tv Interview RT June 5, 2023 5:30am-6:00am EDT
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around is there. we've got an ice camp here. everything's clean, everything's orderly. we're just afraid of this guy circling around here with a helicopter. there is definitely circling around us, coming around and probably taking pictures or whatever. no government money. we live in simple live in, you know, living free and doing the right thing. you know. and tell me what just took, you know shelby angel box and you're going to jump through the hoops. you know, be there little service. the still going around, i don't know, it's hard to tell those police or what very, very disturbing. that's for sure. i mean, we still got, we still. yeah. right. well that's, that's normally what they do either that's not written in stone and they've got to do that. you know, that's a human. so they got to give us a little time, right. i would, i would think so it'd be, yeah, you'd be a little bit of a heart. yeah. yeah. it's certainly a matter time. do you have a job there? came around today, flew around a couple of times, stage, stationed area,
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and then go over here to, you know, to look down at the camp. so he was definitely up there to look at us. so we'll see what happens. right. thanks steve. you the township found out that we're back there and it wasn't long after that. the police since a tractor down there to take pictures of us. and then the police came down and you know, came down for a couple of different reasons. so check out us. yeah, then they, they close this gate here us. so we could access the power lines here and i, i guess they figured that there was no other way to get onto the power lines. they might have figured if they shut the gate, we couldn't use an automobile to get in and out. that would be too difficult and people would leave, leave out of there. but um, yeah, we did find this other route to come in. so it's so difficult for me, but we, you know, at least it's a way to bring in materials for and stays what they need. we're all for now. water
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and dipping supplies, food, things like that to try to bring in suppliers for that whole camp by hand would be almost impossible. so there be, at least we found it alternative route. we're not using government resources back there. you know, we're saving the government money. he would think maybe the government would, you know, try to make things easier for us since we're saving the money. but the other stuff, the case. if i didn't have a, a good truck, you know, with 4 wheel drive. i couldn't go in the new way. yes. to us personally, i can't see any reason why they would leave that open bridge. don't, don't understand. personally, i think the government needs to help all these homeless incentives, sending money over to ukraine and all those other countries worry about your own lunch, right. my name's lisa lisa. we just just take care of the check here you go to see
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the checks. do you want to show some searches? yeah, these are beautiful check. so to the right to control, you know, so we're on the just about ready to go outside and start to start the job. collecting checks, then a little ways other hopefully with the list there, most them or females sort of start linux course. yeah, they all i know. tell i the mouse. ok, this is snowflake and the one that's on the box over there. that's jack. here's a. now these are my babies. this is what keeps me gallon. the idea is just sad situation. it makes me cry. there's little kids that are homeless, but i'm finding out they're taking kids. this is selma on for sax. really come
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on now. life is too short, painful, too short and sad. it makes you want me to start. i'm sorry. i just wish we had a present as daycare we don't have a present in thank tears you know is a sad world always people would wake up to see what jo, by it is doing to us the . i look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings,
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except we're such shorter is that conflict with the 1st law show your mind, anticipation. we should be very careful about our personal intelligence, and the point obviously, is to create a trust rather than fit the job. i mean with the artificial intelligence we have so many of them in the a robot must protect this phone existence with alexis. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy from foundation. let it be an arms race is often very dramatic. only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very unclear to get a time time to sit down and talk and
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of course, now that i hear that he's with china. from what i hear, we're going to be taken over in about probably. and trump, let me tell you, he was an idiot. from the day we took, he took power. he was all down. and while i was over, just see that boy in uh, in north north korea or whatever. and me and him are good friends and everything. and, and he was 2 weeks later he was cute missiles in the year. i mean, he doesn't care about us. the shoes. shoes. 05. 0, i like those you. oh,
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those are makes me curse. no. okay, uh, yeah, certainly new york, uh, this one. so we've got a one girl moved in last night yesterday and then we've got 4 people moving in and about 4 days. and then there's another 2 people that might have to move in, so it is growing. and so it's, it's right around 18 right now. so it'll be over 20, you know, in a week yes, she was over in the ocean all with no place to go. so somebody given her my number there was very chilly last night and sleep outside was nothing would have been there. i had no place to go, nobody would help me. i go so, so services, i get all kinds of stuff. i made 15000 phone calls and nobody would help me. before that i was at a motel. they pulled me up in a little town for a little while, but they wouldn't extend my motel stay. and then without the street again that i
