72_FutureNowShow_ufoday.txt Mmm, that's it. Time is it. Time is it indeed. It's late in the day. Fifteen. And this happened. It's getting a little more crazy as we go forward. Sorry about that little gap, everybody. We were having some technical difficulties. Well, we know that the future can be late now. We're interested in the concept. Anyway, we were noticing that our levels were not going from our wonderful studio out to the Internet. And it took us till now to find out why. Did you know what it was? It was a malfunction of the butt. B-U-T. It's default changed. And we had to reset it. Alright, but hey, let's act like... Everything's normal. Hey, we never have any technical difficulties. Yeah, and it's so weird. Like you sit down, you haven't changed a thing, you've tested everything. It's hot, man. It's hot. And there's one question mark. The weather has an effect on the technology. It's the weather. Yes, it's the weather. We had to reboot a couple times. The fans are going full blast. Because we're off the grid. We can't use air conditioning. And hence, everything's a little warmer than it might normally be. Kind of reminds me of my childhood. [laughter] Well, actually it was worse then because have you ever been in a summer in Philadelphia without air conditioning? Can't say that I have. No. Living at the oil refineries. The wafting of the smell and the warmth. It just makes a memory that is etched deeply into my nostrils. You know, it's really time to start the show, honey. Okay, okay. I'm sorry. Reflecting on the weather. Would you like to say hi to Bobby? Bobby! For a whole listening audience. Of course. Yes, hi, Bobby. Welcome to the show. I'm glad to be here. Yeah. Beautiful day. And I imagine it's a little with a natural air conditioning that you have in San Francisco. It's a little cooler. It cools off at night. Oh. It's at least 20 degrees less than you there, I guess. Wow. Yeah. It's a challenge to keep yourself in a good mood when you're feeling hot. But it's my challenge right now. And if I seem to get a little irritable, let me know. Okay. And if your levels are hot, I'll let you know. Yeah, it says it's even cooler in Jersey right now. Cooler. Don't make me mad. Finally, well, we know our friend Gabby had to suffer through the heatwave last week. Yeah, but you see that torrential rain that they had? Oh my God. That must be the satisfying result of that. We don't get that at all here. We get the heat. And for lucky, I respite for a day or two and hopefully not a forest fire. Yeah, hopefully. Well, I like to start the day with a swim if possible. That is one of the great benefits here is that we've got the most incredible swimming pole in Boulder Creek. Yeah. Just it's one of our best kept secrets. Yeah. So we're not going to tell you guys either. We like our own lane, you see. It's an Olympic sized heated outdoor pool. Very nice. Yeah. Anybody who comes to visit will definitely let you know, but we're not going to alert the media. Okay. We got a couple of guests coming in, not this week, but next week and then week after that. And I'm really excited as we'll be exploring some of our favorite topics in more depth at both of these shows. And this week you get Bobby and Son and I to really look at the news and our version of deconstruction of what's going on. Oh, what's that? Well, I thought there was some deconstruction going on. Oh, yes. You turn on my reverb, will you? Yeah, thank you very much. One of the big stories this week has to do with all this technology. It's a piece called Cheap Fakes. Okay. Now we're talking about the stories that Alex post for the show for everyone to read on the very bottom of the second collection of today's notes, Cheap Fakes, videos, and the phrase itself is coming center stage, especially after the hilarious thing we call the presidential debate a few days ago. I did not find it hilarious. I found it to be a bit of a snore. But I'll take your word for it. You know, it had its funny moments. I have a story on that from a body language point of view. Okay. Body language of the candidates. I thought that was quite fascinating. So let me give me up today what's happening with Cheap Fakes and the bid for presidency. Okay. What's happening? Well, Cheap Fakes videos of Biden have been edited, taken out of context, and to make him look stupider and less physically fit than he even is now. These are inundating social media and naturally being used for a political spin. You know, I think that was more important before the debate. I think a lot of people were feeling like the debate was the chance to debunk all of that fake media. Only people who are already diehard Biden fans were convinced that he was pulling it off just fine. Most people felt that the inability to complete sentences was concerning Mandarin Chief. And we know he's a good guy. We know he's a smart guy. We know he's had a lifetime in office. We know he's got a lot of people around him. Well, that's the thing. He's lies on. That's the thing. I think what we have with Biden is a team. We have a team of people that are actually running a lot of the system. And they're probably getting the most they can out of him. I don't think he's being manipulated like some puppet like many of our friends do. Yeah. And it's pretty easy to separate the deep fakes from the real concerns that we have about this man. Yeah. Well, that's the other thing is that the Cheap Fakes allow you to easily play with context and understanding a story. You can make somebody look brighter. You can make them look stupid. You can play with their demeanor. You can selectively look for sound bites and juxtapose them with other sound bites that had nothing to do with it, but sound like what you always wanted to believe. All these sorts of things are now being done. And so you really can't trust anything you're hearing, including us right now. It all could be manufactured. Well, you've been manufacturing our voices with AIs. Yeah. Let's face it, when we're talking, we're manufacturing our thoughts out of thin air already. So it's all following what we're doing anyway in terms of creating conversation and language. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it can be used for lies and deception. But like language, the cinematic language and visual audio, symbologies that we're all playing with, thanks to our smartphones, are developing a language system that for better or for worse is the species' language system is working everywhere in the world. So what are you trying to say? So what I'm saying is that- Getting better at communicating outside of our language? The cheap fakes, I don't think it's totally bad. I think what it's doing is helping to evolve our species' language system so that it's more coherent that we need to deal with noise in order to know how to clean it up. Absolutely. It's amazing how much the problems of technology are really the growing pains of having these tools work better to meet our needs. And sometimes new needs emerge. Probably before the era of computers, nobody would have suspected that we would need to program computers to sort out which camera images are real and which ones aren't. That's something you don't imagine until it happens. I like to imagine scenarios. I personally enjoy making up stories. I know you do. And I also enjoy reading stories. Yeah, I think your stories are obvious fakes. I wouldn't call them like deep fakes. Fakes. They're fictional. Yeah. But what about this MIT robot that designed to pack your groceries? Is that fake? I don't know. Is that a tell me? Robo-Groser. Is this another link? It is another link. It's like, okay, let's link there. No, I make it different. I'm not into simply family interested in enlivening the conversation with new and exciting information that of things that are happening around us. And one of the things is robots. I really think it's amazing. I think the robot revolution will free us from the shackles of slavery once and for all. Mm-hmm. We'll finally have programmable slaves, huh? It takes it away. It takes it from the suffering of our species to supporting us by our machines. Okay, specifically, I wanted to mention that there is a checkout, self-checkout robot, designed coming out of MIT. It looks like the first part of this robot, it's a system really. The first part of it is the robot that packs your bags. And apparently it took a lot of time and effort to be able to figure out how to teach robo-grossry how to use computer vision and soft robotic grippers to bag a whole bunch of items into a grocery bag, something we do every day. Mm-hmm. How long did it take? It started off rather poorly, but it got better as MIT researchers studied its behavior. To test the system, they placed 10 objects that the robot didn't know about onto a grocery conveyor belt, right? And that included grapes, bread, kale, muffins, and crackers, as well as more solid objects, more easier ones for it to find, like meal boxes, soap cans, ice cream containers. So the