, or maybe the Ottoman Empire firearms are in there. Right. So he creates controversy, political controversy on both sides of the political aisle. There might have been more than one. I'm just kind of spitballing here. Basically, the idea was to create mass public distrust in the system, spend the coffers into oblivion, tax the shit out of everybody, and mismanage law enforcement and judicial proceedings, so that you don't know you get stopped for a traffic stop, you might get fined $3,000, or you might get a bullet to the head. Yeah. And this was all done intentionally. So nobody knew what was going on. Everyone distrusted everything in the government, but kept it just enough afloat, that the machine was able to keep moving. That the same political party remained in power. Does that does any of this sound familiar? Well, I was just gonna ask you, are we living that game now? I'm just wondering, like, is this is this a matrix within a matrix? Is this the matrix? Is this the is this Jalopoli? I'll coin the term now. It appears to be because everything you just said is what's what's occurring in our reality. Be it whatever you want to call it, reality. You know, the economy is imploding. There's so much dissension. It's unreal on either side. I mean, the whole the whole system is failing because of the decadence of our society. And it's not just our society. It's all across the world. What is happening? Is it a bad dream? Can I wake up from this? Yeah. I just don't know. Do you want to go back to what we were talking about earlier? I'm my mind's going spinning in about 100 different directions in that the conversation we had over messages earlier this week. Yeah, I'm this is something I've been contemplating a lot and Michael Rivera in particular used to postulate that that is where America was headed. So this is not a concept that I came up with. But it does. It does have some logic to it, though. Yeah. And that's why I kind of been looking more into it. I'm seeing more and more AI being utilized in areas that I didn't think were going to be utilized. It's like, we've catapulted five years in ahead in a short six months. The stuff that I'm saying I didn't expect to see at least for five years. I think it's all a sham. There's something not right. I think it's a sham. Because if you were holding on to some like, you know, I don't know, like a reactor that works off of water or some shit like that. And you've been sitting on it for like the last 50 years. You know, how are you going to suddenly explain all the research that went into it and the original patent holders? How are you going to explain that away? Because there's records tucked away somewhere. Someone's got the black box. What better way to do it than to say, well, AI figured it out. See, we got the files here. And they're going to use this, I'm telling you, man, they're going to use this to swipe people's intellectual property before they're able to get it patented. I think they already have. This mass surveillance shit that's going on, creeping into everything. And I, John and Chris talked about this. There's a, and this was like way back tinfoil archives days, but currently Israel has a booming tech sector. And one of the things, you know, they like their surveillance stuff too, almost as much as China. And one of the things that they came up with was a way to wirelessly steal data from hard drives and computer components. I don't know exactly how it works, but I know that it's real. And if they have this technology, America probably has it too. And probably Britain or the UK and some of our other allies have it too. And in the tech arms race, you can, I heard about this a decade ago. So probably all the intelligence agencies have this shit now. And it might even be hardwired into our grid somehow. So even if you have an air gap computer, unless it's buried under, you know, 25 feet of concrete and lead, they're going to be able to get into it. If it's powered, they can access it. Literally. Well, you can actually send low voltage current through the air. The way RFID chips work actually is they're pinged by a radio frequency and the radio frequency alone produces enough power in the chip to send a handshake signal back to the checker device, whatever it's called. What blows my mind is this wireless power where you actually can lay your phone down on a pad and it will charge your phone. Yeah, that's unreal. Again, that is not new technology. That is a very old technology. And it was one of Nikola Tesla's patents. That was stolen. Called an open air capacitor. It's kind of an expansion on that concept, but that's where it comes from. And he was working on a way to wirelessly transmit electricity. And this was like over 100 years ago now. Yeah. So again, and who got all of his patents after he died? The Fed swooped in and gobbled them all up. So God only knows what they've done. Well, I really didn't think that AI was going to be the culprit. Everything led to, oh look, aliens came down and gave us this technology. I think it's probably going to be used for data arbitration and aggregation. It would definitely be great for that. And that's proofs in the pudding with ChatGPT and others. Those are just public facing ones. And those are pretty good to an extent. And I could see how they could be useful for that, especially as an intelligence sifting service. You know, you've got Echelon and God knows what other iterations have propped up over the decades. Multiple, multiple. But you know, we don't have any. You could employ every single man, woman and child to work the servers to go through all the fucking data they have on every American, which wouldn't that be hilarious? We have to employ all of America to spy on all of America. Well, because of AI, we're going to put two billion people out of jobs. So we're going to have to have something to do. Right. And what better way to figure out which belligerent criminals or which belligerent thought criminals need to be thrown onto the guillotine than to have AI go through, sift through all their metadata. Does this not look like Orwell 1984? I mean, come on. This is this is the exact scenario. Yeah, but in 1984, people still slipped through the cracks. I don't see that happening with this system that's coming in. I don't see there won't be a rock to hide under. Well, you're right. But with we already know the level of incompetence that goes on. So there is a possibility of some few slipping through the cracks or being able to hide a little bit of what they're doing. If they're if they're smart enough. I don't know. I mean, it's just everything looks to me like 1984 with the bureaus and even goes into several other TV shows, movies and books. Minority Report, you know. That's that's coming, I guess. AI is going to figure out crime before it happens. I'm wondering, getting back to the Soviet Union analogy here. Have you heard the term glasnost? Yes. Forever. Do you know what it means? Not right off the top of my head. I think in the 80s, I had a pretty good understanding of it. But I think over time, it's kind of been muddled. This is from ThoughtCo. Glasnost, which translates to openness in English, was General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev's policy for a new open policy in the Soviet Union where people could freely express their opinions. With Glasnost, Soviet citizens no longer had to worry about neighbors, friends and acquaintances, turning them into the KGB for whispering something that they that could