 Hi, everyone. This is Fijo. Welcome to another live stream. Today is January February March 23rd, 2019. The topic of discussion for today is censorship, privacy, and surveillance. Open discussion. When it's an open discussion, we can talk about anything you guys want, but the main theme is being censorship, privacy, and surveillance. As before, we're going to give everyone a little bit of time to roll in, but for those of you watching on another platform after this has been loaded on after the live stream, this is a topic, privacy, big data, censorship, surveillance. This is sort of a topic that was one of the catalyst that really put me on the blogosphere to a certain degree. It was one of the things that really pushed me towards wanting to share information, writing articles, and slowly, I guess, making videos, editing videos, and loading those on, and kicking into mathematics, and whatnot. Just to let you know how important this topic is to me, when I first started blogging back in 2006, prepping for it in 2005, and releasing stuff in 2006, I wrote an article called, one of the first articles I ever wrote was called anomalies, prisons, and geophysics, how governments use data, and how to stop them. That was basically my understanding of what was going to happen with big data coming from a geophysics background, because we processed, when we do geophysics, we process a lot of data, so I know what you can do with data. The article here, let me pop this up for you. Again, it's called anomalies, prisons, and geophysics, how governments use data, and how to stop them. I first posted this on my initial blog site that I had for a couple of years, and then reposted it again on another website that I had, and then I reposted it again, one of the first things I uploaded again when I went to Blogspot. In 2016, I also did a soft spoken ASMR reading of that piece as well, and that piece still holds out to this day. The concept has become more dominant in our society of what's really going on with big data, and how surveillance, privacy, and censorship is really taking a plane down our world. That's my little intro. What we're going to do is wait for people to roll in, and people are slowly starting to roll in. Hi, Spider, how are you doing? Hey, Chicho, I'm so happy to be here. Me too. Me too, man. Me too. Hey, brother, what's going on? Due to my headache, I am gladly here, even though normally I would be doing astrophysics homework. Cool, cool. Oh, Marko, remember, are you the one that requested an astrophysics live stream? Glad to be here, man. God to have you, man. The astrophysics I would love to talk about, really. At some point, we do, because I studied a little bit of it in geophysics, when I studied geophysics at university, and I really got into astronomy in high school. I bought my first telescope when I was in high school. It wasn't that grand? Yeah, that's me. Awesome, awesome, Marko. You're studying astrophysics, eh? Your mathematics is powerful. The mathematics required to do astronomy and astrophysics, and some of the more mathematics-heavy physics degrees or physics disciplines, they're quite beautiful, actually. Basically, the approximations, the formulas that we've come up with to do approximations of how the universe is rolling out. Big numbers, man. Big numbers, big numbers. There's a lot of data processing in astrophysics. Tremendous, over an extended period of time. Muller report thoughts. I haven't read the Muller report. I just read some of the high, you know, what do you call it, titles and first paragraphs of articles and stuff and videos, but I really haven't followed it because I wasn't expecting for there to be anything. It was just a, I don't know what the acronym is, a cat chasing the tail or dog chasing the tail or it was basically a diversion from everything else that's going on around people. Anybody that actually still, after two years, was still on a mindset that there's anything substantial to what corporate mainstream propaganda is spewing, needs a serious re-evaluation of what is important in their lives and what is going on in the world. And one of the most important things that's going on in the world is what's happening regarding the title of this live stream that we're having now, which is censorship, privacy and surveillance. This should be on the front pages of every newspaper and every news channel if there were truly news channels. So I really don't have any thoughts on the Muller report. It's just garbage. It's, it was leading people's diversion. That's it. Nothing burger. Nothing burger. What was that even a burger? Burger hamburgers are delicious. You get fries with them and salad, like dipping sauces, right? You get bacon and mushrooms and onions, like nothing burger free. I guess it just means you get two buns but sometimes you get burgers that have delicious buns, right? This was a waste of lots of money, fooled people. Geophysics is great too. Astro has always been amazing for me. I study at UFT, UFT, UFT. Where's UFT? Florida? I don't know where UFT is. UTO? No, I don't know where UFT is. Where's UFT, Marco? So I'm assuming it could be Florida, so it can be stressful times. Yeah, no kidding. Geophysics is fun too, for sure. Geophysics is super fun. I love the geophysics world because we took mathematics, learned the physics behind or the mathematics behind the physics. University of Toronto. Oh, UFT, UFT, UT, University of Toronto, of course. I was going to say Toronto but then the F was throwing me off, right? University of Toronto, amazing city. Very, very, very fun city. Great nightlife. Lots of things going on but just regards to geophysics just to finish it off. We took, we learned the mathematics, learned the mathematics behind the physics and then you use instruments that depend on the physics and use the mathematics to do exactly what you're doing and then you take the data into software, process the data and write reports based on it so it completed the loop. That's one of the reasons I really like geophysics. Should people be censored for spreading misinformation? Difference between intentional and unintentional? No, they shouldn't be censored. I don't think anyone should be censored. I think whoever that wants to spread whatever it is that they want to spread, let them spread it. However, that means you have to have the platforms completely wide open so you can have parties that can dispute, debate the people that are spreading misinformation. We don't have that right now. Right now we have corporate mainstream propaganda which is CNN, ABC, Fox, the Young Turks, all these people, even the Young Turks. Okay, misinformation, disinformation galore. They have the platforms, right? But because there's censorship happening, there is no secondary, tertiary, different ways of thought of challenging the same thing. I'm going to take this thing down, this thing up here. That's the article that I was referring to if you guys have rolled in later. Article that I wrote back in 2006 regarding big data. What was going to happen with surveillance and stuff? In 2016 I did a soft spoken reading of that article as well. It's very important and it's going to become more and more important. Right now, I'm going to take this down, right now we have Australian, New Zealand censoring hardcore. We UK has been censoring hardcore. Egypt has just started censoring hardcore, banning or basically saying that anyone with 5,000 followers or more spreads anything that is not approved by the corporate or the dictatorial or the government centralized government, whatever, however way you want to look at it by the central power, right? So anyone with 5,000 followers, right? That would include my channel on YouTube that spreads anything that the Egyptian government doesn't approve of, can be thrown in jail. Right? Wow, wow, wow. Levia, how are you doing? Thanks for giving me a munchies, Gicho. You're welcome, gentlemen. Oh yeah, my food too. Let me show you what I got here. I got oranges, like little tangerines, just a little bit of fruits, right? Summer's kicking in, spring's kicking in. So during spring and summertime, I eat a ton of fruit and I have, this looks like the Persian black tea, but it's not. It's Tolsi Rose Tea. So Tolsi is a, I had to look this up actually. It's Egypt, Indian basil, I believe. So it's basil and rose hips, dried rose of this fantastic tart. Livia's in that. Greetings from the East Coast. Greetings, greetings. I really love Astro because of its highly mathematical structure. Yeah, the mathematics blew me away when I was studying it. As geophysics, we had to study a little bit of astronomy and I had a choice to make astronomy or geophysics and geophysics is to a certain degree astronomy as well, but I went through more applied geophysics and where I could get into environmental stuff. Difference between spreading misinformation and manipulation. It's basically the same thing, right? However, what we have happening right now is corporate centralized government propaganda, like the Mueller report, right? It's complete garbage, but just manpower wise, not only the manpower required to pursue this lie that everyone knew was a lie, right? Everyone knew was garbage, right? To pursue this, not including everyone that worked on it. Just imagine the manpower, man hours, productive hours for not the world, but just the United States. How many, I can't even imagine what it would be, millions, tens of millions of hours of wasted human lives that actually followed this garbage, right? Because there's tens of millions of people not only in the United States but in Canada as well, not tens of millions in Canada, we don't have that population, right? We're one tenth the population in the United States, but millions of people in Canada would talk about it, like I had friends that talked about it. I'm like, are you guys crazy? This is what you're focused on? Like, this is what you're spending your time thinking about? What? It's crazy. I'm sorry, the difference between it. An individual should be able to say, do anything they want, right? Corporations, because they are selling products, right? Because they are producing products that could be harmful to the population, there needs to be a certain amount of accountability there. There needs to be a certain amount of accountability for individuals as well. But we're not talking about huge extreme situations where someone comes on and says, like really, my propaganda level is on the national inquiry level, right? Someone comes on and says, I met Elvis's son that came from Elvis and a chipmunk breeding or something like, like, do we have to censor on that level? Because some people might believe it. There are millions of people that buy those kinds of magazines and read this garbage, right? Maybe they treat it as entertainment, right? Why censor? Because the education system is so poor in a country, people are afraid that their citizens are so misguided, uneducated, that they will fall for every trap or is the centralized power in the business of manipulating and controlling the population to do its bidding. Sorry, I'm going off on this a little bit, but I just want to nick the censorship thing right off the bat. I consider censorship to be the same level as prohibition, right? Prohibition is basically, you can think about it, a centralized power forbidding individuals from acquiring information, right? Because experience as well is considered information. You're collecting data, very personal data, right? So prohibition and censorship, I look at at the same light. And those come about because centralized power are forbidding the population from acquiring certain types of information. That is insane to me. Hello, Saint, just