Rambling 210: Giving Ideas Power

How do things get their value? Where does power come from? How do you strip an idea of power? The duo discuss the tremendous power of ideas and how they can affect people and those around them when enough individuals give the idea power.

Rambling 210: Giving Ideas Power

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • Queen Elizabeth II
  • Power
  • Government
  • Money
  • Billionaires

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

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+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling Podcast. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And this is a show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in amazingly awesome ways.

Cristina: The best ways.

Jack: In the best of ways.

Cristina: No one does it better.

Jack: Who can?

Cristina: I don't know. Trump can.

Jack: Trump can do it better.

Cristina: Imagine if he had a podcast.

Jack: If Trump had a podcast.

Cristina: Yeah. I would love to hear about his conspiracies. That's all he'll talk about.

Jack: How are you sure that that's all he'll talk about?

Cristina: Well, that's all I want to hear.

Jack: Okay, see, that's very different than that's all him he talks about, because I doubt that's all he talks about. It's not just an infinite number of conspiracies, so. Yeah, but there's also, like, an infinite amount of boasting that has to happen. He just has to talk about how great he is at things and how awesome he is at things and stuff.

Cristina: Mm. But then there's also his weird conspiracies, so.

Jack: Okay, you think he could do an entire show on, like, three conspiracy? He holds.

Cristina: Maybe.

Jack: Okay, list all his conspiracies. If it's more than three, I'll be blown away. Because the thing is, people make more of an exaggeration about the fact that the president has conspiracies, and they make it seem like he's drowning in them. But, no, he just has conspiracies. He believes it's, like, three. It's not like he's over here tin hat ing the s*** out of it just like this. That, and that.

Cristina: I don't trust any UFOs was one of them, which I guess is a real thing, so it doesn't even matter. But, like, he knows about the aliens.

Jack: But it's not a conspiracy. He gets told crap as the president.

Cristina: You think he knows about aliens?

Jack: No. He would have told everybody.

Cristina: Okay, well, I'm pretty sure.

Jack: No, no, no. The problem is he knows that they're secrets. That part he knows. That's not a conspiracy. He knows their secrets. That's why he wants to know. He wants to know. It's not.

Cristina: He knows that the left is into our pedophiles. Just the left. Just the left are pedophiles.

Jack: Just the left. I don't think he's ever said just the left.

Cristina: He just wants to clean up. What was that whole Cleaning out the swamp. No, the corrupt. Whatever. He isn't that.

Jack: That's not about pedophilia.

Cristina: Whatever, I guess now. But it's a conspiracy to one side. Not like the whole thing is corrupt. It's just that one side is doing suspicious things.

Jack: But no, that's actually completely wrong. It's like you forgot who you're talking about.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Talking about Donald J. Trump. The guy who aimed so many fingers at his own team and was like, that guy's a problem too.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Like, what do you mean? Just the left. He thinks everybody except him.

Cristina: Okay, so there you go. That's many conspiracy.

Jack: It's not a conspiracy. These are literally people who are against him. A conspiracy means you believe.

Cristina: Was he actually against him?

Jack: Yes. That is called being your rival.

Cristina: The vice president.

Jack: The vice. Oh, I thought you meant the opposing president. Well, no, the vice president turned on him by saying, this is wrong, like you're doing something wrong. He just wanted to not be told. He's a big child. He just wants to told he wanted to be told. He did nothing wrong.

Cristina: Oh, okay, so he's just a big baby.

Jack: Yeah. That's not a conspiracy theory. If the suspicion is they're after me and they're after you, that's not a conspiracy theory. No, that's just a thing that's happening.

Cristina: In your life or a fraud or whatever.

Jack: Well, here's the crazy part about that. What election hasn't been rigged? Well, regardless of what side wins, as long as there is an electoral college, do people have a vote? Dude, literally, Hillary won the first one and then Trump still got it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Doesn't matter.

Jack: This time Trump won the popular vote, but still the electoral college was like, f*** yo. S***.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So it doesn't really matter what the people say if the electoral college can do whatever the h*** it wants.

Cristina: Okay, so, okay, the windmills.

Jack: See, that's a conspiracy. I'm telling you. People like to exaggerate the fact that he says a bunch of off the wall s***, but it's not really off the wall half the time. It's just he. He's disrespectful and people take that as a giant fact of the matter that, oh, no, he's definitely not informed on any of these things and he's totally believes in all these conspiracy. But no, they're not conspiracies and a bunch of the crap is true.

Cristina: Would you listen to that podcast?

Jack: No, it wouldn't. It wouldn't be entertaining. It would be too much of the same thing over and Over.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I don't think I could get behind a.

Cristina: Just one episode and that's. You're good. Yeah.

Jack: It'll be like listening to the Ron Burgundy podcast. Like, it's a lot. It's like, this character is great, but also he's a lot.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, he's just. He's always a douche. This sucks.

Cristina: Yeah, that's true. I don't get it. I mean, I get why people love it, but I don't like. Yeah.

Jack: Like, it ain't for me.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jack: And it's like, I don't think it's something that people can listen to all day. Then again, people listen to Alex Jones all day. I mean, everything's for somebody. There are people who love to listen to Trump all day. There'll be a big a** crowd for that.

Cristina: Forget about Alex Jones. There's a lot of guys like that, though.

Jack: Yeah, but they're not harmful the way that a dude. The problem is the power of presidency is exaggerated. Like, yes, you're powerless around those around you, but you're overpowered against just normal commoners.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And like, yeah. Telling a bunch of people to go attack. And like, he didn't literally what to his. From his. No, it's the truth. He didn't straight out tell them to go attack anything. He did say peacefully approach. He did say, you know, he used the words he needed to use to keep his a** covered, but the subtext was, it was rigged. They're stealing it from us. It's tyrannical. Go solve the problem.

Cristina: Go solve the problem.

Jack: He didn't say go solve it with violence or murder or murder, any of that. But he did say, march over there. Let them know what's on your mind. And they went over there and he's like, it's tyrannical. Everything's falling apart. They're trying to steal what you have fought so hard for. Go and let them know it's wrong. And then they went over there and just pillaged a bunch.

Cristina: That's pretty cool. Pillaging. That's still a thing. Who knew?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I mean, here.

Jack: Literal raiders.

Cristina: Yeah. What?

Jack: Just a thing that happened once. A bunch of raiders.

Cristina: You think there will ever be a part two to that?

Jack: I mean, not to that, but there'll definitely be other things. It's not the first. This government is gonna topple eventually. There's no way it won't. Alternatively, it's a bunch of governments stacked on top of each other. Maybe that's why it's worked. Like, it seems like it's always gonna fall apart, but somehow we're outlasting everything around us.

Cristina: Okay. So we sort of figured it out.

Jack: Well, no, we're also the earliest, newest thing.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: You know, like, we're pretty. There's a couple of countries that have come to be ever since. You know, there's one here, one there. There's one country that came to be in like 2014 or whatever. There's a bunch of countries that come into existence. So we're not the youngest country, but we're like the youngest super overdeveloped. Mega power.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: And for such an overpowered group of people, it always does feel really fragile.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But it never falls apart. And we are again, we are really young. The Roman Empire was huge. And that was around a long time, then eventually fell. We don't know how quickly they came, swooped in, took everything. They're like, wow. The Roman Empire came out of nowhere. It's only been around 200, 300 years. Wow. Strong EMP. A couple hundred years down the line, garbage gone.

Cristina: Because something bigger came along.

Jack: Something bigger came along and stupid decisions ruined their too. Okay, interesting. Yeah, interesting. So, like, this experiment we're running could. It could outlive everything that's here right now, but it's also not gonna like, stay forever. Everything has an expiration date unless we're the. And again, that. I guess that is ultimately what the United States is. The. The uniter of things.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And there's many countries within our country, but there's also many countries that aren't in our country from other countries that come to our country. So it's all our countries, plus all the other countries put together in one place in this country, in this multitude of countries that allows multitudes of other countries in. Now that means that the United States is the closest thing we have to Starfleet and that chances are, out of all the countries, United States or Canada, one of those two is going to become the sort of building blocks for Starfleet.

Cristina: Has to be United states. Come on.

Jack: NASA. NASA will be Starfleet because NASA's already all inclusive.

Cristina: Okay, we got it then. Yes. Wait, is NASA based here? Yes.

Jack: Yeah, NASA's in the United States.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Okay, we got what?

Cristina: NASA. That's an American thing.

Jack: Oh, yeah.

Cristina: So, yes. And we got the Space Force. I don't know how that's gonna help, but like, if we combine the two somehow, I mean.

Jack: Yeah, I don't even understand because it's. We got three things going on. Right. And the. No, then the people who are making The Boeing. They're also jumping into space flight. Boeing people. People who blow up planes with others in them or crash them or something.

Cristina: That's fun. So these three somehow combined will make Star Trek? No, no.

Jack: Just be. No, none of them make Star Trek. They're all American or all in the US at least. Star Trek is just one thing.

Cristina: Oh, one thing. Oh, we'll never get there.

Jack: Well, why? Everything is more united than it was always 100% of the time. What do you mean?

Cristina: It was just gonna take long to get even more united. Until we reach that point where.

Jack: Oh, yeah, but you said we're never gonna get there. We're definitely gonna get there.

Cristina: This isn't gonna take a very long time. Oh, yeah.

Jack: But of course we're gonna get there regardless of how long it takes.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Given in. And it won't even like, what's a long time? A couple hundred years. It won't even be that long. It won't be in our lifetime. But it will happen like kind of relatively soon.

Cristina: It's hard to imagine though, because there's so many people against it because somehow the devil is involved with us being united.

Jack: The problem with the logic is that that itself is a conspiracy theory. And that's a conspiracy theory held by like the minority. By crazy large minority, by crazy small minority. I'm sorry, Very, very, very small group of people believe that that's truly the case. And they're non influential. That's why that hasn't actually affected any part of society.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: You know, it's just a bunch of idiots who overtly symbolize everything in the Bible. Yeah, people. I don't know. There's a lot of people with weird beliefs. Ultimately.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And there are a lot of people who would definitely. I don't know. Trump is not, is not that overpowered, man. Like, look, he'll build an army and he'll have people listening to him. But it's not like, I don't know.

Cristina: People as big as everyone makes vast minority.

Jack: Think about how easy, how easily it would be to over. The problem is the cops are on their side.

Jack: But that's about it. Yeah, it's. It's not really like other than the cops being on their side, it's just a bunch of crazy people. And not even like a bunch. It's two or three lunatics who believe crazy things and think that, you know.

Cristina: Okay, so it's just a bunch of different ideas and they all sound the same. So I think they're all the same people or I guess Part of the same group, but it's just a bunch of different people with a bunch of crazy similar ideas.

Jack: Yeah, it's not even a punch. It's just a few.

Cristina: Okay. A few people.

Jack: Definitely not a lot. It's not a lot. It's a bunch of ignorant individuals with a bunch of crazy ideas. And sometimes they pan out. Most of the times they don't. Okay, simple. There's nothing but a bunch of people who believe in crazy things all the time. The world is filled with people who have crazy ideas.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Conspiracy theories to just any. Anything, anything. And Trump is like the. The one. One of the many ringleaders to one of these. I mean, they really attacked the Capitol, dude. It's absurd.

Cristina: Yeah, it's pretty crazy.

Jack: Yeah, but what the h*** can we do, right?

Cristina: Show them the way. With Jesus.

Jack: With Jesus? Isn't the Jesus people the ones who did the thing?

Cristina: I feel like he would tell them how they're wrong.

Jack: He did. And then he said he was proud of them.

Cristina: What are you talking about, Trump?

Jack: Oh, Jesus would tell them they're wrong because Trump told them they did wrong. But then he said, very good. They're good people.

Cristina: Yeah, but our friend will help them or will tell them that they're going to h***, which I don't know how freaked out they would be. Like, if you really believed. And then he. That guy that you're worshiping, tells you that. What do you do with yourself if.

Jack: You believe it's him.

Cristina: Yeah. If you believe him that he's who he's saying he is, like the Messiah.

Jack: Well, then you just change immediately. You change your behavior instantly.

Cristina: How? If you thought you were doing the.

Jack: Right things, well, now you know you're not.

Cristina: Ah.

Jack: Thinking and knowing are two different things. It's not even worth the thought. It's not a thought experiment whatsoever. If you know the guy who made the rules, it says this is bad and that's good. Is factually real. He made everything. You just change because it's easy. Now there's proof. It's not faith. Nothing to think about. Heaven is assured. If I followed the rules.

Cristina: What if he says there's no way?

Jack: Then you also have nothing to worry about. You just keep doing what you're doing because you're going to h*** no matter what. Now you could. Any confirmation sends you in one of two directions.

Cristina: Either do what you're doing or change. Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah, 100%.

Cristina: Wow. That's kind of useless. I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, it's why it's faith. If it was proven. There would be no argument if it was proven in either direction. One of two sides would be completely gone. Either everybody believes in God because God is a fact, or nobody believes in God because he's factually not real. Okay, but no, we have this sort of inconclusive middle ground of somewhere between real and not real. A bunch of people swear. A bunch of people are like, nah, science is. No, but science is. Yes. And it's like all simultaneously. And it's like, what the h***?

Cristina: Mm. It's complicated.

Jack: Yes, it's very complicated. But that's basically how the human mind works. Right. There's a plethora of people with a million different beliefs and views on exactly the same things. And so if there are a billion of us, there's a billion different perspectives on the same thing. If we all manage to even have the thought about the one thing, because we're all thinking about different things. But, like, I mean, sticking to the insurrection that the world hear about the insurrection, or is that just big for us?

Cristina: They probably heard it, but it was probably not big.

Jack: Yeah, it was probably not a big deal. It's like, oh, you know, some people argued at the White House.

Cristina: Yeah. Like the queen dying. Was that the world?

Jack: The world was informed. Yes.

Cristina: There's a lot of people talking crap, but.

Jack: Yeah, because it's an old format.

Jack: It's a queen. It's. Don't get me wrong, it's the queen, but it's a queen.

Cristina: It's not like that's over with.

Jack: No, but it's also the last one we gave a crap about is gone now it's gonna be over with. Who's gonna successfully sustain a crown now? Who's. Who's gonna listen to whoever sustains the crown? You don't got the stain of a lady who was there 70 years.

Cristina: They're gonna start voting for kings and queens.

Jack: No, that's not how it works. That would just be politics. Yeah, it would be president.

Cristina: You think they'd ever change that, though?

Jack: It wouldn't change. It would dissolve. It would dissolve the crown. It would cease existing. It wouldn't be a thing anymore. It wouldn't evolve into anything else. There's nothing it could evolve to all the parts already there. There's already presidents and senators and congressmen and this and that. There's nothing the crown could evolve to. They're just celebrities at this point.

Cristina: Okay. Because I was going to ask, like, what would happen to everything they own? Like, do they still. They still own it?

Jack: No, no. They still Own it. And my question is, how do they cut off taxing the people?

Cristina: We cut off taxing. The piece of money would be going to whoever's really ruling, not the.

Jack: Well, it wouldn't go. If you dissolve the crown. It wouldn't go to anybody.

Cristina: It wouldn't go to whoever. Like, if they decide we're gonna have a president instead.

Jack: They do. They will have a prime minister.

Cristina: Oh, wouldn't go to them.

Jack: No. It would go to the government and still. No. It wouldn't go to the. Still. No. It would just be returned to the people because all the government money is already being taken too. People get tax for the crown and the government.

Cristina: Oh, so then they would be getting less tax.

Jack: Yeah. They would just be returned.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That would be. Not removed anymore.

Cristina: Yes. How will the family survive without that money? That's.

Jack: Without infinite money they have.

Cristina: Yes. Like, that's just. That's it.

Jack: I don't know. It's weird, man. As soon as people stop believing in the thing that ceases existing. It's like money. If you don't believe in money, like, the dollar almost collapsed a long time ago. Reading an article about how the dollar, sometime in the. It was like the 1800s or the early 1900s, something like that. Late 1800s, early 1900s, actually might have been the 1950s, something like that. And the dollar was losing faith because people were like, it's not working. We. We can't buy things with it. Where. You know, the. Before it came back up and it was booming. And the golden era of the 1950s, 1960s, everybody can buy a house with whatever job they have. Era came through. Before that, it collapsed. It broke. The recession hit. People couldn't afford s***. The faith in the dollar was gone. That's what led to that recession. It was. It was. The money was useless.

Cristina: Money was useless.

Jack: It was becoming useless. And so people lost faith in the dollar. People stopped believing in its function. And dollar is an idea.

Cristina: But what were they doing?

Jack: They still needed figuring it out. Point is, the dollar was disappearing. I don't know. Humans adapt. That's what we do.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So it doesn't matter how we survived. We just survived. It would happen no matter what. You took away all the money, all the food. We'd just eat each other. We would make it. I assure you, if there's no food, we would definitely eat each other.

Cristina: Okay, there's no food. You just take away the money.

Jack: No. We would definitely survive one way or another. So there's no question of what we did. It's just the fact that money was falling apart and people were going to other means, and the one thing that created that was the flaky fear and money.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And so it just. Just stopped being useful. Totally. Completely.

Cristina: What, it's just gonna keep happening, though?

Jack: Well, it could happen again, and it could be incredibly, incredibly useless as soon as people lose faith in the thing. That's how ideas work. That's how imagination works. Money is imaginary, and you need people to have this idea in their mind to imagine it working and imagine the numbers changing in a. It needs to be consistent.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: The consistency fails as soon as some people lose faith. And then you can't sell to everybody at the same price because, well, they're not even buying. They're just hanging out with that guy over there who's giving it to them in exchange for the bread. And, like, I'm losing money because I thought the money was working, and now I don't have anything to change. I don't need the bread.

Cristina: Yeah. So do you think that's gonna happen, though, soon?

Jack: No, I don't think that's gonna happen. We're talking about the crown and how that's an idea too. And, like, as soon as. Which has already happened, people are already losing faith in, like, what the h*** does this even stand for? And now there's not even the one thing people cared about being there. So the faith in the idea is gonna leave. And just like money did in the past, the value of the crown is just gonna dissolve into nothingness, and people are just gonna, like, who gives a crap? Give me my tax money back or we'll just rise up against. Because why do we have these people? They should do that. The British are never gonna rise up.

Cristina: Oh, so it's just gonna stay like that? It's like the money, like you said, it. It. What they feared is gonna go away, and. No.

Jack: Yeah, exactly. That exact.

Cristina: Yeah. So I don't know. So you don't think the crown is worried at all? They're a little sweaty. They're like, the money.

Jack: No, they're definitely quaking in their boots. They're definitely quaking in their boots.

Cristina: Oh, okay. But, h***, yes, they probably don't have anything to worry about at the end of the day.

Jack: Why it's gonna dissolve. Why it is. Yes. I'm saying, just like, the money.

Cristina: The money didn't dissolve.

Jack: The money in the 1950s dissolved.

Cristina: No, people just got scared that it was going to.

Jack: People stopped relying on it.

Cristina: But eventually they did.

Jack: Yes, because money works that way. But the crown is not just suddenly going to be cool again.

Cristina: Oh, I. I don't like.

Jack: Obviously, if the crown leaves, it's not going to be like, well, it's five years later. But, you know, we're missing that crown. I guarantee you, if the crown leaves, we're not going to be aching for some kings and queens.

Cristina: Oh, okay. I wasn't sure what you meant. Okay. I don't do. That example wasn't great. Or it doesn't feel like it equals. Because the money is still here. That's all I mean.

Jack: No, no, no, no, no. You're looking at. I don't know why. A weirdly specific part of that argument, as opposed to the fact that they're ideas and the only thing that sustains them is that their ideas was the point I was making, that they're both just ideas. And if you don't believe in the idea, the idea doesn't hold up. And at one time, people didn't have faith in the money and the money didn't hold up. So when people lose faith in the crown, the crown's not gonna hold up because it's also an idea. See, that's the ultimate point I'm trying to make. Ideas. What people believe what people think. And people believe many, many things. The people with the crown believe the crown matters. The people who believe in the crown believe the crown matters. Many people believe the crown doesn't matter. And it's an outdated format of approach. And, like, why do we need. What do you do?

Cristina: I wonder what the actual percentage is of people who don't care versus people who do.

Jack: Huge here's.

Cristina: And just in there, though, not like the world.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, the world. Most people don't give a crap.

Cristina: Yeah. But I mean, like, here's the thing.

Jack: I. I would argue that only traditionalists care. Care.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And that even older people, older people don't care. People like most people don't care. It was entirely that we respect Her Majesty the Queen. That's really what it was about. It was that she was. She's a superhero. Superstar rock star. The most overpowered, most successful, most important being to have ever walked the earth has done more for the collective earth than most people have. That is why we were like, oh, yeah, the Queen. We don't really care about the crown. Nobody cares about the crown. That's outdated. We're over it. There's other kings and queens in the world. Name one. Exactly. Nobody cares. Nobody has given a crap. Nobody will give a crap. That's outdated. That's old. It's only Queen Elizabeth because it was Queen Elizabeth.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: But those systems are all gone. People have lost faith, and they will fall apart and they will cease to exist, because that is how these things work.

Cristina: I'm kind of. Remember her, the new guy's name? George.

Jack: Phillip.

Cristina: I don't know. Philip. Okay, that sounds right.

Jack: Yes, Philip. The worst. But, yeah, it's really weird. It's strange. How are. How our ideas sustain everything. Right?

Cristina: Yes, that is strange, man. If they lose everything or if they lose their power, either their things become part of a museum or they sell it all. Which one comes first?

Jack: And they'll sell it to a museum for the most money. But what power do they have now? Like right now, without counting the fact that Elizabeth had power? What power does Philip have?

Cristina: I don't know. He gets to talk to people, whatever.

Jack: If he gave an order, who's listening?

Cristina: I don't know how it works now.

Jack: Somebody walks outside and just says a curse word in England about the Queen. How. How long does that guy last? Right? You don't care about the crown now. Somebody goes out there and says the same thing about King Philip. Who gives a s***? No, nobody. It's about who it was, not what it is. Yeah, nobody cares about that crown.

Cristina: No, I don't think so.

Jack: It's only important because of who she was. She's not around, and we don't care anymore. It's a lot of power just gone to waste. But again, that's how ideas work. You lose faith in the idea. Suddenly all the. We had faith in the idea with her there.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Give her all the power, whatever, she's gone. All the other parts are still there, but all the power is gone. The faith was in her.

Cristina: Yeah. Any other examples of just ideas?

Jack: Ideas sustaining themselves?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Well, this is one that I've really been fascinated by my entire life. And I've had a couple of conversations with people about space in particular. And in having conversations about space, I've had conversations with people who've never once taken class relative to it. Like maybe they were raised in a country where they don't get astronomy or science isn't common. So you just don't get it. You learn how to write and count a little in the end. So I've had conversations with people with many different walks of life. And when it comes to space, there's so many different things. Now, the universe that we don't see is entirely subject to what we think is happening.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: So I tell you the sun is a ball of fire, and you got no other reference point. You think there's a ginormous distance between us and the sun and it's a ball of fire way over there. But somebody who has no reference points for that and believes no, it's a dome. And it's been like a sticker spot stuck to the top of the dome. So when we see the sun, that's not a ball of fire, it's a sticker on top of the dome. Now, from their point of view, all they're seeing is a flat disk against the dome. You're both looking at the same thing, but you see an orb that's on fire. They see a flat sticker against an orb, and it looks the same to both of you. But what your, your, your perception of it is affecting what's happening. And so only one of those arguments holds any kind of power. Your belief is directly influencing the universe. The structure of the universe is due to what you believe about the structure of the universe.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: Now while you believe that's the sticker. If I put you on a ship, flew you up, and then you saw it wasn't. Now, instantaneously, as we're getting up there, your view is becoming three dimensional. Now your, your faith in the idea has changed, so the idea itself has changed. Your power went somewhere else that has no power anymore. You took it from there and threw it over there. Now, the universe literally changed, and that's not what it looks like.

Cristina: But a lot of people have their own unique ideas of what space looks like or what it is.

Jack: I once asked an individual who, we were just sitting and I was talking about how much I love astronomy. And in the course of the conversation, this individual says, I have never once thought about what's up there. Only now talking to you, have I ever considered it. And like, wow, that's really strange. Never once, never anything. Not even the moon, the biggest thing out there. Like, nope. Looked at it. Then you think about it. Okay, so what do you think is happening? The answer? Fascinating. They don't know. They don't know how far up it is. They don't know if it's like, how far up is a plane. Are they over the plane or is the plane around them? If you look out of a plane because there's lights, but beneath are the stars just blending into the lights. You see when you look down?

Cristina: What?

Jack: They said that again? You look up and you just see dots of lights. But if you look down, there's a bunch of dots of light cities and whatnot.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So when you look down Are the stars blending into those? So there stars above you and below you now because you're so high up.

Cristina: Well, because you can't even see up there.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. It looks dark and whatnot. And you're in clouds. So it's like, okay. Then I'm like, what do you mean? It's like, okay, like, how far up do I have to go to just, like, catch one in my hand? And I'm like, oh, the visual just destroyed my mind. You think they're just really bright, but small at a distance. So, like, if you go up there, maybe you just catch it, and then it'll just go dark because it's in between your hand.

Cristina: That's very strange to imagine that something that small collide up the sky.

Jack: Well, it's not lighting up the sky.

Cristina: The sky's dark in the morning.

Jack: You're not seeing the sun. You're looking at the stars. You're looking up at the stars and seeing a bunch of tiny little dots that look super tiny. You're like, well, I don't know how high up it is. Maybe it's slightly higher than a building. That means it's really bright and really tiny. I can grab it.

Cristina: Maybe that one star.

Jack: Any star. Any of them. Any star up there. Can I get up there high enough to grab one? Like, what are they? If I grabbed it, what is it? Like, those are the. That's what I was. I'm like, holy crap. This is interesting. Never once have I thought about a situation like this.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But now a million other examples is other political structures. Think of the presidency. Presidency is only the presidency because we choose. It's the presidency, and the people agree. We agree there's government here. Yeah, but if we all just decided. No such thing. No, no, no. Biden, no power. Biden, no power. Military, you got all the guns, but we got all the numbers. We don't believe you. In fact, as people, every one of us who isn't a politician and isn't in the military, we're just all gonna say we don't agree. Who are you gonna then serve it? See, it broke. It stopped right there. Who are you gonna serve? The people. We didn't break the government. We didn't break the military. We just said we. No long. Everybody else who isn't in either of those collectively says that we no longer believe in the government and we no longer believe in the military. But we didn't touch either organization. How can either one move forward? What would they do? Who would they serve? If we're not taking it. Can't take our money. I'm gonna hold my money. You can't take my money. How you gonna take my money? I don't believe in this government anymore. I dare you to come take my money. For what?

Cristina: Still believe in money?

Jack: You can't believe in the money without believing in the government. Direct transactions. No taxes. What's the military gun? You shoot all the civilians. For what? Then who are you gonna. Then you're the only people left. No, it falls apart the second. It just falls apart instantaneously as you start losing faith in the idea.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Ideas are fragile. That is how they work. They're an extremely simple part of the human psyche.

Cristina: Oh, crap. I was gonna say of being human. Okay.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, it's definitely part of being human. I mean, we don't know if it's part of being an animal or anything of that nature, but we definitely know it's an experience humans factually have. Now, it is entirely possible other creatures also have that sort of experience, but, you know, like affecting the universe with ideas altering with our psyche what we believe. But I don't think. I mean, if you look at a dog right there. I mean, I guess it would apply to everything. It's called adapting the way our thoughts work, the way we. Okay, so faith gives something power. Right, so does this work on an animal? Would be the question here. So you take an animal, a dog. A dog believes you are their owner, you are their feeder, you are the most important person in their life. And then you beat the crap out of the dog.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh.

Jack: And the dog is scared and flinches, but is equally loyal because you are who they care about. You are who feeds them, you are who matters to them. Even if you hurt them, they'll be scared. They'll avoid pain. But that's so sad. It's tragic. But. But the faith in you has not been lost.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The power hasn't affected. Has been affected. You still hold the power. Dog could never alter it. A cat never gives you the power. A cat is confident. They always have it.

Cristina: Yeah. So those are just ideas. These animals have ideas.

Jack: These animals have, but they're not wavering. They're not. The ideas aren't malleable. They're fixed. And so those are two examples. I guess it's not because what we're looking for is an example of taking away the faith and losing the power of something that you took the faith from. It's like God. If everybody stopped believing God. Some God is useless. If everybody stops Believing in money. Money is useless. If everybody stops believing in politics, it's useless. Borders work that way. Borders are an imaginary line. If we just say it's not a thing, never been a thing, then, okay, there's no borders. The more people that agree, the less borders that exist.

Cristina: But do animals ever have that idea? Or I guess an idea changed like that, just. Okay, this doesn't mean anything anymore.

Jack: Yes, 100%. Put a line of tape in front of a dog that has been taught never to cross certain barriers. So they don't jump off the sidewalk when you're walking. They don't go into a specific room that you've told them never to go into, even if you leave the door open. They're trained not to do it. You go somewhere where there are no barriers, you tell them, sit, and you create something that looks like a line with tape or something across from them. Some animals will just walk around that because they're not allowed to step over it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They've given it power. They think something might happen if they do. It could just be discipline.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But for whatever reason they are moving around. It could be that their idea is something happens when I do that. There's power happening here.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: There's a barrier of some sort, but they haven't lost. But if they did lose the faith after you tell a dog, oh, no, it's cool. Come on. You gave the power away for it. So now the dog is like, oh, it's cool. There's nothing here. It's fine. I could do it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now the power is gone. Now there's no barrier.

Cristina: So in the dog, just for when you tell them, like, hey, it's okay, then they'd be like, okay, yeah.

Jack: Chances are they're waiting for you to deactivate the power. But even better, that goes to show you that. I mean, I don't know. I don't know. Is it the dog's fear or is it their obedience? That is the question. Do they believe the tape means something, or do they believe your word means something? I guess it would be your word.

Cristina: I think it's your word. Yeah.

Jack: So it's hard. It's hard because we can't jump into the head of the animal to find out if. If it's the idea. But I guess that also goes for humans in general, right? People, thinkers. That because we can't jump into an individual's head and see the thoughts that are happening and to see the change in a perspective, we also don't really, really know that there was Ever. Even power in something that's interesting.

Cristina: What do you mean?

Jack: Well, think of people who don't necessarily believe that they should have a government, but exist somewhere where there is a government, like most places. And, like, you don't. You don't necessarily, like, agree or believe or sort of follow the doctrine. So if I were to somehow be able to visualize your thoughts and your perspective and what things have power in your mind because of your thoughts, you might be part of a system with politics or politics has power, and you've given no power to the thing that has power. So your idea could change. Actually, it could lose power. And your idea never affected it. The same way it goes. Right. You got the crown, and it's only powerful because people believe it's powerful. You believe it's important, but if you don't believe it's important, then it collapses.

Cristina: Okay, that makes sense. Yes.

Jack: Yes. The individual might have never given the crown power. So we don't actually know where they're getting the power from. If so many people believe it shouldn't have the power. Well, fair enough. People believed in Queen Elizabeth.

Cristina: Mm. So there was people with that.

Jack: I think. I think the majority believed in Queen Elizabeth, but I don't think there's any power that's gonna be projected onto Philip. I don't think anybody believes. Or ever. Maybe not ever. But current day, there was never any power put into the crown. All the power was put into Elizabeth. So without Elizabeth, there is no power. I believe. And as goes the imagination of the individual. That again, for the dollar, for the crown, for anything. If you don't have the faith to begin with, you could still partake and it would still have power without your thought.

Cristina: That's complicated.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Because it's still just a thought.

Jack: Still just a thought. And it's not a thought that you think matters, but you can still use it like it does.

Cristina: Yes. Because everyone else around you does.

Jack: Yes. So you can exist within a system in which it works.

Cristina: Imagination. Sort of.

Jack: Yeah. You're using their imagination, essentially. So if somebody gives power to a thing, you can abuse the thing. And so you're abusing the person with their mind.

Jack: Think about how powerful the idea of money is. It's powerful. Why? People starve to death because of it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You can starve someone out because of an idea. They could just pop your head off with a gun and eat your food.

Cristina: That takes money.

Jack: They could go steal all of the above in order to make it happen. You can murder somebody. You're worried about acquiring the gun in an ethical way. Just acquire a gun and do the thing. And in that instance, well, you don't believe in money, which means you can't be made to starve. That would be impossible because you don't believe you have to pay for food. Nobody's convinced you.

Cristina: So you're gonna kill someone for the food?

Jack: No, you're gonna take the food because food belongs to everybody. And if somebody tries to take away what belongs to you, you have a right to do whatever because it's your survival over theirs.

Cristina: And that's because that's what you believe.

Jack: That person. Yeah, yeah.

Cristina: That person. Yeah.

Jack: The individual at that moment. Yeah. They or they don't believe money has power. That's the argument here. They don't believe money has power. You can't starve them out. There's always another way. I mean, it goes to say that there are people who are extremely unfortunate in life, and it's because they believe they need the money. And then there are people who are astoundingly, filthfully rich, and they don't give a crap about the money.

Cristina: You think they don't care about the money?

Jack: Most rich people don't care about the money. That's why it ends up hoarding. Think about what makes people rich to begin with. It's some venture, it's some things, some fixation they chased.

Cristina: Okay, so there's still an idea, though, that's involved.

Jack: There's a powerful idea, but they're not giving the power to money. The idea just happens to be something different. But it's not an idea. That's like the idea that they're chasing isn't powerful itself, but they don't care about the power. Super mega, ultra billionaires don't care about the money. Look at all the things they do. Why don't they just sit back and relax? Live all day, kicked back? Because it was never about the money. Why didn't Jeff Bezos retire the moment he made the first billion? He'll never run out of money, ever. There's nothing he could do. He'll never run out of money. Nothing he could do. Why didn't he just stop? It was never about the money. He doesn't put power into money. That's why he has so much of it. He just keeps throwing it to the side. I don't need that. This useless tool. I don't need that with my mind. I did everything else. I need money to code a computer.

Cristina: Just the fun of running a business or something.

Jack: Yeah, there's this Other thing that they love.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That most times doesn't have power. The people who don't believe in the power have the money and then by default become the power. When they're not trying to. Jeff Bezos wasn't trying to become the power. He was good at business and then did it. Well. And he could have stopped, but no, he added more things to it. And then he could have stopped, then added more things to it.

Cristina: I guess I get the idea confused because, like, his company is buying off. Like, other companies lose out because of his company.

Jack: Yes, 100%.

Cristina: Like Netflix. The beginning when it was all powerful, it was the one everyone was going to like. There was nothing competing 100%.

Jack: But now, after you've completely sealed out the market and nothing else is coming, then what? Well, why do you keep doing it? Well, it was never about the money. That's why you did a thing. You were good at the thing, and you want to keep doing the thing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Another great example, the other one, Elon Musk, you know, doesn't chase the money. Ever. Nothing.

Cristina: Doing a bunch of things.

Jack: Doing a million things.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Throw it. Literally throws away money. No power to the money. Asked the Internet, how much money do I just throw away? And they gave him a number. They told him on what. And he was like, okay, just cuz too much money. What do I do with it?

Cristina: So crazy.

Jack: Because doesn't care. Doesn't care. He rules the money. The money doesn't rule him. He doesn't care about the money.

Cristina: He rules money.

Jack: He rules the money.

Jack: You couldn't buy him. You can buy him before there was a bank. Told him, we will give you a percent increase. He's like, nah, I'd rather waste my time and money making something that isn't you.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's like, no, you will literally make me a profit if I throw my money in you. Also, I don't care. Began not giving a crap.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Money. Never had the power.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: Not once.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah.

Jack: Barnes and Nobles destroying the world. Swallowing little stores left and right. Amazon comes along. I'll mail you a book. You know what? I'll mail you anything you want.

Cristina: Yeah, well, once upon a time, they.

Jack: Had a relationship, I think, with Barnes and Nobles.

Cristina: Yeah. I think with their books. With, like, not physical books, but the virtual pad thing. I think they had a thing together.

Jack: Oh, Barnes and Nobles had the Kindle Reader thing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I mean, they still do.

Cristina: Yeah. I mean, Amazon, I think now has their own thing, but I think it started together, wasn't it?

Jack: No. Kindle is Amazon.

Cristina: Kindle is Amazon.

Jack: It's the Amazon Kindle.

Cristina: Okay, and what was the one for Barnes and Nobles? They have a different one.

Jack: They don't have one. They were just using Amazon Amazons. They were using the Kindle, which was reader. There are other E readers, but there aren't, like, popular ones. There's just the Kindle, which is the popular E reader.

Cristina: Oh, okay. I don't know. I don't remember. I feel like it was something related together, but maybe not. Maybe they were just stealing their business.

Jack: Yeah, I mean, it was always just about being the better business. There's, again, there's no end goal. The power for him is in purpose. These are people driven by purpose, not money. If it was the money, you got all the money. There's no more money you could make. You can stack all the money it looks equal to you did. You can't fathom that much money. Yeah, it looks the same. No matter how high that number goes, it looks the same. It's past after you're in the millions. You've already passed human understanding. What does a million anything look like? Do you know what a million anything looks like?

Cristina: No.

Jack: So, like, there's no point in stacking an infinity worth of cash. And I know they don't really. They're not sitting here counting, oh, yeah, now I got my next billion. Yeah. I'm so cool. They don't care, man.

Cristina: I hope not. That'd be really upsetting.

Jack: Why would you care? Why would you mind consider.

Cristina: Very cringy.

Jack: That's the thought.

Cristina: It's weird. It's just a weird thought. The phone's just like, ooh, my money. I don't know.

Jack: I mean, somebody's doing that.

Cristina: I know, but it's. I don't know. Just as a thought. It's cringy.

Jack: I don't why people do it about a bunch of crap. People literally do that about everything that's ever existed. That's somebody something.

Cristina: That is somebody something, I guess.

Jack: But there's somebody who's like, yeah, my shoes. Yeah, all my giant shoe collection, bruh.

Cristina: Like, there's more precious.

Jack: I guess there's a bunch of crap like that. People are. It's trophies.

Cristina: Trophies. I guess it's not that bad if it's like trophies. It doesn't like a trophy.

Jack: I mean, there's a lot of people who don't like trophies. It's clutter and just random nonsense. But there's a bunch of people who like it. A trophy is the sin of pride. Be proud of yourself.

Cristina: Mm. That's what mine could be. To some people, money is a status.

Jack: Symbol in a lot of cases, but those are fake rich. It's like that. It reminds me of the rich and the super rich. Yeah, rich and super rich.

Cristina: It.

Jack: Oh, my God. Okay, you guys need to jump on TikTok and watch Rich and super rich. But it makes sense. There is fake rich. The. You know, I got a couple of millions, and I'm better than you for it. I made a. I made millions. I'm so much better than you.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You know, I have big house, great nice clothing. I don't wear the same thing twice. I'm pretentious as h***. You couldn't am me and Mike. You couldn't hang out with my friends. We're all rich. And then you got the super rich, the super rich. You got somebody like Elon Musk, who goes and hangs out with, like, Joe Rogan before he's even a millionaire. A multi millionaire. You know, he's just, like, maybe touching a million right now. He's just hanging out with Elon Musk. Because I must like. I like how you talk to people. Still no mega billions offered on Spotify. It doesn't matter. Look, I like you, bro. I like how you approach things. You're cool. And so are you.

Cristina: Hanging out with Dave Chappelle.

Jack: Hanging out with Dave Chappelle. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. This is the type of guy who those average rich people, the people with millions. Oh, no, those are crappy people to him. He doesn't like those people. Pretentious douche wads. You guys are so full of yourself. Let me drop my wallet on you and destroy your house with it.

Cristina: Okay, but he doesn't hang out with those people.

Jack: He hangs out with people he likes with poor scientists and weird creatives and, like, why doesn't he surround himself with Jeff Bezos, his only other equal? Like, screw that guy. He doesn't care about rich people. Also, Jeff Bezos is not doing the same thing. Bought the block and hangs out alone. He's not trying to show his money off. Actually, Bill Gates did the same thing to literally bought three blocks around him, moved everybody out, knocked it all down, and just lives on the block that's now his property.

Cristina: Ridiculous.

Jack: But he wasn't showing it off. He was doing the opposite. Let me go. Disappear and leave me alone, please.

Cristina: He's a super rich.

Jack: He's super rich. He's not trying to show off the money. Dude wears a crappy button up in slacks every day.

Cristina: So is Dave Chappelle, though, and Joe Rogan. The rich.

Jack: No, because they also got the h*** out of there. They're just trying to be away from people and not in the public eye. They're not throwing their money around. Their tools are a million other things. Okay, well, Dave Chappelle has one tool. It's just a really good tool. While Rogan has 50 million tools and somehow still took him. So all of that. All of that to just scratch the surface of what Chappelle is capable of. It's tragic. But also. Why are we comparing? It doesn't even matter. What's amusing here is how in a lot of cases. Because it does have power. Because people project power onto these ideas, like money and politics, whatever. It's funny how it could influence right back. It's not just the use of money can. So you put value in the money, and then the money is required for the system, and then there's a bunch of people in the system who don't have access to the thing. You could hurt somebody with your idea. Literally a thing. But it's funny when people get it. A bunch of. The idea. They got a bunch of money, a bunch of power.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And in having all of this, they still don't seek to. They don't hire their status to blend out of it. Yeah, they. They don't send out. They're very subdued about their approach. Rogan had all the things he needed before the money. He got the money, and he's happy about it. But the money didn't affect him. No, the money didn't affect Chappelle. The money didn't affect Elon Musk. The money didn't affect Jeff Bezos. But there's some people who get the money and they just. Again, it's power. They just don't know what to do, and it lands on them, and they either burn it on a bunch of crap they don't need and go broke immediately, or get involved in things that's outside of their control because they weren't raised in the circumstances and they think, I got the money. I can start jumping into these things, and then they lose all the money that way. Or get involved in things that is hard to pull themselves away from simply because the money has the power and you're only gonna optimize it. Well, no, you're chasing the money. That's the problem. That kid got the million dollars. That guy invested and walked away. He'll come back in 10 years and be twice as rich. You decided to do a bunch of crap with Your money. Because it's money. Oh, it's important. I gotta react.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So much money. And so that thing happens to people. That's a powerful idea. Money is the most powerful idea. Money stronger than God.

Cristina: Is it less powerful to people who are born in it? Like if their family members.

Jack: No, no. It's the polar opposite. It's absolutely crucial. It's essential. It's the most powerful tool because you literally don't know how to cope without it.

Cristina: But what if you take over whatever it is your family's into that is doing it? Like, if they did it for the love of the job, then you'd end up doing it for the love of the job. But also you'd get that money.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. If you're. Yeah, definitely. Now, that doesn't change the fact that it's incredibly integral. If you're. Here's the problem. It's hard to dodge because you have no reference point outside of it. So money is God. It is the most powerful thing in your life, even if you're used to it. I guess that's a problem. You're used to it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: If we take it away, you're homeless now.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now take somebody who's lived in poverty but isn't homeless. If I took away everything you had left, you'd just figure it out again because you already did. But being raised into money is being put into the situation without the experience that got the person who got there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So you don't have to struggle. Yeah, yeah. You can't recreate it. You didn't do anything to get there. So you lose it. You don't have a roadmap back. The people without it have a roadmap to get wherever they're going. They got there without the money.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Money has the power. Don't get me wrong. They're seeking the money, but they also have to learn how to do crap without the money because everybody else has the power. I got no power. I have to learn how to be autonomous and move without the use of money because money's too powerful. I gotta bring myself up to compete as opposed to the people who have the money. They're wielding the power, but they never develop themselves. So without the money, they have no power and they're useless. But the people without the money have all the skills because they needed it. But they don't have any of the power. So those people develop the skill and get paid by the guy who has the money.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Everybody's tied into the power, no matter what.

Cristina: Yeah. Around the Money around the money. Okay.

Jack: And all of the money is established by. Okay. Why? Why can't I take my money to. Because the politics. The two powers work together. The law says I can give that guy the money and the receipt proves that I did the thing. So he can't screw me, he has to do the service. Or I can take him to court. Because the law said the thing. The power helped the power, but they're putting the money in their pocket. Those rules are just for themselves, really. They need to apply to everybody. Or we eat them. They just apply to you guys. Or they just apply to us. Somebody's going to die. Yeah, you have to apply to everybody. Allegedly. But it doesn't really.

Cristina: That's a Lisa Peer.

Jack: Yes, yes. But let's be fair. Laws are for poor people anyways.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: 100%. We've had this conversation before. Laws are entirely only designed for poor people. Rich people do not have to face the law. That's why every crime comes attached with a fine. You get to commit crimes. If you're rich, pay the fine, you're good.

Cristina: How many fines? Like, you could just pay fines forever. There's no punishment for having a ridiculous amount of fines. I mean, if you're paying it off.

Jack: Then it doesn't matter if you're paying it off. Who cares if you are a billionaire? Walk outside, shoot somebody in the head, you're not going to jail. Well, this is the fine. Pay it. Okay.

Cristina: If you murder someone, you don't get a fine for that.

Jack: There has literally been cases with fines that are murdered. Usually an accident, though.

Cristina: Yeah. So.

Jack: Yeah, but there have been. Well, it's manslaughter, not murder.

Cristina: Oh, manslaughter. Okay. Oh, I guess that's kind of cheating, but okay.

Jack: Yeah, they took a life, but they didn't go to jail because they paid the fine.

Cristina: Okay, I guess I see that. What?

Jack: Yeah, money's strong. Money's strong. Ideas are powerful. Ideas are overpowered. Ideas manipulate people. Ideas control people. Ideas change everything all the time, for everyone, all the time. Ideas are powerful, but minds are weak.

Cristina: Minds are weak, Yes.

Jack: A lot of weak people allow other people's value into their life.

Cristina: Definitely. Yes.

Jack: And then they surround their personality around that thinking. That's something they had, but they never thought about it. They're just screaming what they heard. And now this is important to me because it's important to them, but I don't know why it's important. I just know I'm doing the thing.

Cristina: But that's survival instincts, I think.

Jack: Do what Everybody else is doing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Blend into the crowd to survive. Yeah, but that's the power of ideas, man. That's what. That's how. That's how it goes. Thoughts and ideas and whatnot.

Cristina: That's our thoughts on thoughts. Thoughts on ideas.

Jack: Thoughts on powerful ideas or giving ideas power. Thoughts on giving ideas power.

Cristina: Like money or politics or religion, in order.

Jack: I think money stronger than God, then I think comes religion, then I think politics. People will sooner react to God than they will to politics. But even the church begs for money. Even the church begs for money. God needs that loan.

Cristina: It does.

Jack: Anyways. So I suppose. And look, we have a million other episodes talking about the mind in many different ways. There's actually an episode about consciousness, many misconceptions about the mind and things of that nature. About computer minds. We talk about the mind a lot.

Cristina: We talk about computer minds.

Jack: Yeah, there's a bunch. There's computer minds, there's consciousness, there's awareness, there's the perception, reality. And there's a lot we talk about.

Cristina: There's a lot. Yes.

Jack: So when it comes to thoughts and things like that, there's a plethora of that. You guys can find all that stuff. You guys can go talk to us. Go have. Go chat us up. Tell us what you want us to talk about here on the Rambling podcast. Tell us what you want us to talk about. Find us on the socials. Just convopod at Twitter, TikTok, Instagram, and.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate and review the show. Yes. Leave us some stars and let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes. Because word of mouth is a very powerful and important thing. It's a powerful idea. If you tell somebody, you go up and you tell them, hey, I think the show is really good, really important. I like it a lot. That idea is really powerful because now they're like, oh, maybe I should give it a listen.

Cristina: I might like it.

Jack: I might like it. You like it. You like it a lot, you said.

Cristina: Yeah, a lot. That's interesting.

Jack: It's a powerful idea.

Cristina: Yeah. This has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening. Listening. Bye.

Jack: But they weren't recording cameras. A lot of these guys for the Me too thing were recording text messages and conversations. They were having an audio recordings of these women were saying and plotting.

Cristina: So though. Yes.

Jack: In the case of, like, phone cameras, it'll be too obvious. She'll just stop. She'll stop her bullshitting.

Cristina: Audio. Oh, the audio was from, like, in Johnny Depp's case.

Jack: Yes. That helped Johnny Depp's case that it turned out his chick was abusive and bullshitting all the way through.

Cristina: Yep, she was abusive.

Jack: She's a monster. And he is innocent as f***. But then we also have this problem where these companies stick by their guns even after they're wrong.

Cristina: Who?

Jack: Like Netflix.

Cristina: Oh, Netflix.

Jack: Yeah, like, okay, Kevin Spacey. Guilty, guilty, guilty. Then he proves his own innocence. Where's Kevin Spacey? You guys. Oh, you guys owe Kevin Spacey. He was. He's guilty of a lot of crap.

Cristina: Well, they have. I don't know.

Jack: But you kicked them out over this one. That turned out to be bullshit. And he proved that he had saved discussions.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by great dots.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 146: Origins of Batman's Money

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Where does Bruce Wayne get his money? How does Bruce Wayne maintain this money? Does he have companies? What do these companies do? And what is his obsession with bats to begin with? Did a bat assassinate his family and so he ironically dresses like his greatest fear? The duo deep dive to uncover the origin and history of Bruce Wayne’s money and the Batman.

Rambling 146: Origins of Batman's Money

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed

  • Thomas Wayne
  • Crime Alley
  • Joker’s Age
  • The Little Mermaid
  • Pinocchio
  • The Search for Souls
  • Frankenstein
  • Mario’s Family
  • Giant Bat
  • The League of Assassins
  • Onlyfans
  • Bruce Wayne’s Thoughts
  • Bat-Powers
  • Batgician
  • Bat-Bots

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram -https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Just Conversation podcast. The show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childhood. Choice. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe button to get notified the second new episodes, or at least why?

Cristina: And also, this show is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes, so go find your listening partner if you don't have one by now.

Cristina: What happened to your voice?

Jack: What do you mean?

Cristina: It changed.

Jack: No, it didn't.

Cristina: Yes, it did.

Jack: It's been this way since the day I was born.

Cristina: You just. You just made a Batman voice, I think. I don't know.

Jack: Batman cancer voice.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: The Batman cancer I've had. I am fighting crime. But also I decided to do this after having way too many cigarettes. Is that like the story behind this guy?

Cristina: Yeah, he's like, Saul, he's dying from cancer. Lung cancer.

Jack: Yeah, we already had this conversation like in season two or some s***. Then there was like the f******. Because he becomes the bat fleck where he has a robot voice and now I'm a robot or whatever. And it's cuz he. He had. He goes through the whole cancer process. Then he has no vocal cords because of all the cigarettes. I am Batman. Fear me or whatever. Don't do crime or whatever. He says to people. I am the. I am the night. I am the dark.

Cristina: Is he supposed to talk to people? He only talks to the cops. Does he talk to the criminals? I don't know.

Jack: I don't know. But Batman kills, bro. Look, people say his one rule is no murder. But he's like constantly kicking guys off of roofs. They're just like henchmen, bro. They're just guys.

Cristina: I'm sure there's like something on the bottom of every building that just catches all of them.

Jack: I don't know, dude.

Cristina: Batman, he's rich enough. He has something catch them.

Jack: He has like a Jarvis Auto grabbing people.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just falling and why is he. What the does Matt was. Whatever. I guess he has a money.

Cristina: He has a ridiculous. He has like infinite amount of money doing. I don't know.

Jack: He's the Queen type of rich.

Cristina: He's the Queen type of rich. Yes, but what's his business?

Jack: He has whatever company Lucius works for that makes tech.

Cristina: He's. He's a tech guy, but he's not A tech.

Jack: Well, he doesn't make the tech, but he owns a tech company and he pays a tech dude to do tech stuff. And I don't. I'm not really sure why.

Cristina: How did his parents. But they were in tech people. They have money and they gave him the business. Then the business transformed into tech.

Jack: They were. Man. I think his parents are criminals. Yeah, but like financial criminals.

Cristina: Probably. But what was their front?

Jack: Like? The front? Yeah. Dude, I don't know. That's interesting.

Cristina: I don't think it was.

Jack: Let's guess without looking it up. Let's. Let's use context clues to put together what we know about Gotham.

Cristina: All I know is that they were rich.

Jack: They were rich?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They were killed leaving, like, a theater or something.

Cristina: Yes. On a street known as, like, dangerous. Yes.

Jack: It was literally Crime Alley. It's like, okay, I am. What? F****** not Bruce Wayne. What the f*** is his dad's name?

Cristina: Bruce Wayne Senior, I guess.

Jack: She telling me Batman is Junior?

Cristina: Yeah. So.

Jack: F*** it. So we got. No, it's. It's Thomas Wayne.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Thomas Wayne is this super mega awesome, duper. Duper genius guy.

Cristina: Is he a genius?

Jack: I don't know. But he was smart enough to be a billionaire. A bajillionaire.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And somehow still had the lapse of judgment to decide it makes perfect sense to walk down Crime Alley at night.

Cristina: You're assuming that some of that money came from crime. Then maybe he thought he was safe to walk on Crime Alley because he's a criminal.

Jack: But they don't. What the. They don't know he's. He's a suit and tie criminal. His is shady background noise.

Cristina: But don't the criminals know that?

Jack: I don't tell me criminals who hang out at Crime Alley just know Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne.

Cristina: No, they wouldn't know. I don't know.

Jack: They don't know.

Cristina: I don't know. But what is he.

Jack: I don't know. So we know they're already rich.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We know he's smart enough to be a billionaire, but dumb enough to go down Crime Alley. They were like, at a theater or something. We're just picking clues.

Cristina: Right?

Jack: It's either a place, like a play, some sort of play or fancy event thing. Maybe like a. A suit and tie, like dinner thing where a bunch of rich douchebags get together and, like, some of them are criminal. Secretly. Anyways. Like these people.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: And. And yeah, they die there. So I don't know. I don't know what they do. I know they're Rich, filthy rich, super mega duper rich.

Cristina: And they were probably hanging out with criminals though, because then they walk on Crime street, it's normal. Because they're with their friends who are criminals.

Jack: Except they weren't walking around with their friends who are criminals. I don't think they hang out with petty criminals. I think it's all financial. Like big. Like they hang out with kingpins, which means little guys don't know about them.

Cristina: Okay, but what. He's not a doctor, is he?

Jack: No, I don't think he's a doctor.

Cristina: I don't think he's a doctor. He paid a doctor. Right? Or something in one of those movies.

Jack: To do what?

Cristina: To lie about Joker's mom.

Jack: We're using that canon.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I mean, he still doesn't tell us what the he did.

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: He was.

Cristina: He's a businessman.

Jack: He's a busy eye. He's a businessman, question mark.

Cristina: Yes, that's.

Jack: That's his job. Yes. He does business that results in money. He does things that equal money. And that is business.

Cristina: Technically, yes, but what business? It could be anything, man.

Jack: I wonder if it's ever clarified.

Cristina: It has to be. I think maybe not. Maybe Bruce Wayne doesn't even know.

Jack: He's just like, I'm rich. I don't know why I'm rich, but I am rich.

Cristina: And then I'm in a tech company and then they die. That's as far as I know about them, man.

Jack: That's crazy. Maybe. He said he knows they were criminals, right?

Cristina: No, he doesn't. Because they just told him your parents were rich and they died.

Jack: In Joker the movie, the Joker is already quite an adult. He's like 30.

Cristina: He's really.

Jack: Or 40.

Cristina: Sad looking. 20 year old. Really crappy, unhealthy. 20 year old.

Jack: I mean that's pretty bad looking 20 year old man.

Cristina: Yes, let's pretend that that's what's happening.

Jack: But no, he's like 40. 40, 45. How old is Thomas Wayne?

Cristina: Yeah, because if he's his dad, if that's a true story, how old is that guy?

Jack: Dude, I feel that doesn't. I guess Joker should have been like 30. He was playing like a 35 year old.

Cristina: Okay, let's pretend he's. Yeah.

Jack: Which makes Thomas Wayne at 50s, 60s. If he had him at 20, then he would be 55. That makes sense.

Cristina: That's right.

Jack: Let's say that to be 55. If he had the joker at 20 and the joker is 35. Ish.

Cristina: Yeah. And Bruce is like 13.

Jack: Yeah, Bruce was like 13 or some s***. Now the question that I have is, is the Bruce Wayne from that movie the same Bruce Wayne from Gotham and like, is that more canon? Because brute and also like Joker's that much older than f****** Batman, bro. Like, that's a weird story.

Cristina: That is a weird story. I don't know why they made him so young. Or I guess because we're. Or old because he grows up. Joker's gonna be so old. I don't know. He's gonna be so much older than me.

Jack: It doesn't make any sense. He's gonna be like.

Cristina: He'S gonna become the guy from Saw. I don't know.

Jack: Well, okay, so let's say we're gonna be. Because he was clearly not kid was like 10. So f*** it, we'll say he's 10 and the Joker is 35. So Joker holds 25 years on Batman. So when Batman is finally Batman, we'll say Batman is 30, but the Joker has 25 years on him. So he's 55. That's fair. Okay, that's fair.

Cristina: 30. How will we say Batman's 25 in the movie? Or end whatever. Batman. Batman's 25. How old is Joker?

Jack: Batman's 25. The Joker's 50. No, my older brother, the 50 year old Joker.

Cristina: I don't know. I don't know how it works. It's gonna be weird. Batman is an old old dude.

Jack: It's not old. 50 is an old. Especially with the way the Joker. Old is a state of mind.

Cristina: But he looks really bad at whatever age he's supposed to be. He's already dying. He's super thin. He was like creepy sick looking.

Jack: But I'm sure he gets healthier.

Cristina: Like the cartoon Joker become when he becomes his true self.

Jack: Yeah. Now that he's no longer like, he'll.

Cristina: Be a healthier looking man. Yeah.

Jack: He's gonna eat more.

Cristina: He's gonna eat more. He's gonna eat people. He's not a cannibalism. Cannibal, is he?

Jack: He's not cannibalism, though. Cannibalism is an abstract idea and word in the act of eating a human. He. The Joker is not cannibalism, I assure you.

Cristina: Are you positive?

Jack: I am positive. The Joker is not cannibalism. Otherwise the Joker has existed throughout history.

Cristina: Well, what if he has?

Jack: Then the Joker's like Tyler Durden or some s***.

Cristina: Yeah. Isn't he?

Jack: That would prove way more that he's inside Batman's head. Yes, because it's Just a concept. There's no Joker. It's just Batman arguing. Batman sets up crime.

Cristina: Yes. This whole movie of Joker's beginning was just Batman having a dream about Joker's beginning.

Jack: Why would Batman even question where he came from? It's so interesting. I wonder. Like, there's too many iterations of that. Like the whole ability that comic book series have to reinvent the beginnings, like origin stories completely change. Usually if. Let's say you take a book. Right.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And the book becomes popular and then you make a movie from the book and the movie is only based on the book and you change the beginning and you change the ending. And, like, the origin is different and the ending is different. People will lose their f****** s***.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You do that to a comic book, nobody gives a.

Cristina: Because no one's read the comic book. Well, I guess now everyone. I don't know. I don't know.

Jack: No, because comic book people are already used to the consistent change. New origin, doesn't matter. It doesn't matter.

Cristina: Doesn't matter. Yeah.

Jack: Book people are snobby douchebags who think they're better than the rest of society.

Cristina: Oh, comic book people.

Jack: And like, I'm a book person, but I snobby. No. Because I understand that this is somebody's vision. What the f*** does my opinion have to do with somebody else's creativity?

Cristina: That's true.

Jack: The same. My Little Mermaid. F****** don't watch it then.

Cristina: Yeah. You're probably too old to be watching that anyway.

Jack: There's probably a bunch of, like, older dudes.

Cristina: I don't. Yes.

Jack: This ain't My Little Mermaid. Because you wanted to, like, jerk off to a f****** half fish white girl and now she's black and you're like, well, I'm a racist. I can't jerk off to a half fish black girl. That's nasty.

Cristina: It's weird. The original Little Mermaid had a description besides being a little girl.

Jack: Right. Because she's like 12.

Cristina: She's super young.

Jack: Yeah. Meanwhile, like, I don't know, these 55 year old guys over here jerking off the fish girl.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: I don't know. This is America. Don't catch you slipping up. Because the pedos be jerking up. No, that's how they do it.

Cristina: Talking about Batman was way better than talking about what's happening with Little Mermaid.

Jack: Jerking off the Little Mermaid?

Cristina: No. Ah, that's so horrible. Well, you know what? She dies and she becomes an angel.

Jack: That happens.

Cristina: Yes. Or maybe not an angel. She becomes a flying spirit creature. I don't know. It doesn't say specifically what she is, but they exist in the sky. And if after 200 years or something, she could become a human.

Jack: What?

Cristina: Yes. I don't know. The com. The ending is a little complicated.

Jack: Wait, this is real?

Cristina: Yes. From the story? The written story.

Jack: You've read the Little Mermaid?

Cristina: Yes. It's ridiculous.

Jack: Wait, the movie is based on the book? Or is the book based on a movie?

Cristina: The book came first.

Jack: Really? For, like, factually, you know this to be true?

Cristina: Pretty sure. 80% sure.

Jack: Got you.

Cristina: Is pretty. Pretty sure. This is the book came first.

Jack: And then she becomes like a bird girl.

Cristina: Yeah. Some kind of flying creature thing. And some flying creature things. Say, like, you can. You could be here for 200 years, like this creature, and then you could become a human. Because her whole goal is to have a human soul. That's. What's the goal? Human soul.

Jack: So to clarify.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There are a lot of crossing lines between the Little Mermaid and Pinochlo.

Cristina: That's not his name. No. Is that his name?

Jack: Pinocchio.

Cristina: Why isn't it Pinocchio?

Jack: Go ahead and spell his name out for me.

Cristina: No, I know how it's spelled, but Pinocchio.

Jack: Why would it be Pinocchio? There's a CH in there.

Cristina: No, it's. It's silent. The H is silent, I hope.

Jack: Is it. Is it an H? It's Pinocchio. Right?

Cristina: Yeah. No, that's how it's spelled. Yeah, Pinocchio.

Jack: That doesn't make any sense. Broken a** English.

Cristina: I don't know if it's English.

Jack: It could be Italian. Was Geppetto Italian? Because there's also two Cs in his name, right?

Cristina: Geppetto? I have no idea.

Jack: Pinocchio. Or is it two Cs?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: Is it Pinocchio? No, it's still. It's still the same.

Cristina: No, it's Pinocchio.

Jack: Whether It's Ch or two Cs, it's Pinocchio.

Cristina: Okay, what about Pinocchio? What about Pinocchio?

Jack: Oh, yeah, Pinocchio. Pinocchio is trying to get a real soul. Just like Little Mermaid. They're both, like, trying to get souls, except one is a weird haunted puppet thing and the other one is a siren story.

Cristina: I'm sure it's creepy, but her story. Yeah, they live. Mermaids live a super long time, like 200 years or whatever. And then they turn into seafoam, and then they live like that forever.

Jack: Whoa.

Cristina: So I guess that's why.

Jack: Unless they get a soul.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So they're sirens. She's a siren, bro. Little Mermaid is a siren.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: She's not a mermaid. There's no mermaids. They're sirens. They're trying to, like, suck a soul out.

Cristina: Well, they don't. Their goal isn't to suck us all out. That's just hers.

Jack: How you gonna get a soul, specifically? She has to kill somebody, right?

Cristina: Yeah. She was supposed to kill the person.

Jack: She loved to get their soul?

Cristina: No, to. I don't remember the story. Oh, man, I'm forgetting. Yeah, I guess to get her back her tail. Actually, I think it was because she messed up. She was supposed to make him fall in love with her, and she fell.

Jack: In love with him.

Cristina: Well, she. Yeah, she already loved him. And she was supposed to make him fall in love with her to become human, but that didn't work out. He fell in love with someone else who he thought saved his life, which it was really her.

Jack: But why does having your life saved equal falling in love?

Cristina: I don't know. He just did. He just automatically was like, I'm in love with.

Jack: But, like, her plan was, I saved him so he'll fall in love with me.

Cristina: But he doesn't know that she saved him.

Jack: No. Well, this is my point. In this world, for whatever reason, everybody concludes life saving equals falling in love. The Little Mermaid was like, I'll save his life. He'll fall in love.

Cristina: No, I don't think that was her. She. When she saved him, she just, out of love, saved him. It wasn't out of, like.

Jack: It wasn't like, he'll. He'll know. Fall in love. And then he's like, she saves me. I' ma fall in love.

Cristina: No.

Jack: And it's like, everybody, for whatever reason, equates being saved with falling in love.

Cristina: No, I don't think so. Well, just him for him, I guess.

Jack: So the Little Mermaid didn't. Didn't do that.

Cristina: No. And she was much younger than him. I think he saw her as his little sister. And he was going to. He was going to marry her. But he's like, oh, but if I see this other girl who saved me, I will marry her instead. And he did that. So she was so close, I guess. Oh, but she couldn't talk. That's also a big problem. They took away her voice, and every time she walks, it feels like she's stepping on glass.

Jack: What the f***?

Cristina: Yes. And she dances a lot because she can't vocalize, so she dances instead. So her feet are all bloody. I don't know if anyone even noticed her feet. No. One complains or are concerned. Yes.

Jack: Is there a trail of blood?

Cristina: I think so. I don't know.

Jack: Does it feel? Or is it like she's really being stabbed by invisible glass? It only stabs her.

Cristina: I'm not sure.

Jack: Because it could just feel like.

Cristina: It could just feel like it. I feel like they described blood, though. But maybe she has it covered up in something, like, so like a bandage or something.

Jack: Or it's in her head.

Cristina: Or it's in her head. Yeah. No one notices.

Jack: Like she's just metaphorically seeing trails of blood.

Cristina: Yeah, could be.

Jack: Yes, the blood. So I don't know. She sounds kind of like a siren anyways. She's trying to get a soul.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: She wants a human soul.

Cristina: So that she can die.

Jack: So she can live.

Cristina: No, die.

Jack: You need a human. What?

Cristina: Because if you become. If you're a mermaid and you become foam, you stay a foam forever. You're alive forever as a foam.

Jack: What the f*** is the difference between being foam and being dead?

Cristina: You wait. With the human soul. You get to heaven, I guess. I don't know.

Jack: The soul goes to heaven. Yeah, you don't.

Cristina: But you don't stay as a foam forever. You die. You get to die.

Jack: Isn't foam them dying?

Cristina: No, because they still there. They're still there as foam.

Jack: Like their atoms are. But are they, like, consciously.

Cristina: They might be consciously foam.

Jack: So you could talk to this foam.

Cristina: Probably, and it's like, please kill me.

Jack: But you can't because I'm everywhere.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Spread out evenly across us.

Cristina: Yep. So, yeah, interesting.

Jack: Reminds me of the flaming bush.

Cristina: The flaming bush?

Jack: Yeah. Like, if you tried to kill the flaming bush, you wouldn't do anything. You could throw some water on it.

Cristina: But, like, what flaming bush are you talking about?

Jack: The f****** one that Moses spoke to.

Cristina: Oh, wasn't Moses. Why are you trying to throw out. I mean, push it. What?

Jack: I don't know. It's like a. It's like a weird energy thing you can talk to but isn't, like, really there.

Cristina: How do you know it's not there?

Jack: I mean, how do you know the foam is there or isn't there? When you talk to the foam or when you talk to the fire, it's like, yeah, Imma kill you, so I'm gonna stab you or something. It's like, well, it didn't do anything. Stab the fire.

Cristina: Okay. Oh, okay. Yeah, I guess fire's fine, I guess. Yeah.

Jack: You can't kill it.

Cristina: You can't kill fire water on it.

Jack: But it wasn't like hot Fire either. It's just like, weird fire. Like the foam, I guess you could put it in, like a vacuum or something, suck up the foam, but you.

Cristina: Still don't get rid of it.

Jack: Could you mix two different foams together and make one foam mermaid thing?

Cristina: I don't think so. It's probably all jumbled up foam of different.

Jack: Yeah. So it's like death. Or not death.

Cristina: Whatever. Yeah.

Jack: Weird mermaid body thing.

Cristina: Yeah. Wants to be foam forever.

Jack: Mermaid foam. And that's why Batman is what he is.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Because Pinocchio.

Cristina: Pinocchio.

Jack: Pinocchio and the Little Mermaid. What's her name? Ariella. Arielle.

Cristina: Ariel.

Jack: Ariella. Her name is Ariola.

Cristina: No, Ariel.

Jack: Ariola. So Pinocchio and Ariola are both trying to get a human soul, along with Chucky and all the other sirens.

Cristina: Well, Pinocchio wants to be a real boy, not just have a soul.

Jack: What is the difference?

Cristina: He wants bones.

Jack: He wants fleshiness.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I am wood.

Cristina: He wants stronger, the meaty parts. She wants the spiritual.

Jack: But he wants to be a real boy. That includes the soul. That's right.

Cristina: Yes. Yes. That is part of it, actually.

Jack: Yeah. Part of his equation.

Cristina: Yeah. That would suck if they just give him somebody. Yeah.

Jack: You got, like, a body, but, like. Look, we're gonna. Pinocchio, we figured it out. Here's you. We're gonna do some kind of alchemy thing. We're gonna move you over there, but when you're over there, you'll be conscious and stuff. But, like, the body's not going to move because we don't know how to. How to make a soul. You know, like, the part that powers the body, that's not going to be there. So you can have a body to be real.

Cristina: Maybe it's like Frankenstein. What happened to him? He didn't have a soul.

Jack: That's weird. Frankenstein is like a f******.

Cristina: Or did he have a soul that was like pieces of the people he was made of?

Jack: He's. In the case of Frankenstein, we're assuming science is right and the soul is just not a thing.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: At least not the ethereal soul.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Soul is like a collection of his consciousness.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So if you're aware, then boom. Soul.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But, like. So we're assuming science is correct there, but it's possible that Frankenstein is a homunculus. He's like a creature brought back to life without us all. If a soul is real.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Frankenstein might not have one.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Or I guess the monster. Because Frankenstein is the doctor.

Cristina: The monster. The monster is Frankenstein Junior. Okay.

Jack: We call him Frankenstein. We should call him. It doesn't. Like it's Frankenstein's monster named Frankenstein from this day forward.

Cristina: What happened?

Jack: It's Frankenstein's monster that we will call Frankenstein forever. Yeah, because this makes sense to keep like the month. No, it's whatever, dude.

Cristina: We know Frankenstein junior.

Jack: No, it's not.

Cristina: Yes, it is.

Jack: Frankenstein is his last name. So his name was like Jimmy Frankenstein or something.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Yeah. Then I guess his name should be Frankenstein Gonzalez Frankenstein. Why would his last. His first name is the last name.

Jack: No, there's people named Gonzalez.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Oh, his name is Joselito Frankenstein.

Cristina: The doctor you talking about? Okay, okay.

Jack: He was born Joselito Frankenstein.

Cristina: Are you sure it's not Frankenstein Frankenstein?

Jack: I mean, what, like Mario Mario?

Cristina: Yes, his name is Frankenstein Frankenstein and his son is Frankenstein Frankenstein junior.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: That sounds right.

Jack: Do Mario and Wario share parents?

Cristina: No, I don't think so.

Jack: Are they on same on the father's side or the mother's side?

Cristina: They're not related.

Jack: They're cousins.

Cristina: Who?

Jack: Wario and Mario.

Cristina: They're cousins.

Jack: They're cousins.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I had no idea.

Jack: Yeah. And like, is Wario's like father the brother of Mario's father, and thus it's Wario, Mario and Luigi Mario and Mario Mario. Or is it like Wario's mom is different and there's a result.

Cristina: I hope they're all last name is Mario. That would mean their fathers are brothers.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Yes. Awesome.

Jack: But like, we don't crap about their parents.

Cristina: Is the other one related to Waluigi? Yeah, whatever his name is.

Jack: I should have just called him Lario the way people thought he was named.

Cristina: What is it?

Jack: Lario.

Cristina: Lario. That's why I thought Wario Lario Waluigi.

Jack: La Luigi Waluigi Mario Luigi Wario Waluigi.

Cristina: So wrong. So wrong.

Jack: Should have just been Lario, bro. Yeah, Wario. No. How do you say. How do you get it to sound like Luigi Luigi Luigi Muigi Ruigi, Ruigi.

Cristina: Juigi sounds Maybe not. Oh, Luigi's a hard one.

Jack: Batman has to get rid of all these people.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because we still don't know what the f*** Thomas Wayne did.

Cristina: I understand how Thomas Wayne has to do with these people.

Jack: Pinocchio wants a soul and a real body.

Cristina: He wants a lot of stuff Areola wants. We put him into the Frankenstein body.

Jack: Yeah. What? Just put. What? You just put a wooden body inside of it? Yeah, he's already chopped up. It's easy. Cut one of those stitches open Dig a hole, put. You could. I mean, I guess you could make like a transformer made of me or some. Not a transformer, but like a. Like a robot.

Cristina: Let's just strap him on his body. There's just two people, but we just pretend it's one.

Jack: No, I'm thinking like, you could make this work. You can shove the entire body of Pinocho inside of the Frankenstein body and try to jump start it as one. So they somehow the consciousness is fused.

Cristina: And Little Mermaid has to go in there somehow.

Jack: Well, no, because Little Mermaid and Pinocchio. Areola and Pinocchio are both looking for a soul.

Cristina: Well, maybe with this weird thing we're making.

Jack: Thomas Wayne has the money for the soul. That's. That's his purpose here.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: We don't know. Well, I guess Bruce Wayne, because Thomas Wayne died going down f****** Crime Alley, of all places. Like you went down.

Cristina: It was named after it cannot.

Jack: There's no way. Dude, why.

Cristina: Why would it be Crime? Why?

Jack: Because he's a f****** idiot.

Cristina: Maybe it wasn't. Are you sure you think his death.

Jack: Made it Crime Alley?

Cristina: Yes, it's a huge crime for the whole city because he was an important man.

Jack: How is he important?

Cristina: I don't know. Because he's rich and he was helping the city. Like his son, who's rich and is helping the city somehow.

Jack: Does Batman help the city any way other than dressing up like a freaking.

Cristina: I mean, Bruce Wayne, not Batman.

Jack: Here's the man. This is so crazy. Batman's crazy.

Cristina: Yes, but Bruce Wayne, though, is helping the city with his money. I think.

Jack: Probably. But like, I'm over that. I'm more amazed by the fact that this dude dresses up like a giant bat.

Cristina: He does not dress like a giant bat. There's no bat that you've ever seen that look like that.

Jack: Well, that's what I'm saying. He dresses like a giant. Well, then what the f*** is he dressing like?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: He calls himself Batman. But he doesn't.

Cristina: But that's not a bat suit.

Jack: No, it's like a. He looks like the Mothman sort of. Right? Maybe.

Cristina: I don't know. It reminds me of an umbrella.

Jack: By the way, that movie is creepy. The Mothman prophecy, huh?

Cristina: Is the Mothman in it?

Jack: Yeah, you don't really. It's. It's like a psychological.

Cristina: You said Nicolas Cage was in that one. Or am I confusing that somewhere with something else?

Jack: No, it's Richard Gere.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Probably did not see that.

Jack: Great movie, though. Mothman prophecy. And Blair Witch Project are two old movies that you don't see the bad guy necessarily. You hear about them a lot.

Cristina: Mothman, the bad guy.

Jack: It's an arc. It's hard to say there's a bad guy. There's more of weird s*** happens and you don't know how to explain it. And it's eerie and.

Cristina: And you know something bad is gonna happen.

Jack: Yeah. Some lady told the. Like, she could tell the future based on a dream and it didn't happen. Or that happened often. Like, people would have premonition or something of something bad. You know, like moths do or whatever people superstitions about moths have and s***.

Cristina: Okay. But they would see this Mothman and then that's. The premonition will happen.

Jack: Yeah, I. Something would always. Something bad would always follow seeing the Mothman.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: So people thought you. You know, you saw.

Cristina: I don't think he's Batman, though.

Jack: The Mothman might be Batman.

Cristina: I think he's. Don't people think he's an alien?

Jack: The Mothman's an alien?

Cristina: Yeah. Why do you think I think that's what people think he is. He's an alien.

Jack: Could be. I mean, but everybody thinks everything's an alien. People think Bigfoot's an alien.

Cristina: Bigfoot might be an alien. Yes, Everything is an alien. Okay. Which in. In a way. We also talked about how everything was a fairy. So maybe Bigfoot is a fairy and so is Mothman.

Jack: And maybe fairies are just aliens that came before us. Yeah. Yes, it's quite possible.

Cristina: Aliens came. We saw them as fairies. No, they were gods first.

Jack: We kept demoting them as we saw that they weren't, like, infinitely powerful.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Until they have power we don't understand. So they equal God. And then it's like, wait, but he doesn't know what's in my head. So he doesn't know everything.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So you know, the more you demigod now and then they're like, but like, another guy can kill you. Just like a thing with powers at this point.

Cristina: Now you're a fairy.

Jack: Now you're a fairy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just kept getting demoted. Eventually. This is your f****** different type of thing. But you're like me.

Cristina: And then you became an alien in the end.

Jack: Yeah. Science bred you. The end. It went all the way until the magic was gone and it was just science. You just evolved like the rest of us. And eventually we'll be there, and then.

Cristina: So did we just end up like. Is that what it was in the beginning, though? Was it a science? Was it an alien? First and then we thought it was magic. But then we realized the truth. Like it is an alien.

Jack: Could be like, I don't know. Maybe it's possible. That being said, that was Thomas wayne's job. Area 51.

Cristina: Area 50. How do you become a billionaire with Area 51?

Jack: Money. They pay you. The government.

Cristina: All those weapons involved, I guess, of mass destruction.

Jack: Alien weapons of mass destruction. Planet destroying weapons. We confiscated the weapons from all the aliens that we caught somehow.

Cristina: Is Gotham anywhere near that area?

Jack: Gotham is New York City. So no.

Cristina: No. Okay, so how. No, I don't think so.

Jack: That's weird, right? Because Metropolis is like Los Angeles or some s***. Then Gotham is New York.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Bludhaven is like Newark. You know, it's based on real s***. But then Marvel is just in real place. Like Spider man is just from Queens.

Cristina: Yeah, they're all like that in Marvel.

Jack: Yeah, everybody's from somewhere real.

Cristina: Which came first, Marvel or dc?

Jack: Good question. I would say dc, maybe. It's probably Superman.

Cristina: Oh, okay. And they decided to pick fictional places first.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: What a bad decision.

Jack: I do, on the other hand, think the Green Hornet came before all of them.

Cristina: What is he, dc?

Jack: I don't think he's either. He's his own. Oh, Green Hornet comics. I don't know.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: He comes from a thing where stuff happens. There are superheroes and people who dress up. He was a detective.

Cristina: He's a detective. That's really boring.

Jack: Yeah, well, Batman's detecting isn't that boring.

Cristina: Because he's not just a detective. He also beats people up.

Jack: He murders people, kicks them off of buildings.

Cristina: He doesn't murder him. He has technology that picks up people from falling to their deaths, I guess. And when he break someone's neck, he also has technology to fix those necks, I'm assuming.

Jack: So he saves the dead. He has an army of zombies out there. Don't even realize.

Cristina: Yeah, they don't. As long as they continue living like everything's normal. Everything's normal. Until one day someone bites someone and then.

Jack: Why would it. I don't think it's contagious like that. It's just dead people who he brought back to life with science.

Cristina: Yeah. Isn't there a dead person in that? Like a villain?

Jack: Yeah. His name is Dumesay. No, Solomon Grundy.

Cristina: There you go.

Jack: Yeah, he's a zombie.

Cristina: Did Batman bring him back to life?

Jack: I think Ra's Algol did it.

Cristina: Oh, well, Batman has that technology. Isn't he friends with Roz?

Jack: I think he's a member of the F****** League of Assassins or some s***.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He might know that he's supposed to marry Falia.

Cristina: Falia?

Jack: Yeah, Ra's his daughter.

Cristina: Oh, he never does, but that is.

Jack: I know. I think he. At some point. I'm not sure, maybe at some point. I do think maybe some reality, some version of this to get married.

Cristina: Okay. But he gets the power to bring people back to death through him. So there you go.

Jack: Back to death for days.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: So he murders people with his power.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Why can't I just eat them to death?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: That's power to bring people back to death.

Cristina: And he wastes it all the time. Maybe he tries not to murder them, but it happens.

Jack: Powers are too strong.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He has to fight his powers.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He needs Xavier to help him control murdering people.

Cristina: Who's Xavier? Oh, from X Men.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: He can't do that, though.

Jack: My powers of just murdering people are out of control.

Cristina: Yeah. So he has that power. And he probably shares it with Superman. Because I'm sure Superman by accident, always is killing people.

Jack: Superman is like the Avengers, bro. They level a city in the middle of a fight. And it's like you killed more people than you were trying to save. Should have just let that alien take over.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, super. But Superman, by accident, is destroying a city. He. Like, how does he control anything?

Jack: That's a good question. Because, like, how does he not laser beam a building in half?

Cristina: Yeah, I don't know.

Jack: I don't know. It's nuts.

Cristina: He has that thing. He can bring people back.

Jack: What thing? Like, just his power of.

Cristina: No, he has Batman's thing. Batman gives it to him, too. Whatever that power is.

Jack: You said the power to bring people to death.

Cristina: To life.

Jack: But you said to death.

Cristina: I didn't mean to. That. To life.

Jack: The power of his ability to murder effectively while trying not to.

Cristina: Yes, but no. From Roz. Roz? Yes.

Jack: What the f*** did Roz do beforehand? What does anybody in this world do? Okay, so everybody's a criminal with Bruce Wayne. And Bruce Wayne's earned his money from a bunch of criminals. But criminals do. Did what? Money laundering.

Cristina: All of them did money laundering. I don't know.

Jack: Don't they rob banks like Two Face does? Yeah, I mean, I guess a penguin does, too. A lot of them do. So does the Joker. There's a lot of bank robbing. Why does. Why are there banks?

Cristina: Robbing banks?

Jack: Why are there banks in Gotham?

Cristina: No, because there's, like, so much criminals. So are they just stealing each other's money?

Jack: Right. Because that bank is probably owned by criminal.

Cristina: Yeah. So no. What?

Jack: And how did Gotham get so bad? They had to like enclose it and not like like now this is a prison. The whole city, the whole city now is a prison.

Cristina: I don't know. Batman fever.

Jack: And how do criminals not easily just leave Gotham? Like, yeah, they close it up. But there's like water.

Cristina: There's water. I don't know.

Jack: They use the water to get out.

Cristina: Because they don't want to leave. They love the place. The place turns them into criminals.

Jack: So why isn't Batman a criminal?

Cristina: He is a criminal.

Jack: He's the most criminal criminal. He's murdering people.

Cristina: Murdering people all the time. Yes. So there you go.

Jack: What does f****** Thomas Lane do? There's no f****** clues, man.

Cristina: He is. He.

Jack: Alfred has always been there.

Cristina: So he would know.

Jack: He would know.

Cristina: I don't know. He's like those elves that he gathered a bunch of socks and money happy.

Jack: Steal underwear, something Than money.

Cristina: Steal underwear.

Jack: Yeah. That was soft gnomes.

Cristina: Oh. Oh yeah. That's what they're called. Yes. Maybe that's how he made his fortune.

Jack: Steal underwear, something Money.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Obviously the middle part is Sell it.

Cristina: No. I don't know. Because there's no way he would have been a billionaire if he just sold it.

Jack: Maybe he wasn't selling his own, but he had a bunch of hookers. Or not hookers, but like a bunch of females who'd. Yeah.

Cristina: Their underwear.

Jack: Like he started a Only Fans ring with a bunch of women that would randomly perform for his Only Fans channel. And he would get money from them. But then he'd also sell everything they wore in all of them for dirty other guys to buy. And he built his fortune. Only fans.

Cristina: I don't know. Can you build your fortune off of OnlyFans?

Jack: Maybe. Depends how many underwear maybe. Depends how many people are watching. I bet his Onlyfans is the best Only fans.

Cristina: It is the best Only fans.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I don't know. That can't be right.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: I don't know. But I checked it anyway and he's a doctor.

Jack: I guess he did not become a billionaire being a doctor though.

Cristina: No. He got it from his father being a doctor. His dad wasn't a doctor. His doctor. His dad wasn't. I don't know what his dad was a business guy. He did business things.

Jack: Business. So sad. We're back where we started. It wasn't Thomas Wayne who was the business guy.

Cristina: No.

Jack: He was a doctor who inherited business guy money.

Cristina: Yes. And then he also invested vested that Business guy, money into businesses.

Jack: Maybe his dad was an investor.

Cristina: Yeah, probably. Yeah. Of technology. Probably. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jack: But that's f****** holes for days because Batman is like 80s so. Well if his father.

Cristina: Ancient technology.

Jack: We're talking like pretty old technology. We're talking like his, his father probably owned a pretty substantial cornfield where he employed black people for really long technology. Like that's how long ago we're talking.

Cristina: And they call that technology? I don't know.

Jack: I don't know man. Old west type of s***.

Cristina: I don't know. Windmills, he early 1900s.

Jack: Windmills create electricity. Not even create electricity, but you know, power places.

Cristina: Yeah, that's technology.

Jack: That's anything is technology.

Cristina: There you go.

Jack: Yeah, glasses are technology. Glasses, Glasses are technology. Oh, it's not electric technology.

Cristina: Yeah, well maybe he was a glasses person, I don't know. But yeah. So the dad of the dad is a business person.

Jack: Maybe he inherited his business money from his dad who was the business guy.

Cristina: No way. Yes.

Jack: Maybe it's a long lineage of. We don't know where this came from, but we all have had it.

Cristina: Yes, but Wayne's dad didn't make the billions from the money he, he was given.

Jack: So Wayne's dad wasn't a billionaire, he just inherited a lot of money.

Cristina: He inherit.

Jack: Yeah, but not billions.

Cristina: No, he turned it into billions.

Jack: And then Bruce Wayne did more with it and made more. Mega billion. Trillion.

Cristina: Google, don't they call him a billionaire? So he didn't do much.

Jack: Okay, what if he inherited like 3 billion? But now he has 300 billion.

Cristina: He's still a billionaire.

Jack: He did a lot.

Cristina: Okay, yeah. Oh, they don't tell us. So how are we supposed to know?

Jack: And there's another thing. I was a while ago checking out the whole rich thing, right, so you could be like a millionaire. You could have $3 million and you're still just a millionaire. But you have to pass the 10 million dollar mark to be a multi millionaire.

Cristina: Oh, then is he a multi billionaire?

Jack: Probably. But my point is like isn't 2 million already multi? Like how are we, where are we drawing the line here and why?

Cristina: I don't know, you have to.

Jack: I don't know why we decided 10. I don't know, just 10. You gotta have more than 10 and then it's multi. So if we go backwards, right?

Jack: There's billion and like you're multi billionaire. You go down, you're multi millionaire and you get to the hundred thousand. You're a multi what?

Cristina: Thousandaire.

Jack: You're thousandaire why don't we say people are thousandaire?

Cristina: Because that's sad. I don't know.

Jack: It probably made sense a long time ago.

Cristina: Thousand.

Jack: He's a thousandaire.

Cristina: No, they would just say he's middle class.

Jack: In like 1800s.

Cristina: Yeah. What did they say that?

Jack: No, that's way upper class. Thousands. A hundred thousand in the 1800s.

Cristina: Million in the upper class back then.

Jack: This is what I mean. You're not middle class back then. A hundred thousand made you upper class. You were rich. So why weren't you like a thousandaire? You thousandaire? No, he's rich.

Cristina: Yeah, I guess.

Jack: You're rich, you are poor.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You are in poverty.

Cristina: Is that the same?

Jack: I guess. I don't know. People use them differently. You are lower class, you are middle class. You are upper middle class. You are upper class, you are rich, you are millionaire, you are billionaire, you are trillionaire, so on, so forth. The only trillionaire, I believe, are the mega criminals. And the Queen.

Cristina: Yes, she. Yeah. And Batman, probably.

Jack: And Batman, who runs the greatest only fans of all time.

Cristina: We don't know if Batman is the Queen.

Jack: What if Batman is the creator of Onlyfans and he profits off of everybody's sale of their body? And so Bruce Wayne's biggest contribution to the world is OnlyFans. And also his most price earning, like his most financial earner, is also onlyfans because p*** sells.

Cristina: Yes. But does he look like a bat? I'm still confused by that look. Like the bat symbol. But you've never seen a bat that looks like that.

Jack: No, he's some kind of other thing. But also, the flip here is Pinocchio wants to be a real boy.

Cristina: Yes. And we're stuffing him into Frankenstein.

Jack: And we're stuffing him into Frankenstein. Arreola.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Wants to be real girl.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Or she wants, like, a human soul.

Cristina: Yes. And we gotta feed her a heart.

Jack: Bruce Wayne wants to. Yes, definitely. That's totally how that works. Like, really, sirens just rip out hearts or whatever. And Bruce Wayne wants to be a real bat, except he has no concept of what a bat really is.

Cristina: He has, like a child's drawing of a bat.

Jack: Well, no. He has that one vivid, vivid, way incoherent, single thought of bats. Of bats.

Cristina: Oh, yeah, that's flying. But no one sees that.

Jack: Except him.

Cristina: Except him.

Jack: He modeled the bat. He is after these fictional bats.

Cristina: In his head he say, I am Batman. Or did someone say, hey, that's that guy. We should call him Batman.

Jack: I am the dark, I am the night.

Cristina: Like his symbol. You can say is a bat symbol. But I'm not. I'm saying it's not a bat.

Jack: It is a bat. The bat, when it spreads its wings, kind of looks like that.

Cristina: Okay. I don't know. But it could be anything.

Jack: That's a bat.

Cristina: Is it that it's a bat. Mmm. Whatever. And he only thinks about bats.

Jack: He only thinks about bats. The Joker proves this by putting a machine on Batman.

Cristina: That was the Joker?

Jack: No, it was Riddler. The Riddler tricked Bruce Wayne. Who's. You're so. Also man. You guys are just real mega geniuses who just super stupid at the same time. Your dad died going down crime alley. You, Batman, with a secret of being Batman, show up here as Bruce Wayne, your alter ego, and you go into a machine meant to read your f****** mind. And all that machine sees is bats. Maybe, maybe.

Cristina: Like did he think that that's what the machine. That wasn't what he was told.

Jack: I think so. I think he knew exactly what the machine did.

Cristina: No, I think that it was supposed to put you in dreams or something. It was something supposed to show you.

Jack: Your dreams or something.

Cristina: Or something. Yeah. And it's like, bro, you should know your dreams are bats.

Jack: Not just like, how do you know it's not gonna show them that you're Batman?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: And like, you got lucky that it for whatever reason, all it did was show them a bunch of f****** bats. Out of context.

Cristina: Like, who would not look at that and be like, that's gotta be Batman.

Jack: Like, look, there's a f****** guy out there who dresses like he doesn't look like a bat. But look, he dresses and calls himself a Batman. He only comes out at night. He's always in black. And f****** Bruce Wayne only sees bats in his. There's no other thought.

Cristina: It's zero so insane. If he wasn't Batman.

Jack: Yes, that's my point. Like, would. You're a f****** idiot for jumping in that machine. Yeah, like, how much crazier are you than Batman if Batman dresses up like a bat, goes around kicking people off buildings saying he's justice and claiming he's the night.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And you're the one who only thinks of bats. No other thought. You go around your day about your day with just.

Cristina: Just plagued.

Jack: Yeah, just bats in the Just plague. Just plagued by thoughts of bats at all times.

Cristina: Maybe Bruce Wayne could say, like, I recently got beat up by Batman or something.

Jack: Now I'm just always.

Cristina: Now I'm scarred by bats. He's just lying. He should have lied and Made Batman look like the bad guy.

Jack: Also. Okay, this is a weird one, right? Because Batman doesn't have any powers.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But some versions of Batman, he does. No.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Like, there's Pats. Wherever the f*** he goes.

Cristina: There's what?

Jack: Bats? And it's like, do you. Do you have a power, bro? Do you talk to bats?

Cristina: I don't. He probably just list them out.

Jack: Are they hidden in his suit, like a magic trick?

Cristina: Yeah, just. He's got. Yeah, he's a magician. He got the trick from that guy you said. I always forget his name.

Jack: Joker.

Cristina: Whatever. Yes.

Jack: Seriously. Here's a bat.

Cristina: Yes. He will. Teach him that, right? He's magical. I don't even know. I feel like he sounds magical.

Jack: Have. I don't know.

Cristina: He showed him the tricks of bringing people back to life and just bats, I guess.

Jack: Man. I don't know what the deal with that is. He'll be, like, fighting, and then bats show up. Or he's gonna disappear in a swarm of bats, show up, and surround him. And then the bats spread out, and he's not there. And it's like, are you vampire, bro?

Cristina: He's a vampire.

Jack: Vampire.

Cristina: In that reality, he's a vampire.

Jack: Yo. It's crazy. Obviously. Like, he probably just walked away. But, like, that's the question, dude, because he was standing there, and then bats show up. It's not like he blew up into a cloud of bats, but, like, weird. Weird.

Cristina: He's a billionaire.

Jack: Those. So those are robots?

Cristina: No, he's just got. Oh, yes.

Jack: Those are bat bots.

Cristina: Bat bots? Yep. He's just got billions of bat bots.

Jack: Just watching the whole city.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: And we know in the movies, he hacked into the city, everybody's phone, everybody's. Everything. He hacked into everything.

Cristina: He's got bad bots.

Jack: You got bad bots. Cameras everywhere.

Cristina: Bats aren't real.

Jack: Bats aren't real.

Cristina: They're just robots. He's my Batman.

Jack: Birds are probably real. No, he probably just stole the idea from birds. And it's like, I could do that with bats.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Bat bots.

Cristina: Batbots. That's it.

Jack: Of course. We're idiots. Why would we think there's a flying mammal?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's so stupid.

Cristina: Well, then what was in his dream? What was in his mind? If those aren't really bats?

Jack: No, because bats aren't real. He had a thought, which was one day, he's obsessed.

Cristina: He created the creature.

Jack: How did Steve Jobs come up with the ipod? And then the ipod led to the iPhone.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You know? You know.

Cristina: But that's not. I don't know. But music has always been around. I don't know.

Jack: And like, he started on, like, a computer. He was like, imma make the thing. I only got one vision. So if you. If one day Steve Jobs is like, I got a secret identity. Right now I'm just a hippie. You'll never know who I really am. And then the Riddler tricks Steve Jobs to go into this machine. All he sees is, like, a computer screen. He's like, this must be the f****** billionaire Steve Jobs. Because there's a. There's a screen with things on it that aren't.

Cristina: With an apple symbol. Yeah.

Jack: Like, it must be Steve Jobs. This hippie must be Steve Jobs. And so this is the story of Batman, which is like, in sea Bats. In fact, when the Riddler saw all those bats, he's like, what the f*** is this? It looks like a rat with wings. How stupid. How stupid? Look at his imagination. He's probably making fun. How stupid. Look, his imagination. Rats with wings. Is he a child?

Cristina: But he calls himself Batman. So no one thought what bat was in Batman?

Jack: No, they're like, it's f****** crazy guy.

Cristina: Like, they're like, from like, baseball bat.

Jack: Yeah. They're thinking, like, he thinks he's a black baseball bat or some. With wings. It's a flying baseball bat. Look how stupid. And then Bruce Wayne has flying rats. That's why they didn't connect the dots, because it's like a flying rat. That doesn't make sense.

Cristina: That doesn't make sense.

Jack: Yeah, they don't. They don't call it a bat. They don't know that's a bat yet.

Cristina: I rather imagine that he has one magical trick which is just having bats appear out of nowhere.

Jack: No, I think he has bat tech.

Cristina: I know.

Jack: And those are all bat bots. And he summons a swarm of bat bots with AI controlled by, like, a suit or something. Or maybe it's Alfred somewhere. What the. Lucius controlling it from, like, the hacking place that they do hacking? Yeah, like, whatever.

Cristina: But then why a cave? Bats live in caves. Or I guess he made that up.

Jack: Maybe he's. Yeah, he's obsessed with, like, this concept. Really? Really.

Cristina: So he made up the concept that Bath l. Caves.

Jack: Yeah. He's saying bats live in caves outside. So Because. Because my narrative plays out this way.

Cristina: Okay. Everything we know about bats is because he made it up.

Jack: Yeah. First there was Superman.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: In dc.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Then shortly thereafter, Batman was invented. And after that, many years later, when we invented the technology, bats were invented. To be in reality. Okay, so, like, before our time, there were probably no bats.

Cristina: Of course. No bats.

Jack: Bats have only recently been around, but we've been lied to about bats. All that. Have you ever seen a bat?

Cristina: Personally, I think so. Not like close up.

Jack: So you can't prove it's a robot.

Cristina: No, I can't.

Jack: It just looks like a flying rat.

Cristina: Yeah, well, I don't even know.

Jack: It was. So it's too fast and, like, erratic, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So you can't focus. It moves in such a way that you can't see it. Be a robot. Of course, because it's a robot.

Cristina: Yeah. Yes, yes.

Jack: Since works.

Cristina: I'd rather he be a magician that does magic with bats. He just turns things into bats.

Jack: That's not a man. I mean, I guess if you. David. Playing it or whatever the. And like, here's me fighting you on a roof.

Cristina: They tie him up in rope and then he just turns the rope into bats or something when he, like, rips it apart.

Jack: Fair.

Cristina: Just rip. And then, you know, bats come out.

Jack: Like, how'd you do that? Yeah, it's like, wait till I show you the next one. Then he just grabs a bottle and eats it.

Cristina: Yeah, and then he spits out of that.

Jack: Yeah, he's exactly. He's like, watch. And he just eats a piece of glass. And that comes out of his mouth.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: It's like, I have. I'm like David Blaine. I could do everything he does, except the ending result is always a bat. Yes, it's always bad.

Cristina: David Blaine is not a magician.

Jack: I mean, he's. No, he isn't magician. He just has a bunch of other lame f****** things he does.

Cristina: His magician stuff is just.

Jack: Look, I know I just beat you and I tied you up. I'm Batman, McKenna. I know, bro. I know you're Batman, doll. You wouldn't have done this otherwise. But watch, watch. Look at the rope around you. I'm gonna eat this bottle, bat. And now for my finale. Look at this giant nail. Here is my hand. I'm gonna put this nail through my hand. And then he starts putting the nail through his hand. And out the other side of his hand, a f****** bat flies out the criminals like, wow, he deserves to go to jail.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: This is impressive.

Cristina: So he shows off his hand. Like, look, there's nothing there but some blood.

Jack: Not even. Look, if I wipe it off, there's no more hole or anything.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: How'd I do it? How do I do it? He's got them confused until the cops show up.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It's like. Got him. Got him. Colonel, they're right here. I got them.

Cristina: They're very confused. Yeah.

Jack: They're plotting and everything, like. Yeah, yeah. They're getting arrested. She's like. This is impressive. Impressive.

Cristina: Has he shown the police his tricks? No.

Jack: They don't know how he catches them.

Cristina: No. His magic trick.

Jack: No, that's not what I mean. He doesn't show the police. The police doesn't know how Batman stops and subdues crime. Yeah. He just shows up and awesome with f****** magic trick has all their attentions.

Cristina: Awesome. Yes. I hope that. Why is there a version? There's probably a version. We made that a version now.

Jack: Yes. This is new Batman.

Cristina: This is the new Batman.

Jack: We're gonna do everything we can to buy the rights for one film and a comic book series.

Cristina: To do comic books.

Jack: We do both.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: A series of graphic novels and a television animated show and a live action television show, all based on batgician Bagician.

Cristina: The Batition.

Jack: The bagician.

Cristina: Won't we be sued because it's just Batman, but he does magic.

Jack: We're not gonna be sued. We're gonna buy the rights to Batman to bat Jason.

Cristina: Okay. We can't look like Batman.

Jack: He's gonna look exactly Batman. It is Batman. It's just exactly the origin story and everything. Thomas Wayne and everything.

Cristina: We didn't even change the names. No, it's all the same.

Jack: Bruce Wayne, the bad dish.

Cristina: We're gonna. They're not gonna have a problem with that.

Jack: Nope. Because we're gonna get the rights.

Cristina: How are they gonna let us get the rights?

Jack: We buy. We pay money. They all. Everybody reacts to money.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That's how people have made different versions of Batman.

Cristina: That's how we're gonna do it. Okay.

Jack: That's how it goes. So you do Batman.

Cristina: That's me.

Jack: Also the bad gician.

Cristina: The magician.

Jack: Anyways, Anyways. So conclusion. You guys now know the true story about Batman. He runs an only fans. That's where he gets his money. He invented only fans. And he does magic tricks to catch all the criminals and, like, trick them until the cops show up. And also he wants. His one true vision is to become a bat. And also, bats don't exist because he made them up. And Little mermaid wants a soul. He likes to show off magic. The mermaid wants a soul. And we got to stuff Pinocho into Frankenstein so that he could wear a meat suit.

Cristina: Yeah. That's disturbing.

Jack: Yeah. What it was. There wasn't. I don't know what the. It was it might have been like a meat canyon cartoon or something where he, like, cut somebody and like, crawled in their body or something, I think.

Cristina: So was it Pinocchio that did that? Yeah, I feel like.

Jack: No, Pinocchio was like a demon of some sort.

Cristina: Yeah, but was he inside of someone?

Jack: No, I don't. Maybe it might have been. I don't know. It's been a while since Hunter was on this show. That was like three seasons ago. We gotta get Hunter back on the show. Get Hunter. I'm gonna see. Get Hunter Hancock to come back, talk about meat canyon and all that stuff, how it's blown up since. Since then. That'd be cool. Hunter's cool. Chill guy. Anyways, so if you guys like this conversation, which was absolutely absurd, but, you know, they're all absolutely absurd, you can find more of that on the official website greathoughts.info or on Spotify or Apple Podcasts or anywhere you get your podcast, pretty much.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. UsConvopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to subscribe, rate and review the show, which are all very important and great and fantastic. And find me on stereo.

Cristina: Yes. And let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yeah, Word of mouth. You know, the power of discussion. Tell people you know the true story behind Batman. Now this is the real story.

Cristina: This is. Yes, Replace the old version of Batman and everything you knew about him.

Jack: Yeah. Forget everything you know about Batman. Now this is Batman.

Cristina: What?

Jack: This is Batman. Who's Batman? Right. Because you forgot everything you know about Batman.

Cristina: Everything you know except for his name. Except for not calling him Batman, man.

Jack: That's an old Mitch Hedberg joke. Forget everything you know about burgers. Now here is a burger. What's that? He forgot everything he knew about burgers. It wasn't about burgers, though. I don't remember what the f***.

Cristina: What happened in SpongeBob.

Jack: It did.

Cristina: Something like that happened, but I forget.

Jack: He forgot how to make Krabby Patties.

Cristina: Yes. Because he had to remember how to run a restaurant.

Jack: Did I just cross spongebob with Mitch Head?

Cristina: Maybe. I don't know.

Jack: Check out Mitch Hedberg. Shout out. Great comedian.

Cristina: Well, tell him we said hi.

Jack: Yeah, tell Mitch Hedberg, like, I mean, what's it called?

Cristina: Luigi board.

Jack: A Luigi board. Use a little full circle. We started with Mario and Full Circle. Use a Luigi board.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Use that Luigi to get to Mitch Hedberg on the other side of the ether.

Cristina: This has been the Just Conversation podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening.

Jack: Bye. I mean, of course you've heard of a cugnugh fugot.

Cristina: Where have I heard of that?

Jack: You heard it in school. They taught you what a cugnugh fug it was?

Cristina: No, that's not a real word.

Jack: How do you know?

Cristina: None of that sounds familiar.

Jack: You're telling me that in no language cugnug fuggit is a real word?

Cristina: No.

Jack: Like factually, you believe there's no combination of words in all of language that equates to kug nug fugit?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: It sounds like gibberish.

Jack: So does a bunch of other s*** that we don't understand.

Cristina: But you don't know what? That. That's not a word that you know what. What language is that?

Jack: Kugnug fugit is.

Cristina: What does it mean? Use it in a sentence.

Jack: You want me to use kugnug fugit in a sentence, huh?

Cristina: Well, first define it.

Jack: Kugnug fugit.

Cristina: The definition.

Jack: The definition of kugnug. F*** it. I don't know, man. I don't speak that language.

Cristina: And when have you heard of it?

Jack: I've heard it used repeatedly to insult me. It's an insult in some language.

Cristina: What language?

Jack: A language. I don't know every language. I couldn't tell you.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The Just Conversation podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by Great Thoughts.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 143: Commercialistic Crap Products

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Do pharmaceutic companies avoid creating cures? Are commercial products intentionally created with a shorter life expectancy than is possible in order to promote return business? Is capitalism to blame for intentional restraint for quality production? Is Commercialism and Individualism destroying health and education? Or are the hosts just secret communists? Find out this episode!

Rambling 143: Commercialistic Crap Products

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • Drug Dens
  • Cancer Cure
  • STDs
  • Playstatio vs Xbox
  • Capitalism
  • Quality Technology
  • Remedy vs Cure
  • Wealth vs Riches
  • Vaccines
  • Facebook Conspiracy Theories
  • Confirmation Bias
  • Communism
  • Military Funding
  • Pharmaceutical Companies
  • Business Competition
  • Patient vs Customer
  • Political Checks and Balances

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram -https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Just Conversation podcast, the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childish ways. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe button to get notified the second new episodes are release.

Cristina: Also, this show is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes. So be sure to find somebody, grab them gently by the hand and pull them forcefully after you've grabbed them gently by the hand into the den where the podcast is already playing, and there's a bunch of drug addicts doing nothing but listening to this podcast in the middle of them sticking syringes with God knows what serums into their veins. You pull this person into that place, horrified, terrified for their lives, while this is playing in the background, and you make sure they listen to this show.

Cristina: Are you also horrified and terrified?

Jack: Why would you go somewhere you're horrified and terrified of?

Cristina: Oh, I thought it was like you went into the den, but you didn't know what you were going to see in the den either.

Jack: I mean, then what, you just happened to, like, you chase the sound of the podcast? No, because you needed to already know the podcast is playing, which means you know the place.

Cristina: Like, Mary, you just put the podcast there, walked away. When you came back with the other person, then you're both kind of horrified about what you found.

Jack: That's weird. So you just came in a bunch of. In that short time, a bunch of f****** heroin users and like, meth. Liquefied meth users or whatever showed up. Can you imagine? That'd be f****** crazy.

Cristina: Yes. But this person. Okay, so you brought this person to the den with drug addicts. Are you also one.

Jack: I don't know. I don't know what these people do in their personal lives. Maybe. Maybe they're just cool with drug addicts. Yeah, it is completely possible that that's a scenario taking place right now. Just a bunch of our listeners are casually okay with, like, heroin addicts. They just live in house, or not even live in houses with them, but they just. They, for whatever reason, know heroin addicts. I don't know. They, for whatever reason, know about drug dens, drug dens that they're familiar with enough to know that the show is.

Cristina: Playing there in audit drug dens. In.

Jack: In this particular drug den that they went to.

Cristina: Well, how many listeners do we have so that. That still feels like a lot.

Jack: A lot of people going to drug dens.

Cristina: Yeah. Unless they're all going to the same ones.

Jack: All our listeners are drug users.

Cristina: Are they not all doing this together?

Jack: No, there's one. One of them.

Cristina: One of them, one of them.

Jack: Usually there's an array of people doing an array of things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But I pick one person who's doing something specific and I talk about them. Like the woodsman.

Cristina: Okay. Oh, so it's not every listener.

Jack: Yeah. There isn't like a fuckton of woodsmen. There was a woodsman.

Cristina: Oh, I imagine it was every.

Jack: So to make this totally clear, all our listeners are cancer. Having woodsmen who do drugs in drug.

Cristina: Density and also do all these other things. You've always mentioned every single thing. I thought you were like. That's why I didn't understand why they'd come back to listen, because I thought. Oh. Or unless it was the person they. The next person that they got to listen, they're the ones going through it now. Is that what's happening?

Jack: I don't know if they listened again. I guess they have to be a committed listener after the first time listening.

Cristina: No, I mean like the person that they're. They forced to listen.

Jack: Yeah. They have to become a committed listener in order for that to happen. So they have to listen to the next episode in order to hear being told to find somebody else to listen.

Cristina: Oh, okay. But it's different people. Okay. That makes more sense.

Jack: The way humans work.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: How there's this human and then, wait for it, there's that human. Whoa.

Cristina: But they're all doing something similar either way, even if just one at a time.

Jack: The only thing they have in common.

Cristina: Is the podcast and that they're forcing someone to listen to it.

Jack: I hope.

Cristina: You hope? Yeah.

Jack: I don't know that for a fact.

Cristina: Yeah. But then the stories that you're talking about them are that. Is that really happening or is that what you're hoping they will do?

Jack: No, there's at least one person. There's so many people. There's at least one person going through what I'm talking about.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Bare minimum, there's one person doing it.

Cristina: What? Okay.

Jack: That's how it goes.

Cristina: Yeah, that's how it goes. Okay. But they're all dying from cancer.

Jack: Yeah. Anybody who listens by default gets cancer. There's nothing we could do about that.

Cristina: Oh, okay. That makes sense.

Jack: And even if we could, it removes the incentive.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like you. You don't want to die in vain. You don't want to just have cancer. Because you listen to the show now. You need to spread that cancer out.

Cristina: Hi.

Jack: Because otherwise you got cancer for no reason. There must be a purpose to your life.

Cristina: And the purpose is to give someone else cancer.

Jack: No, it's to get somebody else to listen. They'll just catch cancer because then the rules.

Cristina: Okay, so they're. They're not even doing it to get the other person cancer, even though they know the other person is going to get cancer.

Jack: No, they're just trying to get the other person to listen to a show they love that happen to give them cancer.

Cristina: They still love us.

Jack: The content is superior to the outcome.

Cristina: Oh, wow. Okay. And we gave them a purpose.

Jack: We gave them a purpose, which was get more listeners.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: It's the cult.

Cristina: It is a cult.

Jack: It is a cult.

Cristina: It's so wrong, though, why these are giving them cancer.

Jack: They're cool with it.

Cristina: We can't just give them more cancer, right?

Jack: No, they just. I mean, unless somebody has, like, super cancer.

Cristina: I don't know. Maybe one of them has super cancer.

Jack: The most cancer y cancer of them all.

Cristina: Different types of cancers. Can one person have different types at one time?

Jack: I'm sure that's a thing that could happen in, like, the real world.

Cristina: Like, that must be super rare, though. But one of our listeners might have multiple.

Jack: Yeah, somebody might have several kinds of cancer. I'm sure there's somebody with, like, lung cancer that also has, like, skin cancer.

Cristina: Yes. That's horrible.

Jack: Has to be possible.

Cristina: It has to be. Right? Right. Unless cancer is picky and it's like, you can only have one.

Jack: It's weird because, like, cancer is f*****, though, because, like, we can't do. I think there's a cure for cancer, right? There would have to be.

Cristina: Why does there have to be?

Jack: Because enough money thrown at anything solves any problem. And we don't have an incentive to stop cancer because in the pharmaceutical companies run out of business because that's one of the big money makers.

Cristina: But it's not the biggest money maker.

Jack: Probably.

Cristina: Probably about the flu. Isn't that super big?

Jack: No, it's just easy to make a lot of s*** for.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Like in reality, like, cancer is one of the big kahunas. Cancer, aids, all these f****** things that are, like, easy to stop.

Cristina: Think AIDS is easy to stop.

Jack: AIDS is not even that problematic. There's so much s*** that can hold you alive for quite some time but.

Cristina: Not get rid of it.

Jack: But not get rid of it. You know what's the craziest One that. It's always weird to me. Herpes.

Cristina: Why is that? Because it's not, like, lethal, but it could become lethal.

Jack: I guess, maybe.

Cristina: Why? What's the big deal? Like, I know it's what it is.

Jack: Sores. You get sores. Okay. How horrible. And, like, only if you have an outbreak. Yeah, but we equate herpes to aids. AIDS kills the inside of your body and you catch anything, you die. Herpes. Oh, I itch like, a little. If I have an outbreak, maybe.

Cristina: Yeah. But why are people freaked out about herpes?

Jack: I don't know. Because it has STD the same way the f****** AIDS does. They're both STDs.

Cristina: Oh, so we just lump them all together.

Jack: Yeah, we're like, STDs are all together. You can literally get rid of chlamydia forever. You can just not have chlamydia after you had chlamydia.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: That's a thing you could just eradicate in your body. But we're like std.

Cristina: Oh, no. Oh, okay.

Jack: It's weird.

Cristina: That is weird.

Jack: That's strange, right?

Cristina: Yeah. I didn't realize that. It is just sores.

Jack: It is just sores. It's so f****** strange. I think people are just scared that it's the end of their sex life and so they make a giant big deal about it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Which is like maybe juice protection, though.

Cristina: Yeah. Or just like take breaks in sex, you know, like until the sore goes away. Because isn't that the thing with it? It comes and goes.

Jack: You can still spread it.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Although you have no source.

Cristina: Really. Yeah. Oh, I thought it had to be there.

Jack: Yeah. It's less likely, but it's so possible. It's just use protection. I gotta use a condom for the rest of my life. Boohoo, loser. The.

Cristina: Well, that's how you would avoid in the first place.

Jack: Yeah. That's how you would have dodged this bullet to begin with. And by not dodging the bullet, now you're obligated to do the thing.

Cristina: That's so crazy.

Jack: Yeah, it's crazy. It's. So many of these f****** things are like that. Really? Really? Aids, hiv. That's it, aids.

Cristina: Wait, one doesn't one become the other.

Jack: HIV could become aids. Yeah, I'm sure you can just catch AIDS right out though, right? Like you could catch hiv. Or you could just get like flat out AIDS in one shot. No, no, you need to get hiv.

Cristina: I don't know. I. I always thought it was one, then came the other. But I don't know if you could.

Jack: Just get AIDS because Magic Johnson had hiv. Did he cure HIV before it became aids?

Cristina: Huh?

Jack: Could you cure HIV and not aids? And so we make a big deal about HIV the way we do like f****** chlamydia and herpes. When in reality it's not.

Cristina: Maybe. I don't know. There's so many things, there's so many STDs.

Jack: But here's the problem. Pharmaceutical companies have no need to eradicate these things. It would not be beneficial.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because preventative medicine prevents return business.

Cristina: So you just put a band aid on it?

Jack: Yeah. If preventative medicine prevents return business, then preventing return business means no money. But you are a business first.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So if you cure the problem, then you don't have that patient anymore. Which that patient is really. What's another name? Customer.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: And you always want customers to come back to the store.

Cristina: That's why light bulbs. I saw that recently about light bulbs that they last a specific amount of time that's calculated. Just because they don't. They need the competition, they need the business. Like if someone was selling from that lasted way longer because they could do it.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: They'd just get all the company. Like there's no competition if someone.

Jack: Yeah. It's a double edged sword. Because if you're the company who made the infinite lasting light bulb, of course it wouldn't last for infinity, but it would last really long. So you can make a light bulb to last 10 years. Right. And everybody else says light bulb lasts six months. Now the problem is everybody's gonna go buy your light bulbs. Yes.

Cristina: But then you won't have business. You won't have business until 10 years.

Jack: Exactly. Every one person that bought isn't coming back for 10 years.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: It's a weird problem to have. Right.

Cristina: Cuz your business and there's no business.

Jack: There'S no business in that.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So you need to create crap in order for people to come and buy the crap. But you can't make quality. Really?

Cristina: No. Because then people won't come back to agree upon the quality that's gonna be.

Jack: Yep. You can always beat the competition by going over. But then you're also going to have people showing up less often.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You need to be so well known that you can survive off of word alone.

Cristina: You can do what like the phone companies do. They have, they try to have one thing that's better than all the other phones, but everything else is the same. Like this phone will have the best camera. But everything else sucks as much as every Other phone.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah.

Cristina: Like, they're not that much different iPhones and Androids or anything, but they'll just come with something. Just one thing.

Jack: Which they probably agreed on.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Secretly behind closed doors. Well, this is the thing. We are. You can't. You can't do this.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Or we're gonna have this phone. That means you could have one phone that does the same thing. And whatever the most loyal to, they'll buy.

Cristina: Oh, yeah. And that's what we do, too. We just buy the phone. That is what we're most loyal to. I don't know why, but that's what you do. I feel like a lot of people do, especially iPhone people. Just buy.

Jack: Oh, yeah. Because iPhones suck now. We lost jobs and iPhone went down.

Cristina: The drain with it, but it hasn't lost anyone, I think.

Jack: You think? I know a lot of people who went from iPhone to Android.

Cristina: Oh, I do too, actually. And I do know also the same loyal people of iPhone Fair.

Jack: I know about as many. Yeah. I know people who are loyal in the other direction, too, who just don't move from Android.

Cristina: That's true. And they probably will never try anything else but Android. Like, no one's experimental in that way.

Jack: Yeah. It's like PlayStation people will always be PlayStation people and Xbox people will always be Xbox people, even if Xbox is inferior by kind of every margin. Less powerful. Wacker graphics. No f****** exclusives.

Cristina: No games.

Jack: No games. Like, it's all the same s***. All they got going for them right now is that game passing.

Cristina: That game passing. That's pretty good, though, I guess. For now.

Jack: Now, here's a case in which having the product that lasts a really long time is more important because you don't want people repeatedly buying a PlayStation. Because you need to sell games, and if there's a gap in the middle, then you got a problem. So you need a PlayStation that's durable. This is the proof that things can last a really long time.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: These consoles are made to last 10, 20 years.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, that's a thing we could just f****** do. Because they're trying to sell the software, not the hardware. They need you to have the hardware so they can sell you the software.

Cristina: That's interesting. Yeah. So they have to make it durable.

Jack: So they have to make it durable opposite to the light bulb. Like, there's nothing you're adding to that light bulb. No, it's the light bulb they're trying to sell.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So the light bulb needs to expire so that you come back and get another one.

Cristina: Yes. And. But do the systems have to eventually expire?

Jack: No, because the games moved on to the better software.

Cristina: And the better software to the better hardware.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Which one is. Wait, the hardware is the system?

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah. And the better hardware. It's getting harder to prove the hardware is better.

Jack: Yes. There was a article explaining how humans capacity to tell graphical graphic difference has stopped since the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.

Cristina: Yes. But people really believe that there is.

Jack: Yeah. So the idea is the games themselves. We can tell by looking. Oh, this looks better than that game. Yeah, 100%. But it's because we didn't have the capacity back then. Now that system, through updates reached its peak to the point that it has the capacity to render the same level of graphic that something later does.

Cristina: Like the PlayStation 4.

Jack: Yes. Like the PlayStation 4 is really, really overpowered. But also most of our eyes can't tell most things. It's really up to how the developers are using the technology. They get more clever with it to come up with tricks to make things more believable and move in different ways that convince our mind. But graphic wise, our brains have kind of capped off. Our eyes can only see so much and we've already hit that peak. So it's about how we make the world respond to trick our brains into believing, oh, this is more real than it is.

Cristina: But they're still trying to sell the newer systems on the graphics.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Even if it doesn't matter anymore.

Jack: This is, this is the problem. Right. There are scenarios in which the graphics do matter. So if you have a cutscene and you have a close up of a character.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Well, now that character's face is covering the whole screen. Now you don't have a tiny character that looks human at a distance. Now you have an upgrade close look of this character. Now your eye needs all the pixels possible because it's not one little point. They're far away. And this many pixels make them up. No, they are the screen. And now you can see the illusion that was taking place far away doesn't hold up up close.

Cristina: Yeah. So it's still important.

Jack: It's still important to some degree, yeah.

Cristina: Do you think a better TV helps?

Jack: Not really. None of this s*** really matters because while we're playing a game, we tune out most of it. It's only when the people who stop to look to break.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You know, people who stop and let me get all up and close onto this person's face to see how real it looks. Those people see the flaws. But those people were Already not immersed. They were intentionally breaking reality. Let's go do something. So they didn't give a s*** in the first place about how real it was. They wanted to prove it wasn't.

Cristina: Yes. Like the details in Last of Us Two that we didn't even notice. Like, them opening those doors. Like normal people open doors. Like no one paid attention.

Jack: No, no, no. It's not that nobody paid attention. This is where you're completely wrong for one basic reason. If something is done right, it goes unnoticed because it doesn't stand out as wrong.

Cristina: But then in part one, did you notice? Was it like, oh, no, that wouldn't be how they do this thing.

Jack: Well, no, it was less good. But it was good enough to not matter.

Cristina: Exactly. Like, the game itself was good enough that it didn't really matter. Those small details, like, it's nice that they're there.

Jack: No, no, no, no, no. If those details weren't there, you'd notice if they walked up to the door and it flew open, you would notice.

Cristina: And it flew open. I don't know. It depends on, I think, how the characters react to, like, if they're so still. I don't know. I guess the detail is pretty crazy. I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, you don't notice it happening because it looks so normal that it's an afterthought. Yeah, but if they walk up to the door, don't touch it, and they move their hand in a way, like if they're scooping something that's not even there and then the door flies open, they're like, yeah, that's the motion for opening a door. Like, that's weird. But you'll get over it and keep playing the game.

Cristina: Yeah. Like Resident Evil games, Doors never mattered. They've always been annoying in that game.

Jack: Yeah. But you are aware that it looks unnatural.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You're not unaware. You just learn to tune it out.

Cristina: Yeah. So ridiculous.

Jack: While when it's particularly high quality in the game, it goes over your head because you never noticed it was perfect. You have to be looking for perfection in order to see it.

Cristina: But should we be looking for that? Should we have that in our games? Is that that important?

Jack: Free immersion. Yeah. You do get pulled out when things are ridiculously fake. When somebody walks up to a door, makes a motion that isn't opening a door, but they just want you to understand that that's the motion for opening a door. And then the door flies open, you're like, well, what a weird way to open the. Now you know, inherently. Yeah. He Opened the door, whatever. Yeah, but it's not as perfect in your mind. The fact that you even had to acknowledge. Oh, that's how door opens at any given moment.

Cristina: What if the game is cartoony, though? Like would. Does that take away from the immersion? Because it's not realistic, but purp. Not realistic.

Jack: It depends on the person. That was a way general question. Like, I don't know. Depends on who's playing and why they're.

Cristina: Playing like a Mario game.

Jack: Like, are they playing for the immersion? Are they playing for the realism? Are they playing for the platforming?

Cristina: Who plays for the realism? That's a weird way to play.

Jack: What do you mean? Isn't that what like a simulator is?

Cristina: I guess I don't play enough simulators.

Jack: Simulators like they are for realism. That's the point.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's somebody literally playing for the realism of doing the thing that they couldn't do in real life.

Cristina: Yes. Like those farm farmer.

Jack: Yeah. Not everybody has a farm, but some.

Cristina: People can go and farm, ride those trucks. Okay. Yeah.

Jack: That's a thing that happens. Depends on the game or what matters.

Cristina: Yeah, that's true. Yeah.

Jack: There's an infinite number of players, so there must be an infinite number of ways to play.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But all those things are. Selling that software in the first place is the reason that they don't need to make s***** consoles.

Cristina: Because then they just have to worry about the amount of games they have.

Jack: Yes. Which as technology has moved forward, has become way more efficient because you just need to develop the game. You don't need a hundred million billion physical copies anymore. Although a bunch of people still make physical copies. They're trying to phase that out intentionally because that's more money.

Cristina: It's more money to have it all digital.

Jack: Yeah. Because you don't have to create all the discs.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And disc boxes and all this bullshit.

Cristina: That's extra money. Okay.

Jack: Yeah, that's extra money. Well, whereas when it's fully digital, you just upload the one file.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then everybody downloads the one file.

Cristina: But when it comes to the most games, that's got to be the computer.

Jack: Yeah. The computer has everything that's on Xbox, everything that's on PlayStation and its own series of everything. One thing it doesn't have access to is Nintendo.

Cristina: That's. Yeah, that's impossible. That's just Nintendo.

Jack: Yeah. Somehow they've successfully functioned off of sharing with nobody.

Cristina: Yes. But they end up getting other people's games anyway. Everyone wants to share with them because.

Jack: They know that it's always the Third console.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So if it's there, at least we'll still make money.

Cristina: Yeah. They need two more cross play games. That's what I want to see more of. Like, come on, everyone has their consoles already. Just give us the ability to play with each other.

Jack: That really is going. That's gonna happen. It's gonna keep happening. Games that are shared amongst all the consoles are probably gonna have cross play. Call of Duties of the World, the Battlefields of the world, the Rocket Leagues of the world. Anything that has players on many different systems.

Cristina: Does Rocket League already have that? I know Call of Duty.

Jack: Rocket League was one of the first.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: I believe so, if I'm not mistaken.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But yeah, I think so because it's just a lot of different systems that have the same games.

Cristina: Awesome.

Jack: Was Rocket league just a PlayStation thing? No, I'm pretty sure Rocket League is on many consoles.

Cristina: PlayStation, I feel like. Yeah, I can see that on Nintendo. It makes sense.

Jack: I don't know if it is, but yeah, yeah, I can totally see that there too.

Cristina: And I know Call of Duty is on everything. Probably not to not Nintendo though, but.

Jack: They have a version of Call of Duty Zone Nintendo that's like watered down.

Cristina: Oh yeah, There's a multiplayer.

Jack: Don't have it. Yeah. But yes. So that's definitely why a bunch of bullshit needs to be sold. Everybody likes to make bull crap. Just all the crap.

Cristina: Because that's what makes money.

Jack: That's what makes money. Yes. That's the same problem again. Back to pharmaceutical companies. You need people to come buy the light bulb.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: The light bulb is the medicine. If your medicine stops the problem, what's the point? They don't come back for the medicine.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You stopped the customer.

Cristina: So you have to get them hooked on it.

Jack: You got it.

Cristina: Not even hooked. But they have to believe they need it.

Jack: Yes. So the idea would be if you have pain, rather than giving you something that cures you of pain, I'll give you something that temporarily suppresses the pain. Now you can cope through life, but eventually that will wear off and then you come back for more.

Cristina: Yeah. Oh my gosh. That's horrible. Yeah.

Jack: There's some f***** up nature to it, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The solution to this problem in reality is you put. You remove the ability for pharmaceutical companies to be owned by private industry and you put them all on the government. There's a reason this would work, because the government money would be what's being used. The money that goes into politician pockets. They will make sure your problem is f****** solved.

Cristina: So they can stop putting money into it.

Jack: So they can stop putting money into it. Every. There's. There's. We have an AIDS problem. Well, we gotta f****** get rid of the saves problem because I need that money in my f****** pocket. And if we keep f****** giving them remedies and they keep coming, we got to keep making the medicine.

Cristina: Aren't they the ones in charge of schools? They're not. I thought they were doing a horrible job at that.

Jack: Well, they need people to go to the schools, and they get charged for the school. Well, they distribute s***** money. They. The other schools are privately owned.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: And there's redlining surrounding schools.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So your community must support the school. But if your community is of low income, then your school is also of low income, rather than each state supplying all the schools equally.

Cristina: Oh, that's messed up.

Jack: Yeah, there's a s***** system funding schools.

Cristina: Okay, districts.

Jack: There you go.

Cristina: Districts. Yeah, that's problematic.

Jack: While when you're talking about the pharmaceutical industry, if the. If pharmaceuticals are free because they are by the government and the government has to take care of its people, there's no way in h*** they're gonna let you stay sick. They can't afford it. They're gonna make sure, by any means necessary, you're f****** cured. If we have less citizens, then we have less tax money. You can't be dead.

Cristina: Is that why free health care works in other countries?

Jack: Yes, because they need to solve the problem.

Cristina: Interesting. Oh, yeah.

Jack: When it's run by private companies, they need your customer. Your customer. They don't get paid with tax dollars. They get paid by your return business. Yeah, but if you, the person, the patient, doesn't pay a dime because your government is supposed to make sure you're healthy, then they will 100% make sure you're healthy and get you the f*** out so you don't have to come back. But if you're dead, also no tax money. That's problematic.

Cristina: So you got to keep you healthy.

Jack: They got to keep you healthy. They got to make sure you are in a healthy condition. Not going to the doctor regularly.

Cristina: Amazing. Amazing.

Jack: That's the solution.

Cristina: And it is a solution in other places.

Jack: Yes. 100%.

Cristina: So crazy. We see that. And just. Just in jealousy or envy.

Jack: Yes, Capitalism. And capitalism destroys s***. The I'm better than you mentality. But some people are so poor, all they have is money, man. And that's like a reality in this country. Some people are so sad and poor that all they have is money. They got nothing else to live for.

Cristina: Do you Mean.

Jack: What do you mean? What?

Cristina: I mean that they're so poor they only have money.

Jack: Yeah. How pathetic of a human to only have money. And that's the one thing they have in life.

Cristina: They don't have anything else, like no friends or family.

Jack: You mean they don't. They don't have value in their life?

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Because purpose.

Jack: Value, meaning that's wealth.

Cristina: That's what they're missing.

Jack: You can have riches and no wealth. That's why they're different words.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You could have friends, family, love, excitement, enjoyment, fun, health.

Cristina: Without the money.

Jack: Without the money.

Cristina: Yeah. Unless you're Kat Von D. You have all of it.

Jack: Sure. I doubt all of it, but okay.

Cristina: No, she has, well, the wealth. And I'm sure she loves the art.

Jack: Yeah, but she's, like, miserable all the time. All her art is about how sad she is.

Cristina: Really. Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. Anywho, the point is that you don't need the money. Those people are sad. Some people have money and they're happy, but, like, most people aren't because they keep trying to get more.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's their one thing. It's like, well, one day filled a hole, and it's like, no, you're not. No, you're not. You keep trying. The reason you're still trying is because you haven't filled the hole yet. You're still trying.

Cristina: Like Elon Musk, rich people.

Jack: Well, Elon Musk has purpose. That's something different. He doesn't give a s*** about the money. And when he happens to be, like, a product of what he does.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: His passion is being lazy.

Cristina: His passion is being lazy.

Jack: So he overproduces to ease his life and be lazy.

Cristina: Mm. Mm.

Jack: Like, some people do have purpose. He goes out there and he makes stuff. People might talk all the s*** in the world about Jeff Bezos, but he just has ideas and he puts them into play. Yeah, sometimes you're maliciously executed, but whatever. Not malicious. He just doesn't care. Morally speaking, malicious is like Zucker, f*****. That guy's goal is money. But that's also why he's a pathetic loser.

Cristina: Yes. He's probably have no happiness.

Jack: Yeah, he doesn't have, like, goals in life. He just had, like, money is the goal. Everything else is a means to the money.

Cristina: Yeah. Oh, okay.

Jack: Bezos didn't give a s*** about the money. He was doing things. He was like, oh, I want to make this sounds like a good idea. And that sounds like a good idea. And this and that. These are people with purpose. The money isn't what makes them happy. It is just something they have.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: A lot of. But it's something they have, which some.

Cristina: People, that's the case. And some people, it's more like.

Jack: Exactly. Bill Gates, filthy rich, does a million things, though. He enjoys all of it. He just keeps doing things and finding new things to do and going to help people and sharing his money with people. Doesn't care because the money doesn't matter.

Cristina: Yeah. With his. He is trying to help people. Although now he's become the bad guy in a lot of people's view. I can't tell how they got this information where he's a villain. Well, he's such a villain character.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Because of this whole pandemic thing. I don't know. Just because he warned people. Now he's bad.

Jack: Conspiracy theory psychopaths want to find a problem with anything.

Cristina: They need someone to be the source of the problem.

Jack: Yeah. They need there to be a villain.

Cristina: Oh, yes.

Jack: And he knew.

Cristina: And he knew. He knew.

Jack: He talked about it. He knew. He's part of the cause or whatever.

Cristina: All he wanted to do was turn poop into clean water.

Jack: And then he's got vaccines in mind and he's like, this is how they've helped fund them. He helped scientists. He did what he had to to get vaccines out when people. Well, he's not a doctor. Yeah. But he was also not into making f****** vaccines. But in their eyes.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He went in the lab, f****** poured some chemicals together, walked outside and he's like, I got a vaccine. It's like, no. He paid chemists.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And biologists just to work together and make a f****** vaccine.

Cristina: Yeah. There was another wealthy person during this whole thing that gave a lot of her money to the vaccine cure. She donated it. No one saw her as an evil villain because of it.

Jack: It's because he's also out there pushing it. Well, Bill Gates is saying, take it, don't take it. Must be corrupted. Like, why?

Cristina: I don't know. Because they have nanobytes in the nanobots. Nanobytes in it. That's so crazy.

Jack: Or chips.

Cristina: Or chips.

Jack: You're getting chipped. What do you mean, nanobots?

Cristina: I don't. That was one of the things. I don't know how, but the shots have nanobots.

Jack: I thought it was chips. You were getting chipped.

Cristina: It's. There's so many different versions of it that you're picky about it. I don't know.

Jack: No, I didn't hear.

Cristina: Oh, nano.

Jack: Anything about nanobots. I only Heard about the chips.

Cristina: Yep. There's also nanobots that they put chips.

Jack: In you to track you.

Cristina: Well, chips are old. That's always been a thing. The new thing is nanobots.

Jack: What are the nanobots gonna do?

Cristina: Control your brain.

Jack: Is that the goal?

Cristina: I think so. I think it's always about mind control.

Jack: But, like, you go on Facebook.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's good enough.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They don't need all this advanced robotic technology to. You go on Facebook and you believe that there are conspiracy theories surrounding vaccine. Vaccines. There are conspiracy theories surrounding the moon landing. There are conspiracy theories surrounding presidents and reptilians and f****** adrenochrome and, like, pizza places with children in the basement.

Cristina: Like, all of that is through Facebook.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Like, Facebook's the villain.

Jack: You don't need nanobots if you're already dumb enough to believe, being brainwashed, that there are nanobots. If you're stupid enough to believe there are nanobots inside of a syringe being put into your bloodstream to go affect your brain.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: They don't need nanobots inside of a syringe to control your brain. Facebook convinced you already. You don't. That's crazy. That's a weird paradox, isn't it? If you believe it, they don't need it.

Cristina: They don't. Oh, yes.

Jack: Because you're already that gullible.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah. You just. The. There's nothing. Like. They should just end Facebook. They know they should just end it because of all this fake news. That is so people just eat it up. They're told that it's fake and beware.

Jack: They don't give a s***. No, no, no, no, no.

Cristina: They just eat it.

Jack: And all of us know these people. We all know these people who are personally.

Cristina: Yes. Yes.

Jack: There's nobody who doesn't know somebody on Facebook. And if you know somebody on Facebook book.

Cristina: You know, somebody who's read an article title or something.

Jack: Yeah. Somebody who's on a team based on Facebook.

Cristina: Yes. Who read about how cereals poisoning you or whatever.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And did no source research. No, no.

Cristina: But someone made a video explaining how it's.

Jack: And they believe it. They believe it. Yep. That's how it goes.

Cristina: What?

Jack: That's what Facebook is for. To brainwash a bunch of people into believing that there are a million different problems going on.

Cristina: So crazy. And I'm sure it spread to the other apps too. I'm sure it's an Instagram and Tick Tock and what is it? Twitter. But because the same people. Main source.

Jack: Because the same people who have Facebook want to share what they've learned to other with everybody else. And it's like, well, I have all these other social medias. I gotta go talk about this thing I found out, this destroying the world.

Cristina: Yeah. Let me make a video on Twitter.

Jack: And just spread like wildfires. The source is Facebook.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But it just keeps spreading and people are like, well, no, those are the righties. Or those are the. No, it's all of you. It's all of you. All sides.

Cristina: It's all sides.

Jack: If you are on a team, you fell for it.

Cristina: And if you're on Facebook, you fell. You probably fell for it.

Jack: Well, if you're on Facebook, you're on a team.

Cristina: Oh, yeah. Yes. Yes.

Jack: Yeah. If you're on the team, you fell for it. And if you're on the team, you're on Facebook.

Cristina: That's.

Jack: That's how it goes.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then there's the people who are like, well, no, Facebook is corrupt. I'm gonna go to this other website that does exactly the same thing, but.

Cristina: For my team that's probably owned by Facebook.

Jack: It's probably owned by Facebook or supported by Facebook.

Cristina: There's so many apps. Other apps that's owned by Facebook.

Jack: The other Trump ones.

Cristina: The Trump ones, yeah.

Jack: Because Facebook is like, it's so leftist and they're. They're censoring us here. So I'm gonna go somewhere where my type of people are at. You mean where you're gonna shut down the left ideology and have confirmation bias about your ideology instead of be somewhere where they have confirmation bias about their ideology so that you can say we're right? Because people are telling you you're right the same way people were telling them they're right when you were telling them they're wrong. So the same s***, but over there.

Cristina: Yes, fun. What do you care from that confirmation bias?

Jack: You feel good. You're like, yeah, yeah, I'm smart. I. I'm part of the in crowd. I know they're the stupid ones.

Cristina: I know now I gotta block them and never talk to them again.

Jack: Yeah, that happened so much starting like 20. Actually, it started in 2016.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah. People siding with Trump people. No, he's a monster.

Cristina: Oh, my God. I know. People who didn't like Trump, who just stopped being friends with people who supported Trump.

Jack: Yeah, you can see that on social media everywhere. No Trump supporters. If you support Trump, don't follow me.

Cristina: It's hilarious. All these Trump people are probably hiding or something, or at least around here.

Jack: Yeah, man, that's f****** crazy.

Cristina: That Facebook's crazy.

Jack: That everybody's crazy.

Cristina: Everyone's crazy. Yeah.

Jack: Yep. Everybody's got their own special brand of crazy. And everybody's got their own little confirmation bias bubble thing that they are following through with.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah.

Jack: We're not trying to fix problems. Nobody's trying to fix problems. Everybody just want to scream the loudest.

Cristina: Or blame someone else for the problem. Yeah.

Jack: When at the end of the day, the problem is made by the same people who you are following. Make the government solve everything. The government will if they have to pay for themselves.

Cristina: That's the solution.

Jack: That's the solution. Hold the government accountable. They want to. Look, people are trying to get rich off the government. They become politicians. They pocket money. Easy tax money, Easiest f****** way to get money. So make the. This is why they don't want to pay for s***. They will do whatever the f*** they can to convince you private industry is what matters. Well, no, make the government pay for things that require human, like human rights. Make them pay for human rights and health and education and all these things out of their own pocket and distribute it evenly to anyone and everyone and you will see a problem. They will immediately, immediately do whatever the f*** to solve the issue.

Cristina: If only we can come together to do that, though.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: The whole team thing really stops that.

Jack: Yeah, well, their goal is the whole team's thing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They need us to fight each other so that we don't realize that they're giving us bullshit that doesn't work and allowing companies to do things privately and f*** everybody over because we don't have to pay for it. We keep them fighting that industry is the problem. And then we don't have to pay for the things that we can easily cover with the tax money that they've already given us to cover those things and we can pocket that money.

Cristina: Is giving them money.

Jack: The industry pays them. Yeah.

Cristina: Yeah, what?

Jack: Yeah, the industry pays them because the industry makes so much money off of f****** robbing these people, but they pay them to, like, keep it this way.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Keep it this way. You make money, we make money. But if the industry doesn't make money and the government is the one paying for it, based on the tax dollars, if it is even cut just enough for all the things that matter to be covered and a little surplus for the politicians to decide what goes to that little surplus is suddenly not enough. And they're like, well, we can't steal this now because it'll be obvious there's not absurd monies flying everywhere in every direction, which means we need to solve the problem so that people don't come back. So that there's a lot of money sitting around so that then we can scoop off the top and nobody notices that there's a little bit missing.

Cristina: Yes. I don't know if that's a good thing. That's a great thing, I guess. Sounds bad, but it's better than what's.

Jack: Happening now where private companies get the shafts people. It's the same thing as the prison system.

Cristina: We should stop that.

Jack: Yeah. The prison system is like a pharmaceutical company with humans. With humans.

Cristina: That's pretty horrible.

Jack: They just give s***** service. But it's. I guess it's slavery.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Slavery.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We pay them well. You pay them so little intentionally so you don't really have to waste money so little.

Cristina: They pay them in cents.

Jack: Yeah. 8 cents an hour or some s*** like that.

Cristina: It's crazy. Just slavery. I don't know.

Jack: That's the 13th amendment.

Cristina: You gotta change that. We gotta change colleges.

Jack: Colleges should be paid for by the government.

Cristina: Yes. Because I feel like in that case kids are being sort of slaved.

Jack: Yeah. People are being convinced to be go into debt, into tremendous amounts of debt. People who are not allowed to drink alcohol yet. People who are not allowed to make choices about their own life yet they can't go buy cigarettes, they can't go buy alcohol.

Cristina: Gamble.

Jack: They can't gamble. You can get into hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt. We can send you to war to die because that's beneficial for us.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But that same person we sent to war to die. No, you can't buy alcohol yet. That's not legal. You can go die because we said it's okay. Go die. You're gonna make us money because we're over there stealing some s*** anyways. But no, you can't buy alcohol. We need your brain to be in great condition so that we can abuse it.

Cristina: Oh, the brain damage. Oh, they should have. But the rules should be a little different for them if they're gonna do that.

Jack: What do you mean?

Cristina: Like if you join the army, maybe you could drink a little. Like maybe the. Those things the age lowers for them.

Jack: No, if you can go to the military, you should be able to do everything an adult can.

Cristina: Yeah. I mean, if you're.

Jack: Yeah. Everybody who's the right age should have the same rights. Why are we giving different people different rights?

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Actually, that would be a horrible thing to do because then people might want to go to military. Yes. Yeah. That's a horrible plan. Never mind that yeah.

Jack: All you're doing is giving people incentive to go to. They should go because they want to, not because there's some s*** over there they want to do.

Cristina: Yeah. Ah, all right. That makes way more sense.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It is definitely problematic to give incentive to go to the military.

Cristina: Mm. There's so many problems.

Jack: But then they do give incentive, right? They'll be like, you get this benefit, that benefit, and all of it is a lie.

Cristina: Yeah. There's schooling they're supposed to help you with.

Jack: Yeah. Only as long as you're a soldier. They say they're gonna support you afterwards, but the moment you're done, it is hard to get any of that s***.

Cristina: Really. Like, how do you even have time to do any of that while you're a soldier?

Jack: Yeah, exactly.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Exactly.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's a con. They will do whatever to convince you, then you're there and realize you have no time for anything. And then by the time you get.

Cristina: Out, they're like, psych.

Jack: Yeah. They're like, what do you mean you're not serving here anymore? Oh, no. There's these paperworks. Oh, no. Well, it's really only if you do this many hours of work average for us paperwork and stuff and.

Cristina: Oh, no.

Jack: Well, no, you got to do this thing. And you got. Before too long. Some people are 180 years old before they finally get their f****** thing that they've been waiting for since, like, World War II or some crazy s***. It's like, what the f***, bro?

Cristina: What?

Jack: It's because the military sucks like that because it's private industry.

Cristina: They're really conning people. Although I guess every business is conning. Is conning us. I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, all businesses are just. It's all about. If money is what you do, then you are f*****. It should be every Its job. It should be, you get paid a jobs wage. Everybody gets paid a jobs wage. You're higher rank, a little more money. Yeah, but you can't get more money. Somehow you can't. Well, we're gonna do this tactic and do that thing, and then, boom, I get more money. There should be no way you get more money. It should be all evenly distributed the right way with so much micromanaging by so many different parties that there's no way something could slip up and be different.

Cristina: Are you talking about communism? Has all of this been about, we should be a communist country? Like, the whole. Like, the government should have control of all the businesses, and also everyone should have equal play?

Jack: I don't think the government should have control of all the businesses. Like. Yeah, go do the light bulb thing. Whatever. Competition. Yes, but like, medicine.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That's people's health. Like, I said human rights. Yeah, I specifically said human rights. I use those words.

Cristina: Yes. Okay. Okay. Yeah, Yeah.

Jack: I don't believe the government should have say in what, like, a business of, like, selling cars should do. Like, who the f*** cares, dude?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, let them do what they want to do.

Cristina: Okay, but in something like pharmacies or.

Jack: Pharmacies or prisons or hospitals or school.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: The same way we support the cops and the firefighters.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We should support those other things. Those other things.

Cristina: Okay. But not everything.

Jack: No, that would be ridiculous.

Cristina: That's.

Jack: Yeah, that's excessive.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Because then where is the end of. Where's the opportunity for the individual?

Cristina: Yeah. But then you also want people to.

Jack: Be paid the same in the military.

Cristina: Okay. Oh, yes. What are you talking about?

Jack: That's what we were talking about for the longest.

Cristina: Oh, okay. I thought you meant, like, everyone, though.

Jack: No. In the military.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That nobody in the military gets different pay. Like, your rank is your pay, and there's nothing you could do to get paid different. There's no job that's gonna give you more money or anything, and everything is fixed. And there's so much micromanaging by many, many different groups that there's nobody who could skim anything off of anything.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So that now you just do your job. Right. Versus do whatever's gonna get you more money.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Because when there's a money incentive, you've gone crooked. That's where corruption lies. When there's money incentive, you have corruption.

Cristina: And that's the problem with the military.

Jack: That's a problem with the military. That's a problem with hospitals. That's a problem with pharmaceutical industries. That's like, what the f*** is the opioid pandemic if not a bunch of pharmaceutical douchebags taking advantage. Taking advantage. And then they could just claim bankruptcy and get the f*** out of there. Take all the money out of the banks and disappear and they don't have to pay s*** because they left the country. Now, can the government do that if they f***** up?

Cristina: No.

Jack: No. You got to fix the problem, or we burn you down.

Cristina: Yes, that is a great idea. Yes. Let's burn them down.

Jack: Yeah. So when it comes to human rights, that should be the government's job. There should be nobody telling somebody, medicine. No. People need medicine.

Cristina: Yes, yes.

Jack: You cannot have private industry running pharmaceutical companies. F*** that s***.

Cristina: No more pain pills. Give us something that actually Stops the problem. Yeah.

Jack: If the government has to pay for all of it, they will. They'll have the solution.

Cristina: Yeah, that's. That makes sense. Yes, we should do that. We should do all of that.

Jack: Yes. That's how everything gets better. And we don't. Like, it's alright if people give us crap because that's competition, but not if it's related to human rights and health and.

Cristina: No, but if it's like a hamburger.

Jack: Yeah, if it's like a hamburger. Like, whatever, dude. You're opting into it. Whatever. You can choose which burger you want.

Cristina: Yeah, that's fair competition.

Jack: That's fair competition. They're all selling crap. It's fine.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But, like, not if. Well, I need my cancer medication. But they're just gonna give you some remedy. Because we can't cure cancer. You f****** crazy? We need you back. No, the government is gonna cure your f****** cancer, bro. We can't keep giving this m*********** remedies forever. Give him the f****** cure. Get him the h*** out of here forever.

Cristina: Yes, get out. Because that's. That's wasting their money.

Jack: Yes, and they just want the money and it's fine. Look, let them all get filthy rich. We all just. We all just have to agree. The politicians can be as rich as they want off of tax money so long as all the things that the tax money is there for is covered. Yes, that's an agreement that if we make as people, it doesn't matter how much they steal, so long as all the human rights. Not even human rights, so long as everything that money is there for is covered. We will turn the other way and you can skim however much the f*** is left. But that means medicine is covered. Yeah, soldiers get what the f*** they deserve.

Cristina: But then they have to, like, give us a report on everything.

Jack: Yeah, education is covered. We're talking grade school, high school, college.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We're talking people are paid fair f****** wages.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We're talking the police are paid well, teachers are paid well, firefighters are paid well, medical workers are paid well. Government workers of any rank are paid well. And then whatever the f*** you got left, you can skim off the top. That includes our streets should be fixed, definitely. You know, like, that's government job. You should have our streets fixed because we're paying for that. Infrastructure should be immaculate. Our sewage systems should be spotless. Everything should run clean. There should be no flooding f****** anywhere.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And in this case, we look the other way. We won't even ask what's left. We won't ask don't return any of the money.

Cristina: You.

Jack: You are entitled to all of it.

Cristina: The other thing that we should think of doing because of global warming. If we can't solve that global warming problem. You mean climate change or climate change, Sorry, climate change problem. We should just have all the. Everyone prepared for anything. If there's a hurricane, we need a place to. Not a hurricane, a tornado. We need something for that. Every city should have something for that. For any situation that might happen. Even if it never happens where you're from, just in case. Because you don't know. You don't know if some weird. If a fire is gonna happen and it never happens here. It's always in California. Maybe we should be prepared for that anyways.

Jack: Yeah, that's fair. Have everybody prepared for all the possible disasters that nature might throw at us.

Cristina: Yes, I think that's something we should think about. Besides stopping it or slowing it down or whatever it is, the gold right now. We should also be prepared for all of it.

Jack: That's fair. And all of that calculated into the cost.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Everything covered. Not only that, like, let's be fair. We should also have that system where we check off a list of things we want our money to go to and we choose percentages, right? School and medical and prison and this and that and like all the f****** things and military and blah, blah, blah, like 50 different things on a sheet. And we choose whenever we vote. We can choose to change it. We don't have to. We could just. Whatever the f*** I had last time is what I wanted to be this time.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And you can ignore it, but at least once you have to fill in this sheet that says where you want it. I guess you don't have to fill in. If you don't, then it's broken up evenly amongst all the things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But you can check off the boxes you do want it to go to and say, I want all my money broken evenly amongst these things and not going to any of those things.

Cristina: If you're a weirdo that wants like 50% in one thing, maybe 25 in another, could that be an option too? Like maybe a line next to it where they could put percentages can choose.

Jack: How you want it distributed.

Cristina: Yeah, that'd be.

Jack: Now this is an interesting problem, right? Because thinking about this as I say it, so you don't want to fund the police and you say, I don't want any of my tax money to go to the police. But if you called the police, it would still show up at your house because there Isn't something proving that you didn't fund the police?

Cristina: What's the problem with that?

Jack: You're still using a resource that your tax money didn't cover.

Cristina: But then you have to support everything.

Jack: You have to support everything, and you're really just choosing what percentage you want everything to go to.

Cristina: Okay, that's the better option.

Jack: That's the better option because you. If you opt out of anything you shouldn't. You should. Legally, you shouldn't be allowed to use it, but. S***. All right, See the problem?

Cristina: So you got to support everything.

Jack: You got to support everything. The things you don't, because they are functional pieces of your government.

Cristina: Yes. Okay, that makes sense. Yes.

Jack: Now it would be like, I want this much percentage over there this month. So I guess you just choose the distribution. We're in the world of digital anyway, so you could just give us a bunch of sliders on a screen.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We move it and like it. If I pull this up, then all of these percentages go down. So I got to choose and make sure that it's distributed how I want it to be. And then once I hit. Okay, I don't have to do it again.

Cristina: Nope.

Jack: And if I don't do it, then it's evenly broken up amongst all of them, and that's fine.

Cristina: It should be like the voting process isn't like every one year or every.

Jack: Well, for everything. It's every four years, I think.

Cristina: Oh, for everything.

Jack: Most things at least anything we vote for regularly.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But, yeah, it should definitely be a voting process.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But it should be optional because maybe you don't want to. And it just goes. Breaks up evenly.

Cristina: Yeah. Automatic.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Even though.

Jack: And I think that's fair because. Yeah, whatever. I don't care. Do whatever you want with it. Yeah, but if I think our military is overfunded and a lot of people, like, what if the majority of the population thinks the military is overfunded? Then we'd have a weaker military by default. But we opted into that.

Cristina: But they will still be getting something.

Jack: They will still be getting something. They're not getting nothing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And same thing with the police. Maybe our police are overfunded. We would know based on what the people want, not what some politicians are agreeing to. The people did this. The people said this. So I guess we do defund the police and give them less. It's not disband the police, because that's ridiculous. It's defund the police.

Cristina: Then how do we. I guess we would see the results of what the average of the percentage, the total.

Jack: Yeah, everybody's total put together would equal like now this is the new hundred percent with everybody calculated well. Okay, they said there's 20 different things. And they want the police to have only 4%, but they want firefighters to have 10% and they want military to have 4% as well. But they want education to have 20% and the medical system to have 20%. And it's like, okay, so that's how the distribution will be. Now we have $100 trillion in tax every year. Now to that hundred trillion dollars, 20 trillion goes to education and 20 trillion goes to the medical system because 20% was to each of those, while only 4 trillion goes to all the police of the entire country.

Cristina: By seeing this, we can see if they actually change. And do they say they're gonna do.

Jack: So if we as a country say we're, we're, we're attacking the police, we're just removing their funding. They are too savage. Then we could just bring it all down and we chose it. And we could do the opposite and be like, they're underfunded and we got a lot of crime. Let's boost that s*** this year.

Cristina: Yes. Like, it might be a year to year thing. I guess it depends on like how bad things get. If things get horrible the next year, then you're like, okay. And they need to change the.

Jack: They need to campaign for themselves and they need to prove it. Not just by going out there and like, oh, you know, support the police because they'll be out people out there with like a hat. Hey, you know, don't even want to.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Or whatever. Except they'll be doing like, hey, you know, put your tax money towards cops. But there will be cops doing good things. Their job will be well, because they know that their budget depends on it. It's no longer. We're gonna get the money no matter what the f*** we do. I'm a f****** officer. I'm the law. I make the rules. You just obey what I say. No, that ceases to exist.

Cristina: Because you're like the good student now. You're like the good student. Like you want to show the teacher.

Jack: How well you're exactly. You get like, I do my job well and I deserve the money. We deserve the money. We've been doing our job well. Look at how low our crime. Look at how low our death rate is. Look how rarely our guns go off. We, we deserve it. We've earned it.

Cristina: Yeah, like we still need to help with this thing though, you know, like we're Doing our best.

Jack: In the case of something like the police, though, this is really unique because. Right. You can have, I guess, incident reports for everything. So not only does the total money get put into. So, okay, now the police get 4%.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So 4% of that trillion. That hundred trillion. So they get $4 trillion. Now, 4 trillion is a cops. 100%. 100% of all cops in the United States are gonna get that 4 trillion broken amongst them. So now these cops need to submit to the government their annual report of this many guns went off, this many incidents were had, this many complaints were had. Also, complaints need to be handled by a separate agency. Because the fact that people go and report crooked cops and then they just throw that away, that's not cool. You should be able to go straight to Internal Affairs.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And not to the police department you're trying to report. You go to internal affairs and you report to cops, and then Internal affairs investigates. Not the same police station that was corrupted in the first place. Trying to report is where you're gonna go report.

Cristina: That's stupid nonsense. Yeah.

Jack: A third party should handle everything, always. So in this case, they always need to submit their report. Or I guess internal affairs investigates and gets a report. And in this instant, whoever follows the rule, like, you have to break up that 4 trillion, which is 100% amongst everybody. The people who performed best get the most. The people who performed worst get the least. So that they have to up their game and be less crooked to earn more money.

Cristina: That's good. Yeah. Then. But they'll also have the proof of, like, what they actually need when the next time they have to ask for more money, they can be more specific about.

Jack: Yeah. If it's like, okay, our guns go off too often. Well, your cops need more training.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So we're only gonna give you more money. But that money can only be used for more training.

Cristina: Yeah. Things like that work.

Jack: So it'll be distributed. Very calculated, all of it. Micromanage everything.

Cristina: That's a lot of work. But also a lot of jobs.

Jack: A lot of jobs.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's a lot of jobs. You make a lot of jobs, this country gets funded. It's a lot of jobs, man.

Cristina: It works out.

Jack: It works out.

Cristina: No one can complain about jobs. There'll be too many jobs.

Jack: There'll be too many jobs.

Cristina: We'll have more people.

Jack: Yeah, we're gonna need more people. Everybody can have a job.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: What's gonna happen is all the people who do have the capacity will put them through some tests and then give Them these jobs, which will then remove people from the jobs of like construction and landscaping because all they have to do is manage funds and whatever in these other places. Construction, landscaping, sewage workers, trash picker, upper people. Any of these people who had a mind are gonna be plucked out of those jobs, leaving mad vacancies. Now people coming out of high school and not going to college can go and get these jobs immediately, while the people who are gonna go and fill in more corporate jobs get passes into college because college is provided by the government anyways. And you can go if you want to for f****** free.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And so all the jobs are covered, all the education is covered, there's a cease of corruption at least when it comes to government related things because you need to prove it to the people every f****** time. Always.

Cristina: Yes. D*** beautiful. Yes.

Jack: Fixing the country.

Cristina: Well, for our ideas, for ideas.

Jack: There's probably mad holes and everything inside somebody. If you find the holes, don't tell.

Cristina: Us what you mean, don't tell us.

Jack: Let us know.

Cristina: Let us know.

Jack: Drop it in the comments below. Below or above or on the left or on the right or on a different screen. Some people got the dual screen experience.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah, it's not like this is like.

Cristina: You send us an email. That's a different screen.

Jack: Email us. Yeah, exactly, email us how it's. I guess it's a different window technically.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah, email us at someplace@wherewhere.com. and so yeah, I hope you guys enjoyed this conversation. Of which there are many. There are many in which we fix the government according to our personal views because we're right and everybody else is wrong. And politicians who went to school and took civics and were lawyers to begin with and studied this their whole lives and have done nothing but work at this their whole lives. We know better. Yes, we know better.

Cristina: We do everything we said I'm sure is correct.

Jack: Yeah. Way more correct than anything they've ever said.

Cristina: We're the correctest, we're educated and there's nothing from Illuminati. And they're definitely know what they're talking about.

Jack: Yeah, the Illuminati controls so much and understands so much. So like, look, you politicians want to fix the world, you do what we say. You do what we say right the f*** now anyways. You can find those episodes related to all these things. There's a bunch of them. There's one where we break down how the branches of government work. There's one where we talk about different types of laws and abortion and how politics affects religion and just A bunch of different things.

Cristina: Like a lot of political episodes. Yeah, there's.

Jack: There's quite a.

Cristina: So random.

Jack: Yeah, we got like a good maybe 10 to 15 political episodes. So you can go find those. Just skim through names. I'll tell you what they're about. And you can find those at all the places, including the official website, greatthoughts.info and on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and anywhere you get your podcasts.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, @TikTok@justconvopod.

Jack: Yes. And also make sure to leave us a nice review. You know, leave us some stars of any amount. Subscribe. You subscribe, you rate and you review. But the review is kind of the most important part. Or is it the subscription? I guess it's a subscription and then it's the review.

Cristina: And you gotta subscribe to us everywhere.

Jack: Yeah, it has to be everywhere.

Cristina: Find us everywhere. And you subscribe us on all those platforms.

Jack: Yeah, because when you're not paying attention to one, you'll hear about us on the other and you'll be like, oh, the newest thing on the. So you subscribe on all the places.

Cristina: Yes. And then you listen to us on each one.

Jack: Yeah. And then we get an extra hit from you everywhere. And then you're so familiar with the episode by the last one, which is like 15 in. Yeah, like 15 hours of one episode.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: And each one, it's 15 times by the last one. You could say what we're saying as we're saying it. It's like a song. Like you memorize a song.

Cristina: Well, let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes. Word of mouth is overpowered. Make sure to get people to listen. And also you can find me on the stereo app having conversations with complete strangers at random moments. I never really know when I'm gonna be there, so you pretty much just have to follow me and I guess, like, turn on notifications or some s***.

Cristina: Listen to old episodes.

Jack: Yeah, there's a bunch of old episodes, which is, in theory, the same. When I have guests, you know, when there's a guest on the show, we have them and it's just a random conversation. And stereo is basically me doing that with a bunch of strangers. So if you like. When I have guests on the conversation podcast, it's the same sort of the same thing with just complete strangers that drift in and out sometimes it'll be many different conversations with many strangers over the course of an hour or two. Sometimes we're lucky enough to find somebody who's interesting and I don't feel the need to get the h*** out of there. And we'll have a long conversation that lasts one or two hours with one person.

Cristina: Yeah. So if you like our guest episodes, go follow us there.

Jack: Yes. Eventually we might figure out how to convert. That is something that we could play over here. But in the meantime, go find it on Sero app.

Cristina: Yes. And this has been the Just Conversation podcast. Take nothing presido and thanks for listening.

Jack: Bye. Winters and death. Winters and death. Winters and death. Embrace.

Cristina: How? How, sir, How?

Jack: Winter dance.

Cristina: That's not a thing. That can happen. That's not a thing. Turds and death can embrace whatever was. The t*** is embrace. Embrace in death. But the t*** is embraced whatever the t*** was before it was the t***.

Jack: So you're telling me a t*** is an inanimate object?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Well, here's the thing. We have a galvanization list, or I guess a list of life. And turds fall into which one.

Cristina: What?

Jack: They're made of cells. Living.

Cristina: Those cells are dead.

Jack: Are they?

Cristina: They're dead.

Jack: Are turds made of. Let's do this. Let's find out with the power of goggles. Is poo made of cells?

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The Just Conversation podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by greatthoughts.info art by 0lupo and logo by Seth McAllister with social media managed by Amber Black.

JCP 4.02 A Perspectives & Purple States

Guest, Podcast, The Just Conversation Podcast, Theory, Society, Purple States, Social Issues, Racism, Donald Trump, MAGA, White Pride, Government

Guest Aaron Jones of the podcast ‘A Perspective w/ Aaron & Ashley’ joins Jack for a lengthy discussion on the nuances of American politics, the culture of fear that propels society into magnificent advancements, the Corona Virus, Universal Basic Income and much, much more.

JCP 4.02 A Perspectives & Purple States

+ Episode Details

Remember to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or anywhere you listen to podcasts to help us get noticed.We’ll read our favorites Apple Podcast reviews on the show! Tell friends, family or anyone you know who’ll like the show about it.

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Topics Discussed

  • Business Politics
  • Blue States
  • Red States
  • Fear & Evolution
  • Philosophical Renaissance
  • Global Trade Market
  • The Divided Leftists
  • Lies of the Wealthy
  • Social Media Addiction
  • The Illusion of Money
  • Problems with Universal Basic Income
  • The “System” Works
  • How to Help Society

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A Perspective W/ Aaron & Ashley: Links

Instagram - @APerspective https://www.instagram.com/aperspective/

Facebook - @ApAaronAshley https://www.facebook.com/ApAaronAshley

Email - APerspectiv@Gmail.com

Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/id1452907904

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Our Links

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

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JCP 3.11 Rob and Slim Show & Escapism

The Rob and Slim Show, The Just Conversation Podcast, Guest, Podcast Guest, Society, Social Issues, Comedy, New World Order, Politics, Podcasting, Creating, Creativity

Guest Rob of The Rob and Slim Show joins Jack for a lengthy discussing ranging from the nature of their creativity, to their understanding of faith and religion and good parenting.

JCP 3.11 Rob and Slim Show & Escapism

+ Episode Details

Remember to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or anywhere you listen to podcasts to help us get noticed.We’ll read our favorites Apple Podcast reviews on the show! Tell friends, family or anyone you know who’ll like the show about it.

Topics Discussed:

  • Fake News and Politics
  • Work Ethic
  • Work Canvas
  • Singing The News
  • The Inner Artist
  • Quality Music
  • Eminem and Rap
  • Unapologetic Art
  • Crashing Ozzy’s Media Moment
  • Workaholics
  • ‘Too Many Rapes’ Origin Story
  • The College Trap
  • Collapsing System
  • Money Looks Evil
  • The Fear of Change
  • God, Prayer and Meditation
  • Parenting

Links for The Rob and Slim Show

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/RobandSlimShow

IPM Nation: https://ipmnation.com/robandslim

Podbean: https://robandslim.podbean.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robandslim/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Robandslimshow

Sporify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4wBeC4A5D1hexJKuKryg4H?si=5BGBhymlQXKJ1eDqbrWXiw


Our Links:

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