be construed as criticism of the government or its leaders. They no longer had to worry about arrest and exile for a negative thought against the state. Glasnost allowed the Soviet people to reexamine their history, voice their opinions on government policies and receive news not pre-approved by the government. What does that sound like to you? Could you find a modern analogy, if you were tasked to do so? What does that sound like to you in America? I don't think we have a free anything anymore. Well, I highly doubt they did either. Despite what Gorbachev's policy might have stated openly. I think this was probably a tool, an intelligence gathering tool. Well, we told everybody, don't say double plus on good things about the state and wouldn't you know, they stopped openly expressing their opinions, but they still privately hold them and that's the problem. Which one of these ne'er-do-wells is thinking wrong think? Well, we don't know anymore because they won't speak up. They're afraid they're going to wind up in the Gulag. And rightfully so, because they fucking will. So let's invent a policy and we'll tell people we're not going to lock them up, but the worst offenders, they're getting fucking locked up. We're just going to keep it on the DL. No, the worst offenders get their car exploded at high speeds. Or that. I'm thinking TikTok. I'm thinking Twitter. I'm thinking the internet at large, really. Any social platform. I think America has been under the glass nose policy for a while now. What better way to surveil you with my dear? Yeah. We give you a platform, tell you it's a platform. It's actually a published publication. And no, we're not controlling your speech, except we are. We are. And whilst you are expressing your truest opinions on the World Wide Web, do we have a sound effect for the World Wide Web? She's saying we have a problem. Whilst you are expressing your opinion. You've got mail. The open source intelligence begins. Yeah, I just wonder if when the DOD was designing this network, if this was ever, ever conceived. Or it just became what it is because, hey, it works. You tell somebody that this is a public square, the internet, and you give it to the world. And you know what? You know the best way to get somebody to defend something, to really put their elbow into a project? You make them feel like they're part of it. You make them feel like they have some skin in the game. And the best way to do that is to make them spend money to use it. Yeah. Which is why the internet wasn't free and still isn't when it came out. It used to be really expensive. Yeah. More than it is now, and that's really saying something, considering a dollar went a lot further back in those days. Yeah. Well, we had private forums that were off the internet that were created and maintained by individuals in their home or in their business that you could call into, you could attach your computer to their computer, and you could trade information. We could still do that. This was one of the theories I had about where communications might go in this dystopian cyberpunk future that we're hurtling into right now. Yeah. Which is interconnected, basically what amounts to land, but daisy-chained off from local communities, and probably hidden either in plain sight or buried next to currently existing cables in the ground. Right. And you just have a couple of enterprising linemen, you know, that know what the score is and lay down some extra lines. Yeah. And before you know it, you've got a literally underground communication network that's totally separate from the internet. Functionally the same. Well, supposedly there are two other internets that we're unaware of, that we're not part of. There's probably more than that. Two other networks that are available that the government uses and that corporations use, but that we do not have access to. And, I mean, I totally get that. But the problem now is that because everybody's gone to cell phones, nobody has a landline any longer. So we don't have a way to actually, I mean, you could use radio, because radio actually, packets were used in the past to connect bulletin board systems together to transmit, basically, messages for forums. It was kind of like a shotgun. That still exists. Yeah. I think you're talking about, was it DSR? Yeah. Digital satellite radio? Well, no, this is actually ham radio. Well, that, I can't remember the term for that. There's a digital... Packet radio. Yeah. And it still exists, just in smaller segments. Yeah, I remember hearing, you can actually send text messages through this thing. And, you know, if you weren't so inclined, you could probably send a whole book, although it would take forever. Yeah. We do have bulletin boards that are still on the internet that are kind of separate entities. They're not web pages, so they're not crawlable by the web crawlers, the night crawlers. No. So you can have some anonymity. You can have a bit of privacy. You can, I mean, that lends itself to an era of criminality, but, I mean, I'm sure there is some of that that goes on. But that still gives you the opportunity to share information. Yeah. And it's something that we probably should be looking into because the way AI is going and the way all of this censorship and gathering of personal data, we need a central location or some type of different place to be able to carry on conversations with white-bodied people, you know? Me and Sean, we talked about this before, Dzenga, not Kennedy, about guerrilla communications networks. Right. And what it's going to come down to is that you're going to have people like the, like the Samizdat did, and again, going back to the Soviet Union with the fax machines. Right. Sharing information. As you pointed out, they tore up all the landlines. Why the fuck would you do that? Not everywhere, but, I mean, any metro area or even on the outskirts, there's no landlines. Why would you do that? It's all been replaced with fiber. I hypothesize that the reason why they did this, pushing it as a convenience, fiber optic is so much quicker. Right. And we don't need to maintain these bleep bleep landlines. No one uses them anymore. Well, no one uses them anymore because you got rid of all the services that utilized them and forced everybody onto fiber optic, but that was not necessarily everyone's decision. Right. And you can still see in the cities and municipalities where landlines are still available. People are still using them, and it's harder to monitor. You have to be there to physically monitor those landlines. Right. You have to send in one of your goons to put a listening device somewhere along that line to siphon data off of it. I mean, obviously you can do it. You can. It's more labor intensive to do so. Right. And I think it's pretty common knowledge. You could probably Google how to figure out if somebody is tapped into a landline. Yeah. So even if, you know, you could do that, then the person that's on the other end of the line could figure it out eventually. Yeah. I just think we've cut ourselves off from all the opportunities of sharing information. No. We just got to get smarter about it. Well. I mean, in any communications network there's going to be interception, and this is just where we're at. I told you I used the TOR browser. I use TOR quite a lot for anonymity. They did an update, and every time they do an update, for a period of two to three days, the browser no longer works. I don't know why. It just breaks. And it was broke for two days. Well, part