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The Difference between AI and Human Programming, AEI and MagatamaAI, and the performance track, Humanoid. All Rights Reserved. MagatamaAI.com MikhailTank.com
Mikki Willis joins me to discuss the Plandemic series, the importance of voting with your wallet, self-responsibility, and how to protect yourself against social engineering. Mikki Willis is an independent investigative filmmaker. He is the producer of the documentary series Plandemic. // GUEST // Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikkiwillis Website: https://plandemicseries.com/// SPONSORS // In Wolf's Clothing: https://wolfnyc.com/iCoin Hardware Wallet (use discount code BITCOIN23): https://www.icointechnology.com/ Wasabi Wallet: https://wasabiwallet.io/ Casa (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://keys.casa/ Bitcoin Apparel (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://thebitcoinclothingcompany.com/ Feel Free Tonics (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://botanictonics.com Carnivore Bar (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://carnivorebar.com/ // OUTLINE // 00:00:00 - Coming up 00:00:25 - Intro 00:01:58 - Helping Lightning Startups with In Wolf's Clothing 00:02:44 - Introducing Mikki Willis 00:03:26 - The Motivation Behind Plandemic 3 00:05:58 - Synopsis of Plandemic 1 & 2 00:10:47 - Plandemic 3: The Great Awakening 00:13:04 - The Collective Act of Mass Formation 00:18:30 - Manipulation of Human's Purpose and Connection 00:24:29 - Traditional Religion: A Fight against State's Secularism 00:30:57 - Battling the Ego 00:33:50 - Alignment with Divine Intelligence 00:38:26 - Secure Your Bitcoin Stash with the iCoin Hardware Wallet 00:39:22 - The Age-Old Battle Between Individualism and Collectivism 00:43:58 - The Power of Voting with Your Wallet 00:49:20 - The Role of Central Banking in the Perpetration of Psyops 00:51:23 - Mikki's Struggle with Money 00:54:47 - Money is Trust 00:58:35 - Why Money is an Attention Allocation Technology 01:06:40 - Susceptibility to Human Programming 01:12:04 - Change in Belief 01:16:59 - Proper Implementation of Technology 01:19:46 - The Significance of Self-Responsibility 01:24:32 - A Bitcoin Wallet with Privacy Built-In: Wasabi Wallet 01:25:23 - Hold Bitcoin in the Most Secure Custody Model with Casa 01:26:11 - Obedience Legends: A Controlling Mechanism 01:32:49 - Proper Guidance for Children 01:39:00 - Be Aware of Manipulation 01:41:30 - Mikki's Incredible Story About Intuition 01:48:56 - How to Find Mikki's Work// PODCAST // Podcast Website: https://whatismoneypodcast.com/ Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-what-is-money-show/id1541404400Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/25LPvm8EewBGyfQQ1abIsE? RSS Feed: https://feeds.simplecast.com/MLdpYXYI// SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL // Bitcoin: 3D1gfxKZKMtfWaD1bkwiR6JsDzu6e9bZQ7 Sats via Strike: https://strike.me/breedlove22 Sats via Tippin.me: https://tippin.me/@Breedlove22 Dollars via Paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/RBreedlove// WRITTEN WORK // Medium: https://breedlove22.medium.com/ Substack: https://breedlove22.substack.com/// SOCIAL // Breedlove Twitter: https://twitter.com/Breedlove22 WiM? Twitter: https://twitter.com/WhatisMoneyShow LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/breedlove22Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/breedlove_22 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@breedlove22 All My Current Work: https://vida.page/breedlove22
Sean Scott joins me from Portland, Oregon and we discuss Kidney Failue, Autism, Aliens, Working at a Corner Store and a Paranormal Experience. Follow Sean on Twitter: @mitdasein My link as always is https://linktr.ee/melashea
Part I: you're not your brain. Part II: ready to conceptualize the terrible brain programs you're accidentally engaging each day? How'd they get there, how can we rethink them instead of accepting them, and how can we redirect them? Talking family patterns, distraction, indecision, ADD, hypervigilance, trauma, and PTSD fog all in one. Ready to understand your neural patterning better? Then jump into the exercise episode streaming in the TMFR Blanket Fort! Plus, get the intricate details for how this neural nightmare goes down, from the land of academic research. Hit Patreon.com/traumatizedmotherfuckers for the full research episodes, exercise episodes, and TMFR support community. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/complextrauma/message
