Explicit OSINT, Welding
Ep. 40

OSINT, Welding

Episode description

OSINT, Welding

00:00:00 Cybertruck explosions in Las Vegas

00:15:47 Crime rates

00:24:06 New Orleans car attack

00:41:36 Poisonous fogs

00:44:35 Operation Paperclip

00:55:40 Dave discusses OSINT

01:09:01 Ron discusses welding

Resources discussed on the show:

Archive.org (https://archive.org), The Internet Archive.

OSINT Framework (https://osintframework.com/), a helpful tool for pointing you to OSINT tools.

Download transcript (.srt)
0:00

Alright, welcome to the Canary in the Cage podcast. I'm Ron Morgan, my co-host Dave

0:15

Havlicek. We're here to educate you, entertain you, and hopefully at least make you giggle.

0:19

And sorry that we missed you last week. We did the whole show.

0:22

No, we did the podcast last week. Oh, but we didn't record it.

0:24

Well, that's, I mean, is that really that important?

0:27

I don't know, you know what I think I might be? There's the FBI or China or someone has

0:34

hacked your laptop. It was Iran. We all know it's always Iran. It used to be Russia.

0:39

No, I saw it. And actually, like, you just did it right now. I know.

0:42

Where you pressed the button and it didn't record. So like, because last week, I saw

0:47

you press the button and then it just wasn't recording. So Alibaba's doing this to us.

0:51

I don't know. But now we have, now we've figured out the fact.

0:52

We are recording. I have a time. Shit's moving. So let's get started with this shit show of a week

1:00

or I don't think we're going back to last week. But we'll maybe cover some of the stuff.

1:04

But so, I mean, nothing really happened. What do we talk about this week?

1:08

Well, there was a new year with 25. Well, congrats. Oh, Merry Christmas.

1:12

Because you didn't hear that last week. More happy Quanz, happy Hanukkah or blah, blah, blah,

1:17

blah, blah. Saturnalia, I believe Saturnalia. Oh, yeah. But Festivus too.

1:20

Festivus. Yeah, gotta celebrate Festivus. For those of you who don't know, Festivus got started

1:25

on the Seinfeld show and instead of a Christmas tree, they have a stick.

1:28

An aluminum pole.

1:29

Aluminum pole. And you got to tell your family members and friends how they let you down that

1:33

last year. That sounds like a great fucking holiday to me. All right. So I'm going to start with a

1:39

question off of our ex-account. Oh, okay. So Dave, who is Thomas Quitter? I have no idea.

1:48

Well, I was just going through the ex-account. I know Thomas Crapper is. He invented the plush

1:53

toilet. So this guy apparently sent us a message. Oh, really? We got a message? Well,

1:58

it's been a while back. It's been like before Christmas. Oh, okay. And he sent you his phone

2:03

number and told you to call him. Oh, that fucking... That guy. What the hell happened? What did you do?

2:09

Pissed a cereal? We were arguing about something. I don't even remember because I think I ended up

2:15

blocking him because he's just a fucking spam idiot. I think he's in a wheelchair too, by the way.

2:25

Yeah. Now I remember. He said something like... Fuck, what started it? It was something about

2:37

the wheelchair, getting wheelchairs for people. And I was like, well, why don't you start a

2:43

charity or something like that? Because he's complaining. And then I'm like, well, why don't

2:48

you go do it? Who's stopping you? And then he started just complaining. I don't remember the

2:56

exact detail because it was a couple of weeks ago. But if I go back on our timeline, I could find it.

3:00

I tried too, but it was from the 23rd. Yeah, it's a while ago. You apparently post a lot.

3:05

Yes, I do. Okay. So I guess the inquiry reminds me of what I know. Did you call him?

3:11

No. I called him random fucking asshole. It was like, I forget the exact... Like I said,

3:19

I forget the exact thing, but it was something where he could start doing it right now,

3:25

but he's not doing it. But he wants to complain about it not being done. It's one of those things.

3:30

Yeah, I've written to people like that. And I'm just like, dude, just fuck off. It solved the problem

3:36

yourself or stop bitching. Pick one. Oh, I wish other people would follow that advice.

3:42

Kind of like you and Charles, but... What do you mean? I'm trying to solve the problem.

3:47

Okay. I gotta get into that shit, throw up a conversation because it never ends well because

3:51

it's just like blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So I guess, I mean, we got to start with them. The

3:57

New Year's Day events. Yeah, okay. New Orleans or Vegas, which one do you want to talk about?

4:02

I really didn't look at a whole lot into either one.

4:05

Yeah, I typically give it a day or two, but because the podcast was today, I kind of did

4:09

a small deep dive. I just don't care about this stuff. I just don't care, man. It's just,

4:13

you know, stupid shit happens. There's crazy people and they're going to do crazy things.

4:18

And like, you can't just assume... I'm not saying it wasn't...

4:22

You're not safe in public. You have to understand that. For sure. Yeah.

4:25

This shit sucks. Yeah.

4:27

I... They were not border crossers. They were homegrown terrorists.

4:30

Yes, they both were born in America. Yep.

4:33

Well, the both people that they're saying did this were born in America.

4:37

Right, right, right. I mean, obviously the New Orleans...

4:40

The Vegas guy, we don't even know that that's the guy because we have a charred body that nobody

4:45

can identify. But they had one.

4:47

And they have a passport and a little JID.

4:49

Government ID, yeah.

4:50

So he was a crispy critter. Yeah.

4:52

His inside of his truck was literally on fire.

4:55

Now, actually, I was thinking about this today because...

4:57

No, I looked at the video. I watched the video again.

4:58

No, no, no. I'm not saying the facts are wrong. What I'm saying is,

5:02

I want to take one of my old passports and see what happens when I try to burn it.

5:07

So the passport...

5:09

Because I'm pretty sure it's somewhat fire resistant.

5:11

Yeah, but the military ID is not.

5:13

I don't know. I have a government ID and it's fucking hardcore.

