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[00:00:00] This [00:00:02] is web [00:00:03] >> conspiracy [music] theories are entering [00:00:05] a danger is the oxygen of the democracy. [00:00:09] >> There's so much evidence out there that [00:00:11] even if less [music] than 1% is true [00:00:15] that enough to collapse the current [00:00:17] paradigm and change the whole planet. [00:00:23] >> This is a product that is in its early [00:00:25] development stages and it's going to be [00:00:28] given out for free. So, this is not a [00:00:30] paid advertisement. This is my own [00:00:32] buddies making cool [ __ ] for us because [00:00:34] I needed it. And then I realized that we [00:00:36] all need it and we're just going to give [00:00:38] it out because we need everyone to be [00:00:40] able to have access to these files. And [00:00:41] I cannot tell you how many people I have [00:00:43] had text me being like, "Hey dude, how [00:00:45] are you getting into these files?" Cuz I [00:00:46] can't like I don't have time to open [00:00:49] 20,000 files and read them for myself. [00:00:51] Like what the hell? It's like they're [00:00:53] intentionally putting them out in the [00:00:55] most idiotic and opaque way possible, [00:00:59] specifically so that we cannot access [00:01:02] them [00:01:04] because the way that they're getting put [00:01:06] out [00:01:10] is as a Google Drive download. And it [00:01:12] doesn't even come this organized. It [00:01:14] actually comes in a Google Drive [00:01:16] download that's so big that it gets [00:01:18] packaged into multiple zip downloads [00:01:20] that actually overlap in weird ways. and [00:01:22] it gets downloaded all broken up and [00:01:24] then you actually have to rearrange the [00:01:25] files to even get them in order in the [00:01:28] first place as files. And then when you [00:01:30] go into the files, it's literally just [00:01:33] thousands of JPEGs with no context, no [00:01:36] labeling, nothing at all. A bunch of [00:01:38] them are the exact same thing and it's [00:01:40] just a whole bunch of files. And when [00:01:42] you open them up, [00:01:44] this is just like a page of a book, [00:01:47] Ravages of Denial, chapter 3. It has [00:01:50] nothing to do with emails. It's just [00:01:52] someone linked it in an email and now in [00:01:53] here there's like literally thousands of [00:01:55] pages of a book that you don't even [00:01:56] need. You wouldn't even realize that and [00:01:58] you would just spend a bunch of time [00:01:58] reading thousands of pages of this book [00:02:00] for no freaking reason. Okay, no one has [00:02:04] time for this. These aren't emails. [00:02:06] Where are the emails? These aren't [00:02:07] emails. Where the hell are the emails? [00:02:09] But don't worry, Dumbro on Twitter read [00:02:12] it all multiple times. Okay. It's also [00:02:14] got, you know, court documents that [00:02:17] we've already seen. [00:02:19] Confidential. [00:02:21] Oh, that was helpful. So glad they put [00:02:23] that in there. A redacted version of the [00:02:26] black books and contact books that we've [00:02:29] already got. Man, isn't that helpful? [00:02:32] So, as you can see, this is insane. And [00:02:34] that's only, you know, the first two [00:02:35] folders. There's a bunch of them. And it [00:02:37] just goes on and on and on and on and [00:02:39] on. And it's literally like 23,000 [00:02:40] files. Okay. So that's not very helpful. [00:02:43] So how do we access them? Well, web is [00:02:46] how we access them. And there's this fun [00:02:48] string game where you connect the dots [00:02:50] and uh the string and you get all Pepe [00:02:52] Silva. Um and you can just play with it [00:02:54] forever and oh gosh, it's fun. But we'll [00:02:57] leave that we'll we'll leave that where [00:02:59] it is for now. Um and it's just a little [00:03:01] landing page that you can go check out [00:03:02] for yourself, the web.io. It's not live [00:03:04] yet. It's not ready yet. We literally [00:03:06] just like finished the first version [00:03:07] that