just Germany. I missed a couple of posts. I'm going to read those. When I worked in the pharmaceutical industry part-time, I met some big people that taught me lesson about the medical industry. I'm telling you, brother, biggest industry corruption in society. I agree, Marco. I know a little bit about it. It's horrendous, right? The pharmaceutical industry, the medical industry, just the whole healthcare industry is trillion dollar, trillions of dollars a market in the world, right? Hundreds of billions just within Canada and the United States alone, okay? That is built on lies and manipulation and false information, false data, right? Just just on the science level. Just imagine scientists, universities, they get funding to do research. And then when they publish their research, a lot of that research has to go through secondary places like scientific magazines, right? That filter out what they don't want disseminated. And they only present data information that they deem to be valid, right? Now, if that magazine institution has been infiltrated, has corrupt, has been paid off, then certain types of information are never reaching the public. This is information that has been taxed, pay or funded, right? The data is not available. Not only that, a lot of those magazines and stuff, they get paid by corporations to publish their reports, right? So a lot of scientific papers and stuff that we read is corporate propaganda as well. And a huge percentage, we're not talking about one or two percent, we're talking 50 plus percent, right? Is garbage, is lies, okay? That's the reason Aaron Schwartz got in hot water. He went and downloaded a whole bunch of, my memory serves me right, downloaded a whole bunch of scientific papers that were taxpayer funded and released them, right? Because to have access to these reports, to this data, you actually have to pay these organizations per report to have access to them. It's a control mechanism, okay? It's censorship on the grand scale. I meant that as a response to Spaceman, I don't think that government or media aren't trying to spread misinformation as much as manipulate the public. Fox, yeah, for sure. Okay, thanks, Audmic. I got to read the, sometimes the colors are the same and then I get confused. Another lesson I've learned, powerful people get powerful medication. The middle class and poor levels of or society gets 60% of medication, at least in my opinion. Ex, how are you doing? Just taking it to a little bit of extreme on that front. Marco with Marco just stated, a lot of the pharmaceutical companies have been caught using vaccines in poor countries in the global south, in Africa specifically, that were tainted by certain diseases, okay? And they were spreading those diseases or vaccines, vaccines that didn't work in the global south, in certain countries. So first world countries, if a certain vaccine that they created was denied, they would take that vaccine. It was, it was deemed to be tainted, harmful to the society. The pharmaceutical companies would take those vaccines and use them in the global south, in Africa, in South America, okay, in poorer countries, making those people there even sicker, right? Pharmaceutical companies are one of the most horrendous institutions in the world on the same level as weapons manufacturers and oil companies. Specific examples, please, index once. For example, celebrities like Betty White might have access to a cure for cancer, while your average student, just like myself, get the minimum, possibly Marco. What's his name? Steve Johnson didn't cash in on that opportunity if he had it. My immediate thought on privacy surveillance is GDPR, that's North Korea, I believe, that had a huge impact on my company. Was GDPR North Korea or was that East Germany? Because we deal with a lot of personal data, I think it was a step in the right direction, but we need something stronger and specific. Oh no, GDPR, that's the case, man. Isn't that the code? General data, that's right, general data, thanks, I was about to search it. That's the general data protection regulation in the EU. Okay, I'm a little apprehensive of anything that the EU passes, right? I agree with certain aspects of things and I disagree with a huge portion of what they are doing as well. Like in some of the stuff, are you talking about the bear fiasco? And gentle chaos, bear has done it, Merck, no, is it Merck? Merck has done it, Johnson and Johnson has done it. Last night, looking to this was a few years ago, but most of the top pharmaceutical companies have black spots on them where they took tainted drugs and used them in the global south. I'm not 100% sure about this fact, but when I educated myself in the supplement industry, I learned quite a bit. The EU absolutely has a lot of problematic aspects, is very anti-democracy, but even a broken clock, yeah, that's the best case, a best explanation case, man, thank you for that. Even a broken clock is twice a day in a 24-hour period. Yeah, I can't give you a complete fact, sorry, I don't work in this industry, but I'm trying to educate myself. Just Marco, just backing up Marco, and I don't know if there's, I don't, Marco, I don't agree with you that there's a cure for cancer for rich people, because I don't think cancer is one unique thing, right? Cancer has multiple different types of mutations and forms and causes and all this jazz, right? So, I don't necessarily agree that there is for rich people, rich people have cure for cancer, they don't and whatnot, but I'll give you some ammunition, right, to use for anyone that defends the pharmaceutical industry or medical industry or centralized governments that try to regulate controls people's ability to consume certain products if they believe that certain products are good for their health or whatnot, right? Prohibition of cannabis, okay? I bring this up with anyone who defends the pharmaceutical industry, governments when it comes to controlling medication, regulating products, right? Right now, as of right now, you would have to be living under a rock to not know that cannabis is anti-inflammatory, good for digestion, helps you improve your appetite, relieves pain, prevents tremors, okay, is a relaxant, helps people sleep, it goes on and on and on, right? Now, just imagine how many hundreds of millions of people, and I'm not exaggerating this number, right? Hundreds of millions of people were harmed in the last 50 years, half a century, even less in the last 30 years, and I'm, you know, we're just talking in the Western world, if you talk globally, we're into the billions of people were harmed because they didn't have access to cannabis, where a patient that was getting chemotherapy and cannabis is amazing for controlling nausea, okay? So just imagine, just I'll give you one example, you can extrapolate beyond this, right? It helps people crows, like I could go on crows, like it's incredible, right? But people getting chemotherapy and radiation treatment, one of the most brutal side effects of that is nausea, okay? People, they vomit and they can't hold down food, they lose their appetite, and we know cannabis helps with nausea, improves your appetite, allows you to sleep and all this jazz, right? How many millions of people in the last five decades, let's say it goes beyond nine, the last five decades have had radiation or chemotherapy treatment, where they had to control their symptoms and they're brutal, and they were given pills, pharmaceutical pills that had secondary side effects, okay, that they had to use because they didn't have access to a plant. That is censorship, that is prohibition. Okay, we'll get off the pharmaceutical bandwagon, I agree. There's a corruption and powerful, rich people have privileges at the same time, in all fields and areas, there are honest people, and there is no centralized place for manipulation, censorship, etc., because even the powerful and the rich aren't always on the same page, no, they're not for sure. Thanks, Germany. Yeah, I was just trying to give a modern basic example. All the knowledge of the world will be shrunk down to a silicon chip, that chip will get misplaced. Just tea, thank you. Love you, I was loving it. It's a good thing anyone who works with information and data professionals have backups and backups of backups as a standard practice. So they say, the question is not if they backed it up, the question is can they recover the data, and a lot of data in the world has been stored so poorly that you can't really trust a lot of that data. Maybe it's being, I'm pretty sure NSA is pretty doing a pretty good job, but I wouldn't count on it professionally. Misinformation is a big problem. It costs our economies billions of dollars from sources like YouTube, Spirit Science that spread pseudoscience. Cannabis helping people with nausea, cannabis helping people to sleep with anxiety, with tremors used to be called pseudoscience. Now it's fact, right? Our culture centers around anti-intellectualism where we laugh at our failures in mathematics instead of encouraging to try better. I agree on that part, but I don't, we could also purpose, we could also make the same argument that the cost to human lives, to human societies, both short and long term, has been into the trillions because we have not allowed open discussion on many topics. Because I study astronomy, I can't wait to dive into the topic of life beyond earth, even though I want to become an aerospace engineer, nice. Still the FBI definitely hides information from the general public. If they have it, but as far as Marko, I'm with you on that, there's no doubt in my mind there is sentient life, intellectual life beyond our little blue dots. Mathematically it's impossible for there not to be. The war on drugs, especially cannabis, was never about the substances themselves, but about the population that could be targeted, agree to agree, the money that could be made, agree to agree, and the control mechanisms put in place. It's a great example of government propaganda being wheeled as a weapon and mainstream media followed it to the tee, all of it. As Bill Hicks would say, hey, let's have an open discussion. Why is all the news you get from corporate mainstream media propaganda, how bad drugs are? Where's the positive aspect, right? Very off topic, but do you watch Game of Thrones? Yeah, I do, Spencer. It's starting soon. They took their sweet time with it. How interesting. I feel like one can forget all the struggles in the world by just looking at the sky. Yeah. That was one of the first places, Livia. For me, it was one of the first places I found solitude. That's one of the reasons I went into geophysics and looked into astronomy. At night time, you just lay down and look into the sky and you see shooting stars and things going across. You can see satellites by the naked eye, right? It's just brilliant. Plants can have side effects just like pills, 100%. Cannabis by no means a cure all. But yes, has various uses, all for its legalization. But it annoys me when people make it out to be a panacea. I don't know what that means. I guess that means a cure for all. Every day, Gapsy, I agree it's not a cure for all, but literally, not figuratively, not hypothetically, not any other way than actually, factually. It is one of the most beneficial plants on this planet. Like, I don't know any other plant that have as many uses as hemp, as cannabis. I don't know of any. Okay. I don't think anything else even comes close to what cannabis provides us, ranging from food to oils, to fuel, to textiles, to medicine, like its tentacles go into every industry. It is huge. It is huge. Levia, definitely. Space is an interesting infinite. By the way, space, if we're