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The Economy of Critical Race Theory

40 min • 5 november 2020

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Transcript:

https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/55705854
 
Speaker 1 (0s): Hello, my friends. Hello everybody. How's your day going so far, you live in the dream out there. Are you doing whatever you can? Are you living on the edge of what is possible? Are you looking around trying to find out from trying to find a way to make the people around you better? Isn't that a good recipe for success? If you can make everyone around you better, more successful than aren't you, in fact, making yourself successful. 

That's what I try to keep in my mind. I'm not always successful and making people around me successful. However, I entertain that thought. I try to do it. I think it's a good recipe. I think is something that you can find helpful in your life. Additionally, I think if you are to do that, people will find you helpful. We want to be around you. 

Which leads me to the point I was thinking about today. My thought of the day, my idea Maybe of the week. This would be my thought of the week. Let me know what you think. 

Speaker 0 (1m 27s): <inaudible> 

Speaker 1 (1m 31s): First off in order to set this up. Let us think about our economic system. Are you thinking about it? Good. Now think about language. Okay. Now think about the merging of the two. Are you doing it right now? Okay. Or your eyes closed either mind. Think about capitalism, capitalism, competition, wall street money. 

It seems to me that the focus of our economy right now is a digital economy. The focus of our economy is into artificial intelligence. We believe the future of our world lies in robotics, in digital communication, and that these technologies are going to fundamentally radically change society forever. 

Speaker 0 (2m 45s): Okay. 

Speaker 1 (2m 46s): In fact, there is a Race according to 

Speaker 0 (2m 52s): Well. 

Speaker 1 (2m 55s): I am clearly not an authority on the source, but it seems to me that there a race between China and the United States for technological superiority, the race to AI, Google Ray Kurzweil, All of these new technologies, just competing to get there first and the money being poured into this industry and getting behind different agencies to when the races 

Speaker 2 (3m 30s): Staggering, 

Speaker 1 (3m 34s): The pace at which we are moving forward into this digital digital future is also a staggering. In fact, the pace is so rapid. We're leaving most people behind And there's people that do not want to look back. Oh, well, we left those people behind adios, Amigos. You can stand the heat. Get out of the kitchen. No Mosse Bert, huh? Nope, no Mohs. Roberto Duran. 

I almost said no Mohs burrito. And that's crazy because I definitely want more burritos, but you understand what I'm saying? Right? The pace at which we are advancing leaves behind not only people in our country, but the majority of the third world country, what do we do? 

Speaker 2 (4m 26s): There seems to be no slowing down. 

Speaker 1 (4m 29s): There seems to be no taking a break. In fact, if you listen to the pundits, if you listen to the money, if you look at the critical infrastructure for the future, It is the only path forward. According to our financial system, unlimited growth 

Speaker 2 (4m 56s): Quicker, faster, stronger. 

Speaker 1 (4m 58s): We got to get there. Hurry. We're going to get there. Now hurry 

Speaker 2 (4m 60s): Up, 

Speaker 1 (5m 4s): Argue that there's a very technology that we're pursuing Is changing our language. The financial system that we currently are under, It goes hand in hand with this particular technology goes hand in hand with our language 

Speaker 2 (5m 26s): And 

Speaker 1 (5m 26s): It started with McLuhan in a printing press. Now we have the internet and it's just like this 

Speaker 2 (5m 35s): Quickening 

Speaker 1 (5m 38s): Incredible pace at which every one is being forced to run. You could say that's evolution. You could say, well, look the slow. We're going to get caught there, going to be the goo under your shoe. And that's just how it is. 

Speaker 2 (5m 57s): It seems Maybe 

Speaker 1 (6m 1s): Maybe it's the turn of the century. You know, maybe it was the Mayan calendar, 2012. Maybe it's something we are unable to understand, but we are at the corner of revolution and transition. And we can't see around that corner, but everyone has this sense of, Oh shit. 

Something's about to happen. 

Speaker 0 (6m 37s): I'm hopeful that 

Speaker 1 (6m 42s): We're going to turn this corner and things are going to be more visible. You know, I feel like we were just in this race car, we're just flying down this road and we're going to have to make this 90 to a return in a minute. And like, we know we have to however were too sick. We were like, we're not, we don't want a slow down. I was like, Hey, we got to turn up here. Okay. I'm just gonna pull the e-brake and we're going to say, we're going to slide into this turn. I don't know. Maybe it shouldn't. 

We slow down and take a little look. People are like, no, we need slowing down. We're just going to get, we're just going to get on it. We're going to steer into the skid man. I think if we continue the path we're on with this particular form of capitalism, turning into state capitalism, which is the Chinese model, it's just going to lead to incredible chaos. And I don't see how this doesn't lead to a world war if we could turn down this path. 

So because of my love for the world, and I love for you and my love to have a podcast, I thought I would throw out this idea of Looking at a new economic model in a biological way, right? We'd been looking at it like in this mechanistic, futuristic Silicon artificial way. And it's gotten as far we've explored so many new technologies we've explored so much so rapidly. 

However, you can see what this road goes. Maybe this road is inevitable, but I think we can at least take the long way around maybe or a more scenic path or maybe a route that kind of comes close to the edge, but not it doesn't take us over. And that road is a more biological economic system. When we focus on biology, when we focus on seeing the world 

Speaker 2 (8m 59s): As a part of us, 

Speaker 1 (9m 3s): It changes the way we feel about extracting resources is that kind of makes sense. Like if we just have unlimited competition, 

Speaker 2 (9m 16s): Then we, it 

Speaker 1 (9m 19s): Ultimately throw away our values. If it's only a limited competition, if it's only the survival of the fittest, 

Speaker 2 (9m 31s): Then there's never 

Speaker 1 (9m 33s): Any real And working together is that kind of makes sense. The only reason I do you think the only reason people worked together is to benefit their own personal goals. It might be, Are we truly capable of cooperation? I don't know. I'm not sure that I would like to believe we are. 

However, I don't know. It seems to me that we're so far splintered right now because of competition Because of our philosophy on life of having more, what are you more you a little bit more Can I have some more Hey he wants more. I want more, what about that guy that didn't have any fuck that guy he's lazy. 

I think we have a real opportunity right here. I think if we could get our...

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