of this legislation they're pushing through for the TikTok ban, which is ridiculous because as far as I know, TikTok is not specifically mentioned in that bill. No. So it's a fucking lie. Yes, they could ban TikTok with that or force it to sell to an American holding company, but that is not what the bill is about by far. They're talking about banning foreign state actors from influencing American minds. Hello? Are we adults in America? Can we make up our own minds on shit anymore? Apparently not. Has the AI beast really gotten that sophisticated? Because if it has, then the only solution to that problem is to turn the Internet off altogether. Yes. Well. That's the only solution. They have too much money tied up in that. They can't do that. There's too much business that runs off the Internet. There's too much advertising that demands to be used on the Internet. Well, if the AI boogeyman is as bad as they're proclaiming it to be, if it's going to come in and they're going to have fake speeches from politicians saying the N-word and other stuff and basically implode our current political situation even worse than it already is with a bunch of fake content, not to mention spreading. I mean, they could take a video of you and superimpose your face onto somebody in a gangland shooting and make it look like you committed a hate crime five states over. They could do that to any one of us. If it's really gotten to that point where it's that bad, the sky's the limit, man. They could fake banking credentials. They could hack into your account. They can do that now. They could crash the entire economy. I'm not even talking about state actors. I'm talking about just, you know, Jimmy Crack Corn hacker out there with some AI tools. Yeah. If it's really that bad, then it's time to turn the Internet off. That's the only solution. We're getting to that point. What I'm saying is it's not that bad because if it was, it'd be pretty fucking obvious that it was. There's some weird stuff going on there, man. There really is some weird stuff happening that I'm not comfortable with. I don't know what, you know, we were discussing the Tucker Carlson interview where that could be an AI demo. You know? Yeah. I'm not saying it isn't possible. I'm just saying if we are at that point, then it's time to cut the cable for the Internet. It's time to pull the kill switch. Who's going to do that? You or I? We have no say in that. And the politicians are not going to. That's where, and I think I sent you a video, this guy's talking about music and Suno and Udio being utilized for music and how this is going to take away from musicians. Nah. This, literally this stuff is so good, I'm amazed at the content that it can create or steal. It's soulless. I've read, I didn't know what you had sent me, but those lyrics were trash. Oh, yeah. That was. That was. But there are some pieces that I've seen and heard on Suno and Udio that are actually very well written, very good pieces. And the music is very well written, very well composed. I'm surprised. The problem is the government is not, they're not stepping in because if they're using other copyrighted material to train their data sets, then that's a copyright violation. And why shouldn't they be sued just like anybody else be sued for copyright violation? I don't see how this couldn't be happening, considering, I mean, did they obtain licenses for all the data that was sent into these machines in the first place? No. None of this data, because it's out on the internet, they consider it open source. Well, I mean, that could be the hiccup that puts a log jam in further machine learning development. I hope so. Well, maybe that was done intentionally. Maybe that was done so that the problem would arise, so that there'd be a lawsuit and legislation would have to be passed. And now any future developers will have to follow some strict verification procedures to make sure that there's no embedded copyright material in the machine learning code. That way, only the big boys... People are pulling their songs from streaming platforms because they don't want them being used for training models in AI, this AI music creation. It's too fucking late for that. It's too late. You put it on the internet, it's out there. People have not figured this shit out yet, and they need to, I don't know, do something else with their life. They need to do something else. Yeah, I totally understand. This is possibly a stumbling block or a speed bump. I don't see it as a stopping point. This is not going to stop them from doing anything. But they may actually incur some copyright lawsuits. You know, that song I sang, you both of us kind of thought we heard something in there. It was similar to something, I don't know exactly what it was, but... And there's a lot of music that's very similar. When I listen to some of this stuff on CD, I'm like, you know, that sounds like such and such, or I've heard this melody somewhere else. It's changed, but it's the same melody. So I know that they're utilizing copyrighted material. It's just, you can't put your finger on it. But if I were to do it, I would incur a lawsuit of $850,000. Yeah. And be liable for all kinds of things, you know, so... Rules for thee, none for me. Well, well. That's crazy. Am I sharing or is that you? No, that's me. What is that? This is fake you. And what I've chosen is John F. Kennedy. And you really have to train it a little bit. I just, I threw this together real quickly, but... We are about to engage with a new enemy on an electronic battlefield, like no other we have ever encountered before. Be aware that your society is about to collapse and become the obsolete. So, I mean, you can change to all kinds of different, different ones. Jimmy Carter. Yeah. And it really doesn't take very long for it to create the new... What's really cool is you can actually take a picture and put the audio to the picture where it's actually moving the mouth. I tried that with John F. Kennedy, but it was a sideways picture. Yeah. It didn't do well with the picture, so if it was straight on, I think it probably would have done a much better job. But, I mean, there's a lot of this available. We are about to engage with a new enemy on an electronic battlefield, like no other we have ever encountered before. Be aware that your society is about to collapse and become obsolete. Obsolete. Mr. Wordsworth, the state has found you obsolete. Look at this new study that just came out. If you're wondering why there's these tip screens on every table in America, well, it's because people tip 11% more digitally than they do with cash. To tip or not to tip, that appears to be the question yet again as tipping options pop up in new places. That's what she said. What you're seeing is office share online, and they're asking me if I want to leave a tip. What? Your vehicle stopped and your phone dings with a prompt for a tip. We're now displaying tipping options more prominently in the app. Dan says he's noticed the difference. The real chunk of where you made your money is tipping. Now, sure, the driver might rely on these tips, but the prompt itself adds an instant layer of obligation, making what could be a simple transaction feel like a moral judgment. So, okay, I'm going to stop it here for a second. There is, let me see if I can pull this up on Reddit. I go to buy a pack of cigarettes, and they ask if I want to round it up to give to some charity. Yeah, they do that everywhere now. McDonald's, I think even Walmart, like