talking space, if you guys aren't watching one of the best science fiction space movies, TV shows, watch it. It's called The Orville. It's got Seth McFarland as a producer. He stars in it as well. It's got quirky humor. Very American, sarcastic, quirky human humor, but it tackles very important subjects in our society, just the same way that the original Star Trek did. Just the same way that the next generation did. It's a great show. Very, very fantastic character development. It's space travel, right? Spaceships and stuff like this. Very low budget CG compared to some of the other stuff that's out there. Fantastic writing. Highly recommend. Infinitely interesting. The main discovery in astronomy is undoubtedly that space can hold anything. Space can hold anything. There could be anything out there. Cool. Speaking of astronomy, the moon is hovering around me and is looking golden and wonderful. It's eight hours ahead. Ten hours ahead. Yeah, it's nighttime there. Yeah, here too. It was full moon two nights ago, I believe. Happy solstice, everyone, by the way. And if you're followed the lunar calendar, happy new year, the Persian calendar, happy new year, happy solstice, happy spring, it's, I think it's going to be a grand, grand spring. Teddy Bear with a heart. That's cute. The night sky is one of life's greatest pleasures and the thing I miss the most living in urban area. Yeah, I don't see it as often as I used to when I was, as a kid, almost midnight. Nice. My dad is a botanist and highly advocates for life beyond earth. There is, this is why I've been instilled with this knowledge from young age. Awesome Marco. Great, great person to have around. It's a plant that has walked a long evolutionary path with us. Our bodies even have an endocannabinoid system. Yeah, cool. I was debating coming to UK to study pretty far from Toronto, though. Hey, March 29th. First, first all lady spacewalk happening. Oh, is it first all lady spacewalk? That's crazy stick. 2019. That's how long it took. Cool. Silip Simon has also a long evolutionary path with us. 100% sila Simon. Very powerful indeed. Heroic doses. Heroic doses, as Teres McKenna would say, right? Pharmaceutical industries, botanic space and astronomy, philosophers would agree. The internet provides a pseudoscience with data collection on the function of millions of human brains. Therefore, the pharmaceutical industry makes experimental pills that can make certain areas of the brain. Hopefully, it never kills our ability to be completely cautious and comfortable located on the frail lobe of our brains. Definitely, certain concerns. Happy solstice. Happy solstice. We had the full moon in Libya in operation in opposition to an airy sun. Major change in relationships, guys. Is it, Libya? Thank you for the astronomical reading on the subject of the Orville. That one episode with everyone living by upvotes and that was such a pretty interesting critique on the internet call. It was amazing. And by the way, just on the same topic, Orville had a sort of episode where people are upvoting and stuff each other, right? It was supposed to be complete democracy. Their argument was this is purely democratic. If people like it, they like it. They upvote you. If they don't like you, they downvote you, right? And then your social standings would change and you might become a criminal and they might even execute you. Black Mirror had a certain similar or has had certain similar types of episodes as well. Black Mirror. Dark. Depressing. What a dystopian society, right? Orwell. Okay. Sorry. Yeah, George Orwell, right? The Orville. Same concept, but it was sort of happy-ish and light-hearted and funny, but there was a darkness to it. And looking from outside the box, we're like, oh, that's scary. But there was a little bit of lightness in there. Huxley. Wow. We're living in the golden age of information. So even though their censorship implemented, creators and artists are able to create content which is amazing to share their perspective of what society could be like if we're not careful. Part of the reason cannabis has been villainized is because Western medicine frowns upon self-medicating of any kind. Any cannabis lends itself well to self-medicating practices, 100% agree index. Like one of the first things the pharmaceutical industries will tell you, doctors will tell you, if you ever take their medicine, right? And sometimes you have to. You can't trash talk all of it, right? Sometimes, as I'm going back to Nicholas Taub says, if you get severely ill, you need power, something to, otherwise you're going to die, you take it, right? But in regards, I'm losing my train of thought, but in regards to cannabis, right? Being self-medicating, one of the first things that happens if you ever start, hopefully not, but if you ever get ill enough that you need the pharmaceuticals, right? Strong pharmaceuticals. The first things the doctor and those people subscribing this medicine to you will tell you not to take anything else, including cannabis or any other type of drug. One of the reasons is because they don't know what the side effects will be, the interaction between these drugs and other drugs you may be taking. The other reason is they don't want their experiment to be tainted by other drugs, that way they can't pinpoint certain side effects or benefits or other illnesses that come along to this specific thing. So once you agree to that type of experiment, you're a guinea pig. Really appreciate what that means. And you better do your research before going down that route. Off topic, but I do have a commandee, the last boy on earth number six available right now on eBay. I usually only ship within the U.S., but of course we make an exception for Chisholm. Thanks every day. Every day Gatsby. Thank you for the offer. I have to look at the cover. I might have a commandee number six. I would have to look at the cover. I have a lot of the early issues, but I don't know if I have it or not. And people have contacted me before wanting to send me comics and I've told them that I have to get set up for it. I'm going to get a PO box and stuff like this. And I hadn't yet, but since I'm going to be putting some stuff on eBay to sell, some of the mermaid, well all of the mermaid comics that I have, issues of the comics that I published and some of the other stuff that I have in my collection, doubles, triples of that I've bought over the years as an investment or because I liked her because I was a little crazy. I went crazy on the cover. Oh my God, I need two or three copies of this. I'm going to start going through my collection and selling some of that stuff. And because I'm going to do that, the odds are I'm going to get a PO box. So thank you for the offer. If it was an offer, I think it was. But what I'll do is hit me up again. And on Monday, we're going to do a comic book, you know, trying to list things on eBay. I haven't sold anything on eBay for a while. I'm going to go on there tomorrow and figure it out and at least put one thing on eBay. Okay. And then at least we've got the thing down. I'm going to set up things for Monday, you know, just to show you what I have. We'll take pictures and just talk comics, basically, even if we don't list it. But I'm going to get a PO box once I start putting the stuff on eBay. So hit me up again. And if the offer is still open, I'll give you the PO box. Maybe even start getting comic books coming in that people want us to do readings for. Because that's amazing. Just doing the readings off the haul that we got from Nicholas. I think that was we've done uploaded one yesterday, right? We've got a couple of more that we're going to upload from that as well. Neuroscience is crazy. It is, it is. Neuroscience is insane. And people, we're talking about pharmaceuticals and herbs and externals as well for health. One of the things I, we haven't talked about it, I'll emphasize this and I'll just plan to see it. Your perspective on life, your health, who you are, what your illness is, is also very, very important, as well as the way you approach certain disciplines if you want to study them. IE, you can build your own connections, neurons, the neural network. You could make it stronger through meditation, through a certain way of thought. Okay. So you don't necessarily need external stimulus to do that. You can do it internally. On my way to visit Canada in three days, nice. Springtime in Canada is amazing. Same with, well, in fall too. And if you like snow winter, and if you like summers, summers, definitely one of the hardest areas to study. Neuroscience, yeah. Awesome. Make sure you check out Toronto and Vancouver, depending on where you are staying. Yeah. East coast is amazing too. Maritimes, absolutely beautiful. In the summertime though. Maritimes in the summer is beautiful. Montreal is fantastic. Quebec City is amazing. The prairies are beautiful. Beautiful. It's like you're a universe within a universe. Oh, that was regarding neuroscience, I believe. ASMR and moderate doses of psilocybin is a match made. Personally, I'm not, I am not too excited with NASA's discoveries. Personally, I think SpaceX has a brighter future. NASA was hijacked a long time ago, I believe. I live on Uranus. China has a special credit system implemented. It's called XAMS Semicredit. It has extremely scary implications. I agree, Nana. That's the surveillance and the privacy part kicking in, right? And that's going to get rolled out here as well. That is rolling out in the Western world as well. It rolled out in a big way just with credit cards, with your personal credit, right? Right now, there's many things you cannot do if you do not have a credit card or if you have bad credit. Now, what happens when they take that centralized, take that all that data to centralized power, right? Centralized entity that controls everything. Like one of the discussions I had with a friend, you know, I mentioned to them that, you know, they should get off Facebook or at least change the real name on Facebook and their friend's name and don't talk about certain personal things on Facebook and other social media platforms and all that jazz, right? And then we're like, well, I don't care, you know, I go there collecting everything, right? And I've had this discussion with numerous people. I mentioned, oh, they're collecting everything. Like, they know you and Orville, just going back to Orville, they just did an episode where they simulated someone, okay, in a simulation through their phone, because they had all their texts and pictures and voice and everything like that, right? And with a person's data, you could recreate that person, right? You could simulate that person, okay? And the technology is available to have CG, phase doing it and whatnot, right? But if a centralized entity has all of your data, and in the Western world, we're basically a plutocracy, corporacy, corporations ruling it, right? And if the corporations have access to that data, then just taking it, since we're talking about healthcare medicine, just imagine in many parts of the world, you have to get private insurance, even in Canada, you to a certain degree need private insurance to be covered for everything, right? But when you sign an agreement with a private insurance company, healthcare company, right, there's a small prince on there saying, most of them will say, they will not cover you for any pre-existing conditions, okay? So just imagine, all of your life data is held in a centralized location, right? And you sign an agreement with, for this example, being a healthcare provider, right? Where you said, you agreed that you would be not, you wouldn't be covered for any pre-existing conditions. And let's assume