vision kicks in first, then it detects the objects as they come down the conveyor belt, and the vision system looks how big they are and their orientation on the belt. And then, in comes this new thing called the Graspur, and it's called soft robotics. It's really soft. It's like a rubbery material. Imagine a couple of fingers coming down and squeezing a grape. It can touch grapes. It has little pressure sensors. And when it squeezes, it can tell how much to use to pick it up. Haptics. Yeah. Haptic feedback, as you can say. How delicate it is. Another item is not so much. You have a soup can. It doesn't need that kind of sensitivity. And it knows what to put on the bottom of the bag. Like you want the heavier items on the bottom of the bag. Like the cans and stuff like that on the chips on the top. Eggs on the top, right? Yeah, eggs. On the top, you want eggs, bread, chips, and bananas? Yeah, I think everyone in the banana is right. So the robot was able, they had to teach it what goes on the bottom, what goes on the top, and it seems to get pretty good at that. They say that they've got it working now, but that there's plenty of room for improvement and upgrades and a better Graspur system and a better imaging. They're looking at this on an industrial level, though. Not just your shopping bags at Safeway, but an industrial recycling plant where it's dealing with thousands of items coming down the conveyor belt, all of which needs to be sorted and placed in the right other conveyor belt or bin or robot coming to pick it up or whatever. The sorting capacities. I love sorting things especially recycling, sending all to me. We'll be right back. All right. Thanks, Robo-Grusery. A burden of a long, expensive lease. Your solution is Satellite Digital Media Studio on SoCal Avenue with their downtown Santa Cruz. Satellite offers private offices, meeting and conference rooms, even co-working by the hour, day, week, or month. Schedule a tour at satellitecoworking.com. Mention Santa Cruz Voice for a 20% discount off your first reservation. Hi. I'm Nancy, the Tasting Room Manager at Barchetta Winery in SoCal, where we've been producing award-winning wine since 1933. Our Tasting Rooms are open daily at our SoCal location at 3535 North Main Street or in Monterey at 700 Canary Row. We host weddings, receptions and special events. Go to Barchetta.com to find out more or call 831-475-2258. There's always something happening at Barchetta Winery. When you need help managing your estate, call on the angel. Hello, I am attorney Angel Hess, and I am ready to help. Whether you need a will or a trust, a guardianship, or a conservatorship, or if you are managing the financial affairs of a loved one, I will help you with over seven years' experience working in estate planning and probate fields. When you need help, call on the angel, attorney Angel L. Hess at Santa Cruz Legal.net. The hook is California's first-ever cannabis outlet. 100% locally owned and operated, we're here to be your friendly neighborhood hookup. We believe that everyone should have access to fairly priced cannabis, so we work hard to get it to you for 30-50% less than the other guys. If you're 21 or older with a valid ID, visit us in Capitola or in Watsonville today. We're here to be your friendly neighborhood hookup. Check out our website HookOutlet.com for deals and stay groovy. Oh, I'm not having a very good time. She believes the technical difficulties are plaguing us today. It certainly could be related. It could be related to a dedicated broadcaster robot to give me the day off. Yes, well, I trust that the technical difficulties are the way in which the machines from the future are contacting us today. They're doing it through our links. Like for example, did you know that today is World UFO Day? No, that explains a lot. I know, right? And here it is. That's what they're telling us. Go to the first story, you humanoids. All right, tell us about World UFO Day. Well, thank you, okay. Let's click on that. From India today, it was covering it the best. Oh, India today. Oh, so this isn't even about our Congress coming clean with their... No, no, not American politics. No, this is old school UFO. This is world event. This is world... People seeing unexplained phenomenon. This is world UFO Day today. Okay. Observed annually on July 2nd. Okay. Yeah, and it's all things UFO today. So keep that in mind as you experience your day. If you see some weird aliens, just realize that they have the day off. Yeah, because everyone is thinking about it today. And when the group mind is focused, shall we say, it gets crazy like that. It's like magic. Yeah, nate top. Okay. So whatever it means to you, to me, it enriches your knowledge about lots of various topics. Even if you believe or not believe that aliens exist, it doesn't matter because it's all part of the mind-fu of the day. No, isn't there a whole new Netflix series about an illegal alien that's a guy from another planet that is having to escape immigration services? Illegal aliens have a whole new spin. Men in black, what does men in black have to tell us about the border situation? Right. You know, how can these sci-fi ideas apply to reality? Well, in terms of immigration and walls, we learned from Germany that walls are meant to keep people in, not out. But hey, that's it. What a bump for as far as I'm concerned. You know, to me, I like to think that ever evolution is a biological one, not just just our mental bodies. And along those lines, if you think of biology and walls, I think membranes. Membranes. That's what biology uses for separating things. Now, maybe it would work on the level of humans too. So if you start to imagine walls as being smart, that's getting closer. Their hand-or- L corporation and those are working in that direction. And smarter things is good. But alive. The next step would be get smart and alive. And when it becomes alive, it becomes... Now, maybe it's possible... Maybe it's prognosticating. Well, I'd say it's possible that we can create membranes that aren't alive as we do it all the time. It doesn't necessarily have to be alive initially, but can use a lot of the ideas of aliveness like membranes for borders, for thinking about borders. Okay. We're going in that direction anyway. We all have these passes now that allow you to go over faster. If you think of a cell wall, it's allowing certain nutrients to go in and certain other things not to go in. It's very intelligent about how it allows the flow of chemicals in and out of the cell. You know, you're simulating in me something that may not be related, and yet it does have to do with membranes. But it's about things that Robert F. Kennedy has been saying in some of his recent media coverage. For instance, he is very interested in solving some of our current problems, such as immigration, with some very novel solutions that involve AI and blockchain and issuing passports to every single person in the country who would like to use them. And he's running into a lot of resistance with implementing any of these futuristic ideas because, of course, the people that are currently running those things have their own agenda. Yes. They don't really want to clean it up. Yeah. That's it. If you haven't tranched interest and you have the new ones that are coming in, and certainly one of the most entrenched is the whole economic model. But as far as membranes in the future, we are going to have more efficient solutions. We are not going to be fighting over stupid things like who gets to come in and out of the border. It just seems to me that what's going on right now is a big fight over tax money. And with the national budget being so completely insane and out of control, we know that the fight over who gets control of the tax money is really a fight over the power of the future. But eventually, we're going to automate all that stuff and it's going to make things easier, not harder for all of us humans. I really strongly believe that. I'm glad you do because I kind of hid in that direction myself. It could go either way. I think what we think about and what we'd like to create is important. What you do think matters because it adds to that particular possible future. Sure. The planetary group mind is kind of a democracy. Kind of. Everybody gets to put out their own vote of their own thoughts. Yeah. And it does work. And we are organizing as a species. Now, if microbes can organize, humans can too. Fair enough. And we do. Who's going to stop us? Well, ourselves. I think that the whole nationalism debate is stopping us. It's not understanding how we're one species and how it all connects and how we operate as an organism. None of that is discussed or understood or received and national interests are considered. And to a certain extent, that's good. It's like in the human body, the kidney needs to defend its territory as does the heart or the liver. They're all unique organisms in and of themselves. But to operate together, it's another level of