when I go to order shit on Walmart, be it from the app or the self-checkout, it's like, would you like to donate a dollar to the Children's Cancer Children's Society Foundation to help? No. I'm sorry, I just paid you $12 for a fucking pound of ham. Do you know Texas, and I think two other states, have banned certain photography sites from being accessible? Yeah, I know. Because of... Ask me how I know. Because of adult identification. Yeah. And I'm just like, are you serious? It used to be a thing back in the early days of the interwebs, and it was kind of pushed as like an identity verification type thing also, but... One of those sites I know has a verification process. I understand the process, and I totally agree with the process. You have to have an identification card, your ID. You have to send them a picture of yourself. I agree with that, and I don't know why all of a sudden there's a problem with that site being shut down. Not really shut down, but inaccessible from Texas. Well, some of it, like I know... Oh, what the hell is the name of it? I can't even say the name because it'll get flagged, but the one with the word hub in it. Yeah. I know that one. I think one other one, they just said, well, fine, we're just going to pull off our servers from Texas. So that's what's going on. It's kind of like a, well, fuck you, Texas. I can almost understand because we have been operating for so long on the honor system. To upend it, there's going to be some growing pains. I'm not a big fan of it either, but the other direction is, we're going to go backwards in time and have to pay for a subscription again, and they'll argue they need to do that to maintain the system to check your identity and all this shit. So we're already seeing all these paywalls. I mean, you go to the New York Times, you can't even read your webpage in the New York Times because it's behind a paywall. Yeah. Everything's going to go behind a paywall. Why? That's not what the internet was supposed to be designed to do. You're supposed to be sharing information. I have a feeling the reason why this is happening has nothing to do with saving the kiddos from seeing content. I have a feeling what it does have to do with is the fact that there is a vast swath of people on the interwebs that have found multiple avenues to block advertisements. Well, I agree with that. I totally agree with that. In swoops, this legislation, and before you know it, now, because there are so many... I couldn't even count how many different websites there probably are that puts out smut content. Oh. If one goes down, the government is not going to sit around playing whack-a-mole with every other Tom, Dick, and Harry website out there, or Jane, and whatever your kink or whatever is. They're not going to play whack-a-mole with this shit. They're just going to swing a hammer, a big one, and try to hit as many big corporations at once with it as they possibly can. And this is what has transpired from it. That, to me, seems like they're doing it in order to stomp out competition. And they can take pot shots at the smaller ones later on. Yeah. Because I still think the primary reason this is going on is they're losing out on advertising dollars, and that's how these websites that don't charge you money when you go on there make their money. Yeah. And it's probably pretty fucking stark right now. Because everybody's burnt out on these advertisements. You can't fucking get away from them. They're everywhere. They're on every website, every application. You want to watch a streaming service that you paid for, by the way, and we're still going to advertise to you. Yeah. And you can't get away from them because they're locked in. You can't fast-forward past them. You have to sit and watch the advertisement. And they have a little clock at the top that tells you your show will return the X amount of seconds. Mm-hmm. This is the kidnapper retightening your restraints. Oh, I see you tried to wiggle free. Let me just tie those up again extra tight. It's censorship. I get it. Because of advertisements. What is that sanity? Where does that come from? There is no fucking way this is about protecting kids. None. Zero. I don't buy it. Because we have gone decades upon decades, well, two decades to be more clear here. I guess there was some of this in the 90s. We've gone two straight decades without anybody, politician, corporate or otherwise given a solid shit about this issue enough to actually do something about it. No. This is because corporations are missing out on ad revenue. That's the reason why. Period. Here's what got me. It really got me because this was signed in June of last year, but nothing happened until this month. It probably had some kind of an enforcement deadline, and we passed that. I think it was last month or the month before is when I started noticing that. I'm just like, what the hell is going on? I mean, it's fine. I mean, really shouldn't be going to stuff like that anyways, but, you know, it's free country. Well, I mean, I'm just saying it's another form of censorship. It's not one I'm about to sleep or, you know. I just can't believe we're living in a world of censorship like this. You can't say certain things in certain places because you're going to get flagged or shadow banned or, you know, nailed to the wall because you said the wrong word. Also, I'd like to point out that during the COOF, the early days of the COOF, when people were trying to spread actual real information, one of the avenues that they were using in reaction to the mass fucking censorship that happened on the big tech platforms, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, you name it. And, yeah, this was before the Elon Musk buyout, not that I believe the free speech hype. Right. They started posting this stuff up on the adult websites. Right. And I think that's probably another reason for it. Because now, it's not going to stop people from posting it there, but it'll slow them down if there's a paywall. You know, people are tired of the fucking advertisements. Well, I'll tell you. And also, as part of this, they're probably going to start charging money to the content creators, too. Back in the day, when I was not so outstanding citizen, we used a bulletin board that was set up by a large phone company. Do I need to edit this part out later? We were trading hacker information through this phone company's bulletin board system. So, yeah, I mean, people are going to use it to spread information, to get around the censorship. Handler223 has joined the chat. I'm not proud of it, but I'm not ashamed of it. I mean, that was something that went on, and I knew about it. I knew a lot of people that were involved in it. We would like to know what happened to all those people that… I'm sure they're still around. Well… Probably a lot of them got federal jobs now. Probably. I wouldn't have done that on a bet, but… So, I mean, we're going back to… This whole conglomeration has become so vile. You know, we're talking about tips everywhere. Why? We're talking about censorship everywhere. Why? Because our system is imploding under its own weight. The blow of all this government excess spending and the mortgages… I think the mortgages is really the big one on the private sector that's causing massive amounts of inflation. But all across every single forum, all people talk about, if they talk about anything at all, is the Fed. Oh, the Fed, the Fed, the Fed, or government spending. But that is just a small fraction. I