5:16

I got a friend of mine who used to have one. She's like, yeah, it probably would burn.

5:19

And I picked up my government ID and I was comparing it to the photo.

5:22

I'm like, damn, that's the same fucking ID.

5:23

Okay.

5:24

So yeah, it's not a military, but it's the same...

5:26

But we're not talking a lighter to it. We're talking like full-

5:28

No, yeah, yeah. You throw...

5:30

I mean, I can't throw my government ID in a fire because I need that.

5:33

But I could...

5:35

Wait, you look for the feds? You're a fed?

5:37

Yeah, I'm a fed.

5:37

Did you just admit that?

5:38

Yeah, I'm a fed.

5:39

Were you in J6 as a...

5:41

I don't know if that's your questions like that.

5:44

But no, I do have...

5:44

He probably was.

5:45

I do have an expired passport. I think I have it somewhere.

5:49

And I could throw that in a fire and see what happens.

5:51

Well, but I think the chip inside the passport would start

5:54

sparking and it's thrown off.

5:55

I don't know.

5:56

Oh, you admit there's chips in passports. Okay.

5:58

I don't know if there's a chip in a passport.

5:58

We're bringing David Long down this...

5:59

I don't know if there's a chip in a passport.

6:01

Real good.

6:01

So we don't know...

6:03

Because here's the one thing.

6:05

Because he was active military.

6:06

Yeah.

6:07

Only from Germany.

6:09

Okay. I didn't know that part.

6:11

And he got into a fight with his wife and he lives in Colorado Springs.

6:15

Okay.

6:15

So he went on Turro and rented basically a tank.

6:20

Yes.

6:20

Or a bulletproof vehicle.

6:22

Yeah.

6:22

And decided to put bombs in it.

6:24

They're not very bulletproof.

6:25

What?

6:26

Tesla trucks are not bulletproof.

6:28

Dude, look at the video.

6:28

That Tesla, body wise, it's a great body of shit.

6:31

Well, I see people like shoot their trucks and...

6:34

No, there's a guy in Sutherland.

6:35

He shot his up and it didn't go through.

6:37

Maybe a 22.

6:38

I don't know what he used.

6:39

Little bitch 22.

6:41

But all I can say is he...

6:45

I witnesses claim the Tesla Cybertruck pulled up,

6:50

yeah, kept his foot on the brake.

6:53

Okay.

6:54

And then it blew up.

6:55

Yeah.

6:55

Now did anybody hear a gunshot?

6:57

That's my question.

6:58

Because I saw...

6:59

Or a muzzle flash.

7:01

Maybe he gets the head.

7:02

Yeah, yeah.

7:03

But people were suggesting like maybe it was on...

7:06

Like maybe he had already died but it was on autopilot.

7:09

Now I don't know if the Tesla autopilot can do this.

7:12

I don't know.

7:13

So I don't know if they fixed this, but all Tesla's, if you use a tennis ball trick,

7:18

you tape tennis balls to the steering wheel.

7:20

Yeah.

7:21

And it believes that you're holding onto it.

7:23

Okay.

7:24

So were there tennis balls in there?

7:26

I don't know.

7:26

I don't know.

7:26

Did you...

7:27

Those would melt, yeah.

7:28

Because there was a...

7:29

When I lived in Seattle, there was a dude taking a nap while driving.

7:33

Yeah.

7:33

He had two tennis balls.

7:34

Now I know a guy here in Vegas that pre-ordered a Tesla Cybertruck.

7:38

Yeah.

7:38

And he rented out on tour.

7:41

Now I don't know if it was his truck.

7:43

I haven't seen him lately.

7:44

The Cybertruck was rented out of Colorado Springs.

7:46

Oh, okay.

7:47

Yeah. So he drove 12 to 15 hours...

7:50

Weird.

7:51

To do this.

7:52

Did that why?

7:52

Or...

7:52

Why did he go to truck hours?

7:54

A dead guy was in a truck for 12 to 15 hours.

7:57

Yeah.

7:57

I don't know.

7:58

If he was dead, he was dead in Vegas.

7:59

Oh, he shot me in Vegas?

8:00

Yeah.

8:00

Well, that's weird because when I worked at...

8:02

We had a bullet fly through my building at like 5 a.m. on New Year's Day.

8:07

I wonder if she'd look into that.

8:09

Maybe they shot him in the parking lot where I work at the bullet went through...

8:13

No, that seriously happened though.

8:14

I literally came to work and the bullet went through a window.

8:16

I saw it like at a wildfire near Fremont Street.

8:19

Like they had like 50 cop cars.

8:21

Wait, a wildfire?

8:22

Or was that the hotel on fire?

8:23

No, no, no.

8:24

Wildfire Casino.

8:25

Oh, wait, was that two days ago?

8:28

It was on...

8:29

Yeah, New Year's.

8:29

That was the hotel.

8:30

I've been in a hotel.

8:32

Or did you see a newsman?

8:33

No, no, no.

8:34

This was like a photo and there were like 50 cop cars.

8:39

Wildfire, these like little mini casinos that we have here in Vegas.

8:42

They're sort of like Jackpot Joanies or Red Dragon.

8:45

Yeah.

8:46

Yeah.

8:47

We get...

8:47

So there's a wildfire near Fremont Street and there was like 50 cop cars.

8:51

Like...

8:51

So there was a fairly large fire in a hotel that was abandoned.

8:57

Obviously probably set by homeless people.

8:59

We tend to have a little bit of a homeless problem here.

9:02

But I don't know.

9:03

I mean, you lived in Chicago for a while, but I don't know.

9:06

You know what happens in Regenification when the owner doesn't want to sell the property?

9:11

Squatters?

9:12

Yeah, you got that.

9:13

So you start to get up and the city will roll in, the county rolls in, starts getting you, fighting you about improper stuff.

9:18

And then sometimes mysteriously your ship burns down.

9:22

Oh, that was a big problem in Greak Town.

9:25

Oh, okay.

9:25

They're burning shit down.