I can play with today. And I'll [00:03:09] show you what that looks like. But the [00:03:11] the goal is here and we're going to work [00:03:13] towards that goal and it will be out for [00:03:15] free that you guys can download and use. [00:03:17] It is an AI based tool that you will [00:03:20] have to plug in your own API from uh [00:03:23] right now Google Gemini and there's a [00:03:25] couple other options. Um we'll explain [00:03:27] that later. You have to plug in your own [00:03:29] API tool so that you can use it. And if [00:03:32] you have, you know, your own misgivings [00:03:33] about using AI, I get it might not be [00:03:35] the exact tool for you. But part of the [00:03:37] point is that you're not uploading your [00:03:39] files. You're not uploading your [00:03:41] documents and interacting with them [00:03:42] online on a web tool. You're actually [00:03:45] downloading this to your computer and [00:03:47] you can just use this tool as a [00:03:48] self-contained tool on your computer [00:03:51] that doesn't require you. So if you have [00:03:53] like some secret cache of documents, [00:03:55] your documents aren't getting uploaded [00:03:57] to like Google for example. Um obviously [00:04:00] like AIs do have some privacy concerns [00:04:01] and you should think for yourself on [00:04:03] that. Um, but ultimately these are like [00:04:05] public document dumps. And so this is a [00:04:07] public tool for you to use however you [00:04:08] want. And if you want to use it, you can [00:04:09] use it. Um, and you can look through [00:04:11] this really sick ass website that my [00:04:13] homie put together for it if you want. [00:04:15] Um, and when it goes live, we'll let you [00:04:17] know. But let me just show you a little [00:04:19] bit about how it works. Um, where are [00:04:23] you web? Where are you? [00:04:26] Okay, [00:04:29] here's web. [00:04:32] So, the thing about AI is that you can't [00:04:36] trust it. Okay, I'm I'm moving it over a [00:04:39] little bit so that you guys can see this [00:04:40] part is you can't trust AI. You need to [00:04:42] be able to get to the sources. So, it's [00:04:44] not just that we need to have a tool [00:04:46] that can analyze all these documents and [00:04:48] tell you what's in them. It's that you [00:04:49] need to have a tool that can analyze all [00:04:51] these documents and you can talk to [00:04:52] about it and learn what's in them, but [00:04:54] then it needs to site sources that you [00:04:56] can click and open. Okay? [00:04:58] And so, for example, earlier I asked it, [00:05:01] who is Ariana Rothschild? Point blank. I [00:05:03] have all of the image files uploaded [00:05:05] into here. And I just ask it, who's [00:05:06] Aranda Rothschild? And it builds a [00:05:08] little dossier. Okay, she's a person. [00:05:10] Um, she's very important. There's a [00:05:12] whole bunch of context in these [00:05:13] documents. She gets mentioned this many [00:05:14] times. Um, which is kind of an at least [00:05:16] in case it missed anyone. And it tells [00:05:18] you what she's talking about with [00:05:19] Epstein. And it cites sources. And then [00:05:22] you can go and click on that source and [00:05:24] it will open it what it is. And this is [00:05:26] in the emails. And it's a, you know, [00:05:27] from a magazine article it would look [00:05:30] like. And there's another source. Oh, [00:05:32] and that's one of the emails right [00:05:34] there. Right. [00:05:36] Wasn't there a science person that [00:05:37] worked with Consuel that you thought [00:05:39] interesting? Okay. [00:05:42] The Vanity Fair piece. I know what [00:05:43] that's referring to. And it has turned [00:05:46] all of this imagery into text that is [00:05:48] now searchable that I can search in [00:05:50] here. Um, but you can also use web to [00:05:53] search and it has cited tons of sources [00:05:56] and you can talk to it. You can ask like [00:05:58] let's ask it a question. Let's ask like [00:06:01] um what businesses [00:06:05] was Ahood Barack interested in and we'll [00:06:10] see