mean, you want to talk about… There's probably quadrillions worth of dollars going into the mortgage markets right now, where banks are literally breaking their own arms, patting themselves on the back, and creating money. And every time they do this, it devalues our currency. I hate repeating myself, but I feel like I need to, to drive this point home. You do. That is why our economy is failing. And it's picking up steam now because the government is also doing it. And they're probably doing it because either, one, they want to bomb this economy into the dirt. Two, they can't stop the economy from being bombed into the dirt. So they are riding high while they can, spending what they can while they can. Before the bubble bursts. Before the inevitable pop. I don't know when that's going to happen, but it feels like it's going to be pretty fucking soon. Yeah. And that is what… And then if you factor in that inflation level, and the fact that, you know, what was it, five years ago, Cali's were fighting for $15,000, which wasn't shit back then. Now it's $20,000, which ain't shit now. I can tell you that for a fact. But they're losing money because of it. Because people aren't… nobody's buying anything from them. Who is? Who's losing money? The restaurants. The restaurants for one. The drivers. They're not getting the deliveries that they should be getting. Because these are service jobs. Right. Which means you need people to come in, everyday people, to come in and spend money on your overpriced hamburgers. And they're not going to. I just looked at… let me… I just scrolled through it here. Where is it? So this is Save the Dishes, or whatever it's called, Skip the Dishes. This is an order from some overpriced burger joint. One fusion blah, blah, blah. $30. A Mowi Wowi burger, $21.85. Holy crap. Brownie thing, $11.50. Oh, they got it for free. $11 for a fucking brownie, $20 for a burger. And these sit-down restaurants, that has become the norm. And that's actually… That's $22, get it right. Yeah. When you're figuring dollars and cents, you know, $1.85 extra is $2, literally. Because they're going to want a tip, and they're going to ask you, hey, do you want to round it up? I don't even know what this other thing was, $30-something bucks. What the… The reason for the tip, why that exists, and why it's been pushed and pushed and why people are freaking out on the Uber, DoorDash, Faber, skip-the-dishes forums about not getting tips, is because that is how they make their subsistence. They're not doing it. And the same thing goes with basically everything in the service industry. And I keep coming back to this point of, in order for a business to succeed in this economy, they have to embrace a certain level of corruption, because that's the only way you're getting ahead. And the reason for that is because the corrupt elements in your wallet, I'm sorry, snuggles struggling your wallet, that's the only way you can get ahead, because what you should actually be making to adjust for inflation is so fucking far above what you might imagine that it should be. If you're making $10 an hour right now, you should actually be making about $35 an hour. If you're making $10 an hour, you're below poverty level. You can't afford to actually pay your bills on $10 an hour. Well, apply that metric up the line. If you're making $50 an hour right now, you should probably be making about $220 an hour. You should. Unfortunately, that's not the case. It's not the case. And this incrementalism has worked on the middle class, not so much the tech sector. Although they're getting fucked too. But it's been worked on the blue-collar jobs primarily to kick things down, and outsourcing everything to China has not fucking helped. Well, in Japan, you're chastised for trying to tip. They do not believe in tipping. Did you know that? That's like a taboo thing. You do not tip in Japan. I get that. Yeah, I get that. Well, actually, I don't understand that. But I get that that's part of their culture, and I have heard that before. So I think they should be adopted here. But I understand because I have family members that have been in the service industry, and they were getting paid like $2 an hour, but they were getting tips, and that's what they actually made their money from, the tips, not from the $2 an hour. Now that doesn't – you can't make money – you can't get anything off tips because people don't have the money. They don't have the disposal income. No. Basically, you're rent-seeking on the rich. You're rent-seeking on the rich or the ignorant. Or those of us that feel obligated. Yeah, but even then, you're only able to tip as much as you have access to. Yeah, well, I've over-tipped at times when I couldn't afford to, but you get that sob story from a waitress, you know. I've got three little kids, and I'm blah, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, okay. I just don't know how I'm going to make rent this month. Come on, I don't either. Servers make as little as $4 an hour, and they're expected to make up the rest in tips. Should employers pay more so that people aren't so dependent on their tips? In the U.S., the federal minimum wage for tipped employees is $2.13 per hour, provided that this amount plus the tips received equals at least the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. Otherwise, your company... Jeez. And this is current? Yeah. Oh, my gosh, man. Wow. This is legalized pain handling. Wow. It really is. You might as well bring homeless people in there and spruce them up and give them a uniform. Honestly, some of those pain handlers make better money than service workers do. I don't doubt it. Company, the employer must make up the difference. This system allows businesses, particularly in the hospitality and service industries, to legally pay significantly lower wages on the assumption that tips will cover that shortfall. Larry Kramer said based on his years of restaurant experience, he believes the current system of tipping works best for everyone. Some person might tip 30%. Some person might tip 18%. So the server makes a lot more by getting tips. It also motivates the server to do well. Federal law says businesses can pay tipped employees as little as $2.13 an hour. And the reason for that is because they expect you to make around $5.12 an hour in tips. That $5.12 an hour, the company doesn't have to pay. If you aren't making $5.12 an hour in tips, then the company has to pay out-of-pocket to match $7.25 an hour. I want to give you a really clear example of how this works. Here's a chart that shows you make about $6 an hour in tips. After working 8 hours, you make $65.04 as the employee, but the employer only has to pay you $17.04. Okay, now let me show you this chart with $0.00 an hour in tips. Your company has to pay out-of-pocket $40.96 to get you to the minimum wage for that day, which is $58. Now does it make sense why companies love employing tipped workers? Because it helps pay for the employees. But let's imagine a world where your coffee doesn't come with a $5.12. And I showed you where even in YouTube Shorts now, they have advertisements in the Shorts. Yeah. That's unreal. So I was on Michael Bordenaro's channel the other day. I watched the rest of that clip we played last time, because I wanted to make sure that I didn't overstep, that he did not, in fact, address the larger issue. And I was right. He did not. Yeah. And it's been pretty consistent. But that video was 20 minutes long. Do you know I got hit with like 