complexity that I think we're just figuring out how to do. And right now we're dealing with a little of internal chemistry with our particular organ in the United States. We are. Yeah. If you think of the US as an organ, it has a role to play in the planetary species organism. Yeah. A lot of people like to think so. Yeah. It's true. And it's important to think about it. What role do we play? The planetary system? Are we the brain or with a muscle? You're talking about the United States? Yeah. Maybe we're the freckles. The freckles on the face of the planet. Mrs. Shichir, I appreciate you humor, but we must think deeper on this. Oh, okay. We need gravitas, more gravitas. We're America. Okay. The world's policemen and we're the melting pot where people from around the planet have come and we get to know everybody from everywhere and that's who we are. We're not just from here. That's important too. Well, we're the country that first eliminated slavery at the level of our laws. Yeah. There's a lot of countries that haven't caught up yet. A lot of our people don't even realize the freedom that they have in protesting is part of the elimination of slavery and giving rights to the people. What are some of the other great claims to fame? Well, supposedly we don't have kings. Well, not if you listen to the Democrat commentary on the most recent Supreme Court ruling about presidential immunity. I did read Lawrence Lessig making some intelligent comment because I was really trying to figure out why they were saying that the president would be king. I know that the way that the judges think is really much more legalistic than that and what they're very fine scalpel of discernment is actually looking at is whether or not the actions of a campaigning president are presidential actions that are protected. I guess that in the past presidential actions were considered private and maybe now they're considered public or now they're considered part of his presidential responsibility. But it's a very murky issue. Yes, murky indeed. Imagine keying into how it feels to be running for president and yet you are and we're the president and let's face it, people treat you that way wherever you go. So if you both could use a newfound presidential immunity capability to win, wouldn't you? So looking at it from an alpha males president's point of view, what does it feel like viscerally in the moment to win and keep winning? Much like a king, I would say. Try taking the king's position for a moment. Feel it. It's good to be king. When you feel the kingness and I think we're all capable of doing this, I think Shakespeare showed the how important it is that we're able to empathize with these various characters that we can feel what the king is dealing with and it does feel good to be king. I think it has biological basis. It's feeling on top of it. It's the alpha male feeling. This is a real thing and it's really clear in being in charge and knowing how to do certain things that others don't or thinking about things when it could cut through a lot of bold, like a Gordian knot. There's a feeling of power as a self-assurance that we're all capable of experiencing. There's nothing wrong with that. So you think the idea of calling that being king is really just a euphemism to talk about power. The state of self-empowerment and ability to enact your own will. Yeah. I think we're all capable. You know, the big thing these days is to discover your superpowers. Yeah. Right? So it's kind of related to that. You could discover your lordship, that side of yourself, as well as the less admiring parts of your being. The acknowledged whole thing. But on UFO today, we're looking at recognizing your alpha self. Yes, sir! Could you elaborate a little bit? UFO World Day and it's important to see yourself as your own superhero. Okay. All right, to really be you. And that's okay because that is your superpower, really being yourself, your authentic being. Right, so. It seems to me that's something that has more to do with pride month than it does with World UFO Day. Oh, do you? Well, explain that to me. As part of World UFO Day. I don't- You understand the whole issue of identity, too, right? That that is something that people have had a hard time with these days, whether it be sexual or political. Oh. Liberals and Democrats aren't what they used to be. Male and female aren't what they used to be. What's going on here? I think clarity will happen on that issue, too. Well, we can help. Part of it is our ability to instantly travel using our technology to anywhere in the world in real time. The ability to have phones that allow us to use avatars. The ability to have multiple identities online. All these things are training us that we're multidimensional beings that can have many personas. For example, consider the galactic IAM meditation. I am vibration. I am timeless. I am unity. I am activating. I am resonant. I am galactic. I am radiant. I am divine. And why limits yourself to just one? I am lunar. I am magnetic. I am planetary. I am balanced. I am organized. I am connected. I am inspired. I am in harmony. I am integrity. I am perfect. I am manifestation. I am dissolving. I am releasing. I am liberated. Your basic expanded identity. That's a very advanced thought. I think of expanded identity along the lines of expanded communication. Look how easy it was for us to adapt to having long distance communication anywhere on the planet, anytime, in high quality. It's interesting how easy it is to feel like you're talking to someone anywhere in the world and how easy we got used to doing that. It's become normalized very quickly. I mean, a hundred years ago, it would be a miracle. Sure. Well, technology is magic, isn't it? Yeah. Politics, religion, all these things, we're going to get some clarity on and it's going to happen fairly fast. Fairly fast. Fairly fast. And now time for space news. Space news. Do you like space news? I love space news. Yes. I love looking at 138 UFO sightings in California. Well, that's for starters being on UFO day. How many sightings did we have in this area? Is that just today? I don't know. I saw this article. Remember, this article is coming from one of the UFO capitals of California, the Mojave Desert. Okay. All right. They claim that 138 registered sightings of UFOs have happened since January across the gold state. And of those 138, 52 were explained as planes, rocket launches, Starlink, Sats, or space junk. That leaves 86 that remain question marks. So 86 so far this year. Big one. Was it Los Angeles? 25 people reported sightings over Los Angeles. In mid-June, there was a shiny bright round disk that flew really fast over LA. And there was some kind of aura or haze around it. And 25 people, huh? And then people in Malibu saw a bright white light moving really fast to the Northeast. A faster than anything they could imagine. Also British lights flying information over LA. Wow. Number two is a part of the state called Santa Maria. You know where that is? Not exactly. It's a little south of San Luis Obispo down on the central coast. Oh, yeah, right. Right. That area down there. There's kind of interesting because they had a sighting of a cigar flying cigar. Mm. Really? Which is really interesting to me because we have a winery along the coast here in Bonny Dune. And apparently a cigar shaped UFO was seen over that winery years ago. It became emblazoned in the label of one of the wine types. Really? It's got a cigar UFO. The body doing venues, yeah. Became cigar wine. Local UFO lore. Yeah. Figaro or something like that. I think it's a lisigara, something like that. Shablity of some sort. Unidentified lying wine. And also a lot of strange UFO sightings. Sacramento. Oh, well. Pretty unidentified in Sacramento. Yeah, it could be politics and UFOs. Connection. Don't look up. Oh, five sightings were shared. Residents saw weird lights. Triangle shaped triangles keep coming back all the time. Triangle shaped craft and square ones and glowing green orbs. Okay. I haven't seen any of those though. The AI did push out something like that to me yesterday when I was a glowing green orb. I was prompting for blobs, color cycling blobs that look like they're coming from biology, floating in the air. And it came close to having these green glowing hovering orbs that are apparently at sightings of Sacramento. Okay. Yeah, so my mind sees a connection there. Green glowing orbs in our political gathering. Green glowing ores around the orbs. Teenage kids were picking up a package and they saw specks of green lights above an apartment complex. And then the two square objects appeared out of nowhere, just hovering square objects. They have with a green glow aura and a green dot right in the middle of them. It's like somebody's focusing plane for an Oculus three. Are we just part of somebody's VR game? What's going on here? TV. Yeah. Simulation hypothesis. Yes, Bob. Yeah. Those have LiDAR on your iPhones and it does three-dimensional. And it puts out this green grid if you can see it, but you can't. But it is this green grid. So I don't know. Maybe somebody had a Vision Pro or something. The green dots. I don't know. Well, maybe the kid had his VR gear on it. I forgot. Yeah. For some reason that he was wearing it. That's when it gets really weird. You forget to take off your goggles. You can't tell the difference. You can't tell the difference. It's designed so that augmented reality is so good. It's seamless. It's a seamless interface between what you're seeing in your goggles and reality. Augmented reality could get that good with probably not that far, like maybe 8K technology. 