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had no place to stay and that was the very 1st day i was actually out on the street where i had no place to go. and then he helped me. i mean, i'm old. i don't, i don't want to live by myself somewhere. and this is my biggest thing. i didn't want to be in the window by myself. you know, and, and be scared here. here. i have, you know, there's people here who are so nice and everybody's kind to me here and, and, and this is a great, you know, it's, it's, it's a good thing to have. at least you have this, you know, you're, you're very vulnerable and susceptible to the whims of the government. they can come in here and shut this down for, you know, for any reason they want to dream up, you know, and create, go to, is this a good chance that people there, you know, they take their garbage in the bag it up, but i take it out of here, it's a clean champ. it's an orderly camp. it's just a good chance. yeah. and the good people there. so you know, there should be champs like this around america. people can't afford housing. this
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gives them freedom, it gives them community, it gives them all kinds of aspects that they need as an individual, you know, and we're complicating things and we need uh, we need a complicated type of system to live in my practice going god, i have a written for morning, at least to pine trees here, straight ones. these are in need of to this area. rockefeller had all of the street pine trees imported in planets in this, in this area here. so we're in ocean county park, also called rockefellers park. this used to be j. d, rockefeller's the stage. you know, he was normally stationed in in new york and then when he decided to retire, he's lives here. i think for about 20 years, lakewood was an extremely prosperous town. it was the playground of the rich and famous as they would say. a lot of billionaires lived in lakewood around the turn
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of the century, 1900. you know, the very rich and famous original man that ever lived in the history of the world lived here. and yeah, now it's, it's one of the poor as towns in the area. in fact, uh, i think it's considered the poor is town at ocean county. right. now or yeah, we're all on route to the main camp, but uh, there's uh, a couple, a man and a woman who's living in one of these abandoned buildings right here. been in houses . there's about 4 of them in a row right here. and they're, they're spending the nights in one of these houses. so they called me every so often for some water, and then propane, they've got a small propane heater, that they put in a room to stay warm. and they have a little propane stove that they use to cook on. you know, i get a lot of calls from people that are an adverse situations that are living in their car that are uh, either living in somebody's house on their couch or in their basement, living in some adverse condition. they need some help. so the property owners,
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if they find out that people are living in these houses, i'm sure they'll be checked out. but so they've gotta be very quiet. they gotta leave early in the morning, come back late at night. and they've got, you know, they can't have any lights on it where it would shine through a window or anything like that. they've got to stay located, but everybody has a right to have a place to lay their head. that's a basic human. right. and so, you know, the problem is that the government and this area at least this is withholding that basic human right from the people. and it's is morally wrong is ethically wrong. it's, it's constitutionally wrong, as you know, is just wrong or across the board. but it goes up, it happens all the time. and so, you know, it's, it's, it's a, it's a crime against humanity is what it is. are you still with it actually just down there? you know, the, the, the generator need the generator. you know, 247 around the clock is kind of
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a life and death situation for 2 of the women down there right now with the price of gas the way it is. it's already $600.00 a month to keep up with the costs of the gasoline it takes for these generate this generator to keep going. price of gas goes up is going to be more and more expensive to keep these women alive down. and we can actually the machines. yeah, for a seal pd. so this is the machine here for an s the machine. so okay. and you, you've tried other places with your social services and nothing. right? no, because i have a dog. my dog has a lot to make sure of that. right. it's, it's important. yeah, no, that's right. yeah. the animal can be part of the family for sure. so it is larry, we are switching on. yeah, they shut down surface room and ram or. yeah, it was low and some, some movies november. they used to live and shutting down. and it's not
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because i didn't feel right. because they sold right. 00 less affordable place to live in the area. that's right. yeah. no, i had a trailer on my own. all, this is the last resort. ill try to make it as comfortable as possible, but just know no other options for me. i'll be 60 for angela. i just ordered, heirloom, and it's organic don chemo. everything's going to be non tmo. i got 50 seats of a plants health, cause people i gave plan here. i don't want to be under a rather be over. we have an abundance we can give to others. i can cook 3 or
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a child in a plant like a plant farm i can make, or i can make the pre k plan where you put it in the flower and you put little chunks of garlic on top of it. this is page and we get some spare coping up. there we go. ok, the love we expanded. so spillage and let's see what else do we need to see a felony cheese for sure. really what we're going to the we're going to doing. we've got a big area right here, right? right here is a big area. it just swell is tremendous for this area in jersey is not no good, sorry, i know, but for whatever reason, because i think this, this is one plan. and so i had a lot of bio matter rolling in the chain here. and again, it created a very cold and much soil twice certain areas and which is fantastic sort of knowing things. and so we, we just happen to be bless another god said,
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we're blessed with good soil right down here. we've got a plot of land and see if we go about 20200 yards over here. oh wow. yeah, 200. well, not a football field football field with the uh too far. so i think 200 maybe a 150 yards. 200 yards. so yeah, we'll put this down with a lot more and then we'll get the router chiller, finding the word silver. wait till the soil up here, and are you going to your, the seeds on order? i got them on order. i got to now i'm going to be ordering more. you know, because i'm looking at, i want to make sure it's heirloom, non g m o. you know, i don't want to become a genetic hybrid waiting for the stream will tap into the stream for washing water for showers, which are good with the extra is that what it continues to run? right? if was right there, past the tower, and the rug was 200 would just a little pond there now for 3 years. all right, we'll dig around, go,