15 advertisements on that video? Now, I don't know how much control over this the content creators have, because my channel has never been monetized. Yeah. But I'm seeing this on every fucking YouTube channel now. Even some ASMR ones, which really boils my noodle, because I'm trying to fall asleep. Yeah. Can you imagine that? You just start zonking out, and then all of a sudden, IR products on sale now. And it's always those fucking AI products or the fake government assistants. Well, and it goes back to our entire society is permeated by advertising to the point of you can't do anything without getting bombarded. TV, radio, streaming services of all sorts. Just a web page has multiple, multiple ads on a web page. And if you go to a news site, you're still getting ads. There's no way to interact with this world anymore without the constant deluge of mind-bending amounts of advertisements. And they're tailored to your particular tastes, supposedly. Yeah. Yeah, ostensibly. I just don't think these companies should be allowed to do this to this level. I mean, I understand some. No. But if all you do is advertise? You brought up the, was it Spectrum and the ACP program last stream we did being phased out, and they're like, well, we got this new thing, and if you upgrade to our mobile plan, you'll get a phone valued at $200. And, you know, my thinking on that has always been, you mean the phone that's going to connect gobs of advertising? It's going to sling advertisements at you. It's going to have bloatware on it that you can't delete unless you jailbreak your phone. And it's going to connect all my data. All my personal data. Yes, your personal data, which it will then in turn sell to third-party marketers that will then bombard you with advertisements. Yeah. And that's not even counting the shit that's going to Uncle Sammy for review of your wrong think. They will most certainly make more than $200 back from that equation. Do you get like 10 spam calls a day? Have you seen that happen? Not since I switched over to my new number a couple years ago. Literally, I have like 10 a day, and they're all spam. And I don't know how to get rid of them. I'm on the do not call list. I've gotten some weird ones. Last year I got a call in Chinese. And I've gotten a few, like I mentioned last time, the numbers that look scrambled because it's not a real number. But if they're advertising something, I don't know what it is because I can't fucking understand them when they're talking the ching-chong speak. And when you're going to call and then hang up, I don't know what that's about. If you're going to give me a creepy phone call, at least do me the courtesy of breathing heavily into the microphone. Yeah, I get like six voicemails a day, and they're all click, click, click. Yeah. Why do I have to go through this? The only thing I can figure is they're working on some kind of a system that only works if it goes to voicemail. So if you actually pick up and start talking, it just hangs up because it can't complete its program. Right. I don't know. It's very annoying, but it's another form of advertising that we're being bombarded with from every sector of every corner of our world. Again, cable was advertised to the public initially as a commercial-free product. That didn't last very long. No. And, essentially, the web is transformed into that same armpit. I mean, I'm halfway to thinking we need a Web 4.0, underground guerrilla web, just so we can get away from the ads for no other reason, if for no other reason, so we can finally have some fucking peace. I understand at some level they need to have some revenue to pay for the bills, understandably, because not everything can be free. But there are ways of merchandising or, you know, providing services that are paid services. If it's a good enough service, I'm going to pay for it. I know it's an open contract, but when I initially signed up for YouTube, I never agreed to get bombarded with 15 fucking ads on a 20-minute long video. That's like, it's almost one ad per minute. Fuck you. I didn't sign up for that from however many years ago YouTube was created. I've been using it for probably since its inception. I don't remember agreeing to that. Do I get grandfathered out of this bullshit? No. No. Absolutely not. It's just insane. YouTube, you are in violation of my initial contract with you. Can I sue you for all the monies now? For all the time that you wasted, for all the advertisements that you unlawfully pushed on me without my consent? No means no, YouTube. Got a Jimmy Dore clip here I'm going to do. So apparently there's a couple of states that have passed a bill that allows teachers to conceal carry in the schools. Lately, it's kind of escaped my memory that Jimmy Dore and crew are still at heart a bunch of shit libs. And they come out with a little gem like this that will remind me of that fact. They walk a very fine line. And I think that's for viewership. This was not well received, as you will see in the comments section, which we're going to get into here in a second. Russell Dobbler filling in for Jimmy Dore, who is performing. Yeah, here comes the B team. Let me make sure I got the speed cranked up. Performing in El Paso, Texas this Friday. All right, say what you want about these here United States, but you find me another advanced industrial country where the teachers are packing. And now Tennessee is added to the list of states where your child's elementary school teacher could be strapped. What school district is it? The whole state. The Tennessee Holler. NBC Nightly News. Chaos erupting at Tennessee's state capitol where Republicans passed a bill that would allow teachers to carry concealed handguns. What could possibly go wrong? I was going to say the only difference is you're going to see far fewer bulges in pants now because they were probably bringing the guns in anyway. They're probably hiding them. You'll still see the bulges. They'll stuff a sock down there. Do they have to wear school shoes or something? Do they have a problem with the school shoes in Tennessee? Well, that is where you had the trans shooter who shot the Christian school up. So this is a big paradigm for that. Yes. I mean, I would definitely say that probably contributed to it. This whole thing. Oh, my God. Passed a bill that would allow teachers to carry concealed handguns in schools. This is the reaction of rage, hurt, and anger. Okay. 68 to 28. I just thought I'd stop to kind of percolate on that. I keep rhyming. That ratio indicates to me that there were at least a few Democrats that signed that bill as well. Yes. So this whole... I cringe every time I hear Republicans passed the bill. Well, how are you... What's the metric you're using for that? Only Republicans signed on to that? Because the numbers would indicate to me that that is not the case. Yes. Probably Republican-led. Yeah. Okay. But not... That's not what they're saying, you know? Tennessee is a red state. There were more involved than just the Republicans. It's a two-party system. Get over yourself. Oh, I got to get to work on that soundboard, man. I got to flush this out, so... Might do that later tonight. It's too late. There's already guns in them. It's been done happened. 