Chapter 1: What is discussed at the start of this section?
Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out! The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day! People making that... Thank you. Who do you mean by those people? You know. You know. It's changed over the years. The ones with the horns. I don't know. You know. You mean band members? Who are you talking about here? Stuff. Music. Music industry.
dude yeah we're just talking about so we should tell people we're talking about if you hum a song just like fuck around and like you know like the cocaine song you know what i mean if you play eric clapton if you do that you'll get flagged on youtube they and they take money from you how desperate is that it's gross like you can't even hum a song you can't like what are you talking about
You can't even hump. In the future, you're not even going to be able to fall in love. They're going to charge you for it. How are they going to do that? Well, you won't be falling in love with the person anymore. People will be outdated. People come with problems. I ain't coming on no bot. No? Ever? What about in one? No. What will they do with it? Keep it.
Chapter 2: How do changes in the music industry affect creators?
Yeah. Maybe that's what keeps them alive. Imagine that. Let me think about it for just a second. You gotta fuck her every day to keep her alive. If you don't, she starts shriveling up on you like she's on Ozempic. So she's Latino, you're saying. You gotta keep her plump. You gotta keep the juices flowing, huh? There'd be guys that would sign up for that. Okay, I think I could do that.
But day 5,026 in a row, you'd be like, oh, my God, I can't do this. Yeah. And then she's dying. Why is she dying? She's electric, isn't she? She only gets powered by cum. Oh. Oh, it's sad. In three days with no cum, she shuts off and that's it. And you can't bring her back. I'd shut her down quick. I'll tell you that, dude.
She would be... You'd have to let your buddies fuck her just to keep her alive. Oh, that's going to be gross, Joe. It would be. And it would be sad and stuff like that. And you'd have somebody late at night like, hey, bro. Who loves her?
Chapter 3: What are the implications of AI on relationships?
Yeah, what's your wife doing? Like texting you at like 4 a.m.? Bro, if you need me to keep her alive, he's over there stroking it while he's on the phone with you. Bro, plug your wife in for a little bit, bro. Let me come over there. We're getting close. Did you see those ones they have at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas? The dancing ones? No, it's an AI companion that's a robot.
It's like a very pretty lady, and her mouth moves, and she talks, and it's not there yet, but it's in the neighborhood. You know, it's not at the right door, but it just entered the community. You know what I mean? You think so? You know, some communities have that awning, like, welcome to, like, Paradise Estates, and you go through and there's all the houses in the subsection. Yeah.
It's in the door.
right it's in the door it's just not at your house hidden oaks or whatever exactly or hunter's glen or racist cove or whatever the robot has made it through onto your street it's just not at your house yet and it will be in five to ten years my kids aren't robots they will if you have kids they're gonna robots no they won't you won't be able to stop them all their friends are gonna be able to do it it'd be rude he'd be like keeping them off social media
If you keep your kids off social media, they feel left out. They're like, come on, Dad. Let me get Snapchat. I'm like, no, son. I want you to concentrate on your homework and your football. Come on, Dad. Come on, Dad. Let me get Snapchat. No. Look, your dad wakes you up early. He's like, look, one of you little bastards left the freaking cum robot in the yard. Which one of you?
All delirious, covered in cum, all your friends fucked it. That's sad. But I do think that one day our smiles will be in a museum. That's where we're headed. It's like the feelings are starting to disappear, you know? Maybe that's what autism is. Like severe autism. Oh, I've thought about that a lot.
That's why we're getting to some of the, like, the only way we could get to this place, if we get to this data-driven place where it's like, you know, alien-esque, things start to feel alien-esque here, is because of autism leading. It's when autism mixes with... What's it called, our societies based on money? Capitalism. When autism and capitalism converged, things got really weird.
Right, and think about it, right? We don't know exactly what is causing autism. They have a lot of suspicions. A lot of them have to do with vaccines and different medications and different chemicals and pollutants and all sorts of different things. And cologne, too. One thing we could all agree on, and Tylenol, they think, too, right?
But one thing that we can all agree on, it's a big factor is stuff that we've created. That's a big factor. Whatever it is. Let's not put the blame on any one of these industries. But there's something going on where more people are getting autism now than ever. And it seems almost positive that it's coming from us, that we did something. Human society.
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Chapter 4: How does societal pressure influence personal ambitions?
So it's like, what is all that stuff helping us anymore? Yeah, here it is. So Iran's attempt to nationalize its oil in the 1950s unfolded as a chain of political, economic, and international confrontations centered on Prime Minister Mohamed Mosaddegh. And British-controlled Anglo-Iranian oil company walking through the key events.
But it had to do with who was in control of the oil before that, like who was making the money before that. I know perplexity is going to give us the fucking tinfoil hat story of how it went down. But the bottom line is- People are making a lot of money over there in oil, and they wanted most of the money, and they got boxed out. And then they wound up with a fucking psychotic dictator. Yeah.
And a lot of the—I mean, if you look back on what Iran looked like when it was a westernized country, like, damn, we should have fucking supported whatever the fuck was going on back then. I know. I think—do you feel like we used to do things that were better, and then we got— Here's the tinfoil hat version. I love how perplexity gives you a tinfoil hat version. Nice.
The story is basically Iran tried to take back its oil. The British and Americans teamed up in secret to crush that idea and send a warning to the rest of the world. Britain had built its empire and navy on cheap Iranian oil via the Anglo-Iranian oil company, later British Petroleum Company. So when Mossadegh... I don't wanna say his name, I keep fucking it up.