if it works. [00:06:17] Sick. Okay, dude. We were so stoked when [00:06:21] we got this to finally start spitting [00:06:23] out answers today. I cannot even [00:06:24] describe. What businesses were Ahoud [00:06:26] Barack in? Okay, here's what I can tell [00:06:27] you about Ahub Barack's business [00:06:28] interests based on the provided [00:06:30] documents. Um, he's a person. He's a [00:06:32] politician. He's a military leader. He's [00:06:34] mentioned at least 299 times. Um, he's a [00:06:37] prominent figure in Israeli politics [00:06:38] serving as prime minister source for [00:06:40] that. Defense minister source. Foreign [00:06:43] minister source. Um, the sources aren't [00:06:46] perfect yet. Not sure how much I would [00:06:47] like this might not be exactly what I'm [00:06:49] hoping it is. Um, oh, actually it is [00:06:53] kind of it's a piece from a big old [00:06:54] document that's actually talking about [00:06:55] the history of Israeli politics. Um, [00:06:59] interesting. [00:07:01] And Perez, it's probably from a book. I [00:07:03] don't know why it's in the files, but [00:07:04] it's in the files. Cool. Um, his [00:07:07] military experience shaped his approach [00:07:08] to politics and policy. Source [00:07:09] relationship with Jeffrey Epste. Brock [00:07:11] had communication with Jeffrey Epste. [00:07:12] Source. Source. Source. Source. Source. [00:07:14] Cool. Sick, right? Like you get the [00:07:16] idea, right? It's going to be freaking [00:07:18] cool, especially once we fine-tune it. [00:07:20] But why stop there when you could build [00:07:23] a canvas [00:07:25] just like an Obsidian file, but you [00:07:27] could use that analytical process to [00:07:29] dump this analysis like from the Jeffrey [00:07:32] Epstein file leaks that were [00:07:34] inaccessible 10 minutes ago. And then [00:07:37] you can now make boards that right now [00:07:40] it's not perfect. We can't draw lines [00:07:41] yet. There's a lot of functions we still [00:07:42] have to get right here. But now I can [00:07:44] ask questions. Who is Ariana Rothschild? [00:07:47] It can answer and site sources and pop [00:07:50] out sources right here and stuff like [00:07:52] that. You can drop screenshots in and [00:07:55] you can literally just screenshot off [00:07:56] the off the internet. Find a good [00:07:58] article about what you're researching, [00:08:00] drop it in here. Actually, let me do [00:08:02] that right now. Let me um grab [00:08:05] uh this is one of the sources about the [00:08:09] sketchy French painting company. And I [00:08:11] just grab a little screenshot and I drop [00:08:13] it onto the canvas right there and I'll [00:08:15] drag it up. And then when I do that, [00:08:17] yeah, that's what it's called. It's [00:08:18] called OCRing. OCRing is how you get um [00:08:21] AI to analyze the image for text. Okay. [00:08:24] And you just click the OCR button and it [00:08:26] takes a second and then it's [snorts] [00:08:28] processed and it's saved into the memory [00:08:30] of your fi of your project. So now when [00:08:33] you ask it questions, it can also refer [00:08:35] to everything that you just put into [00:08:36] your Blackboard in the project. Do you [00:08:39] see where this goes? Like, do you see [00:08:41] what this could be and do, dog? [00:08:46] Yeah, exactly. There's so much you can [00:08:48] do with this. And then you can link [00:08:49] things together. You can ask it more [00:08:51] questions. Um, you can chat about this [00:08:53] specific source, right? So, um, I don't [00:08:56] know if this feature actually is working [00:08:57] yet. I don't think it is. There's this [00:09:00] cool stats feature my homie built in [00:09:01] where you can ask it about statistics [00:09:03] from within the files and it'll pop out [00:09:04] all these cool freaking uh numbers and [00:09:07] stats, but it's it's not really like [00:09:08] exactly keyed in yet, but you see where [00:09:11] it's going, right? So, we're going to [00:09:13] game on this for a while and get it [00:09:15] really tight