16K for sure. 16K would be as good as the Abretna. Well, I'll tell you some of these other UFO sightings sound really interesting. The one in India and the one in Coachella Valley. Yeah. It's non-stop interesting. Yeah. It's true. So apparently there's in a near proximity to a military installation around 29 palms. Right. There have been. This has always been a prime UFO UAP sighting. Well, I guess, right? Military bases. They definitely have a higher than average UFO sighting percentage, I'd say. You think the military folks are seeing more UFOs than everyone else? Well, I just think that with reverse engineering to the degree that the military have their own vehicles. They have enough new toys to play with. Right. They'd be more interested in the topic. Yeah. Yeah, I suppose if I had some anti-gravity boots, I'd be playing with them. I'd imagine that things could be very different if some of those technologies got out. Yeah. But the sightings were from a trio of NASA scientists claiming that they were on a stargazing trip on an official observation hill when they spotted an anomaly in the night sky. So these are NASA scientists that saw three of them. Yeah. Some credibility there. There's some credibility there. Yeah. What about this huge dark V-shaped craft moving across the western sky over the San Jacinto Mountains? I'd like to see that. Now, you know, what's interesting is that a lot of this stuff is being captured now in people's cell phones. I'd like to see it integrated so that we could sort of, I think there's some people that are aggregators and are kind of doing that with collections, compilations on YouTube. We're already seeing this start to happen. Oh, there you go. Here's the eighth sighting article is about some that were in San Jose. Right. Right. Right. We're on the corner here. Two San Jose UFO incidents. Oh. Late June, shortly before sunrise. A stationary bright light. Oh, you don't think that could have been planet Venus? I thought it could be a star or a planet until I noticed it changing and moving. So there you go. In San Jose, a bright star was changing and moving. You know, you remember Robert Anton Wilson? And then it vanished. Yeah, of course. Yeah. He wrote about UFOs quite a bit and he had often wondered about the story of a UFO that lands and instead of taking the people and subjecting them to anal probes and such things, it came into the house and pulled out what looked like a dish of pancakes. And offered to share them with the people. Yeah, let's stir up and everything. That's some non-alien activity. Yeah. Well, I thought that was interesting. Probably one of the more close encounters I've heard of. Oh, boy. I can't believe they have a kitchen on these UFOs. Oh, yeah. What do you think they have? I don't know. They probably have something that manufactures instantly like a 3D model printer, but it's actually whatever their sustenance or food or they take gobs of vitamins once a day or who knows? Yeah, and I know. What do they? What do they want? Yeah. I breathe. I breathe whatever I want. The other that was at Area 51, they said light ice cream. The alien, the unidentified being. It's good. Yeah. The aliens like ice cream. And that's all that would eat with ice cream. And it lasted for a couple of years, I guess. She's a wonderful flavor. Let me think. I mean, Rocky Road. No, I think it was vanilla. It's just like vanilla. Is it just straight vanilla? Yeah. Vanilla alien. He's a straight vanilla in alien. Well, it seems to be a cry for citizen science on this whole issue. Yeah. Well, this article was in a citizen science newspaper called patch.com. Ooh, okay. Well, there it is. It was a very thorough list of California sightings of UFO if you want to check it out on the DrFutureShow.com. Yeah, as a starter. People are starting to track it all. It's starting to make patterns. It's going to get interesting as we approach what you might call, Kurtz Weill calls the singularity. Art Bell calls the quickening. All right. We'll enjoy your UFO day. I'll be what you call it. We're going to go have some news at the top of the hour. I think they're going to be off in 15 seconds. Okay. They're here to watch the big transformation on here. The transformation. Okay. The planetary transformation. Yes. That's going to happen. All right. Be right back. You live? I will continue with Space News. Space News. Yes. Remember how Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, invested in a company that was supposed to capture debris from low Earth orbit, deorbitant, sort of like space debris collector machines? Yes. Great. I do remember he was setting up some kind of weird satellite trash collector. Well, right. I think it was privateer or anything. Privateer. There you go. In military news this week on Space News, there's a startup from that universe called Turian, T-U-R-I-O-N, Turian Space. They're developing a collection of satellites that will autonomously dock at dead satellites and deorbit them. They offer de-orbiting services. Right. Well, that's really interesting. That's kind of the tugboat of space, right? Yes. The atmosphere that these things burn up in the atmosphere or at least land in the ocean. Yeah, the police tugboats. They'll do data collection. They'll decide which satellites to grab and then they'll move them. They have parking orbits where they can temporarily put them for a while and then they have ones where they drop them into the Earth's atmosphere. The original parking meter in space. Yeah. They go into the lot for 45 days and then they get dropped onto the Earth and they become a pretty site for people to see. Fascinating. Yeah. So the mothership maneuvers and lets the droid ships know where to go. So there is literally a mothership that runs a fleet of these tow trucks in space. It's sort of like waste management, right? In a way, that too. They go out and collect the trash once a week and bring it back to the depot. Right. Try and save the good stuff and recycle. So they've been funded. Their first satellite is called Droid.001. It's a 32 kilo spacecraft and it's designed for situational awareness. In other words, it's a spy satellite. Yeah. Yeah. Thanks for buying on space. Yeah, situational awareness. Who are you kidding me? The situational awareness is really paying attention to what's going on right next to you too. Like you go up to a dead Russian satellite, Chinese satellite and see if it's worth anything. See if you can get any data out of it. There you go. Right. I mean, it's the same value. It's not just value. It's not just value. These days is not just it's metals in silicon, but the memory and how it works. The frequencies it's paying attention to, how is it able to descramble our signals, all that kind of stuff. I see. These are kind of smart trash collectors. Let me start up snow and where to get the money from in order to finance their clean up operations. Right. Well, they're promising big. Yeah. And would you call it over promised so they can under deliver? Well, in these speculative areas, the R&D, it's easy to get away with more in terms of, I didn't know that was going to happen kind of response to things because you don't because you're playing with the edge more and space is hard. So to create a way in which you can clean up the garbage and lower Thorbit is not a trivial thing. Look how hard it is just to create a robot that can pack your groceries. Look how hard it is to get to that part of the ecosphere. It's hard stuff and be able to do it now to get there and then to be able to operate when you're there. It's a huge deal. Interestingly enough, this Droid.001 is also funded partly by NASA. Mm-hmm. NASA is the big coordinator of all the technology going up to space. Quite a bit of it. That's true. And they are working with more and more private industries to help explore possibilities. Yeah. But the space debris problem has been a big one and this is part of the solution to that is at least that's the way they're presenting it. Right. Yeah. So basically sending up these little propulsion systems that will just start jettying, they'll attach themselves to a satellite that needs to be de-orbited. Yeah. I think of them as, yeah, they're like little insects that can fly around to different ships, land on them and either de-orbit them or find out what they know or bring them back to life or there'll