you end up falling down and throwing out your back and you're out of work and stuff like this, and you need to be covered, right? You need to pay bills, right? Now, if that corporation has access to that centralized database, and in that centralized database, they have access to your healthcare information, and in your healthcare information, if you have something that says, oh, when you were a teenager, when you were playing soccer, playing volleyball, playing basketball or something like this, you got hit and you threw out your back, and you couldn't play for three months, four months, or five months. That's a pre-existing condition. Now you're no longer covered for falling down and hurting your back, okay? Because it can be linked to a previous injury. That is the problem with big data, with centralization of power and giving all that control to entities that control every aspect of your life. And you can extrapolate this to finance, you can extrapolate this to trying to start a business, you can extrapolate this to travel, where there's travel bans in China now, if you don't fit certain credit criteria, or you can't get a loan from the bank, right? We've seen this play out in the United States, where you could have, I believe, declared bankruptcy, committed murder, and you can still get a student loan to go to school. But if you have a drug crime, you've been convicted of a drug crime, could be cannabis, possession of cannabis, you're no longer allowed to get a student loan, right? This also, what Mammoth is mentioning, this also exists in Canada and the United States as well, what China is implementing now. It's just been under the radar for a while, right? It hasn't affected everyone yet. It will, it will. There's no reason to be reductive about NASA. I've missed a lot of chat. Look at this, wow, wow, wow. Okay, gang, my apologies. I'm going to scroll down a little bit just to get caught off because I went off there for a bit, right? I'll start reading from the bottom and work my way up. So if there's any followers, any subs and stuff, thank you for the follows, thank you for the subs. I'll mention that again. And if I missed any questions, please post them again. I'll catch them. Okay. The under, uneducated generally, generally population doesn't even know what's going, going through Mars actually means they just hear the name and get excited. This is why major companies don't expose blueprint plans immediately. Oh, I missed some awesome conversation. I hope you guys caught them. I'm going to read a little bit higher up. I agree. The Mars project is amazing, but I'm excited for when it becomes mainstream and somewhat affordable. Oh, what is the Mars project? I missed the discussion on the Mars project. Okay, well, maybe catch up later. Have you ever appeared on anyone else's podcast talk show? Gentle chaos. If that's a question for me, I'm assuming it is. I've, I've appeared on a podcast about three years ago, four years ago, where we talked about education, centralized education and stuff like this. They reached out. They wanted, they wanted to talk with me. And that was the first, first podcast I've been on. And that's the only podcast I've been on. It was fun. It was, it was a little raw, raw, I guess, because I, it was before I did live streaming. And it was fun just talking with them and stuff like this. And the gang was pretty happy about it. If you send me a reminder, I'll find it for you. I'll link it. Do I have it here? I don't think I have it on this computer. It's on the other computer. But if you do a chichu podcast education and my pop up, I forget the people that are doing it. And I've been interviewed regarding cryptocurrencies and the education system again, from, I think two, two different places. One of them was a more recent place. It was focused on cryptos. Not that we won't ever go to Mars, but SpaceX has done nothing to realistically make me think they have a real plan to go to Mars. But hey, hopefully they get there one day. But now, right now, it's a business publicity tackling. That's because space, space trials is a private industry nowadays. I would enforce patience and breakthroughs coming. I suppose you'll have to wait and see like the rest of us, space travel. Hey, chichu, how are you, man? Doing great, Riot. How are you doing? I went to outer space after that Robert Anton Wilson film, but I'm back on Earth. That interview, the discussion, you know, how many hours, seven hours? Fantastic talk with Robert Anton Wilson. I'm painfully undereducated, but also painfully curious. It's lots of resources, game at home, mom, to learn whatever we want to learn. A lot of learning I've done, I've done on my own. I really took to heart that I'm my own best teacher, for most things. There are many things that I found amazing teachers for. That's a gift, brother. In the past, I was the same. Enjoy your bright future that is inevitably coming. Literally unlocks your mind, literally unlocks your mind, that interview. No problem, Marco, about the typos. I'm educated under painfully curious moms, personally, as a uni student. School sucks. Yeah, school sucks. School sucks. And just regarding education, many people have said it. Feynman, it was one of them, which is basically, you realize how dumb you are, the more you learn. There's so much to learn, so much to learn. I can teach myself better than a teacher can. Yeah. For most things, certain things, teachers are amazing. Robert Anton Wilson, an amazing teacher, because he takes his stories and interlocks them with personal experience and doesn't stop at the story, but extrapolates that to other events and things that have happened in his life. So he brings everything full circle. And many people have done that. Many people have done that. That's a sign of a good teacher, right? I know that I know nothing socrates, yeah. I'm sad you haven't met a teacher to make you change your mind on that. The majority of teachers know, case man, there are certain amazing teachers. There's no doubt about it. No doubt about it. Bill Hicks would be one. Terrence McKenna would be one. I've had some personal ones as well, but very few in our education system. I couldn't even name five amazing teachers I've had throughout my life. I found that literature is more so teaching basis. You can learn mathematics by yourself. Yeah, you can learn mathematics by yourself, but you have to do a lot of reading. The mathematics, Marco, I think what really is needed is to learn the basics of mathematics. That level of mathematics is where the problem in literacy in our societies in regards to mathematics is really the focal point, right? That's where it starts. Because if you know the basics, then you can learn the rest. Once you know, don't know the basics, don't have a really good grasp of what functions are and what just the simple operations are, that's where everything falls apart. It's a side effect of the assembly line, nature of our schools, yeah. And as well, case man, as well as censorship, because there's a lot of information that is forbidden to be taught in schools. I thought teachers do, both male and female, just because, you know, they're one or the other, doesn't mean they're any less hot just because you may not be attracted to them, right? And not just physical, but intellectual. I've had some amazingly intellectually stimulating teachers that I would love to have spent a lot of time with, really. I'm grade 11, I'd like to think I could teach my teacher physics, cool. In grade 11, I had a good physics teacher in grade 11 and 12, and I'm a great, great earth science and geology teacher in grade 11 and 12. My college education, all the all the debt was worth it for the incredible teachers and students I met in that experience. The work was second there. I'm glad you had a good experience, case man. The experience of university is important, I agree, but going into debt, you know, people are going into debt for hundreds of thousands, right, or tens of thousands, right? For me, I was in debt, I forget what it was, $20,000, $30,000, right? This is back in the 90s. That was a lot of money, right? But I was working co-op. I was getting work experience, and I didn't work outside of my work co-op terms when I was going to school. So, I was able to pay that off. It wasn't a huge burden for me at the time. It's sad that the school puts us into survival mode all the time. I agree, Olivia. Hey, Chico, just listening while I game. How have you been doing great, Tony? How are you doing? I hope you're having a fantastic game, kicking ass, don't hit the tiger. What noticed is that a lot of intelligent students don't even know the basic Pythagorean theorem, and I mean, that's extremely basic. Literally, one of trigonometry, yeah. Yeah, there's a lot of people that don't, a lot of people that don't even know how to multiply or add fractions. Wow, the science students anyway. Yes, the intellectual stuff. But could we do a stream on aesthetics and the philosophy behind it? Aesthetics. We could, Olivia, send me a reminder, we'll set something up. I'll look into it. I'll have to figure out what it is exactly you mean by aesthetics and the philosophy behind it. I love to learn. I learned a lot from these streams. I'll be fine. I think I found it. Was it on free, free radical media? That's it. Gentle chaos game. That's the one. I can post it in the general section on Discord if you like. For sure, if you like. I'm a little rough on it. This is my first podcast live discussion anytime, right? But it was fun to do. It was fun to do. Chicho regarding forbidden information. One of my favorite teachers at my local community college was a fantastic rebel, rebel against that. He taught people how to find the things they wouldn't learn in college, made us write a paper about all of the theories around the JFK, awesome assassination and under the implications around them. Fantastic. You're lucky. Very good. Very good. Case man. I had a very good history, social studies teacher in high school as well for a couple of years. And I remember him talking about the JFK and assassination and the way I saw him at our 20th, 25th year anniversary from graduating high school or something, right? Or 20 year and if I can't remember what it was. And I told him, Hey, I remember what you did when you talked about the JFK assassination. Thank you for that because you planted the seed because he basically told us that it was, you know, the lone gunman, you know, Oswald shot and the bullet hit here, hit here, bounce here, bounce here. But the way he explained it, he was mocking it, right? He said, the bullet went here. He basically threw mockery. He made it obvious to the class that this was a lie, right? And that made us look into it or made me look into it further and be open to other information coming in. Okay. So there are some amazing teachers doing some amazing work. My tuition costs $12,000 a year. And I'm not a, I'm rather say, wow, that's a lot. So four years, that's $48,000. That's a nice chunk of money. I believe that intelligence is the, is a physical application and manifestation of the facts we learn and critically analyze into the real world. That's a good way of putting it. I'm going to read that again, now, Olivia. I believe that intelligence is the physical application and manifestation of the facts we learn and critically analyze into the real world. I like it. I can talk music aesthetics. Awesome. I love it. It makes your hardcore so good, so good. I can talk music business. It's bad. Oh, music business is bad. But as someone who consumes music, wow, golden age of music right now. So much amazing stuff that we have access to. So much Marko agreed all the way to the definition of intelligence. Awesome. Aesthetics is a major topic in philosophy. Is it? What I don't like about uni is the crowdiness of it. Yeah. And that's, that's my design as far as I'm concerned through centralized power, right? They need to be able to control the masses, the herds. And there's a lot of experiments being conducted on the herd, mob mentality within universities, and what that's going to entail in regards to big data and how you can manipulate those masses to do your bidding. Never better, better time to consume music. Absolutely. Absolutely. What's your preferred type of music rather? Oh, I listened to the main three types of music. I listened to metal, hip hop and electronic. Okay, electronic. I'm all over the place. I like a lot of it. Okay, hip hop. I like my political hip hop. I like my social analysis when they embed that and that's that and political go hand in hand and large part. Okay, I like lyricists for sure. Like Blackalicious is amazing. Dropping it. I love the rhythmic aspect of it, right? So those are the three genres I listen to mainly. I feel like uniqueness and the individuality becomes a paradox in crowds. Yeah, unfortunately, in the Western world, in Canada, the United States, they try to, they and they've been very successful at it, trying to associate people's uniqueness by what they consume, the labels they wear, right? So and I was prey to that when I was a kid, right? Coco pepsi. Oh, you like pepsi? Oh, you like cocoa? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Coco pepsi, right? That's the my example I use with that, right? So here, people are being brainwashed from very young age to associate their uniqueness to what products they consume. Once you break that and interview with Robert Anton Wilson will help people break that. Once you're able to break out of that, wow, right? Wow, what an amazing world we live in. Yeah, same here for one of my classes, I had one lecture with 10,000 people. Really? No, Marco. 10,000? That's like an auditorium. That's like hockey ring or something. How nice. Hey, Chicho corridor girl, how are you doing? Hey, Chicho, do you have thoughts on copyright, copyright and creative commons for bodies of creative work? I'm full on creative commons. Okay, I'm not sure what copy left is. I totally anti against copyright and patents. I think those have been the chains that bind our society and our creative outlet and innovation. 100% against the copyright laws that we have right now. Copyright laws back 100 years or 80 years ago, which were like seven years plus another seven years or whatever it was, maybe. Okay. But for me, creative commons all the way. Share and share life, just give credit to where you're using the material from, right? And don't use it for commercial purposes. If someone's creating a product and sharing as creative commons, don't package that product and sell that product without talking to the people who created it to say, Hey, listen, I want to do this. Can I do this getting permission and giving them a cut? Right? Have you ever heard the song mathematics? Oh, yeah, for sure. I cut mathematics Marco mathematics by most death. Okay, that was on black, black on both sides, black. I forget what it was called. But I took that song and edited it. That song, mathematics, edit that song in one of the videos, one of the first videos I put out back in 2007, 2008, I think it was for the real number set, possibly, or on that big wall, where I cut most steps music into the math video, we're doing urban graffiti style math on the walls. For sure, most stuff is fantastic. If you travel back in time to a past era, where would you go? You know, top five are I don't think I would go anywhere. I like the present. It's exciting for me. I don't want to go past live at a time where we didn't have internet. I love Conan the barbarian. So if I could, if I could kick it with Conan, it was real. And I would be guaranteed that I'm not going to get dismembered and die, or die of a disease, or be eaten by animals, or anything, or be was zapped by wizards, and played alive by witches, I'd go kick it with Conan and go do a couple of campaigns. But I wouldn't, right? The present is amazing. Have you ever heard the song that, yeah, great rap for kids nowadays, much better than mumble rap. And as a 21 year old with a girl, I know a lot about bad music. Yeah, there's a lot of bad music out there. Wow. Copy left. Copy left is a general method for making a program or other work free in the sense of freedom, not not zero price. Okay, freedom, do what you will. And requiring all modified and extended versions of the program to be free as well. The simplest way, so open source software, way to make a program free software is to put it in the public domain on copyrighted. Okay, yeah, then copy left is Stahlmann. You're talking about Stahlmann and Unix and Linux and stuff. Okay, yeah, for sure. 100%. If I was a coder, that's exactly what I would be doing, right? If I was producing code, 100%, I would only use, I don't know, you know, talking without having worked in the industry, right? But I'm hoping that if I was a coder, I could only, I would have the option to only use copyrighted free software as in freedom to use software as long as it's being attributed to previous versions, right? Yeah, I'm all for it. People switch from being individuals to being hive minded in groups. The book, The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Hadet has some really interesting theories on that, worth a read, though I don't agree with some of its conclusions. Thank you for the recommendation case, man. For real, brother, University of Toronto has some crazy big lecture halls. Wow. Sure, you're not exaggerating. 10,000 is one in one class. University of Toronto has 90,000 students. In the present time, we have the wonderful opportunity to compare. We do. How come we can remember the past, but not the future? Some people say they do remember the future, right? Especially some people who have experimented with entheogens. It's really tart and sweet at the same time. Very delicious, really. Bionomia. I'm going to try to pronounce your name. I don't know where the brakes are. Ben, I hope I am so good to call you Ben. If it's not, please correct me. Thank you for the Twitch Prime subscription. Arno for real, Arno Schwarzenegger impression. I didn't miss something. How did Arno Schwarzenegger come into play? Maybe a little bit. But physics is a big branch of University of Toronto. It was around that number, though. Yeah, I'm assuming everybody has to take first year physics. In science, anyway, I believe everyone does. I don't know if chemistry does. Biology, probably. It was a couple of years ago, so I could have forgotten. What is an entheogen? Entheogen is basically plants that occur in nature that people use to alter the state of understanding, to manipulate time, to break out of their ego, to have a better connection to nature. Entheogens, you can consider some of the herbs, some of the power plants that Shaman use traditionally to guide their tribes. Basically, that's it, right? Taco, hello, how are you doing? Welcome to another live stream. We're having fun. Censorship, privacy and surveillance, but we're going all over the place. We've talked astronomy and space travel and pharmaceutical. He did a movie on going, oh, Arnold Schwarzenegger, that's right. That's where he comes from. And that was a fantastic movie, by the way. The first Conan movie, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Fantastic movie. Very happy. He didn't talk very much in that movie, right? I think intentionally they, because his accent was so strong, they didn't give him many lines to talk. He had to get a speech therapist to learn how to pronounce the words properly and stuff like this. And Conan, there's a period for Conan. He doesn't speak very much, right? He just does. He's a man of action. Fantastic movie, Conan the Barbarian. Very good. Loved it, for sure. Lots of love for Twitch Prime sub. Thank you. Sounds like people are doing well, Taco. I just finished my work, which means another billboard chat has been created. A lot of that top 10 is trap mumble rap. The kids love it, and the kids are alright. Case man. I don't know if I even listen to any of the top rappers right now. Yeah, I was crazy a few years back. A group of students at University of Toronto ran around with carcinogenic products. Once again, University is a weird place. I really have no idea how to feel about the present music. There's gotta be some, like the billboard, the charts, top 10 charts, like really, I don't know what's on there, but during my time, the top 10s were usually things that we weren't listening to. Best actor, Sylvester Sloan has done. He's done a couple of great movies. He's done some great movies. He did one where he was the head of the union. He was just a worker, and he became the head of a union. And that was a really good movie. I forget what it was called. I liked it. Well, also on the top 10 lately has been Queen. I think everyone can get on board with Queen. But do they deserve to be on the top 10 again? Is it new stuff they're releasing, or is it the soundtrack related to the movie that came out? So I like Queen. I listen to Queen. I listen to Queen, but I'm really not into looping Queen again. I've sort of been through that large part. There's a lot of amazing music coming out that blows away Queen. I don't know, blows away Queen, but compatible to Queen. Some would say some of it better than Queen. But Freddie Mercury is seriously amazing. I really like Run the Jewel. Run the jewels. I recommend them. Run the jewels. I don't know Run the Jewel. Creed II was an amazing film and conclusion to Rocky's story. Really, I saw Creed. The first Creed I really liked. I haven't watched Creed II yet. I thought about grabbing it and watching it. Okay, Marco, it's on my radar. I'm going to grab it and watch it. I like Creed. The first one was good. And Rocky is Rocky. Rocky was good. Rocky got the juices flowing. And before Rocky, Sebastian Stone did a porno. Soft porn. I've just seen it. It's very soft. Just to see what he had done. Any statistics on classical music? I don't have the statistics on classical. I haven't listened to classical for a while, Olivia. I used to listen to it a lot. And at some point, I will again. Lately, just some music's come up. I've been looping. There's two bands I've been looping on my long walks. I've been listening to Strange Brew. Oh, it was a tip of my tongue. Strange Brew by... Index, well, no. Who did Strange Brew? Strange Brew by... Where's my IP3 player? I've been listening to Strange Brew by the blues. Oh man. Strange Brew? No, Strange Brew. The album Strange Brew by the jazz blues musician. No, Strange Brew is... Strange Fruit is Billie Holiday. That I listened to every now and then. Where's my IP3 player? My IP3 player is over there. I'm going to grab it. I got to read. I got to tell you guys who it is. It's not John Lee Hooker, but I got to get it. I got to get it for you. Hold on a second. Oh, I got to actually just plug this in. So it's going to take a little bit of time for it to reread. It's what do you call it? But I'll let you know what it is as soon as it loads up again. I got to let it refresh. Listen to the song, Sickle Mod. And I miss some stuff again. Okay, I'm scrolling down. How long have we been here? I just realized you're on. We've been here for an hour. Oh, it's 420. Happy 420 everyone. No, not Strange Brew by that. I'll let you know what it is case by that. Only cream comes to mind when you say Strange Brew doesn't cream. I haven't listened to cream forever. I should listen to cream soon. And it resets every time I do