32 other states. You know what I have to say about this, man? It's about fucking time. Yeah. I don't even think this is the best idea, either. People will figure it out anyway. I don't know that I ever told you. When I was teaching, we actually had a school shooter on campus. You did not. Hey, dude, if you're talking, I can't hear you. I think you're having some connectivity issues. He kind of just wandered around on campus. Right. Can you hear me? Fuck. All right, I hear you. Okay. You were recounting your time as a school staff of some kind or another and encountering shooting bang-bangs. We had an individual that was on campus with a gun. As far as I'm aware, he didn't actually shoot anyone. He did shoot the gun on campus in a classroom, but no one was injured and no one was killed. But the campus was locked down, and if I had had a gun on me, I would have felt more at ease. Literally, we were sheltered in place. We were locked down in a classroom and couldn't leave, and it really felt like a sitting duck. I mean, because you can't go anywhere, you can't do anything. And, of course, you're not getting any information from anywhere. It's very scary, to be honest with you. Having a firearm would have made me feel a little more at ease. Well, okay, the liberal machine has been hard at work demonizing guns out one side of their mouth, and at the same time, a lot of these tech companies lobbying are the same ones pushing out games like Call of Duty and other various clones. Right. So, unfortunately, it's ingrained into folks, just like the Orange Man Bad and Trump Derangement Syndrome and all that. Right. But this actually goes back a lot further. The anti-gun culture actually goes back way before Trump. Way, way before Trump. Oh, yeah, yeah. This has been an ongoing battle. I don't know exactly when it started exactly. If you go back and listen to John in the archives over on RBN, he actually talks about this stuff, Waco, Ruby Ridge. I think Waco was really the hardcore start of all of this. And, of course, other high incidence, high profile incidents, Columbines, Handy Hook. Right, right. But something else to note here is that there are these little devices called less than lethal weapons. Why don't we have those on school campuses? Rubber bullets, stun guns, tranquilizer guns. Well, apparently they have a new pepper ball gun that is supposedly non-lethal, but you have to have training with the gun because you can't shoot above the head, above the neck. That's true with basically any less than lethal weapon. A head shot with something like that will run the risk of killing. Same thing in, we called it in military police. When I was military police abroad, we had the ladder of force training, which is, from my understanding, pretty ubiquitous across law enforcement. The ladder of force areas that you were allowed to strike with your gun, and you had green areas, yellow areas, and red areas. And red areas were areas that if you struck it with enough force, it really doesn't take that much in the grand scheme of things to kill somebody, and those areas would be areas that you think they are, the head, the neck, the groin. I mean, you could kill somebody hitting them in the chest, stop their heart, break a rib, puncture an organ, but it's less likely. Now, the yellow areas were areas that if you strike somebody, you could cripple them or mutilate them. Right. And that would be like your knees, your elbows, your hands, wrists. Those are yellow areas. So with any weapon entering the equation, there has to be corresponding training that goes along with that. I'm not necessarily for this bill either. I just don't see another step to take to come in and at least put a tourniquet on the problem because it is a huge problem. These schools are for any psychopath that gets it up their ass to go and do some murder in these areas. There's nothing to stop them save for maybe one SRO and maybe one security guard that probably isn't armed. Yeah. I don't think I sent you, and I don't know if you knew about the Arlington shooting last week. No, I hadn't heard of it. There was a 17-year-old that shot an 18-year-old on campus. Is that in Virginia or Texas? Texas. Okay. Now, he was found off the main campus on like an auxiliary campus, away from the main campus. They have yet to find the gun. They have no idea what happened to the gun, which is really strange. So only one person got shot? Only one person. He went in and shot the guy five times and left. But it was a targeted incident. Yeah. I think I did hear about that, actually. And, I mean, whether you like it or not, stuff like that is going to happen regardless of, you know, you could have the entire fucking campus armed up and metal detectors. Shit like that is still going to happen. Yeah. I've got to turn my volume up here. I feel like I'm screaming. There we go. Well, I mean, they had safeguards. They had metal detectors. They had all that. They don't know how he got it on campus, but they don't know where the gun went either. So that's what I'm saying. It's going to be on campus. My comment here to Dobular's bad impression of the Jimmy Dore show was, sad that it's come to this, but at least it's a deterrent for psychopaths wandering into an undocumented shooting range. Now I'm just waiting for the substitute teacher that goes Manchurian candidate so they have an excuse to ax this. False flag incoming. 32 other states passed legislation allowing teachers to carry guns in schools as states across the country grapple with how to address school violence. If signed by the governor, the Tennessee law would allow teachers to carry guns in schools where top administrators agree. The teachers would be required to have a permit due training and get a background check and mental health evaluation. Currently, it's just one of those gun-free zones where people know they can go there and take advantage of folks. Now heads to governor Bill Lee's desk who is expected to sign it soon. Every person that dies at the hand of a gun in this state, it's on their hands. Tennessee becoming the next state to arm educators in America. Yeah, it wasn't clear to me. There's a few comments on this montage where it's not clear what side they actually fall on the issue. Right. And I think that was intentionally clipped that way so that you could argue that they were for or against. The start page has these two articles side by side. And it's tracking us. How about that? I think. Wow, that's real time. Let me, we interrupt this regularly scheduled program for some fuckery. Definitely fuckery. We'll get into this later, but let me just share it with the audience here. Wouldn't you know, Rach got recommended this article and one other one, both from MSN. You know, Microsoft. 