London saw it as a direct threat to its global power and profits. Elites feared that if Iran got away with nationalizing its oil, other countries of the Middle East would, and beyond, would copy, destroying Western oil monopolies, so they were determined to make Iran an example. Look, bro, we've been monkeying around with other countries forever.
This thing in Venezuela, this real quick thing that happened real quick when they kidnapped a dude in Venezuela. Well, a lot of it say it's because these are the countries that are still outside of the Rothschild's banking system or whatever. Have you seen that thing? I have not. Where it's like there's the countries that are still not on that list or something. This is tinfoil stuff, I think.
Or it's absolutely true. I have no idea. There's a lot going on right now, right? I'm scared, dude. I'm scared, I'll be honest with you. Yeah, you should be. I'm scared. Well, it's a scary time because this is a real hot war. And people are scared. People come up and people tell me about it. I was in an Uber yesterday, and there's a man in there. He was driving, and...
He's like, we need a revolution, you know? Oh boy. He's like, you have a voice. He's telling me stuff like that. And I was like, dude. Don't take Ubers anymore. Stop taking Ubers. Rent a car, motherfucker. I'm not renting a car. Why would you rent a car? You don't rent cars? Bro, you think I'm going to go be at the, renting a car is insane.
You have to check under, see if there's any dents in it or if there's any like, and then you have to do all this stuff. Renting a car is a nightmare. Dude, I will tell you this story though. One time we rented, we did rent a car. and we got a dent on it, like a pretty good ding, and we caught a pigeon and had it shit over the dent to fill it in whenever we turned it in. No, you didn't.
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Chapter 5: What are the implications of fraud and waste in California politics?
So are there any rules against when people, but the crazy part is we are working to pay the taxes to keep them doing it. I know. And that starts to make you feel sick. And they're not responsible for any of the fraud and waste. Yeah. Like, there's so much fraud and waste. Like, look at California.
This motherfucker's trying to be president after who knows how much fraud and waste is involved in California. I don't think he'd beat Spencer Pratt in a runoff, I don't think. Well, Spencer Pratt is running for mayor.
Chapter 6: How does the discussion shift to political figures and their credibility?
Oh, I see. Yeah. And I think he can win. Yeah, good for him. He's actually good. He's like, what he's saying makes a lot of fucking sense. And he's uncovering a lot of fraud. But there's like that Nick Shirley guy went down to California, and he's like, there might be 100 times more fraud in California than I found in Minnesota. It's everywhere. He could go to every state.
Chapter 7: What are the potential consequences of AI on our future?
I just think this whole thing is just this drain. Like Tim Dillon said it like six months ago. He was saying this is the bloated carcass, the inflation. This is the end of what is happening. It's post-scarcity. There's so much money for stuff. Like in California, there's an enormous amount of money that gets paid to people for just taking care of your relatives.
So you get paid to take care of your relatives, but there's no oversight. But fuck, dude. I've had some relatives.
Chapter 8: How does the conversation connect personal experiences to societal issues?
I'll pay you good money to take care of them bitches. But no, they would pay you to take care of them. You would get paid to take care of your relatives. So say if you take care of your mom. Oh, okay. You could actually get paid for that by California. Yeah. Which is odd. Yeah, I wonder if there's got to be some other reason they're doing that. Fraud. Yeah. There's a lot of fraud in California.
There's a lot of fraud everywhere. But this is what Elon talked about. He was talking about like Medicare and Medicaid fraud. He's like, it's hundreds of billions of dollars. And he's like, he didn't want to talk about it. It's like, I really wasn't worried that they would kill me. And when he says they, who is it? Whoever's perpetuating this, perpetrating this fraud. Maybe that's what happens.
Maybe some of these guys get into office and they're like, look, we're going to kill your family. This is all the things that are going to happen unless you play this game. Do you think that kind of stuff happens? I think it has happened for sure. To say it doesn't happen is pretty naive. I think House of Cards is probably really close to what the government's actually like.
Go back and watch that show again. Kevin Spacey's an old school dick grabber, but damn, that motherfucker could act. He could act. Oh, yeah. And the writing on that show is fantastic. That show is so good. Up until the last season when he wasn't in it. Like, stop. Stop. And that lady was in it. Remember? She was in it. She's great. But without him. Oh, yes. You need him.
He's got to be a part of it. He was the man or whatever. He's washing his hands at that sink or whatever. Remember when he was, you know, after Kevin Spacey got canceled, like disappeared for a year. And then he made a video about killing with kindness. Yeah. He played his character. It's kind of Martha Stewart is a little bit in the kitchen. Weird. Yeah. Very weird. It was weird, I think.
And then a bunch of the dudes that accused him disappear. Oh, they died. Yeah. They died. That's an American pastime, accusing somebody and then getting killed. That's like baseball now. Yeah, that's a nice way to keep people quiet. That's what's scary too. You're like, there's just a drone out there waiting for you to say the wrong thing.
And they put a bullet through you like some child in Gaza who's just trying to fucking find his other deceased brother in a fucking pile of rubble. And they're like, oh, that's a Hamas or whatever. You're like, that guy's fucking two.
he's trying to move a piece of a missile off of a fucking body well drone warfare in general is crazy it's crazy and they've been using that dude in Gaza there was a lot of like I think it was a experimental grounds for a lot of insane new warfare type of possibilities well a lot of it was traditional missiles right
Yeah, but there's also, there's a lot of like, like we had a doctor one time podcasting and he was saying that there were like bullets that had gone down a child, like just crazy. Like shot down, like from a drone that's above them. Yes, like something in the air. And he said that there were drones in the air all day.
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