it. This thing's so... This is like old school, it's four gigs. And it's been with me for Miles Davis. I can't believe Miles Davis' names flipped over me, right? So not Strange Brew, Bitches Brew. Just because I looped Bitches Brew, not Strange Brew. Bitches Brew by Miles Davis. So I've been listening to Miles Davis and System of the Down. I start my walks with Miles Davis and a certain way down, System of the Down kicks in. I finish my walks with System of the Down. Oh, Bitches Brew. Come on, Gicho. Give me a chance. I know. Sorry, brother. Me and names. I can't, you know, for some reason I mix things up so much with names. Ta-da. 420. Smoke weed every day. Only if it's legal in your country or in the state. What is your take on nutrition? As a boxer on the side, all I eat are egg-oat meals, boiled chicken, and sweet potatoes. Nice. Yeah, great album. Great album. A boxer. I did a little bit of, I had a punching bag for a while, by the way, Marco, at our house. We had a big place and we had punching gloves. Anybody that thinks they're in shape, try this out. Go in front of a heavy punching bag and try the last three minutes throwing punches. By the end of three minutes, if you can last end of three minutes, you're dripping wet, right? So boxers are one of the most fit athletes in the world, right? As far as boxing diet goes, when I was doing a fair bit of lifting, and I'm going to get back into it again, by the way, at some point, it's going to be eggs, potatoes. You need the starch to deliver the protein, and it's going to be a fair bit of protein. So protein is starch-heavy, okay? And if you want to trim down, you do low salt. If you want to retain the water, it's good to retain water. You do add the salt to retain the water, but it makes you thirsty, so when you sweat out, you need water. So you try to control the thing. But that's a good diet, Marco, as far as I'm concerned. What have you been talking about? Oh man, we're true Miles Davis, true visionary. By the way, I'm listening, I'm looping Miles Davis so I can load on, I'm going to try to pronounce this correctly, Thelonious Monk, okay? Load his, half is this, this geography anyway. So I'm going to go from Miles Davis, once I, Bitches Brew is just, I can't stop listening to it, right? It's just journey, right? It's an amazing journey. But as soon as I get my fill of that, I'm going to upload Monk and just loop that a while. As a boxer on the side, all I eat is the ear, that's a reference to Tyson biting off that ear of Holder? What was his name? I forget his name. He was a good boxer, too. He was a good boxer. No legs, but good boxer. Bitches Brew came out in 1999, never broke 50,000 sales, 500,000 sales, the music industry, everybody. It didn't, it didn't break, not even 500,000? Really? What? Like, serious? The music industry, everybody, exactly. Not Mike, thanks again. Punching stuff strays the lots of lots, I fiver. You mean 1969? Index noses, music, I sure do, whoops. All good. Monk was an influence on Miles. Yeah, I think Monk was an influence on, I don't know, I think on all jazz music, it's just like Nina Simone. I think Nina Simone was an influence on everyone. Same with Monk. And I think anybody after Miles Davis, Miles Davis was an influence on them. I idolize Mike Tyson and Aaron Moss. Take it how you want. Mike Tyson, man, I got full respect for Tyson. No, anybody that trash talks Tyson doesn't know poop from poop, really. Tyson, dude, the guy, 100% respect. Monk was an influence on nearly every modern jazz musician, like an amazing musician. Yeah, I've never indexed. I've never sat and looped Monk the way I have Davis, System, Nina, John Lee, BB King, Aretha Franklin, some of the grace, right? I've never done it with Monk. I am looking forward to it. And I'm going to do it because of the graphic novel I picked up. Monk that I'm going to read as soon as I get Monk's music looping in my head, I'm going to sit down and read the graphic novel. So I'm building up to it. Can't wait. Like anything well worth experiencing, it's worth taking your time for it. Tommy Thomas, Ring a Bell, Timmy, Timmy Thomas. I don't know what Timmy Thomas is. Respect from Alaska. Respect right back, brother. Respect right back. I'm not familiar. I don't think I've never heard of Monk. Should I check him out? I think so, Marco. It's trippy, chaotic. If you don't know Miles Davis, listen to Miles Davis first. Okay, they're different. Index will know more. I've only sampled Monk, right? But I find them different than Miles Davis. But listen to Miles Davis, the intensity of that music. Monk layered. You also need to do the same with John Coltrane. Yeah, I've never looped. Coltrane, I've listened but I've never looped hardcore. I looped a fair bit of the old school blues. Some of the Big Mama Thornton comes to mind. Love Big Mama Thornton. So good. So good. I can't remember any of her songs or any of the lyrics and stuff. It was a period. I was looping that stuff. Very empowering. My plan list goes from animals, House of the Rising Sun, to MoShop, to System of the Down, to Ramstein, and finally to Doom. Ah, Doom. BFG. Edition soundtrack. How many silver-backed gorillas could you find before you fall in love? Ken Burns Jazz should be required viewing for all music fans. Oh, really? Is it documentary? Is viewing, so I'm assuming. Now I remember Amand Holyfield was his name. Yeah, Holyfield. That title went Holyfield. Holyfield was a good boxer. Holyfield was a good boxer. Coltrane is fascinating because like Miles Davis, he was always evolving, remaking himself. And when he died in 1967, he was on a spiritual quest that is palpable in his music. It's incredible, really. So Coltrane's, what do you call it, library? Is it as vast as Nina Simone's or Johnny Hooker's index? I'm assuming. He died in 1967, so he died fairly young, I think. So did he put out a lot of albums? Should we listen to it? The same with Nina Simone. Nina Simone progression. He just followed her life, right? So would you recommend starting Coltrane from the first album he put out and just going sequentially? The man that got his zero? No, it shouldn't. So many things wrong with the Ben Burns doc. Oh, really index. Okay, I'm going to index this by our music to go person. Okay. Respect index. Cool me. Nice. Whoops. Aha. Caps. Well, maybe that deserved I assumed index you wanted. He had no legs though. He had no legs agreed Marco. Link the Thomas song and discord music. Check it out sometime. Okay, we'll do top fiveer. When Rocky was 60, he could move better than him. Yeah. Rocky Marciano, I'm assuming you're saying yeah. Hopefully you're not saying Sylvester Stall, but Rocky Marciano. Yes, he basically created impulse records. He was their lead artist. Really? Okay. Would that be John Coltrane? Yeah, we're talking about John Coltrane chaos. I would recommend starting with his Miles Davis sideman stuff, especially if you know Miles Davis already. But by 1960, you work with Monk and then started his own quartet. Really? 1960-64 golden years of Coltrane impulse. Also, thank you index. Marciano, Marciano, Rocky Marciano. All school, all school, all school, all school. Very fun, very fun. Yeah, Stallone did a boxing movie at 60. I know. I know what you say. You've got to give a certain amount of respect to Stallone. He's lasted in Hollywood, man. That takes some doing. My pleasure. Love talking about this stuff. Yeah, me too. Love learning about the stuff index. For me anyway, I really like listening to Nina Simone. Feeling good because feeling good. Yeah, her song Feeling Good. Oh, Feeling Good because when I had a rough day, I forgot about, then listen, you should listen to Nahtaco. She's got a song. I don't know if it's called Feeling Good, but the lyrics in it is Feeling Good. Feeling Good because when I had a rough day, I forgot about everything and just be happy. Also, Michelle Bubble did Feeling Good and it was like a 60s spy theme. Really? I don't know, Michelle Bubble. Do we need an internet bill of rights to stop big tech social media censorship? Do we need no? I mean, bill of rights to a certain degree. Yes, but we can't have the government central centralized controlling the companies. Because if we have that, then we've got complete totalitarianism and we've got absolute censorship through government. Exactly what's going on in Egypt where they just passed a law saying that anyone that has more than 5000 followers, 5000 or more followers, if they disseminate anything that the government disagrees with, that government thinks is misinformation or disinformation or enticing rebellion against the government, then they can have their sites shut down and arrested, thrown in prison and most likely in Egypt you might get executed and with lots of fines. So we cannot have centralized control of the internet. We have to have rights, just like rights to free speech. So in that regards, if that's what you're saying, Spencer, I agree, we should have some kind of rights where we're allowed to share whatever we want online as long as we're not stealing and I don't mean downloading, downloading is sharing, as long as we're not stealing other people's contents and pushing data as our content, if we're sharing it fine and dandy or stealing products and selling them online, if you know what I mean, that's on the fringe. That's not the main activity of the internet. The main activity on the internet is the free flow of information, peer-to-peer, one-on-one, exactly what we're doing right now. Right? Hey, Chico, should I buy a powerful computer? I have a Mac laptop for school, but I have been looking into powerful PC. Any thoughts? Personally, Marco, I would stay away from Apple products. Our first main personal computer home was in Apple. I still have it Apple too. But Apple went dark a long time ago. I didn't like the totalitarian nature of their activity. Not that PCs, what do you call it, Microsoft is better or whatever it is. If I knew Linux well and if I had the editing software and like video editing and graphic editing, image editing software available to me the way I do on a PC, non-Apple PC, then I would go Linux. But I don't have that technical capabilities right now. At some point I will. When I get the funds, when I can make sure I can depend on someone to get something done that I can't get done, because I don't want to go down for extended periods and for me to learn Linux, even though I use Unix and Linux and University. But I would stay away from Apple and as far as personal computers, I'm very happy with the one I bought, which is and from what some people said, I made a good choice going with this company, which is MSI computers. They're gaming laptop computers, gaming computers. Oh wow, taco. Thanks for that. I would assume not chicho. Have you listened to Kendrick Lamar at all? Not really. I've heard random stuff, but I've never gone off on him. I know he's big, right? He is big, but I haven't looped him. Recommend? We need a petition to protect our memes censorship laws, sharing and miscellaneous. And if this fails, we should protest peacefully to show the government that we don't agree on their terms. I can agree with that. Information rights are human rights. Yeah. Kendrick Lamar is incredible. Cool. What about people getting banned off YouTube, Twitter for political opinions? Does getting banned from big social media equal censorship? Yes, to a certain degree, because they're monopolies, they've been given monopoly powers, right? So they are being censored, right? However, it's not government censorship, it's corporate censorship. So what needs to happen is exactly what's happening right now, which is disruptive innovation coming into play, such as bitchute, such as gab, mines, and