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we'll just take a deep and we'll create a box, right? and then was the generator in the poll, we'll talk with the or did r, r y. everybody has problems. i mean, both my children are living with people that they're scared. we're going to throw them out in the street any day. you know, same. so here they can't help me because every time they try to help me, it gets them in trouble. trouble. yeah. so yeah, we're here and in the liquid industrial park, this is, i think, the 2nd largest industrial parks in the state as it's a very big industrial park. these are more manufacturing type jobs or service type jobs. and you know, typically don't pay real well. and so, you know, a lot of times people that are working here, they need to jobs or they need their, their spouse needs to be working a good job also to afford ends me. the problem is the costs of housing keeps on
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going on. the cost of living keeps on going up, inflation keeps on going up, gas keeps on going up. so all the costs of living keeps on rising. but the salaries typically are keeping up. so it's a big problem for a lot of families. you know, i'm seeing it firsthand with families. i got another family coming down into the homeless camp this week. we'll have 5 complete families living in the 10 city. yeah, i've done a, you know, some research on the family history, thomas bring them to move. in 1635, my personal family. the brigham family had a key role in starting the revolution. guiding the revolutions and a participating, a $117.00. brigham was born in the revolution, all related to the so yeah, this idea of equality is near and dear to my heart. and i can't see why these government agencies are doing, you know, what they're supposed to do,
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and guarding the rights of the people and treating everybody equally. you know, that's part of the reason why i do this in lake work because i see groups of people that are being discriminated against and just respected, you know, and it's just not the american way, the the take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power to division with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills. and is it just because it shows you fractured images,
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presented it is, but can you see through their illusion going underground? can the i really thought that we were going to die and i crawled all the way to the right. and then i hid behind the 2 years before i was born and business again and again it again because people continue to stick with the system . basically we want to make sure that certain regular civilians should be in the hands. those
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people who aren't safe as big know where the hello, i'm the know a chan. you're tuned into modus operandi. the pentagon calls them autonomous systems, but most average citizens refer to them simply as killer robots. but the wars of tomorrow are about more than just a systems doing the killing. this we will explore how technology is shaping the new landscape of warfare. all right, let's get into the m o the if you're the u. s. is real germany, france, and so forth. you're not modeling through the conflict in ukraine now. you're
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looking ahead 102030 years into what the battle field might look like that. here in the us, the pentagon has invested billions of dollars into the development of ai and other so called smart weapons. that won't require much manpower in future conflicts, whether it's autonomy, drones program to seek out individuals on a terror list or by tech that aids in existing conventional warfare technology is the new tip of the spear when it comes to war. and for more on how technology is shaping the future of war, we are being joined by in con, he is a futurist and emerging technologies expert. and thanks for being with us. first, the deputy defense secretary kathleen hicks said in her official press release that quote, the directive was
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a stablish to minimize the probable lity and consequences of failures in autonomous and somebody autonomous weapon systems that could lead to on intended engagements. in what is she implying here that a i might go rogue and start killing everything in its path? i mean, the unintended engagement part is quite disconcerting. and so we have to realize that this deed of artificial intelligence right now is and a place where it's not perfect, it's not sent in. and it's, it's not fully develop. we're still working with how it works and you know how it's deployed when it comes to military usage and usage and war and, and situations like that. are, you really can't take a risk. and what you really meant by that statement is that there needs to be a safe guard, and jayce technology goes wrong just like your, your computer sometimes malfunctions. what happens if an e, i enabled missile or
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a system or anything goes wrong and it stops working, or it just something that's something that it's not supposed to? what's the max stuff? how do we, how do we make sure that you stop it? and that's what's really in, in the meaning of that, it just means we're creating a little bit of the risk of hardness a little bit off of a way to control things. if they don't not go the way we want them to go. and so what does the future of warfare look like to you in the eyes of a futurist and, and when i mean, will it be a distant future? will it be a i versus a i on the battlefield? so the distant future n e i n warfare is, is, is a difficult topic, but water is the reality of the world we live and unfortunately, oh, the future, you really can't predict what's going to happen on one hand, if you have technology fighting technology, then you know, just like a game of automatic and the computer to computer chest. maybe there's uh,
