Ashton Forbes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's something that somebody could theoretically do if they had the effort and the time and the resources in their garage.
Make something that could destroy maybe the whole planet.
And that's what I think the whole war in Iran is all about.
It's not about, it's not about Israel's telling us what to do.
It's not about, you know, us worried about its particular nuclear weapon.
It's us looking at the situation going, these guys are a threat if we don't do something about it right now.
And is it morally right, morally wrong?
I don't know.
How do you even judge morality in a world in which you have plasma fusion orbs and teleportation technology and possibly black hole super weapons that could destroy the whole planet?
I mean, where do you draw the line?
Would you want... Anyone who disagrees with the Iran war, what I would say is, would you trust somebody who's willing to strap a bomb to themselves and blow themselves up?
Would you trust that person with a weapon that could destroy the whole planet?
They're the only ones who get to decide.
I think most people would say no.
Of course not.
I wouldn't trust anybody on this planet, let alone somebody that would blow themselves up.
So I only say this to give you the context of why I think this technology is impactful from the geopolitical perspective.
that we figured out how to manipulate space time with nuclear weapons probably back in the 60s now i'm not saying that a nuclear weapon created a black hole or a wormhole right away but it created space-time ripples manipulations that we saw that we noticed and said oh crap there is a connection here between electromagnetism and gravity and the nuclear weapons the high energy physics shows that unequivocally it's true
But then we covered that result up.
We said, no, we can't tell people about this.