a whole bunch of other platforms where people can share information. The problem comes into play here. Governments have their people placed in positions of power within these monopolies such as Google, and Twitter, and Facebook, and so on and so forth, right? So those are basically controlled, right? So if they're censoring, at the same time, they're also banning these other platforms, right? So for example, let's use what happened in New Zealand, okay? As an example, the person live streamed what he was doing on Facebook, okay? And what the Australian and New Zealand government did, governments did, they didn't ban Facebook from their countries because that's government run. They controlled it inside out, right? They banned vote, they banned bitchute, they banned archive, they banned gab, they banned, I don't know if they banned mines or not, they banned all the secondary platforms where they don't have control over, right? So what's going on right now is serious power play between government run tech monopolies and disruptive innovation brought about because there's major censorship happening over here. We have to make sure these platforms are alive and well and functioning and we're able to disseminate information through these platforms because if we allow these platforms to die, okay, then what's going to happen is when the governments come for you, no one will be here, will be allowed to hear about it, okay? It's the poem, Norman Miller's poem, first they came, right? That applies across the board in our societies right now, period. So the problem is the tech giants right now are not individual standing companies where online we're allowed to have competitive powers coming up to compete against them, right? I would like to see the same thing happen to Facebook as happened to Myspace. I would say Twitter as well, I would say YouTube as well even though I have a nice presence on YouTube, okay? I'm loading more videos on bitchute than I am on YouTube. I'm putting more weight in that direction, okay? Even though I love YouTube, I love the community there, I love what we've created there, 650 plus almost 700 videos, right? I don't know how many years of my life this is 2007 to 10, 12 years creating content there. I wouldn't mind seeing competitors come up to be challenging YouTube. That to me is freedom of speech. You should ask someone who knows about hardware and ask them about hardware parts to assemble and build the tower. Yeah, if you were Marco, what Taco was saying here, I built my desktop computer. For a laptop computer, I bought one that was already pre-made, okay? Because the option isn't really there, that's where I looked anywhere, there might be. If I look further now, I ask people that knew their technical stuff to see what laptop to get that was within my budget, right? So for sure, but a desktop computer, you can get a tower and fill it up with some of the best stuff and have a fantastic computer for around $1,000 to $2,000 desktop that'll blow away, you know, $6,000, $8,000 laptops. User Benchicho. Yeah, my friend has been getting me into him. I'm a jazz person, but he got me into two pimp, a butterfly with all the jazz he uses. And yes, definitely recommend, really. Okay, Kendrick Lamar, I'll look into a super conscientious political rapper and just incredible talent, really, okay? And next, I do, I do, someone else mentioned too, that I think caseman said Kendrick Lamar is amazing. Thank you for the recommendations, gang. Got to go eat dinner, brother. Meal plans, nice. Take care, all thanks. Good luck in school, Marco, and happy training if you're boxing. Have a good meal, have a great meal, yeah. To pimp, a butterfly is a masterpiece. Oh, gotta write this down. Thank you. What's the difference between government censorship and corporate censorship? Here, Spencer, I'll give you sort of a tangential answer, okay? Private corporation controlling your data, not as problematic as centralized governments controlling your data. The reason being this, private corporations do not commit genocide. Centralized governments commit genocide. We know that throughout history. They might commit genocide with the help of the corporations, and they have in the past, look into the history of IBM, right? So centralized governments have used private corporations, the data they've collected, the way they process data to help them commit genocide, but private corporations individually cannot commit genocide. That's the difference between government and corporate censorship. Corporate censorship is censorship on their platform. Government censorship is censorship across the board, censorship of your whole life, and you could be made to disappear. What X said? X said, give me, give me, what? To pimp a butterfly is a work of art. Even if you disagree with the politics, it's impossible not to enjoy it. Definitely my favorite album all time. Wow. Not that I've listened to too many. I highly recommend it. I've wrote it down. That's, I'm grabbing that sucker right after the stream. Yeah, to be honest, TPA, oh, to Pimp a Butterfly, TPAB, just put Kendrick's skill on display in so many ways. It was a huge shock for me how good it is. Oh man, you guys are pumping this up too high. It's like me pumping up Big Pun saying, man download Big Pun's first, grab Big Pun's first album, right? Big Pun's first album, wow, wow, wow. Big Al's first album, wow, wow, wow. I got a feeling this is going to be higher, higher. Thoughts on the Korean hotel, spy camp scandal. Right now, right now the technology is available to that we could have cameras everywhere, everywhere, right? Be aware of that. Now, should you act in a way where you're always under the eyes of someone always being recorded, you should only care if you live in a society where your actions are punishable on a grand scale, right? But as far as the hotel camera, I believe it was a hotel room where it was a little eye thing, video, the pictures were being taken of people in the bathroom or whatever it was. When I go hotel rooms or any place like this, public washrooms or any place like this, I'm assuming that there might be eyes on me, right? So there's certain ways I may not behave, okay? Not because I'm afraid of them, but because I'm in a public place. I don't, I don't take it for granted in my house, okay? If someone came here, placed the camera here to watch me in my house, which is what some people are willingly doing, right? With their alexis and smart TVs with the camera on there. Like right now, right now, I wish, let me see if I can show it to you. Right now, I have a tape over my laptop's camera. Let me see if I can show it to you. See if this is, okay, I got to do it this way. Hold on a second. Let me open up my OBS or put the screen. Let me see if I can show it to you. Doop, doop, doop, doop, doop. See? See? That right there is tape over my laptop. The camera that you see me on this is an external HD camera that I'm live streaming on, right? So I'm assuming there's tech out there that can watch me if they want to, right? So be aware of it. You don't need to spend a thousand dollars. You can spend five to eight hundred for a great or greater setup to have for gaming video work. Really, that's it. With eight hundred bucks, you can get a fantastic desktop gaming computer now. Like you can tell, I haven't, the computer, the desktop computer I put together that I'm still doing editing on and stuff. I did, I got back in 2011. So it's like eight years now. I am, I am in need of an upgrade, but that one cost me around fifteen hundred dollars or eighteen hundred, sixteen hundred hundred dollars or something. And I burned the SD drive on it once. What's the Korean hotel spy scandal? I think the Korean, I'm assuming there's just the one where there was a little camera and a gadget where it was filming things. What are your thoughts on astrology? If you like it, you like it. I'm okay with it. For me, it's fun. Do I put a lot of weight on it? I don't know. It depends on my mood, I guess. If I'm in a playful mood or not. Some people do. I know Livia, Livia loves astrology, right? Which is fine. I have friends that follow astronomical, astrological signs a lot. Aggressive. Why is this being, okay, I'm, okay, Taco, for some reason you're being, I'm gonna allow this, but I haven't read through it. So if it's not allowed, hopefully someone else will take care. Do you get Michelle Michael Byrne to help you bench press? Astrology is silly. It depends, I guess. Placing cameras in people's houses, death note. Do you get, you talk some bullocks? Oh, what's, what's going on? Great anime. That asks some really great philosophical questions. Death note. Oh, death note. Yeah, yeah. Fantastic anime. Long, five seasons, I think, but fantastic anime. Death note was fun. In 1990, Ibrazadia split up into pieces. Then the main three countries went to war, Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia. It was all external forces that forced that to happen, as far as I'm aware, right? The UN came to help, or so we thought. They came with supplies to help the local armies and civilians, but they wanted to stay neutral by carrying guns and protecting themselves and not the civilians and local armies. By, during the war, there was an ethnic cleansing genocide that killed more than thousands to 10,000 soldiers and civilians. This was a massive failure by the UN, and, okay, we missed that because there was a big line, a bunch of texts coming in taco. And it was an external war that was brought about by NATO, right? And I believe it's recognized as the first NATO war, instigated war, and the first NATO war in Europe for sure that they started, which they wanted to start, which was really a move towards Russia. Agreed. Thanks, index. For sure. Not a 10 out of 10 for me, though, since I feel it got kind of boring after certain death. Spencer, a death note in the middle, I think, for me anyway, I think it was season three or something like this, where it got a little slow, it was jumping around too much. But towards the end, the last season was fantastic. The first two seasons were absolutely brilliant. Your source seems a bit... I don't want the bad people if I don't have to. Yeah, for sure. A little warning, there's been times for indexes like that. Thanks for chilling it down a little, index. It's okay. More oranges. No fun stuff. Well, we talked a little bit about censorship, privacy, and surveillance. All right, here is the... No, no liqueur today. No liqueur. Oranges today. I got tolsi. This is tolsi rose tea. And tolsi is like basil, Indian basil or something. It's herbal tea. It's really good. It's tangy. The rose really makes it tangy, and tolsi has a very unique flavor to it. So it's fantastic, really good. And no liqueur. I go through phases. Like I haven't had... I think the last stream we did like last week was the last time I had a little bit of liqueur. I haven't had since then, right? So I go through phases. I don't want alcohol to be in my system always. Alcohol is a preservative. I don't want to preserve my body. I need it to be filtering through. So today, fruit, it's sunny out, spring. I don't know if it was split up into seasons. I watched it on Netflix and all the episodes in one... were in one place. I like adding apples and bananas to my oatmeal. Well, musli, yeah. Fruit and musli or oatmeal and stuff. So good, so good. So we're coming up to two hours gang. Nice discussions. We talked about everything, including a little bit of censorship, privacy and surveillance. Pharmaceuticals, astronomy, astrology, music, right? Censorship for sure. And a few other things, I guess. But the way we started this, let me just pop this up again. Surveillance, privacy, censorship. They