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2 types of a i fi to each other, but i really see that as a scenario, not happening. i do however, see that countries that have enough technology that have progressed with their usage of a guy that have deployed artificial intelligence in warfare to have certain advantage because of advanced systems. i operate or less systems and really taking people in human beings out of the region where artificial intelligence can operate different kinds of equipment, different kinds of artillery. uh, you know, a fighter planes and what have you. i really feel they would be no need for people to be in the battlefield. and if that battle is really happening, where, where to, you know, to the people that 2 parties are clashing. but um, and that's one scenario. another scenario is that a, i based systems will, will attack the digital systems off other countries. for example,
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the future might be full of uh, some of the whole digital cities are smart. so these are cognitive cities that are run by artificial intelligence that are full of technology, which acknowledge you use doing taken care of all the infrastructure of transportations drones, buildings and so on. and then a, i would be able to attack those cities digital needs and cripple those cities. think about a nuclear power plant. think about crippling the electricity systems, or any other system that runs the infrastructure office city or a or a country crippling. those would be catastrophic. to many of them, and that's what's what the future of warfare looks like. and it's not just physically harming and destroying cities, but digital, the crippling cities and countries in order to, to give the advantage. what does that be? something i'm a bloodless war where it's just basically robots destroying other robots. and let's
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talk about money. there's huge money being dumped into a ton of us weapon systems all around the world. what countries are spending the most, who or, or what companies are the movers and shakers in this eco system when strips and how much money is being spent on technology warfare of artificial intelligence and, and really this new arrows of war that's powered by technology. i mean, we have to look at, we have to look at the big tech uh, worldwide of who are the companies that are reinventing technology and, and creating technology that can be used in, in, in a war machines in, in, in battle. and the power systems that are being produced by companies that produce as those aircrafts and so on. and so for intentions on all the companies that are producing equipment and gear and separately needs technology now
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to to power their machines in order to be battle ready for this new battle in one way. as we're still talking about physical battle and going into the battle field up, on the other hand, companies that are producing a high technology, i think will be the ones that will dictate how their technology will be used, where it will be used. and so if you even look at the examples off autonomy, jones, or operator drones, drones that are operated by uh, by an operator that technology got started with started uh, you know, a 2025 years ago. but it started being used in warfare in, in afghanistan, iraq, and other places of, of the world who does really become popular for, for some countries to use drones, in order to not send people in there. and to remotely do what they need to do. now when we talk about artificial intelligence, it's a little bit more complex because a i, as a technology, is, has to work with a lot of data in
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a lot of information to learn about the terrain, to learn about maneuvering, to learn about a 100000000000 things in order to work successfully, and that is where technology comes into play. that is where a deep learning machine learning concepts come into play. and those things will be done by the companies that produce technology that produce a lot of some companies. i mean, we can talk about technology companies that are out there in the world, starting from a google microsoft. alibaba. i've been throw, you got hundreds of millions of companies that are doing incredible work and not naming just any one of them. but everybody who's developing a, i, as a contribution to, to the future of warfare, anybody who's remotely developing even any a niche solutions with an e, i is going to be a part computer the to the future of was just like, just like office productivity. if you look at computers and operating systems and
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tools, you use our computers and ourself within smartphones. we have different types of smartphones. we have different apps, just like you know, different app providers for smartphones. you'll have e, i technology providers. that'll specialize in specific things that will be used by it. definitely. and uh, and in more general dynamics certainly comes to mind with their wildly human like robots. they're playing a big role in the future of warfare, aren't they? and so generally damage is one of the companies that's yes of course, operating in, in, in this industry. and, you know, their technology is not just there's, they're looking at the broader world. they're looking at other checks that's out there. i mean, when you look at robotics is it's not necessary now that future robots that are in a battle field look like humans. it's not necessary for them to be that right because they're essentially a chilling machine. but when it comes to maybe, uh,
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you know, being more channels, flies looking like a human or, or what have you there. yes. you know, you could have someone looking like a robots out there right now. robotics is that a very interesting place at a very exciting phase, generally in the world. and of course, battle and war is one of the applications. but humanoid looking robots have been becoming popular. you know, we started with that. there was a robot called us of the a few years ago that the world was fascinated that i'm talking 5 years ago. i flew there fascinated with associates a robot. but now you have other things such as boston. they met the damage that was bought by google. you have a media, a very human looking robot, and others that are now going to be that are now going to inspire this new generation of robots that move like humans. that do, uh, seems like humans take up objects of data, need bombs, and what have you.
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