Karin Tyden connects with me from Sweden to share simple mind hacks to overcome fears, remove doubts, build self-trust and strength. She is a multi-award-winning coach, active in over 25 countries and is known to be one of Europe's sharpest in her field. Karin has helped thousands of people to maximize their potential and in this episode you can learn the method on the mechanics behind people's subconscious patterns to help create new and improved strategies in life.By understanding what happened to you that made you think, feel and act in a counterproductive way and how your subconscious mind works, you will find keys to unlock your inner power to create the life you want.For Further Info on Karin:Website: https://www.karintyden.se/en-GBFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/yourmindnavigatorInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/karintyden/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/karintyden/
Happy thanksgiving y'all. The devs streamed/recorded this episode to youtube and twitter on Nov 18, 2021. You can catch the video on youtube here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oooMMwTVuD8 Got a longer one this week, with some live viewer questions. We talk bout - RIP Dolph! - web3 - Apple's self repair program - Mehul puts Rick on the garage sale game - Overtime League - We give away a pair of the Trae Young 1s Follow us at twitter.com/peachtreedevs --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/peachtree-devs/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/peachtree-devs/support
Theoretical neuroscientist William Softky returns to the Far Out with Faust podcast to delve deeply into the science of our senses to help us understand — technically speaking — exactly what's going on (and what's going wrong) within our nervous system.Learn why math is better than science (he's got proof), and how artificial intelligence (AI), corporate algorithms, and our own blind trust in “the spreadsheets” have created a self-fulfilling dependence on the unreal that's damaging our core in ways we may never comprehend.According to Bill, the anti human programming solution is simple: it all comes down to connection — the actual kind. Listen in to learn his anti-tech tricks that just might save us from ourselves.William Softky is a biophysicist who was among the first neuroscientists to understand microtiming, and among the first technologists to build that understanding into algorithms. His name is on 10 patents, thousands have cited his scientific work, and two of the companies he inspired were acquired for $160 million total. Softky holds a Ph.D. in Physics from Caltech, where he discovered a still-unsolved paradox about the firing patterns of brain neurons. A theoretical biophysicist — the son of two physicists — Softky served in the Peace Corps in Cameroon before attending grad school.His subsequent career in Silicon Valley (including biophysics, human-computer interaction, and signal processing) has given him a unique perspective on the software and hardware architecture of human brains, including new insights about our deepest (yet most deeply-hidden) high-bandwidth method of somatic communication. softky.com --A scientific philosophy of life: https://www.softky.com/index2.php Pure science: --A Grant Unified Theory of the Informational Structure of Life, starting with homeostatic fragility and ending with spinal ecstasy and human resonant connection....all derived from scratch, no footnotes: https://www.softky.com/index2.php --Bulletproof 60-page peer-reviewed paper outlining human nervous system needs: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1710.08916.pdf --Eight mathematical proofs that brains are natively analog 3-D processors: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1409.8275.pdf Fair Observer.com: https://www.fairobserver.com/author/william-softky/
We now have shirts!! Head over to TeeSpring and get yours today! https://teespring.com/stores/journey-to-truth-podcast If you'd like to donate to us: https://paypal.me/journeytotruth Thank you!