go hand in hand with prohibition as well, right? But for me, surveillance and privacy, two of the most important things in our society that should be on the forefront of people's tongues when they're talking about political system, economic system. And I wrote an article regarding this, my perspective on it, when it became clear what was being done with big data through governments and corporations, but mainly governments. And I titled the article Anomalies, Prisons and Geophysics, How Governments Use Data and How to Stop Them. It was one of the first articles I ever wrote when I started blogging. It was back in 2006. And in 2016, I did a soft spoken reading of it, a video, sort of just reading with camera looking out the window with a fire being reflected in it, right? Because I think it's important. It's something that I think I find an unfortunate majority of people in our societies are not thinking about in the western world anyway, because it could lead to some dark places. So that's the reason I put this discussion, you know, I put the title of discussion, what we did. And if you want to, you know, read that article, listen to the soft spoken video, just do a search on their anomalies, prisons and geophysics and the video is embedded in the main article that you can see. Don't want to seem like I'm pestering, but anime stream. Do you ask me to? Spencer, remind me, I just grabbed Space Dandy. Okay, the two seasons. It's on my computer. When I watch it, I don't know what I'm going to get to it, but thank you for the reminder and you're not pestering. I asked you to do it. Remind me, remind me. I love anime, I love anime talk and I promise to do it. Your reminders remind me to watch it. Right now, I started Planets again because someone else brought up Planets before in a previous stream. I'm like five episodes into Planets, but I might stop that and watch Space Dandy so I can put that anime video together and then we can put an anime live stream together. Thank you for bringing it up by the way. Quick question. Is English your native language? No, Spencer. My mother tongue, what I learned at home was Armenian and then I learned Farsi and then I came to Canada and learned English and they try to teach me French, but it was full capacity. There were cases all over London and parts of the UK where there were cameras where privacy is a privilege, not a right anymore. Some cameras go into hidden places. Yeah, all philosophers. Spellcheck. I should watch Planets. I heard it's super underrated, but really good. Yeah, it is super underrated and it's really good. It is really good and it has, by the way, Planets is related to one of the discussions we had during this live stream. I'm going to take this anomalies thing down again. It's related to one of the discussions we had in the stream which was space travel. Corporations going into space and Planets is centered around future, near future, relatively near future, where corporations have gone into space and they control certain parts of space and they do certain things and if you want to go into space, basically you have to work for a corporation to go into space and stuff like this. And then later on the thing you find out that they're exploiting certain parts of it is really good. Well worth it. Spencer, if you like anime, watch it. Someone underrated, but I'm a math PhD student and after I graduate, here's a sizable chance I might move fields to computer sci AI, but I worry that any work I did in the field of AI could be used unethically by companies, government thoughts. That is one of the problems. Now the question is there are some amazing human beings that have worked for decentralized powers that have revealed what decentralized powers are doing, Bradley Manning, Snowden. Julian Assange was a hacker and he got burned by the centralized powers. So he decided to create a platform where whistleblowers could come on. Another one, mathematician. One of my personal people that I have a tremendous amount of respect for. On the same level, if not more. Anyway, I don't want to do comparisons, but the NSA mathematician, I forget his name, NSA mathematician, that blue to whistle on the NSA. I hope one of you guys post his name. I forget his name. Yeah. Anyway, you can be, you can act. No, Snowden was not the mathematician guy. Mathematically, Snowden was nothing compared to this guy. This guy designed the NSA's surveillance program, but I can't believe I forget his name. William Beanie. Thank you very much, case man. I was hoping someone was supposed to say William Beanie. He was the mathematician that designed basically the NSA's surveillance program. The reason he blew the whistle on the NSA was because he found out that the NSA was mainly in large part using the surveillance program to spy on Americans. And that went against the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and all that jazz privacy. So he came out and said the hell with you blowing the whistle. The FBI bang, they busted down his door and found them in the bathroom taking a shower naked holding up a gun. And he's like, what do you guys want? The guy's got balls of steel, man. That guy got respect for another question. Marvel with interesting stuff. Did anyone see that AI widget on Google that made four part harmonies based on Sebastian? Oh, I saw the widget. I didn't click on it. I stopped clicking on Google's widgets. I don't trust Google. I don't like Google. Another random just make sure just game of home mom. Just one thing. Oh, don't you're going to be forced to compromise your principles. Principles always have to be reevaluated just regarding working in AI, computer science and working for these giants and stuff like this. We always have to reevaluate our principles. But once you have your principles set, right, it's okay to question them, but make sure you don't compromise them, right? You will never be able to live with it again if you compromise on your principles. When I was younger, I've done it before because I was young and foolish and stupid. I would never do it now. And I, well, let me put it this way. I hope I would never compromise my principles now, because I know what it would entail that you have to think about it for years and decades to come. So strong, hold strong, right? Another random question. Are you Marvel Marvel movies for sure? I'm watching them. I don't like all of them. Some are garbage, but some are good. I'm looking forward to the bloodshot movie from valiant wrong hands crazy. I'm a software engineer student and you can immigrate stay hidden or be the black sheep and follow the hidden flock. Nice. Which five individuals alive or dead would you choose to educate the first sentient AI? I don't think there'd be an education for the first sentient AI. I think you just press a button. As far as who would I choose the five people that would choose to write the program before you press the button and they cross their fingers. AI happens or AI doesn't happen. I don't think we're anywhere near close to AI. Okay. I just want to add that, but William Beanie would have to be on the team. That's how much respect I have for him. The other ones I don't know. Leonardo. Not sure how long I can stay. So I'll get it out early. Jamaican color painting in one of your first check out my comics videos. Awesome. Someone else brought this up in the last stream and I thought they meant the old man sitting on there a tree with the white painting that my mom had done that was smoking a hookah. Right. So there's a there's a video I put out with that on there. I don't think I don't know if it's a comic. I thought it was a comic book, but I don't think so. But the one you're mentioning, it does rock. It's awesome. We bought it from or my brother bought it from an artist in Toronto. He hadn't do it for him. I believe it was a what do you call it commission piece. Right. Fantastic painting. Thank you. Thank you for loving it. That stays what do you call it? That's part of the family. That'll stay with us forever. Right. As long as the first we remember. Right. Fantastic piece. Fantastic piece. I don't know the artist's name. Sonsu fund Richard Dawkins. Isaac Asimov. Superficially without much consideration. I wouldn't include Richard Dawkins. Isaac Asimov. I would just feed the AI. I'm excited for EEG. And I saw the doom annihilation trailer and I can see that they didn't follow the plot and made major changes. They made the main character not wear the original doom. I haven't seen the doom annihilation trailer. That must be new. There was no team. Only one guy. The enemies are maybe zombies instead of demons like the last movie. I hope the last movie Fantastic Four was brutal. Such a horrendous movie. All the Fantastic Four movies. I hope they put the movie in the movies and no one watches it because the trailer says it all. Really? Okay. I gotta check it out. I gotta check it out. I gotta check it out. Fun. Okay gang. Taco. In two days Monday we do comic book talk. So I'll be happy to talk comic books on the Monday session more. Chicho, do you have any favorite fiction novels? Fiction novels? Like science fiction and stuff? For sure. C.S. Lewis. I don't have the three books anymore. They're gone from my collection. The ones I've read. But C.S. Lewis put out an adult science fiction series that I loved. It was called Hidden Strength. The names are different but if you do a search for C.S. Lewis trilogy, adult sci-fi trilogy is fantastic. Dune is absolutely amazing. If you've never read Dune, Dune is a must read and the death gate cycle. You haven't read any C.S. Lewis? C.S. Lewis is the author I've read the most. C.S. Lewis I love. Okay. He opened my eyes a lot in terms of logic, in terms of thinking. Okay. That trilogy is really good. Is it gentle sci-fi? It's a great sci-fi read. Okay. And Dune is amazing. Dune is a must read and the death gate cycle I really loved. Death gate cycle I found fantastic. Superman. Spiderman. What do you think about Alex Jones being banned from YouTube, Twitter, Facebook? I think it sucks. I don't think you should be banned. I think that's crazy. I think that's the road to totalitarianism. That's the death art societies and the destruction of the internet. It's ridiculous. Corrupt them all. Destroy the child. The Lord told me to do it. He wrote through the looking glass. Not so. He wrote through the looking glass. Not so. Okay gang. Monday. Monday at what time? Let me click on this. Monday, Monday at 1 p.m. We do comic book stream. Okay. We're, I'm not sure if we're going to do, I'll have everything set up to be able to list stuff on eBay. I said it. I'm going to shoot for it, but either way, we'll do a comic book stream. I'm going to show you what I've been reading. We talked about comic books, movies, or whatnot. There's amazing comic book TV shows and movies out, right? And on Tuesday, we'll talk about current events at 4 p.m. Okay. There's a lot going on. I figured we'd do that as well. More politics and economics, I guess. Fun stream. Fun stream. Thank you guys. Thank you for the discussion. Great music talk. Great space talk. Astronomy talk. Nice talk on the censorship privacy surveillance. Alice in Wonderland. Through the look, Alice in Wonderland. That's right. Through the looking glass. That's where I was going. What's that? Through the looking glass. I heard the movie's supposed to be good. The first Alice in Wonderland. Not so good. The first, actually first 40 minutes was fantastic. And then it got bad. Okay gang, I'll see you guys Monday. Hopefully you can make it. And thank you everyone for participating, index. Thank you for taking care of business. Thank you for the subs. Thank you for the follows. Okay. Bye for now.