9:26

A lot of restaurants burn down in Greak Town all the time.

9:28

And let me guess, a bagel studio, a yoga studio, or a condo building went in their place?

9:33

Nothing had...

9:35

The last place they had I know built, burnt down, nothing was up in its place by the time I moved out.

9:38

Okay, so here's a quick fact.

9:40

To check right now, actually.

9:40

If you live in a city or an area that's booming and you see a yoga studio and a bagel shop,

9:48

you're Regen-trafined.

9:49

It's coming, rinses are going up, and shitheads are going to move in with their man buns and everything.

9:54

Although I do wear a bun myself right here, but I don't wear...

9:58

I wear mine ironically.

10:00

No, that would make me a hipster, wouldn't it?

10:03

I don't know, man.

10:03

It's crazy.

10:04

I wear mine so I don't have long hair at work.

10:07

I'm good, I forgot I just got off of work so it's still in the bun.

10:11

But mine's a cool bun.

10:14

So, yeah, there's a lot of questions about...

10:17

I witnessed this never saw the metal flash, never heard the gunfire, and I would think they would hear

10:23

at least the gunfire.

10:25

So I don't think he was trying to kill anybody.

10:27

I mean, just with the bulletproof truck and the...

10:30

Because you all know, even if it's not bulletproof, the weakest part of that truck is the cover of the bed.

10:35

Okay.

10:36

Did you see the picture?

10:37

He had either sticks of dynamite or fireworks in there.

10:40

Yeah, like I did.

10:41

And they didn't explode.

10:42

Right.

10:42

So, and but guess what?

10:44

He was acting duty military and he was a green bright with training in firearms and explosives.

10:52

So he built a bomb that didn't go off properly?

10:54

Well, so like it's hard to get good equipment as a civilian.

10:59

Oh, I guess if he's acting military, man.

11:00

But did he steal it from it?

11:01

Like, did he go and steal it from a base or...?

11:04

Well, I think I'm kind of like, I always take like a 24 hour pause on shit like this.

11:10

But again, because of the podcast, is that I wanted to at least have something to talk about.

11:13

Yeah.

11:17

I don't know.

11:18

I mean, it's just, it's, it doesn't seem legit to me.

11:23

I just, I don't, I'm not saying it wasn't him.

11:26

I'm just saying something doesn't, and so I'm kind of waiting for friends and families to start being interviewed.

11:32

Um, because every, every once in a while, you'll get, oh yeah, he was definitely a mass shooter.

11:37

Yeah.

11:38

What we expected him to, or you get, he was very calm and quiet.

11:41

He was very shy guy.

11:42

Right.

11:43

You get one of the two.

11:44

I want to see some interviews with some friends and, and the wife he was fighting with was his wife at.

11:48

Right.

11:48

Because you know the media, if it bleeds, it leads.

11:52

So, and then there's the other theory, which I kind of tend to go for and I just forgot the name of it.

11:59

So.

12:00

MK Ultra?

12:00

Yeah, MK Ultra.

12:01

I got it marked in the book.

12:03

So, I've actually talked about this before.

12:05

This is the book Chaos.

12:08

This book talks about Charles Manson being an FBI asset and he was testing people for mind-altering drugs.

12:18

So, it goes into a lot more detail about this, but the one thing about this book, I'm not much of a reader.

12:24

So, I watch, I watch interviews and usually my wife will read the book for me and give me the,

12:29

the cliff notes, but this one I'm kind of, I'm kind of, I'm kind of going through because it really interests me.

12:33

Oh, it actually says Charles Manson, the CIA and the secret history of the 60s.

12:40

So, but the interesting thing about this book is now we all know what citing the source means, right?

12:47

Where you, you make a claim and you cite your source.

12:50

Yeah.

12:52

So, all these pages here are citing, these guys citing the source.

12:58

This book, at least at the time it was written, had more sources being cited than any other book written.

13:06

I don't know about that.

13:07

Do you have a source for that?

13:09

The author?

13:10

Oh, so he said it.

13:11

Well, yeah, but I mean, you just see that.

13:12

I mean, show me the other one.

13:14

No, I don't, I may not be talking about textbooks.

13:16

I'm talking about books that went through retail cell.

13:19

I mean, dude, that's, that's, I mean.

13:21

I've seen bigger appendices than that.

13:23

Definitely.

13:24

Than this?

13:25

Yeah.

13:25

I've been off a page or two.

13:27

I definitely see bigger appendices than that.

13:29

I don't know.

13:30

I mean,

13:31

When was this book written also?

13:34

Probably the 2019 era.

13:38

I'm going to scratch over.

13:39

Yeah, definitely seen books with bigger appendices.

13:41

But are they textbooks and no, no, just just like pop science or pop.

13:47

Oh, I think you think you decide that source 2019 the book was written.

13:50

Yeah, I have that.

13:51

So I mean, I'm probably sure I'm only all pretty sure I have books that have bigger

13:55

appendices than that.

13:57

I mean, the guy made the claim, nobody rebuted it.

14:00

So yeah, I think he's a little full shot on that one.

14:05

Most most.

14:05

No, look up.

14:08

I guess I'll have to look it up and bring it on next week because I'm not going to

14:11

press the fucking camera and shut off the camera and be there talking to him.

14:16

What the fuck was that good for?

14:18

Absolutely nothing.

14:20

Oh, you're supposed to say it again.

14:22

What?

14:23

So what is it good for?

14:24

What's he good for?

14:25

Absolutely.

14:26

Say it again.

14:29

So the Vegas bomber that killed no one except himself.

14:33

Yeah.

14:35

I, you know, so that's a, I guess a smaller story than New Orleans.

14:40

I do believe it was weird though.

14:41

It is very weird.

14:43

It's, is it a message to Trump and Elon Musk?

14:46

And through the foot.

14:46

I know it's.

14:47

But why?

14:48

Oh, wait, no, but the FBI is on the case.

14:50

Oh, okay.

14:51

They'll get right down to it.

