Bart Sibrel
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
She put me in touch with Howard Baker, who was a United States senator on the Intelligence Committee, and he put me in touch with the Mind Science Foundation in San Antonio, Texas, and who sent me to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, which I believe at the time had the world's fastest supercomputer. And they were trying to generate random numbers. And there's a bit of a problem with that, kind of like AI.
She put me in touch with Howard Baker, who was a United States senator on the Intelligence Committee, and he put me in touch with the Mind Science Foundation in San Antonio, Texas, and who sent me to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, which I believe at the time had the world's fastest supercomputer. And they were trying to generate random numbers. And there's a bit of a problem with that, kind of like AI.
AI really isn't alive, although I have a test that I've created that will prove whether AI is individually conscious or not. So Elon Musk, if you want to talk about that, let me know. So they have kind of the same problem with creating random numbers. They can basically have a program that's programmed to run random numbers, but they want genuine random numbers.
AI really isn't alive, although I have a test that I've created that will prove whether AI is individually conscious or not. So Elon Musk, if you want to talk about that, let me know. So they have kind of the same problem with creating random numbers. They can basically have a program that's programmed to run random numbers, but they want genuine random numbers.
AI really isn't alive, although I have a test that I've created that will prove whether AI is individually conscious or not. So Elon Musk, if you want to talk about that, let me know. So they have kind of the same problem with creating random numbers. They can basically have a program that's programmed to run random numbers, but they want genuine random numbers.
So they had a computer that, as best as I understood, had a Geiger counter hooked up to either a small particle of cesium or uranium, and they would assign clicks one through five or something like that as they came out, or positive, negative, positive. electrons, I'm not sure how it worked. But that's how they would generate random numbers.
So they had a computer that, as best as I understood, had a Geiger counter hooked up to either a small particle of cesium or uranium, and they would assign clicks one through five or something like that as they came out, or positive, negative, positive. electrons, I'm not sure how it worked. But that's how they would generate random numbers.
So they had a computer that, as best as I understood, had a Geiger counter hooked up to either a small particle of cesium or uranium, and they would assign clicks one through five or something like that as they came out, or positive, negative, positive. electrons, I'm not sure how it worked. But that's how they would generate random numbers.
At the time, I think they told me that every second, it would generate a quarter of a million random numbers, one through five, something like that. And so they would have me try to make the number five happen greater. And they had like a little scale of basically 50% was average, whatever I was targeting, and it might go you know, 49 or 48 or 50.1, you know, 51 point something.
At the time, I think they told me that every second, it would generate a quarter of a million random numbers, one through five, something like that. And so they would have me try to make the number five happen greater. And they had like a little scale of basically 50% was average, whatever I was targeting, and it might go you know, 49 or 48 or 50.1, you know, 51 point something.
At the time, I think they told me that every second, it would generate a quarter of a million random numbers, one through five, something like that. And so they would have me try to make the number five happen greater. And they had like a little scale of basically 50% was average, whatever I was targeting, and it might go you know, 49 or 48 or 50.1, you know, 51 point something.
And they said, that's really as far as it's ever gone. And then when I did it, I remember it went to like 53 on one end or 47. I thought, I'm failed. They said, no, you don't understand. This is a million numbers every four seconds. I mean, anything beyond like 1% or 1.1 is way off. And you did, you know, triple the distance that has ever been off before.
And they said, that's really as far as it's ever gone. And then when I did it, I remember it went to like 53 on one end or 47. I thought, I'm failed. They said, no, you don't understand. This is a million numbers every four seconds. I mean, anything beyond like 1% or 1.1 is way off. And you did, you know, triple the distance that has ever been off before.
And they said, that's really as far as it's ever gone. And then when I did it, I remember it went to like 53 on one end or 47. I thought, I'm failed. They said, no, you don't understand. This is a million numbers every four seconds. I mean, anything beyond like 1% or 1.1 is way off. And you did, you know, triple the distance that has ever been off before.
And then apparently they gave me some sort of subliminal message while I was there. And then when I was asleep... In Nashville, they would have me influence the computer while I was asleep over a distance of something like 300 miles, and apparently it did even better than that.
And then apparently they gave me some sort of subliminal message while I was there. And then when I was asleep... In Nashville, they would have me influence the computer while I was asleep over a distance of something like 300 miles, and apparently it did even better than that.
And then apparently they gave me some sort of subliminal message while I was there. And then when I was asleep... In Nashville, they would have me influence the computer while I was asleep over a distance of something like 300 miles, and apparently it did even better than that.
I wasn't supposed to, but I got a report of the Congressional Intelligence Committee because the researcher liked me or something. I was referred to subject BWS, blah, blah, blah. And so that was kind of the last I heard of it. I think they wanted me... to move up the chain of command, and I don't know, do who knows what for the government.
I wasn't supposed to, but I got a report of the Congressional Intelligence Committee because the researcher liked me or something. I was referred to subject BWS, blah, blah, blah. And so that was kind of the last I heard of it. I think they wanted me... to move up the chain of command, and I don't know, do who knows what for the government.
I wasn't supposed to, but I got a report of the Congressional Intelligence Committee because the researcher liked me or something. I was referred to subject BWS, blah, blah, blah. And so that was kind of the last I heard of it. I think they wanted me... to move up the chain of command, and I don't know, do who knows what for the government.