10,000 fewer fast food jobs since the bill was signed. Who'd have thunk? Those are just side by side. There were a couple of others a little bit further down, but I wasn't going to post those. You know, the thing that every single fucking economist in the entire universe said would happen, happens. Who'd have thunk? Who'd have thunk it? Oh, there's comments. Okay. We're, I don't want to sidetrack. Let's try and finish this video. It seems like it's been. Yeah. Let's finish this. This is something like out of the dystopian satire of the original Robocop. Tennessee becomes the latest state to arm teachers. Like this is something that would have been satire 30 years ago. Police Academy two last night, and it was remarkable how close it was to real life LA. I mean, first of all, the gang is in a store just grabbing shit off the shelves. The one guy's got meat. And then Bobcat, I think they were at Diva. I'm a vegetarian. No one can do anything. The cops show up and shoot up the holes. It was actually like Robocop. That was a few years ago. They're going to be really ineffective or really deadly. Report loaded gun fell out of substitute teachers, waistband on Pinellas County playground. Just this is a little, a little, a little montage of what happens when teachers carry guns. Seaside high teacher accidentally fires gun in class. Students injured. Students find cops gun in bathroom in middle of school day. Did they return it? I guess they must have. Yeah, that's his property. I guess these are all states where that's legal. I guess Whitney middle school teacher left gun unattended in teachers workroom. Second incidents of unattended gun in Whitney. I asked where's Whitney? Wait, I don't. So this goes on for a minute here. I might skip through it, but that what reaction exactly were you expecting from the mainstream media, which is where you're pulling these articles from Mr. Dabula are something that Jimmy would have probably pointed out himself. Were he there to wrangle in this fucking clown show and something that you would have pointed out on virtually any other issue. So the, the lack of some questioning of the mainstream narrative here is quite glaring. Given the typical content of this show, this is pretty sad. Well, Texas Central, Central middle teacher brought gun to class students. It's not clear why they stole the gun or why the teacher brought the gun to school in the first place. So that's just a little Whitney of what, really? It's not clear. Why? Really? Okay. It's a headlines. We'll be getting the teacher came intending to sell the students a gun and they just took it and didn't pay him. Is that what they mean by stole? Maybe, maybe they, they, they, they ripped them off. I didn't realize that there were 32 different States that, that allow teachers to bring guns. Is it that a lot? Well, there was a map up there somewhere. I don't know where it was in one of the TV. Okay. All right. Yeah. All right. But that's a lot. I mean, but that's a lot. Look, that's insane. I didn't know it was happening. It must be going great. If I haven't been hearing about it, like the school shootings. Isn't that interesting? Yeah. I mean, I kind of said what I kind of said, the man sharing candidate thing, tongue in cheek, I guess it's so possible, obviously, but haven't heard of any mass shootings popping off in the school since that happened. Cause if it had, it'd be mainstream news, media news, like everywhere. Yeah. Oh, they passed it. See, the teachers concealed carry and they still couldn't stop the lone nut, lone wolf gunner shooter. Real far cry from the Obama administration, where it seemed like we were having one of those every other month or every other week. Yeah. I mean, without getting into a thing about the second amendment and who should be allowed to have a gun after. Yeah. Let's not get into a thing over it. Let's not make a thing over one of the most important amendments that we have. Let's not make a thing over it. Let's not make a thing over one of the most important amendments that we have. Let's not make a thing over that. What amount of waiting times and background checks and this and that and the restrictions on weapons, because I know that's a big thing. All right. Well, what I'm saying is even beyond that debate, right? Like beyond what on a policy level you feel should be done regarding who can have what gun according to what timetable and you know what the person's biography is. It's obviously a country that loves guns, right? Like, we love guns. We love guns. And a country that loves guns is a violent country with a violent culture where there's going to be gun violence. Forget about the policy. It doesn't matter what that, we like guns. We like violence. We like the idea of solving problems by shooting people, obviously, or at least brandishing a weapon to show, well, we'll put one in. If you cross us, that's the culture. It's a frontier country with a frontier culture. And of course, in a country like that, with a culture like that, that's this in love with deadly women, that that has a real sort of like sexual fetish for weapons and guns. That's going to be a country with a gun violence problem. Even before you get into the debate, before you even touch debates about guns. Yeah, but okay. Why is that? Well, I mean, the country was founded on that right to bear arms. And that is, that is so much a part of rural America. I'm sorry. That's, that's the way people survive. They hunt. They take care of pests. They protect their own with guns. That's what we do. I'm sorry. It's that's, that's our society. It was a, it didn't have to be written down to be understood that frontier life was hard and dangerous. And there was critters in the wild that wanted to eat you and yours. And there was also criminal elements out there. And there were, you couldn't call the police. There is no police. There was no, you're the police. You, you are the protector. This is where the concept of the militia came from. Communities policing their own because there was no other choice. Either you protect yourself or you have a community that will protect you and you'll protect it. There's, there's some kind of a transaction going on there, but, but it still involves guns. Yeah. Or whatever the arms of the day were, you know, yeah, yeah. I mean, can you see that happening? I'm going to, yeah, I've got a, I've got a Katana behind the door, but I'm not going to be able to use that. If somebody breaks in my house, I mean, if it's all you got, I'm probably going to grab the baseball bat before I grabbed the Katana. But yeah. Yeah. I mean, I have a shotgun in the closet. A little bit harder to explain why the intruder is in nine different pieces to the officer on scene. I don't know. He just fell apart. It just, I, I, I have a hard time understanding their rationale. You cannot have guns. We've always had guns. That's always been part of our society. It wasn't so much the, like I've heard people say this country was founded on the second amendment and it was founded on the idea that we should have the right to protect ourselves. The right to protect ourselves. And when a government tries to take that away, which is exactly what caused Appomattox to happen, the, Holy crap. The attempted seizure of gunpowder and other munitions. Marble sized hail. What? Yeah. Right now? I heard something. Yeah, right now. Well, we're here in the time span. It took me to get back downstairs again. It rained so hard. The entire backyard is soaked and I guess it must've rained sideways and it blew over a bunch of shit in the backyard too. I'm pretty sure they call that a squall. Yeah. It probably only rained for about five minutes, but it's soaked back there everywhere. Well, I heard a noise. I heard a noise and I thought, that's not my PC fan. And I just opened the door and there's hail. Gun control. Just look at that. A country that likes guns is going to shoot guns. A country that shoots a lot of guns is going to hit a lot of people with the guns that they shoot. It's not, it's really not. Not if you're doing it right. As John Stapmiller used to say, he's all for gun control. Two hands on the weapon and hitting your target. Yeah. That hard to figure out. I don't know. I don't know how anyone who ever went to high school thinks that it would be a good idea to arm high school teachers. Well, people love guns. The country loves guns. Okay. That's it. Sure. But they don't love high school. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, 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