14:52

Now, apparently he was pro-Trump on social media and stuff.

14:56

Says who?

14:58

Well, actually that's going to be part of our topic today.

15:01

So, because I actually heard something similar to that, but they're all like,

15:05

and maybe he was.

15:06

I mean, again, the MK ultra could kind of like make you do stuff you don't normally want to do.

15:12

I don't, I don't buy that stuff.

15:14

Like, I know the program existed for sure and they tried to do it.

15:18

I just don't think they had a whole lot.

15:19

Like they just fucked people up instead of make them into mind control soldiers.

15:23

Well, it's called chaos, dude.

15:24

You like to read, read it.

15:26

So I also want to bring up something else off of X, but unrelated to this guy,

15:31

yelling at guys in wheelchairs.

15:32

I don't even know if he's in a wheelchair or not.

15:35

No, I think he is, but I didn't know he was when I started arguing with him.

15:38

So if you ever meet him in person, you have to fight him.

15:40

You have to sit the, I have to strap you to a chair.

15:42

I'm okay with that.

15:44

Still the advantage.

15:45

My legs actually work.

15:47

So our, our, our, um, president, your candidate for the libertarian party that got less than

15:53

a whole number, he made a post that kind of just kind of pissed me off.

15:56

So I was going to break it up.

15:58

Number one, crime is at a near record low across the country.

16:04

I'm assuming that's what he's referred to.

16:05

And the second point he made is the persons who perpetrated the attack were born and raised in

16:10

the USA.

16:11

Now, oh, this is a textbook example of using a tragedy to score political points.

16:16

Politicians do regularly.

16:17

They never let a good tragedy go to waste.

16:19

Okay. Yeah.

16:20

You're stealing that from a whole bunch of other people.

16:22

It's not your thought.

16:24

And, and he was responding to a tweet, a, an X or whatever from Trump.

16:30

But, and he is right about number two, but again, US citizens have been radicalized.

16:35

So it's still terrorism.

16:36

Just saying.

16:38

Does he believe crime is down at all time, record low in this country?

16:42

Does he actually fucking believe that?

16:44

So like we talked about on that show with the, with our guest, Ken Good,

16:49

it really depends on what scale you're looking at.

16:51

Well, in the up in the last couple of years, right?

16:54

Well, the FBI doesn't report their crime stats.

16:56

Yeah, it's hard to compare, but they did come out recently and said, yeah, we messed up.

17:01

Right. Right.

17:02

Yeah.

17:02

But now, so like if you look at a hundred year time span, yes, we're at low, like very extreme

17:11

lows.

17:11

A hundred years.

17:12

Yes.

17:13

But if you look at a 10 year time span, we're at an all time high for the 10 years.

17:17

I mean, I've always thought that the 80s had like the worst crime rates.

17:21

Yeah.

17:22

The 60s, 70s and 80s were the worst in modern.

17:25

No, I thought 80s were even worse than that 70s.

17:28

But a hundred years ago, back to the 20s.

17:31

Yes.

17:31

So yeah, it was a lot worse.

17:33

Crime was a lot worse.

17:34

No, that was before the depression was in the late 20s.

17:37

It started in 29, October 29 officially.

17:40

Oh, that's been supposed to be all about people jumped out the window.

17:43

Yeah.

17:43

They only have one person on record.

17:44

But crime has always been worse.

17:47

On a per capita basis or?

17:48

Yes, per capita.

17:49

See, that's bullshit.

17:50

It's not.

17:51

No, if you look at, okay, so what's the five worst crime cities?

17:54

What's the five worst crime cities in this country?

17:56

No, that keeps changing.

17:57

Who the fuck knows?

17:58

Give me a New York, Chicago, LA.

17:59

Yeah, New York, Chicago.

18:00

Oh, but on a per capita basis, they're not even the top 10.

18:04

Well, that was, that's what you're saying.

18:06

Like that's bullshit.

18:08

Well, okay, so I get it.

18:10

I understand the more people you got to factor that in, but to do it on a per capita basis,

18:14

it makes it look like Chicago, New York, and LA aren't that bad.

18:17

Now this, these numbers are going to change the last couple years.

18:20

There's no good way to fucking like do this as a whole, right?

18:23

Because let's say you have a small town of 20 people and someone gets murdered.

18:27

Right.

18:28

Are you the most dangerous?

18:29

That's not the worst city in the country.

18:30

It's not the most dangerous city in the world.

18:32

Well, they'll do it on like a 100,000 or 10,000 or 200 or whatever.

18:36

But you still can't do that in a tiny town.

18:39

It doesn't make any sense to apply that kind of reasoning to a small town.

18:44

And it also like, so for Chicago, for example, where we're both, I'd say we're experts.

18:50

Yeah.

18:51

Right.

18:51

Chicago as a city is not dangerous.

18:54

It's only these little neighborhoods where it's very obvious that I should not go to that neighborhood,

18:59

that that's dangerous.

19:00

You don't think that changed like five or six years ago?

19:02

It's gotten worse for sure.

19:04

Yeah.

19:04

I mean, do you know why it got worse?

19:07

Well, like all the crazy leftists were marching for...

19:10

Well, no, actually the federal government got involved and they recode all the gang leaders.

19:15

Okay.

19:15

So these gang leaders, they were businessmen.

19:17

I mean, they weren't like bankers and lawyers that became gang leaders.

19:20

They ran their gangs like a business.

19:22

Yeah.

19:23

The one thing I always kind of thought was cool, again, if a person, a teenager in their

19:32

territory showed promise of being a rapper or a sports player, they were off limits.

19:38

The gang leader would make sure they had money to buy shoes and stuff.

19:42

They took care of it.

19:42

They did that in the old mafia too, right?

19:44

A lot of these bands like Frankie Valley and the Four Seasons, Frank Sinatra,

19:49

these were all like well-known connected people.

19:51

Right.

19:52

So when the gang leaders got recode, there was a hole left in the thing and all the...

19:58

They obviously got...

19:59

They promote from within.