be lots of different purposes for them. But they're of fleet of ships that can visit other satellites and do what they need. They could be doctors. Sure. It's the satellite traffic controllers. The mobile insect lake and small spacecraft. Yeah. The garbage collectors in space don't have to be big garbage machines like we have here on Earth that collects all the garbage from everyone's house. No. No. It's more like it can push a satellite in a certain way and move it to a de-orbiting orbit or to a storage area for a while. It's more about its ability to move the other ones in terms of its size. Space sweeper. Space sweeper, yeah, can be relatively small and be good at its job. Turian space. So far they've raised about $20 million in venture capital and a former SpaceX propulsion engineer co-founded the company, Mount Westerdal, Westerdal, with Tyler, James Pierce and Patrick Weter. In space news, venture startups on UFO Day, we have our garbage collectors starting to do their job. It's a whole generation, it used to be that people would get interested in technology and they'd soup up their hot rod cars. Now they're souping up their space missions. Yeah, yeah. And what's nice about near Earth orbit is that you can have your control panels at home. You could be comfortably in your living room. Your star link could be a link to actually playing with real moving objects. Oh, so your virtual world is actually your remote control, huh? Yeah, you have a remote control of a dozen satellites or at least one when you step for starters, that you can control from your living room. That's what's possible. That's probably what will happen. I know that's something you've been fixated on is to have control over a little drone light show. I mean, I guess that's analogous because you have your local controller and you've got your device out there. It's on arm's reach. I see space is something that's creatively we can play with. You turf. Yeah, yeah. And most of it's not being used by much. I think some large group gaming scenarios could happen with real space objects. You're playing around with them. Of course, you need to be conscious of not causing any harm to the planet or the people on it. And the rules of low Earth orbit gaming need to be defined. But I can see it as something that's technically feasible and could be a lot of fun. So you're talking about gaming with remote control satellites? Yeah, well, satellites represent actual objects that you're controlling from your home. They're low enough worth. It's only a couple hundred miles so that the latency delay wouldn't be a big problem in terms of remote control. It gets to be a problem when you're on the moon where as a second and a half, it's really hard to be spontaneous with a second and a half delay in your ability to control a remote body robot. But here it could be huge. The Earth orbit gaming commission would be formed and maybe I'll do a little story about this. Now that I've got these AI tools, I just did a story we submitted to a film festival last night that is an idea along the, not along these lines, but on this level. Yeah, Dr. Future has produced yet another AI assisted short film. Yeah, we'll put the link in our sight here. Blushing out some of his creative ideas for the world to see. Low Earth cleaning it up first. I agree. We should clean up low Earth orbit. We made a mess out of it. We've got a lot of junk there. We should clean it up. Then we can throw some group games there. I take it. You don't want to bring up this user input. Okay, user input. This is huge. Something completely different. Thanks. I thought low Earth orbit gaming was huge. I think it could be huge. What are you talking about? Oh, the Supreme Court. Oh, your least favorite celebrity. No, I just feel the law is very antiquated and is really worshiping the past. Well, and it's so interesting that we've got all this focus on people making the laws. Meanwhile, the laws don't seem to be applied to anybody in government anyway. No, no, because that's not where the life is. Well, and laws try to keep up with life. It might be the sign of a free country that the people in power think they're free, but they think if they can put some laws out, then people who don't know that they're free will just follow them. Maybe that's how it works. Well, that would freedom is in America. Oh, I didn't know. Jeez. All right. So, Supreme Court Biden tells doctors to provide emergency abortions. That's the story that's sent in on our tech feed. Who's that from? Someone who's concerned about. I was cleaning up the garbage in space. The abortion ruling well. I know it's really important. It's very important. It's defining. Really as it's defining the age that we're in as technology changes the landscape of what we do with our time and how we pay attention and what's important in education. The practice of abortion and the laws affecting abortion are a direct expression of the power of women. And so the way that the interpretation and then the pushback unfolds is very much about the future of power for women. My understanding is that a lot of women doctors don't want to work in states where anti-abortion laws have been enacted. Right. Yeah, we were just reading about that, about how if you put this decision back to the states in the states where- It's going to reduce the medical quality of those states. Right. And the logic in the article was that people don't realize that a lot of the current population of young doctors is women. There's a much higher percentage of women now than there was in the past. So a lot of the doctors that exist in some of these places where they're pursuing rather antiquated versions of law will have old doctors that are going to retire and these old doctors are not going to be replaced by young women doctors because the young women are going to choose to go to states that honor the rights of women. So anybody who doesn't keep up is going to be left behind. Yeah. So what are we supposed to do about it? What would happen, right? Well, yeah. I mean, everyone's going to learn their lessons from- Definitely emerging history. I mean, it's definitely one of the things that we watch as people who feel like we're from the future. This two steps forward, four steps back, phenomenon around the power of women is just jaw-dropping. But I suppose that's how real progress is made. Real progress is made where there's a shock to the system. Look, somehow all that information about anti-abortion and pro-life or pro-abortion has been going on for 50 years and still there is a reaction and control that reverses that. Now, why has not half of the country learned what the other half has learned? Is there something missing here in terms of understanding what life is? Well, it's changing landscape. The eternal question is what nurtures life and what makes life worth living. I mean, those questions will never go away. But the modern questions are, do we use human technology to intervene or not? Those are the kind of questions that are concerning to people now. We're messing with the gene. We're messing with surgery that can determine when life begins. We're doing things where we're inserting our humanity into realms which previously were considered divine. So it's a new conversation. It's a new territory to think of. Yeah. Yeah. Well, the big shift, spiritually, of course, is thinking of it as all divine. That's true. It's all divine. It's just missing that little final piece. That's right. Well, that really flattens the hierarchy. It does. It doesn't mean it goes away. It just means it goes away for those that totally get it. Yeah. So there's a combination of people with different conflicting belief systems and different lessons to learn all living in the same physical space time. Welcome to our society. But because we have better communications, ideas can be passed along more easily. It can be easily faked. But in that process, we're learning how to make it better by using the fake information to fine-tune our ability to know the truth. And argue with that. Eli Lilly has a new drug. Oh, new drugs. You are very interested in drugs, aren't you? Well, drugs are part of the being here on this planet, biochemistry. And especially in the current, in the modern culture, we listen to the comedy special of someone who's now one of my favorite comedians, Hannah Ein Binder. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Part of her comedy was about the fact that the ADD generation of kids have all been given at all. They've all been given all kinds of drugs to affect their moods and affect their consciousness. And the way that they relate to the pharmacy industry is certainly very different than the way I relate to it. They have no resistance. And in fact, they want to be smart shoppers, but they definitely want to shop. They want to get ahold of whatever drugs they can for whatever kind of physical or mood altering behavior they can. And so they are the audience for this Eli Lilly, for instance. Well, no, Eli Lilly is focusing on one of the big diseases of our time, Alzheimer's, which is fairly new. It's not been as big as it has been now. You mean the drug or the spread of Alzheimer's? How many people have Alzheimer's? Yes. Yeah. And so this is a donut mab, D-O-N-A. Can you point to the word? And I'll take a guess at it. M-A-B. Donna, like Donna NEM, dammit. Donna NEM Mab. Say that three times. Oh, that's the name. You came up with that name, right? That went through a focus group, really. Yeah. I like donut mab. Perfect. For trying to remember. Donna NEM Mab. Donna Mab. Yeah. So whenever it ends with the M-A-B, it means it's a monoclonal antibody. Oh, okay. And so what it's doing, this monoclonal antibody is targeting the amyloid betas and the tau tangles, these misfolded proteins in the brain that causes Alzheimer's. And the amyloid. Well, that reminds me, there's been a lot of controversy in the news lately about the amyloids. Apparently, there was some major paper that had been doctored back from 2008 or so. Right. That sort of showed that the amyloid model of understanding Alzheimer's may not be what's actually going on after all. Yes, I read that one too. And it could be some other process that we're just not aware of. Yeah. It could be prions that are causing Alzheimer's. It could be, I really think it has to do with the mitochondria in the neurons and that as you get older, the powerhouse of the neuron, the mitochondria, they just slowly stop working. And so there's research where you can take a methylene blue and it reactivates some of these older mitochondria and they start working again and... Memory improves. It's a memory improves. Yeah. So there's different approaches. Yeah. I was fascinated myself with the psychological studies that show this frame of your attitude towards the disease affected how well you did. Yeah. It seems like more positivity did make a difference in this case. Yeah. Fascinating. What's going on with this? And I think Doc Wallach was saying that they had an epidemic of this 40 years ago in veterinary world and they solved it because they couldn't have a flux of sheep forgetting where they were not coming back to the barn at night and stuff like that. They had to figure out how to deal with that. He was able to treat it purely through food, shift in a diet. Yeah. And he's talking actively about that these days. Certain vegetable oils, certain kinds of sugar. Fascinating. But this latest drug from Eli Lilly is in its final phase of FDA review. Even though it's not guaranteed, it's going to prove that probably will be approved by the end of the year. This might make the difference for some. He did try this approach before and what was happening was these Alzheimer's patients were getting encephalitis. Their brains were swelling up because the monoclonalibrize were attaching to the amyloid proteins and they couldn't flush them out enough and it was kind of plugging up the system and their brains were swelling up a little bit. So hopefully this one doesn't have that problem. Yeah. I assume when everyone thought that the amyloid plaque was a problem there, it's a huge focus put on how to get rid of amyloid plaque in the brain, right? There's a lot of work on that. Scrub your plaque from your head. And then what I remember is some of them were really good at getting rid of it but it didn't seem to make much difference. Mm-hmm. Because it wasn't quite as- It wasn't about the plaque, isn't it? It wasn't the problem. Yeah. Right. So now we know a lot about washing out plaque from the brain. We just don't know how to make the brain keep working. Yeah. Yeah. What is it that's really? The deeper mysteries of how the brain works is definitely always taking us outside of our normal of what we actually know. There was that work out of MIT and Harvard where they were flashing lights at 40 cycles a second and it was actually activating the glial cells which in your brain you don't have an immune system. You have kind of a like a roto-ruder flush out system where it takes things that shouldn't be in the brain and flushes them out through- Right. It uses your lymph. And I guess there's this- The lymph class. Exactly. The point where your lymph pressure goes down and another point where your lymph pressure goes up and that cycle of pressure is what moves the fluid through your brain. They were taking rats and then they took people and they just flash 40 cycles a second and the glial cells start pumping or they start synchronizing altogether and they start flushing out the amyloids out of the brain. So they got to get it flushing the amyloids and that's- Yeah. So maybe if they combine this with the 40 Hertz light- Free-gliding. It also works with sound. They were using headphones and you have this low frequency. It also works just as well as the light at 40 cycles. Yeah, that's interesting. I wonder about that. I wonder about the electromagnetics and its effect on disease as well. You know, there's all that talk about the quantum consciousness where it's actually- Yeah, I'm just- These microtubules and there's actually ultraviolet going down these tubules and when the light actually changes from a particle to a wave that it collapses the quantum state and that's what gives consciousness. Yeah. And I- It's a great one. It came up with a model, huh? It's a pittington. It is based on the machine. Yeah. It's a hammer of hammer. Yeah, hammer of hammer. Hammer of hammer. Right. Yeah, hammer of hammer. Yeah, exactly. That's fascinating. We've got to go to a break. We'll be right back. We're talking with Bobby Wilder. On Santa Cruz voice. Cannabis is one of nature's most beneficial plants and at Treehouse dispensary we use it to build community. In addition to dispensing cannabis and education, Treehouse hosts first Friday events every month that feature our community's local artists, makers and activists. 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Please go to Santa Cruz voice.com and click support. Thank you. Hi folks. How many of you out there love to garden? Wouldn't it be nice to grow some of your own food or maybe a flower garden would brighten your day? All you need is the Knox Garden Box, a heavily constructed portable elevated garden on legs that can virtually change the way you've garden in the past. The Knox Garden Box can be set up anywhere. Yes, you can place it right on concrete. The Knox Garden Box.com. That's KNOX Garden Box.com. Okay, welcome back to the show. This idea that our planet is going through a black hole. Oh yeah, thanks Billy. I sent that one in. Yeah, yeah. Not sure what to make of that. Well, it's the new take on energy. Dark matter. It's a dark matter shower. Dark matters as usual. Yes. Again, that we actually don't want dark matter clouds that we're passing through as we spin through the galaxy. Yeah, our planet's being battered, battered by waves of dark matter. 27% of the universe, they're guessing. I've heard up to 85% observed it directly. Right, right. How much do we really know what's going on? I think the 87 is the dark energy. And yeah, 27 is the dark matter stuff. Dark matter. Dark matter is a placeholder for a name of something we can't. So it's not a real thing. It doesn't interact with light. So we don't have any experiments to understand it and characterize it. We don't have the instruments to detect it. And we're trying, trying to come up. Yeah, so we've done some stories where there's some theories of universe where it doesn't even exist that it can be accounted for without having to resort to the unknown dark matter. Yeah. Yeah. Dark matter as being as it is, it's not fully defined yet. So it can do all kinds of weird and mysterious things. So I'm not surprised it's become a major creativity play zone for astronomers to think about exotic dark matter, black holes and such. This is a classic kind of article in futurism.com that gives you some of the language that's being kicked around by modern physicists. So for instance, dark matter, when they prove that the God particle existed, they say, "Hey, the standard model works," but they've been noticing that the standard model only covers like 15% of the known universe and they are struggling to figure out what the rest of it is. And so that's where the dark matter comes in. And the things that they're talking about is, "Well, what does dark matter look like? How big is it? What does it act like? How can we imagine interacting with it?" And so some scientists have proposed that it might be extremely massive particles and they're called weekly interacting massive particles or wimps. Wimps, yes. And then there's the ionized particles that interact with the hypothetical dark matter. Don't forget those. Right, right. And so we can see the ions, but we don't know why they're doing what they're doing. But here's the interesting thing. One scientist says, "An electrically small dipole antenna targeting the generated radio waves can be orders of magnitude more sensitive to dark photon and axion-like particle dark matter." Oh, sounds like you should get one. Would you like an electrically small dipole antenna? Well, it gives me the mind is that the idea that the universe might be creating all kinds of weird ass antennas out there, including small dipole wave generators that communicate with dark matter or are made out of dark matter. The ideas like that show that antennas just might be more of a universal concept than we realize. Well, with all these satellites, we should be able to get up to the ionosphere and check it out, right? Apparently that's where we have the best chance of having our antenna interact with the radio waves that might illuminate dark matter for us. And that does remind me that SpaceX is attempting to explore an area where humans have not been since the Apollo project. Oh, yeah, let's talk about SpaceX. This is a new SpaceX called the Polaris Dawn mission. And it's trying to hit several new milestones in our explorations of space, like traveling 800 miles out. Oh, yeah. SpaceX, the current satellites of the Starlink system are all orbiting at like about 200 miles up, I think. Yeah. So now this next flight is going to go towards the North Pole and it's going to go 800 miles up. Yes. Yes. Oh, one comment just before we get into this. Thanks, Bobby. That's a great article. Bobby sent me an article. Is your DNA an EMF antenna? Yeah. So we're talking about very small dipolar antennas like in the molecular level. Exactly. Exactly. Apparently, certain frequencies can get the DNA to actually change or produce RNA and proteins differently just based on radio waves that you're in. Yeah, but what does it kind of do in that case? There can be EMF control frequencies for adjusted. Does it revampify? Yeah, it's just it starts jiggling at the frequency of specific devices. Yeah. Yeah. Radio frequencies. So when you're talking about this dark energy and these micro dipolar antennas, your DNA is made up of these tiny antennas. Yeah. So they would probably... So maybe we interact with this dark matter in a way that we're just not aware of. We can swim through it. That they're a piece to understanding the ecosystem in which we are. Yeah. So in other words, it's not a mystery to some part of ourselves how we interact with dark matter through these dipole antennas perhaps. We'll have to investigate this a little further. Thank you, Bobby. Okay. Back to SpaceX. Now we're back up. Bolaras Dawn Mission. Yeah, 800 miles above the Earth. Most of our space explorations have been the 200 to 300 mile range for humans. So this is a huge jump beyond the International Space Station. All right, well, tell us all about it. Well, I was originally scheduled for 2022 or originally announced. They're going to be pushing how far out into space we can be. It's privately funded. There's a billionaire named Jared Isaacman who is bankrolled this mission. And its date has been pushed back a few times, but it's set to launch now by July 12th coming right up 2024. Oh boy, next week. Besides going to 800 miles, they're also going to try to do a spacewalk. Now that might not seem so unusual, but it's the first spacewalk by a commercial company. A private team. A private spacesuit. Their own private spacesuits. Right. With their own design spacesuits. Exactly. They're going to be in the Guinness Book of World Records. Absolutely. Or it's off world records, I guess. Off world records. Well, I don't know. If you walk, I mean, they walked in spacesuits on the moon. So that's quite a bit further. But I guess this will be in actual space. 800 miles out. It's also an opportunity for the Starship research to be done because this is an early pathfinder for the Starship spacecraft, which SpaceX has been working on now. For some time, we've been talking about that. The Starship 4, I think, was the last one that was launched. I see. So they're going to go up and see what the space is like 800 miles up. Yes. It's a place where Starship will be comfortable and at home in. But first, we need to know more about that space. Does it radiate us? What kind of radiation exists up there, for example? Always a good thing to ask. How are we radiated for these parts? Well, it says the cruise is going to spend about five days in orbit, flying so high above our planet that it will actually pass through the Van Allen radiation belt. That's right. That's the other thing, is that they'll be exploring the radiation of the Van Allen radiation. No one's gone through that since the Apollo program. That's right. Very energetic particles trapped in our magnetic field. But they'll take advantage of that. They know they're going to go through the Van Allen radiation belt, so they'll be collecting medical data to better understand how that radiation impacts us. Yeah, I've been wondering what they have to use materially on their suits to resist that kind of radiation issues. They'll be finding that out. They're also looking at how to measure the gas bubbles in your blood. Oh, right. It's like when you're surfacing from deep pressure. Decompression sickness. Yeah, decompression going to deep space. I guess that is one of the issues in space, gas bubbles in your blood. Oh, look at them. What about the issues with your eyes in microgravity? Oh, yes. Yes. You get glocko. Well, go ahead. It seems like if you have zero gravity, not only that, but also less pressure, then-- All your fluids will start to bubble. Yeah, the pressure is down. Yeah, it's nitric oxide that forms bubbles in your blood system, in plasma. And when it forms those bubbles, then the platelets and red blood cells don't get to move as well. And you get the bends, like those divers, and they come up too fast out of the water. They get the bends, and then they have to put them in these hyperbaric chambers to actually compress them back down to reduce the bubbles, and then slowly bring them up in the atmosphere. Right. Yeah, this might be a Rosanna or Zanna-Danna moment for me, but does nitric oxide have something to do with the active element of Viagra? Yeah, that's exactly it. It does sound good. Yeah, what it does, it dilates your blood vessels, and so that's what gives you a heart on, you know, is just when you dilate your blood vessels. Yes, but it's also helpful for people with glaucoma. If you could dilate the blood vessels, the neurons in the back of the retina to the brain, if you can dilate those, then you can get more nutrients, and then it reduces the effect of glaucoma on the eyes. Wow. So nitric oxide is good. Yeah, and I know that a lot of people after COVID have very low energy and fatigue, and a lot of them are also being suggested that they supplement with nitric oxide. I was, yeah, don't you exactly give me some nitric oxide to take every day? Right, for vascular issues. Yeah, more innovation of my feet, and I'm feeling a little numb at the tips of my toes. Yeah. So that's, yeah, the guy that got the Nobel Prize back in the late '90s had discovered the effect of nitric oxide on the blood vessels. Yeah, you know, yeah, my toes are feeling more, and it's great. The thing is, toes, not the only thing that's feeling more, it seems to be working in terms of vascularization. That's good. Oh, Robert F. First Scott. I slipped it up. So the microgravity experiments with neuro the ocular system is being studied out there as well, because astronauts typically have some issues with blurry vision. So there's a, one of the crew members is going to be a guinea pig for a way of measuring spinal fluid pressure in space, or he'd be measuring a mechanism that's surgically implanted in him before the flight. So this is Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Scott Kidd-Poteat. Yes. Being the guinea pig. The guinea pig. Colonel is the guinea pig, and they'll be measuring that. Also, they're looking at non-invasive techniques as well, but that's how important it is to see what's going on with that pressure. Right. What's happening with the pressure on your spinal fluid? Can we keep your spine solid? Yeah, it could be. It could be that humans are not designed to be in space for more than a year or two. Well, we're designed to be in a gravity well. Yeah. So as long as we can bring our gravity well with us, we can probably endure space. Yes. And as much as I love spaceships and the UFOs and such portals, I'd be willing to jump through portals instead, flying metal ships. Wouldn't you? Well, we don't know what happens to the portals either. You'd rather dissolve into your light body and then reassembled on the other side. No, I guess that's a crude way to think about it. Well, what do you think happens in the portal? You think it's just a tunnel? Yeah, you just walk through and you just change. You know, nothing happens. Sort of like caving. Yeah. It's all invisible. What do you care? You're just you again. You just have a zero moment. I believe you. I think that's what the Shaky Mooney principle is, right? Well, that's the thing. I don't mind-- I don't need to be in this physical body if