in the next week or so. Um [00:09:17] we're getting really distracted by it [00:09:18] because it's so much fun, but um I just [00:09:20] wanted to show it to you. Um some of the [00:09:22] fun stuff we found on web today. [00:09:25] So, what I spent my whole morning doing [00:09:29] is on web, [00:09:31] um, [00:09:33] I've been thinking about how there's, [00:09:35] um, [00:09:38] there's whole sections of the Epstein [00:09:40] files that are like a whole book or a [00:09:44] giant news article or someone shared [00:09:47] like a pre-publication of something and [00:09:49] it's like there's 700 screenshots in a [00:09:52] row that's just one some giant like [00:09:54] Cody's piece on [00:09:57] mathematics or some [ __ ] that we don't [00:09:59] need to know about and it gets in the [00:10:00] way and it confuses the AI scraping and [00:10:03] it makes it so that it'll like source [00:10:04] stuff from this book that is not [00:10:06] actually the Epstein files um which is [00:10:08] super annoying [00:10:10] and so I just thought I'd ask it. Um hey [00:10:14] web are there any books or long articles [00:10:16] in these documents? Meaning can you [00:10:18] identify large blocks of files that all [00:10:19] seem to go together? Um how many are [00:10:21] there? give me one sentence summary of [00:10:23] each and identify which files are [00:10:24] included in each one. So, sort of like [00:10:26] give me the groups so that I can go into [00:10:27] my own files and pull them out and find [00:10:29] them and either throw them away or not. [00:10:33] Um, and I probably won't throw any away [00:10:36] because, you know, you don't want to [00:10:36] destroy your evidence. I could always [00:10:39] redownload it, but you know, but let me [00:10:43] pull up my file over here. [00:10:45] I found one that's super interesting [00:10:48] that I actually sent around to a few [00:10:49] homies today. We'll do this while Claude [00:10:52] works. Claude's over here working [00:10:57] in the other screen. Oh, Claude's done. [00:10:59] Cool. We'll come back to Claude in just [00:11:00] a second. But yeah, Michael Wolf is this [00:11:03] journalist that's like best friends with [00:11:05] Epstein [00:11:07] and um [00:11:10] he seems to be writing fluff pieces [00:11:12] about Epstein throughout and he's in [00:11:14] really close contact with Epstein [00:11:16] [clears throat] and [00:11:18] he seems like an [ __ ] He is of the [00:11:21] tribe and I can't help but notice that [00:11:23] that seems pretty coincidental when you [00:11:25] read the way he writes about his boy [00:11:26] Epstein and you read what he was up to [00:11:29] behind the scenes scheming about Trump [00:11:31] with Epstein trying to do mean things. [00:11:34] Um, and then the one of the first big [00:11:38] documents I pulled out of here that [00:11:39] seems to be all one thing is an [00:11:42] unpublished, never-before published [00:11:45] manuscript for a profile on Jeffrey [00:11:49] Epste that he was working on, like a [00:11:50] long news article about Jeffrey Epstein. [00:11:53] And I like had I found a few of the [00:11:55] pages and I grabbed some of the text and [00:11:56] I was just like, "Hey Claude, can you [00:11:58] decipher what this is based on the [00:12:00] context within it really quick?" Claude [00:12:02] comes back and it's like, "It seems to [00:12:03] be this some sort of unpublished [00:12:04] article." I'm like, "Cool. I'm going to" [00:12:06] and I like went manually through the [00:12:07] files and found where it seemed like it [00:12:09] started and where it seemed like it [00:12:10] ended. Copied them all out, threw them [00:12:11] all in. It was like, "Yeah, this is an [00:12:12] unpublished manuscript by Tom Wolf. That [00:12:15] makes sense." Um, as far as we can tell, [00:12:17] that's what it is allegedly. [00:12:20] Um, it's pretty clear though because [00:12:22] it's this whole story of like him [00:12:24] visiting with him, him in all these [00:12:25] meetings. There's all sorts of stuff in [00:12:27] it that's never before been been [00:12:29] revealed and it's all right there. It's [00:12:32] just right there. Um it is documents [00:12:37] number 022844 [00:12:40] right there [00:12:42] through just in order 845 846 847 etc. [00:12:48] over to [00:12:50] document number [00:12:52] 022862. [00:12:58] And it's super interesting how he fluffs [00:13:00] up Epstein. and um [00:13:03] and you kind of it really gets you in [00:13:05] the head of these like esteemed [00:13:07] professional scientific types of folks, [00:13:10] mathematicians and stuff um that were [00:13:12] enamored by Epstein's lifestyle and by [00:13:14] like his mind and how he thought and how [00:13:16] he lived because Michael Wolf clearly [00:13:20] enamors him in the same way. And so it [00:13:24] gets you inside the head of these people [00:13:26] and how they think. And if you just read [00:13:29] the words at face value, it's like, "Oh, [00:13:31] I get it. This isn't even a problem. [00:13:33] He's just misunderstood. [00:13:35] He's actually really cool." Which is [00:13:37] obviously [ __ ] [00:13:40] but it helps you understand them. And, [00:13:42] you know, know thy enemy, right? It [00:13:45] helps you understand how [00:13:47] all these billionaires and millionaires [00:13:50] excuse what's clearly happening in front [00:13:52] of their eyes. Excuse their own terrible [00:13:54] actions as part of some greater identity [00:13:57] that is just superior to yours. They [00:13:59] just understand the world more than you [00:14:01] and they're serious people and you're [00:14:02] not. Right? It's how they think. And the [00:14:05] whole article is a really interesting [00:14:07] look into that. And so I've got it all [00:14:10] put together into one word document um [00:14:12] that I'm going to print out and I [00:14:14] haven't actually read the whole thing [00:14:15] yet. I've just read some summaries of it [00:14:16] and kind of popped into specific places [00:14:19] because I don't want to read a 19page [00:14:21] document on a screen. Um I already do a [00:14:23] lot of reading on screens. I didn't have [00:14:24] time for that today. So I'm going to [00:14:26] print it out and read it on paper. Get [00:14:27] out the highlighter old school style. [00:14:29] Bitcoin and Epste. I was actually [00:14:30] looking into Epstein's relationship with [00:14:32] Bitcoin today [00:14:34] and [00:14:36] bro was talking to Steve Bannon about [00:14:39] it. [00:14:41] Let's go look. Where did I put it? I [00:14:43] think I put it by Bannon. I gave Bannon [00:14:45] a whole new section for it. [00:14:47] So, Steve Bannon face to the name. [00:14:50] Shame. Shame on you, Steve. [00:14:55] Shame. He had a lot of emails with [00:14:57] Epstein. Very close relationship. And [00:14:59] this is in his last years. This is in [00:15:01] like 2017 and 18, even 19. [00:15:11] So in house oversight document 026258. [00:15:16] 026258. [00:15:20] First message on the page. Jeffrey is [00:15:21] emailing Steve Bannon on February 24th [00:15:25] of 2018. [00:15:29] And he says coin issues, receive coins, [00:15:32] distribute coins, pay in coins, coin [00:15:34] cooperative prohibitions, foreign donor, [00:15:36] question mark. I need to understand the [00:15:38] flow of funds, donor to campaign [00:15:41] contributions. Does it have to go to [00:15:43] campaign first? Does it have to go there [00:15:45] at all? Etc. And this is in response to [00:15:47] Steve Bannon sending him a political [00:15:49] article about Susan Rice, lawyer, Obama [00:15:51] administration, classified intelligence, [00:15:52] Michael Flynn, Trump. Um, so it seems [00:15:56] like [00:15:58] Bannon had emailed him an article, but [00:16:00] they had been in the middle of another [00:16:02] conversation or they had been they had [00:16:04] then talked in person and their brains [00:16:06] had gone off in a different direction [00:16:07] here. This is at 8:13 minus 500. I'm not [00:16:11] really sure what these it's it's hard to [00:16:13] link up the timelines because I don't [00:16:15] know where Epstein is at the time. I [00:16:17] think -0500 means it's relativity to [00:16:20] Zulu time like we were talking about, [00:16:22] but Steve C. Bannon is just displayed as [00:16:23] 7:48 p.m. or A.M. [00:16:28] So, I don't know what that means as far [00:16:29] as timing goes, but [00:16:33] they're chatting and they chat a lot. [00:16:35] And Epste's emailing Steve about all [00:16:37] these ideas about coins. And I'm pretty [00:16:39] sure there's another screenshot that'll [00:16:40] show us. No, that's as far down as it [00:16:43] goes. [00:16:48] And then Bannon sends back on it. [00:16:53] I guess we can infer based upon the [00:16:55] timing here. February 24th, February [00:16:56] 24th, it's all happening on February [00:16:58] 24th. Sorry, I'm off the screen. So, at [00:17:01] 7:48 Bannon time is this this message. [00:17:05] And then at 8:14, same day, Bannon time. [00:17:08] So, just less than like a half an hour [00:17:10] later, Steve Bannon's already replying [00:17:12] to this message. So, this is a quick [00:17:14] exchange. [00:17:18] On it. That's all he says. He's on it. [00:17:20] These are the questions that Epste has [00:17:22] about crypto coins. Steve Bannon says on [00:17:24] it, Jeffrey comes back to him same day. [00:17:29] Do you have coin guys? Brock's people. [00:17:31] Brock Pierce. Hey, we're finally going [00:17:33] to get to talk about Brock Pierce or [00:17:36] should we find some of the lefty crypto [00:17:39] guys or should we find some of the lefty [00:17:42] crypto guys might find it difficult to [00:17:44] join, but they say bringing tech to [00:17:46] discourse is on a higher plane. [00:17:49] Bannon writes back, "I think I have the [00:17:52] most solid guy on the right tied into [00:17:54] the Swiss guys named Jeffrey Worernick [00:17:57] going through due diligence. Now, I've [00:17:59] known him a while as I've studied this. [00:18:01] He can't walk you he can walk you [00:18:02] through the deal." [00:18:06] So, Steve Bannon and Jeff and Jeffrey [00:18:07] Epstein are discussing a cryptobased [00:18:10] deal in 2018, probably for millions and [00:18:14] millions and millions of dollars of [00:18:15] value. [00:18:18] Who knows what they needed their crypto [00:18:20] value for, what they needed crypto coins [00:18:22] for, but that is not a good look, Steve. [00:18:25] Um, based upon [00:18:27] the questions that Jeffreey's asking, [00:18:29] coin issues, receive coins, distribute [00:18:31] coins, paying coins, coin cooperative, [00:18:33] prohibitions, foreign donor, question [00:18:35] mark, donating as a foreigner. Um, I [00:18:38] need to understand flow of funds, donor [00:18:41] to campaign contributions. Does it have [00:18:43] to go to campaign first? So, he's seems [00:18:45] to be asking about some sort of donor [00:18:47] advised fund maybe, which we know he was [00:18:49] interested in. Um, but maybe he's also [00:18:52] interested in other use cases of crypto. [00:18:53] I'm sure none of it is good, [00:18:56] but that's interesting. Why are you [00:18:58] talking about that, Steve? What are you [00:19:00] doing? [00:19:02] But then here's another thread of a [00:19:04] different thread of emails that sprung [00:19:06] off the same email. So, he must have [00:19:08] replied multiple times to the same [00:19:10] email, right? Cuz here Bannon [00:19:13] uh Jeffrey emails Bannon with that same [00:19:15] list of [ __ ] you know nonsense that [00:19:16] he has. Bannon says on it and then [00:19:18] Jeffrey emails him back with a different [00:19:20] email off the same one. He says should [00:19:22] it have a Christian component tithe? If [00:19:25] you form a church, you may be able to [00:19:27] tell Mueller you have a confession [00:19:28] privilege. Smiley face. Oh, it's so [00:19:31] funny. Funny jokes. Funny jokes about [00:19:33] scamming the church with your crypto [00:19:35] coins. Jeffrey Epstein. Gosh, you're so [00:19:37] funny. [00:19:39] That will be enough to collapse the [00:19:41] current paradigm and change the whole [00:19:44] planet.
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