20:02

Yeah, but even...

20:02

They should really advertise that.

20:03

Even there, like where I lived on Michigan Avenue, you're not in any danger.

20:09

Like the most dangerous thing you might run into is like a drunken frat guy on Saturday night.

20:13

Right?

20:14

But after I left, right, after I left, they were literally trashing the store on Michigan

20:21

Avenue that my wife worked at.

20:22

They were marching about tearing down the Columbus statue, which I can see from my window.

20:27

Burgers at Navy Pier.

20:28

Right, right, right.

20:29

Yeah, so it's been getting worse lately.

20:31

But compared to the 60s, the 30s, the 1800s, it's still way safer now.

20:38

And the trend is going in the wrong direction.

20:41

So we do have to reverse that.

20:44

I just have to look at it.

20:44

I know the 80s numbers in Chicago was a fucking hole.

20:48

Oh, they're terrible.

20:49

I'll never tell you my story about meeting an off-duty cop in a VEL and ZZ Top Concert.

20:55

I don't think so.

20:55

So I don't I like live music and I do.

21:00

I like a lot of music.

21:01

I don't like fucking crowds.

21:03

So this was an outdoor venue in Naperville.

21:09

So I had to go to Naperville.

21:10

Ribfest?

21:11

Yeah, I think it was Ribfest.

21:12

Yeah, there you go.

21:13

But ZZ Top is playing.

21:14

So they did good shows at Ribfest.

21:16

So I stopped on the way there, grabbed my cigar and said,

21:19

Wife, son, get as close to the stage as you want, intermixed crowds.

21:24

I'm going back here.

21:25

So I'm in the back, like waiting the bags to smoke my cigar.

21:27

So a big burly dude walks up and he's like,

21:30

um, is this a smoking section?

21:32

I go, it is now.

21:34

So him and I were talking and we were just kind of talking.

21:36

We realized we both live in Chicago.

21:39

And he was acting a little cagey about like what he does for a living.

21:41

I'm like, oh, what do you do for a living?

21:43

Because that's just like, you know, I don't know this guy.

21:45

What else am I going to talk about?

21:46

Right.

21:46

What stick are you smoking?

21:47

I mean, it takes about 30 seconds.

21:49

And he was a little bit cagey.

21:50

I'm like, well, I mean, I run buildings and I'm a building engineer.

21:53

I, you know, I'm like, so I go, that's what I do.

21:55

He goes, I don't like telling people this because they annoy me,

21:58

but I'm a Chicago cop.

22:00

I go, I'm like, that's cool.

22:02

I'm not, you know, I go, I don't, I'm not going to be asking questions about,

22:05

you know, whatever.

22:07

But I go, but kudos are getting the, the murder rate down.

22:10

He goes, well, I mean, the murder rate is down, but the shootings aren't.

22:16

I go, what do you mean?

22:17

He goes, we're shooting more people than ever before.

22:20

We're just better at keeping them.

22:21

He goes, it's the damn doctors not knowing what to take a talk.

22:24

Coffee break.

22:26

He goes, if it comes in, look like a gangbanger, act like a gangbanger,

22:30

take a coffee break, let it die.

22:33

Okay, cool.

22:34

That's a great perspective.

22:35

I think you met my dad at, we're fascinated.

22:39

That's what happened there.

22:41

But no, but I mean, Chicago, seriously, we've had ER rooms where they've been

22:45

treating gangbangers and more gang mayors run in and so try to kill a dude.

22:48

We've had shootouts in our ERs.

22:50

I mean, we have, it was fucked up.

22:53

But again, like that was always confined to very specific neighborhoods where

22:57

like you knew not to go and they do not to escape.

22:59

No, no, no, but it's been getting worse.

23:02

It has changed.

23:02

It's been expanding.

23:03

Since they re-coded gang leaders because there's been turf wars going on.

23:07

I mean, look at like, Bucktown, not Rogers Park, fuck, that's a shithole.

23:15

Oh, where was that?

23:16

I forget the Chicago names.

23:18

Those neighborhoods were always fairly safe.

23:20

Yeah.

23:21

Because not because the cops, because cops take too long to respond.

23:25

I mean, it's just, it's not their fault.

23:26

It's just the composition of the neighborhood.

23:28

But it was the dads in the neighborhood.

23:31

Yeah.

23:31

We still, I think I did mention this before.

23:34

We still don't know the neighborhood that if you fucked around it, you found out,

23:38

you found out by getting stripped naked and throwing this track of river.

23:41

Every once around the news, we're like, oh, another nigga got in the track of river.

23:44

We're like, I don't know who's doing it, but keep doing it.

23:46

That's, you know, good.

23:47

I want to kill you.

23:49

I mean, that is unless you take their parking spot during dibs.

23:51

You take their parking spot during dibs, man.

23:53

You take your life in your hand.

23:54

Dibs is if you shovel your car out in the snow.

23:56

We already went over this.

23:57

Yeah.

23:57

Okay.

23:57

Well, now we got new listeners.

24:00

You, I did it quick.

24:01

Well, you own that spot for 24 hours.

24:04

Don't park it.

24:06

So yeah, now that we went down the Chicago history, I guess it's time to get on the New

24:10

Orleans.

24:11

Okay.

24:11

So that was, yeah.

24:12

Well, early on, people were like, there was a photo of like the guy had a

24:18

flag on the back of the truck and like they wrapped it up and like tried to hide what it was.

24:25

Now, I don't, I don't know if we found out what it actually was, but it looked like a

24:30

nicest flag.

24:30

Oh, look at Dave over here.

24:31

Lord could have been kind of something.

24:33

Because I never saw an unfurled photo.

24:35

Okay.

24:36

I only saw the furled up hidden photo.

24:38

Enough internet sluice called a nicest flag.

24:41

And I'm willing to say that because, because the media lies, the FBI lies.

24:46

So I'm going to go and go with people that haven't lied to me yet.

24:50

Yeah.

24:51

And so the guy was, is, well, he was Muslim or not.

24:56

I don't want to say Muslim, but Middle Eastern just said.

24:59

Middle Eastern.

25:00

But American more.

25:01

Yes.

25:02

And apparently he had just recently started getting into ISIS shit online or like,

25:08

I don't know where you didn't find this stuff.

25:10

Like, I didn't look it.

25:12

I've been trying to draw the Nazis.

25:14

I can't.

25:14

I don't know.

25:15

I guess I'm typing.

25:16

I may be, I may be still ISIS.

25:17

ISIS, send me your phone number on Twitter.

25:18

What are you doing?

25:19

What are you guys doing?

25:19

No, no, no.

25:20

Um, no, like, I don't know.

25:23

And so here's the thing.

25:25

Like sometimes people just go, they snap and they go crazy.

25:29

Yeah, they do.

25:29

And, and like, I've seen this happen to where they didn't get violence.

25:34

Maybe they, you know, committed suicide or, or just, I've seen things where

25:41

somebody had a YouTube channel, right?

25:44

And they just started uploading more and more bizarre contents, like 20 times a day.

25:49

You can see that the, the, the, the right.

25:50

Yes, you see the decent, right?

25:51

Yeah, the, the, the, yeah.

25:52

And, and it's like schizophrenia or who the hell knows what's wrong.

25:56

I think schizophrenia usually pops up in your late 20s anyway.

25:58

So this could be medical or that.

26:00

I mean, I am more, I think more conspiracy than anything else.

26:04

But yes, there are medical events that do this.

26:06

There are current events that do, that make you go crazy,

26:09

or there are drugs the government gives you that makes you go crazy.

26:12

Now people were talking about,

26:14

there, there are these barriers.

26:16

Good. Cause that's what I was going to bring up next.

26:17

Go right ahead.

26:18

That block access to Bourbon Street.

26:20

Yes. They pop up.

26:21

Well, there's, they have two different types.

26:23

They have the ballards that pop up.

26:24

Yeah.

26:24

And they got a plate that pops out.

26:25

Now I was there in 20, 2019.

26:31

Okay.

26:31

And I don't remember seeing those things there.

26:35

I was there in August.

26:35

It was in August.

26:36

I was there, I was there a year and a half ago, but I don't typically look for them.

26:40

Yeah.

26:40

Because when I was there, the roads were open.

26:43

I was there for work actually.

26:44

So, so now I remember, so I remember the roads were open,

26:48

but Bourbon Street was not to cars.

26:50

And during the day it is, cause you had deliveries of alcohol.

26:53

Even during night.

26:53

So, they were shut down.

26:55

Yes.

26:56

Well, there were cars when I was there.

26:58

And they were, they were like stuck waiting for, you know, people to walk.

27:02

So, every time I've been on Bourbon Street at night, and I don't, I can't tell you.

27:06

You know, not on Bourbon Street, on the cross streets.

27:08

Oh, the cross streets.

27:09

Yeah.

27:09

Oh.

27:10

Well, okay.

27:11

So, one, the ballads were not up.

27:14

Yeah, I don't remember seeing them.

27:14

No, they weren't.

27:15

No, they've been admitted.

27:16

I'll tell you why.

27:16

I don't remember seeing them when I was there.

27:18

Right.

27:18

So, the ballads were not up and it's just like, okay, fuck nuts.

27:23

You're going to expect me to accept this.

27:25

You have, you paid money to put something in and you're not going to use it.

27:29

This is kind of, it's kind of a life.

27:30

I'm saying if they normally don't use it, then why?

27:33

Well, no, no, Bourbon Street was wide open to pedestrian traffic.

27:36

Yeah, it always is.

27:37

No, no, no.

27:37

Maybe I'm talking about the roads.

27:39

The road.

27:40

Because the ballads didn't, they were not up, but there was a cop car in its place.

27:44

Okay.

27:45

That's where they go, oh, okay, that makes me feel better because I don't like here and,

27:49

oh, we didn't put the ballads up and we didn't know what guy was going to drive through this.

27:52

I don't think, I don't know if they're ever up.

27:54

Well, they're not.

27:56

It's probably body ground.

27:56

They're broken.

27:58

Well, there you go.

27:59

So, that, well, that's what I want to talk about.

28:01

Yeah.

28:01

So, they put these, they spend taxpayer money to put these in and they don't apparently maintain them.

28:08

Yeah.

28:09

And I kind of go back to Katrina.

28:11

Okay.

28:12

Do you know how many, you know, Katrina, New Orleans is underwater.

28:17

Yeah.

28:17

So, they've got like retaining walls around, uh, Glevis.

28:20

Yeah.

28:20

All around more of the poor areas of New Orleans.

28:23

Right.

28:23

Shocker.

28:24

But like I was seeing an interview after Katrina, the guy's like, yeah, I used to,

28:28

as a kid, I would, I would watch the ships go by.

28:31

Yeah.

28:31

And I'm like, fuck.

28:33

What?

28:34

But the, the flooding down, somebody said some levies broke in New Orleans.

28:39

I do not remember that story.

28:40

Okay.

28:41

I'm not saying it didn't happen.

28:43

I do know they were cresting the levies and coming over.

28:45

Yeah.

28:47

Over half their pumps weren't working because they didn't probably maintain them.

28:51

The fuck, guys, you're under, you're under, your sea level is minus something.

28:58

If your sea level is minus, well, maintain your fucking pumps.

29:00

So, like I said, I was there, I believe it was 2019 and we stayed in an Airbnb

29:05

about a mile from the French Quarter.

29:07

Okay.

29:08

So like every day we would go and walk over there and we would take a different route every day.

29:12

With your life in your hands.

29:13

But okay.

29:14

As I've recommended on the podcast, take a different route.

29:17

Dude, we were the most, it was me and my buddy and we were the most dangerous people around.

29:22

Like no one's going to fuck with us.

29:23

Trust me.

29:23

But there were massive potholes.

29:28

And when I say pothole, like you, you think of something that you like your tire bumps

29:32

and like you get annoyed.

29:33

No, like this would fit a whole fucking car.

29:35

So what I like to say about that in Seattle, they have their potholes have potholes.

29:40

So it's probably similar to that.

29:41

But those were from Katrina.

29:43

They just never got fixed.

29:45

And like there was a road next to some railroad tracks where they had just dug the whole road

29:50

out and it was just an empty pit for the whole length of the road.

29:54

So if I give a fuck down there, they just don't give a fuck.

29:57

If I were to guess what political party is in control in New Orleans, would I be right or wrong?

30:03

You'd be right.

30:04

Oh, Democrats.

30:05

By the way, fuck you, Ray Nagan.

30:08

So funny thing about New Orleans Democrats.

30:11

So in Chicago, there hasn't been a non Democrat mayor since 1930.

30:16

Yeah, it's been a really long time.

30:18

New Orleans hasn't had Democrat mayors or non Democrat mayors since I think the early 20s.

30:22

So they have Chicago beat.

30:24

Yeah.

30:24

So my problem is Ray Nagan.

30:26

Ray Nagan was the mayor of New Orleans during Katrina.

30:31

Yeah.

30:32

I believe he messed up a lot and he has a lot to do with the cause of the city.

30:37

One, you're not maintaining your shit.

30:38

Yeah.

30:39

Okay.

30:39

But that wasn't my problem.

30:43

He could have bussed people out sooner, but instead put them in the dome.

30:47

And there was no security in the dome.

30:49

People were, there was a lot of shit going on down there.

30:53

And that's wrong.

30:54

But he was doing a speech probably six months after Katrina.

31:03

Now, mind you, I'm a decent guy, but I don't really go to a lot of fundraisers and charity events

31:08

because I don't trust the full of the money.

31:10

Yeah.

31:10

I just, I don't.

31:13

But I'm like, no, we're going, we're going to do this.

31:16

We're going to take, you know, have faith that it's going to go there.

31:18

This motherfucker went on the air and was like, oh, we're the city people forgot about.

31:23

We're the chocolate city.

31:24

So the people, the American people don't care about us.

31:27

Okay.

31:29

And honestly, that really pissed me off.

31:31

And, but that, that wasn't quite the end of it.

31:34

Yeah.

31:34

Because I actually was boycotting New Orleans for quite a few years because not only did he say

31:39

that and did he mess up Katrina because it really wasn't FEMA.

31:43

FEMA has like a 72 hour window before they're going to be there.

31:46

Yeah.

31:47

They're just, they're not going to come into an area where a hurricane's coming through

31:50

and be there waiting.

31:51

They're going to sit out in the outskirts and mobilize.

31:54

He got reelected.

31:56

Now what I was told later on was they, they bust a lot of people back from Houston because

32:01

they sent a lot of the poor people to Houston.

32:03

They busted them back to vote for him.

32:05

So there was a little bit of the weird corruption, but, but still, I mean, you let him get back

32:12

in all, he's in jail now.

32:13

What did I forget?

32:13

What a damn shirt.

32:14

It's kind of, they all do something.

32:16

So, like, let's, let's talk about this week's Monero challenge.

32:21

Oh, you want to do that now?

32:22

Yeah.

32:22

So we got, we got to throw it in randomly to throw, throw these listeners off.

32:26

So here's the challenge.

32:27

What was I doing on July 12th, 2003?

32:32

Just tell me what I was doing.

32:33

And there's a bonus, going to be a bonus because we missed last week.

32:35

Yeah.

32:36

So there's going to be a bonus giveaway.

32:39

If you can show me a street view photo of where I was.

32:41

Oh, you're on Google Maps?

32:44

Use Google, use whatever you want.

32:45

Well, okay.

32:46

So you, I believe you're still living in Chicago.

32:49

I'm going to give you a little hand.

32:49

You're not allowed to, no, no, no, shut the fuck up.

32:51

I don't know the truth though.

32:52

That's the challenge.

32:53

I don't know the truth.

32:54

That's the challenge.

32:54

Not where I lived.

32:55

It's where I was on that day.

32:57

I was, I was doing deductive reasoning to come up with that.

33:00

Don't help them out.

33:01

All right.

33:02

Again, this July 12th, 2003.

33:04

What was I doing and show me a street view of where I was?

33:07

So it's going to be two separate giveaways and it's not a wheel.

33:10

So the first one that gets the right answer is going to win.

33:13

Okay.

33:14

I want to make one guess and it's not going to give anything away.

33:16

No.

33:16

No, it makes it a good thing to know why.

33:17

For God, I want to know if this is an acceptable answer.

33:20

I guarantee you on that day at one point you're yelling at somebody.

33:25

I'm sure I will.

33:26

Sure.

33:27

So does that count as an answer?

33:29

No.

33:29

Okay.

33:29

Oh, because they didn't really say where you were yelling at the president.

33:32

It's going to be specific.

33:32

They just said you were yelling at somebody.

33:35

Calling somebody a retard or an idiot.

33:36

And if you, if you, if you think how the fuck am I going to do that?

33:39

Stay tuned for my teaching segment.

33:41

Oh, we got a little teaser.

33:43

So now, now going back to the New Orleans thing.

33:47

So that there, so the sister ballards are not properly maintained, which is basically

33:54

life saving the equipment.

33:55

We now know that they park a cop car in there, which okay.

33:59

And that's, that's acceptable.

34:00

I think that's what was there when I was there.

34:01

It's cop cars.

34:02

Okay.

34:02

So they had a cop car there because it's a video of the dude in the truck coming down the street

34:06

and he literally goes around the cop car up on the sidewalk, drives down the sidewalk,

34:10

and then just guns it.

34:13

Apparently the only thing that stopped him was a lift, a boom, a boom lift.

34:18

Okay.

34:20

Yeah.

34:20

I don't really know why he drove right into that because he could have got around it and you

34:24

don't trust me.

34:25

I've been on boom lifts.

34:26

You don't not see a boom.