your light body's just as good. I can understand you a concern that was first expressed by Dr. McCoy in the original Star Trek. What did he say? He never did like transporters, transporter beams. He just didn't like having his atoms scattered throughout the universe and then coming back together again, something just to agree with him. Having your molecules scattered. You go away for a moment, you know, any kind of process like that, but you come back again. You got to trust that you're going to come back. In some ways, I guess the modern approach would be is going into surgery and you have to go unconscious. You don't know if you're going to come back or not. You're making that kind of fear. Here I got the quote. Yeah. Leonard McCoy. Okay. I signed aboard this ship to practice medicine not to have my atoms scattered back and forth across space by this gadget. That's it. Thank you. You're welcome. That's very good. I'd rather have that kind of experience than having to deal with nitrous oxide, the bends in my blood and stuff like that. Well, these are the early days, right? Captain Nemoi. Yeah, that's true. You still have to invent a few spacesuits for you. We do. That'll make it comfortable and satisfying. That's the other thing is they're testing out a newly designed extra-vehicular activity spacesuit. That could be so exciting. What's the best suit you can wear in experiencing the deadly vacuum of space? And the Van Allen radiation belt. That's right. NASA's are a bit bulky. What does safe space wear look like? You want more flexibility. You want it to be the more figure, show off your figure a little more. There was a really great episode about spacesuits on one of my favorite podcasts called "Huge If True" with our host Cleo. I don't even know her last name, but she's just right light. She's great. Really fun. Cleo and the science girl. Yeah, I love her. Yeah. Huge if true. So another thing that they're going to be testing is a new Starlink system that will be working from 800 miles up. What's it supposed to do? Say. They're not saying. They're not saying. It's just new. Say that when you start getting up there, you're going to start thinking about cross communication between the millions of gadgets that will be in ortho orbit. Well, I imagine that the radio field that the signal has to transverse is very different up by the North Pole and very different part of the magnetosphere. So they'll probably have to redesign the Starlinks if we're going to be communicating from that part of the orbit of the Earth. Yeah. We will. We'll be changing our Starlink behaviors. So they've been training for this mission for years now. Skydiving high altitude, mountaineering, centrifuge training, just like real astronauts from NASA. So they're getting ready to go. And they want to have social media on board, so they want to stay in communication with everyone and have all of humanity involved. Oh, that's good. I'll follow them. To the moon, to the Mars. They want to be the front end. And I guess they'll be our contact with the frontier as it moves forward. All right. So where are we out here? This is the Polaris Dawn mission. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Another thing. We've all heard to the nth degree the stuff about the debate, right? I do have a link from Politico where it covered an unusual angle of the presidential debates where it looked at the body language. They had a body language expert study the two presidents. I don't know if it's the same body language expert, but Dr. Phil of member of the Winfrey friend, Dr. Phil, he did some incredible interviews with the candidate. It's all three. Of course, I consider Robert F. Kennedy to also be a candidate in the running. And Dr. Phil had this incredible extended coverage after the debates where this body language interpreter was on hand was taking a look. I wonder if this is the same guy. Well, this guy was an FBI agent for 25 of the last 50 years. And he also is somebody who's just personally fascinated with politicians and how they twist the truth. And he's saying that after studying body language for so long that it doesn't lie. Oh, boy. And he watched the whole debate first with the sound off to see the two contenders, what they were really thinking and feeling. And what did he conclude? Well, I'll tell you, first of all, they were thinking feeling quite a lot that they left unsaid. Well, that goes without saying. But decoding their bag. It's an interesting article. I highly recommend clicking it. First of all, there was no handshake. Oh, those guys don't like each other. It's pretty obvious. They didn't do that. That's a tradition that's been going that some baggage lack of handshake. I didn't surprise them though. That kind of shows him that the election will be-- What's very un-American to be said-- It's divisive as-- Poor sports, you know. It's a divisive move not to handshake. Yeah. That's what he's saying. And he said, Biden had entered the room first and his stiff walk with a short, narrow, stride immediately showed his age. Yeah, who's probably trying hard to not mess that up? But it's not necessarily a cataclysmic sign of mental decline. Yeah. He says, "As we age, we lose the nerves that keep our balance. The Merkle, Mezzier, and Rufini, and Pacinian nerve cells just below the skin." That's the ones that are robust to delicate touches and pressure changes that you lose sensation as you get older. That can cause you to be affected. He analyzed a lot of that. And the first thing he noticed about Trump, he said, was his tan. He says, "That might sound superficial, but if you look back to when Nixon was debating Kennedy in 1960, Nixon had this five o'clock shadow and no makeup, pale. And then here was John Kennedy, young, tan, with makeup, just stands out." In a similar way, he said that, "Look wise, Biden looked as white as a sheet next to tan Trump." Oh, I don't know about that. Yeah. He says that people just intuit healthy vitality energy to a tan face. Well, we know that these guys are, they probably have makeup artists. Yeah. It is true. Biden does look pale, like older pale compared to Trump's, I guess it's tan or it's makeup. I don't know. Well, probably, but I don't think, well, he's been a reality TV star for years. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Makeup is nothing for him. Right. Body language speaks volumes. He said Biden's volume had a lot of blank pages. He says, "As we age, our gestures become more economical. Biden's non-verbal communication did nothing to counter that narrative that his age is catching up with him there." I thought Biden just looked like he was constantly annoyed and amazed that Trump would be speaking things that he thought were so outrageous. Tired voice. He said there was a tiredness in the voice when he listened to that, that carries through. And that if it was a cold, they should have admitted it right up the front. I lid flutters. He looked at eyelid flutters. And Biden flutters his eyes when he makes a mistake. Yeah. That's true. And with the sound off, he can tell when he's stumbling over a word, by the way, he flutters his eyes. Oh, that's interesting as a stutter. Yeah. That's not too surprising. That's too surprising. Yeah. I think people who like Biden are used to forgiving that. Yeah. Right. He said Trump, eyelid flutter, meant something entirely different. It was less an expression of inward frustration that it was outward disdain. How very Trump. Hey, you know what, we're down to our last two minutes. Okay. One sentence there. "Nicolson's character and a few good men flutter in his eyes whenever he got a challenging question on the witness stand." Oh, sort of like licking his chops before he going in for the kill, huh? And when Trump doesn't like something, his eyelids come down hard and linger in a downcast position. It's an interesting article. I suggest you do it just as kind of funny. They have the little clips of the debate demonstrating these ideas that is on our political article, Body Language expert. So thanks again for everyone tuning in this week. Thanks for putting up with our technical challenges. Take a challenges as we go through this heat wave, stay cool, stay comfortable and keep on keeping on. Keep looking up. Yeah. Thank you, Bobby, for being here. Appreciate your attention. Yeah. We have a couple of new guests coming in next week or next week. We're taking a deep dive into a QAnon, a friend of ours that disappeared into that world and managed to come out of it. And an author of a new book. She's written a book about her experiences. So quite fascinating. And after that, we also have Luigi on scamming and the latest scams that are happening to us all. What's it do about her? So next week and the week after, it'll be fun. So thanks again, everyone. I appreciate your attention. Thank you. Enjoy it before the July. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah. Have a great future now, everybody. Have a good weather with us. Enjoy, folks.