Meet Scott Selisker, Associate Professor at the University of Arizona and resident expert on science fiction and *teaching* science fiction. His book, "Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom" (2016) is worth checking out on its own merits. He is also the unlucky human responsible for introducing US to Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.'s "The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction," which has spawned not just a seven-episode series on this podcast, but also reshaped our conversations about science fiction (and fantasy) on a macro level. We invited him to come and join us for a conversation about the very macro question of "What makes science fiction beautiful?" Excited words follow. Side note: Selisker's voice is a sonorous ear-worm you NEED in your life. Our conversation includes references to a number of formative works of science fiction criticism and fiction, including David Wittenberg's "Time Travel: The Popular Philosophy of Narrative" (2012), Jennifer Egan's "A Visit from the Goon Squad" (2010), Kazuo Ishiguro's "Never Let Me Go" (2005), Max Barry's "Lexicon" (2013), as well as Marina and Sergey Dyachenko's "Vita Nostra" (2008). We also discussed the "Alien" and "Star Trek" franchises (of COURSE), Ursula K. Le Guin, Nnedi Okorafor's "Binti" series, and Nalo Hopkinson's body of work. Selisker also references Dan Sinykin's article "The Conglomerate Era: Publishing, Authorship, and Literary Form, 1965–2007" in the journal Contemporary Literature and Joseph Campbell and Darko Suvin's competing definitions of science fiction; to read more about these, just look for the Wikipedia page on "Definitions of Science Fiction." Want to find out more about Scott Selisker? You can find his book "Human Programming" on Amazon, his faculty webpage at https://english.arizona.edu/users/scott-selisker, and his Twitter handle is @sselisker. We do also want to give shout-outs here in the show-notes to our previous episodes on Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.'s "The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction": Beauty #1: Fictive Neology (Episode 5) Beauty #2: Novums (Episode 12) Beauty #3: Future History (MIA, hard drive failure) Beauty #4: Imaginary Science (Episode 34) Beauty #5: The Sublime (Episode 55) Beauty #6: The Grotesque (Episode 71) Beauty #7: The Techno-Gatorade (Episode 79) You can find all of our back episodes on YouTube once they have shuffled off these earthly coils of their SoundCloud first life. Like our content or our new introduction? Our website is www.imaginaries.net, and you can drop us a line at imaginarypod@gmail.com or find us on Twitter at @imaginary_pod. You can find ALL of our back episodes on YouTube, and listen to our episodes on iTunes or SoundCloud. If you would like to help support our work, you can do so at www.ko-fi.com/imaginaries.
Topics Disscussed: Stepping out of the Matrix, Human Programming, Subconscious mind, War on information, Economic Slavery, Vaccinations Ian R Crane is an ex-oilfield executive who now lectures and writes on the Geo-political issues. Support the podcast: Via our Patreon page - https://www.patreon.com/Ascend Show Notes - http://ascendbodymind.com/ascend-podcast/
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons, and American Unfreedom (University of Minnesota Press, 2016), Scott Selisker offers readers a fascinating new history of American anxieties along the borderland between the machine and the human mind. Demonstrating the way that a variety of fields influence and coproduce one another, Human Programming follows the metaphor of the automaton through news media, fiction, psychology, cybernetics, film, law and back again. Along the way, Selisker engages academic work on labor automation, posthumanism, affect and emotion, and techno-Orientalism. Through careful interpretation of books on American soldiers returning from the Korean War, the trial of Patty Hearst, the narrative logic of Snow Crash and Blade Runner, the central conflicts of Homeland and the Manchurian Candidate, and the baffled news reports on John Walker Lindh, Human Programming “offers a new literary and cultural context for understanding the human automaton figure” as it has appeared and reappeared over the half century, and explores how the metaphor of the automaton has “shaped American conversations about the self and other, the free and unfree, and democracy and its enemies, since World War II” (7, 8). Beginning with a prehistory in WWII propaganda, this timely study comes up to a present in which we replace our employees with touchscreens, rely on machine learning to translate our conversations, use proprietary software to plot our routes, and deny the human freedom of our fellow citizens. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carls work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology