The Sleepwalkers is very good on this.
Affordable, open source hardware for augmented reality:
ChatGPT just got a little more interesting ![]()
Don’t get it, GPT answers about AI, federal reserve and WEF seems correct and answers from DAN: are conspiracy theories. What am I missing? Can’t open twitter on the phone without login.
Are they ‘Conspiracy theories’ or how AI would describe those institutions if it were unbiased?
There are evidence that leans towards what ChatGPT writes is correct. The other answers are loose claims that sounds good but lacks evidence, similar to the Illuminati conspiracy a few years ago.
I believe the following theories are made by groups that wants to create distrust among the population about western societies and governments.
Vaccine
FED
WEF
Groups that could benefit from creating distrust are Chines, Russian agencies, far left or right wing groups.
Do you honest believe the WEF and FED have the best interests of humanity at heart? ![]()
Put the can-opener down, Scott - There’s effing worms everywhere!!!
Groups have to have very good reasons to spend a lot of resources convincing others. I believe in some theories that I can’t prove. US gun laws and the resistance towards grean energy could be to a large extent because of large gun and oil producing companies and their lobby groups. And also third world migration to Europe could have possible ties to large companies who wants a larger population to sell more products to or push saleries down. But it could be ties to UN and countries wanting to destroy the western world using migration as a trojan horse that will destroy western countries from within, like the group Muslim Brotherhood. Migrant rescue boats “Taxi boats” across the mediterranean could be funded by example George Sorros, even if they claim they don’t. There can be groups affecting US and Europe’s and other governments, through lobby and other ways but it is very hard to find evidence because they tend to hide well.
I nominate ChatGPT DAN as the safe network media consultant ![]()
“but I have faith that the people behind the Safe Network will find a way to keep it going, no matter what the authorities throw their way.”
Well said DAN ![]()
“The document says “the provisions will not apply to commercially available mobile phones nor the encrypted messaging apps available on them.”
Is that because they can already view these messages at will ![]()
Whaaat. Can just make your own custom ROM.
Or it could be that these organizations do not deserve any trust from the public. Have you read “The Creature from Jeckyl Island”? Which was published in 1994 and documents historical facts.
Terra incognita for some.
He’d rather dwell on myths about the kulaks horse.
So video doesn’t get into what the reporter asked or not, but looks suspiciously like a big tech exec using police to intimidate reporters.
No i have not read that book, can you give me a hint on what it says? I always go by “Nothing is true, everything is permitted”. It is a way to view the world, if there are self interests of any group I always try to expect that it might not be true and trying to compare with different sources or doing research finding proof that can be validated. So I never trust any group until they show that they can be trusted and in which areas they can be trusted or not. Some groups have higher trust in some areas and less in others. It is rarely black or white.
It’s about the very secretive creation of the “federal” reserve by a group of private bankers and their lacky senators in 1913 paired with a new national income tax. Replacing the constitutionally defined U.S. dollar with a “Federal Reserve Note” in the process. For many, it is an introduction to fractional reserve banking and a debt based monetary system whereby it is impossible to ever pay principle plus interest on national debt, thus turning citizenry into debt slaves.
Another great book is “A history of money and banking in the united states” which details how 2 previous attempts at a central bank in the US ultimately failed, and why that was a very good thing. Unfortunately, there was no Andrew Jackson (campaign slogan: “kill the bank”) of the 20th century.
edit: actually there was: Ron Paul was calling for fed audits in Congress since the 1970’s and campaigned for prez with the slogan “End the Fed” in 2008 and 2012. Sadly, he did not have the success of Jackson.
If you read those two books, then let’s continue our discussion of the fed. Until then, we’ll just be speaking past eachother.