34:29

And then he got out of the truck and he was shot and killed by the new one was peaceful.

34:32

But I also believe he got a few rounds in some cops.

34:35

So, but I'm going to go ahead and say I'm pretty confident that guy's the guy.

34:42

Yeah.

34:44

So I'm not continuity of

34:46

Completely crazy.

34:46

Evidence and all that.

34:48

But again, I don't like bringing humor into stuff like this, but the reality is we, you know,

34:53

we live in the year we live in and Xers are kind of, we like to laugh.

35:00

So the FBI brought out their DEI hire to take care of this problem.

35:07

Um, and her first statement was this is not terrorism.

35:12

Okay, you're an hour into this.

35:14

How the fuck do you know?

35:15

Well, okay.

35:15

So let's let's be specific here.

35:17

Okay.

35:18

Terrorism is when you're doing it to achieve a political end.

35:22

Okay.

35:22

Right.

35:22

So now I, we don't know why the guy did it.

35:24

Well, they, they're calling it terrorism now.

35:26

Okay.

35:26

But do they know why the guy did it?

35:28

Like, do they, do they have a manifesto or?

35:31

Well, if he was radicalized, which I do not know if he was.

35:34

Now, and I agree that you shouldn't say it's not terrorism because you don't fucking know.

35:38

Right.

35:38

Well, it's so different when the bridge, when that boat hit the bridge.

35:41

Yeah.

35:41

Like literally like the bridge was still collapsing and Biden's like, oh, it's not,

35:46

I can tell you this, it's not terrorism.

35:47

You don't know yet.

35:48

Shut the fuck up, old man.

35:50

So, um, they stopped him and all that.

35:53

But so this DEI hire, um, well, there's a couple of problems here.

35:58

One, I did not know this, but the FBI does not allow facial piercings.

36:05

Okay.

36:06

But yeah, she's got a nose piercing.

36:08

And is that a big deal?

36:09

No, it's not.

36:09

I could,

36:10

But if it's, if it's, if it's, if it's part of the job, like Chicago police cannot have beers.

36:15

Chicago firemen cannot have beer.

36:17

I'm really annoyed that they like have armed tats and all this.

36:21

Like, dude, like you're fucking gang, like you're a gangbangers.

36:24

You're, you shouldn't be a cop.

36:25

Sorry.

36:26

I met this cop and him and I actually.

36:27

No visible tasks.

36:28

Friends, he was a big burly dude with sleeves on both arms and we can't get

36:33

being friends and he was a neighbor at cop and we'd always fuck around with each other.

36:37

But yeah, I agree with you.

36:39

You know, have some decorum and some professionalism and not the tattoos are not.

36:43

I mean, I,

36:43

He wants to respect you and treat you as like a, a role model to look up to and fucking act like it.

36:49

Yeah.

36:49

No, but I also don't believe tattoos make you a bad person.

36:52

I choose not to have any.

36:53

I mean, I don't know why people would want to put something under body.

36:56

It's not.

36:56

Okay.

36:57

So that would help please identify them.

36:58

Tattoos don't make you a bad person, but bad people tend to be attracted to tattoos.

37:04

There was bad.

37:05

That's like 80s, 90s view.

37:07

Now it's, uh, it's the hipsters.

37:09

You know, with the band bonds.

37:11

You don't think those are bad people?

37:13

Hipsters?

37:14

Yeah.

37:14

I mean, they, they suck.

37:16

Well, there you go.

37:16

But I mean, I don't know if they're like gangbanging and shooting people.

37:19

If you're not happy with the body that the universe.

37:23

Oh, almost a guy gave you.

37:25

Oh shit.

37:26

And the atheist is just that God.

37:28

Now, if you're not happy with what you have going on, that you need to fucking permanently

37:33

ink yourself or paint your hair pink or all this stupid, like, fix yourself.

37:40

Right?

37:40

Yeah.

37:41

Inking yourself is not going to fix you.

37:42

Your pink hair is not going to fix you.

37:44

I mean, you feel better.

37:45

I can't get it if you want to.

37:47

It's a red flag.

37:48

It's a big red flag.

37:49

If you want to have like water two tattoos and they're small.

37:51

I don't even like that.

37:52

I didn't know.

37:53

But if it's a backup memorial to someone, I kind of understand that.

37:57

But I just choose not to do it.

38:00

I mean, I've got family members that have tattoos.

38:02

So, I mean, I don't, I'm not against them.

38:05

It's not the point where like now everyone's doing it.

38:07

So like you're, you're more of a rebel by not having tattoos.

38:11

So like, what are you trying to prove?

38:12

You know, like,

38:13

Well, that's what I was going to say.

38:14

Ironic.

38:14

We went from a society of like the bad ass biker dudes have tattoos to now like the

38:20

weak scared people got people have tattoos.

38:23

Yeah.

38:23

It's not cool anymore.

38:24

It's done, dude.

38:25

It's over.

38:25

Man, put us, put a fork in it.

38:28

But I believe this is the senator's name.

38:30

There's a senator, John Kennedy, right?

38:32

Yes.

38:32

From Louisiana.

38:33

Uh, I think he's from, yeah.

38:35

Yeah.

38:35

So when I was reading this article, I'm like, John, oh, they, they, it's Robert Kennedy, dumbass.

38:42

But he's not related to them.

38:43

No, but then, oh, he's not.

38:44

No, he's not related to them.

38:46

I don't think so.

38:47

Let me double check.

38:47

Yeah, I don't know the guy.

38:49

I just found out about him.

38:50

I don't think he is related to them though.

38:51

And his age would make him older than when President Kennedy was elected because what

38:57

is he like 70?

38:58

Yeah, he's he's up to, he was born in 51.

39:00

Yeah.

39:01

So he was named before John F. Kennedy was John F. Kennedy.

39:04

So I guess, but John's a very popular name in Kennedy's in this country.

39:07

Unfortunately, the very popular name as well.

39:10

So this D.I. hire with her nose piercing.

39:15

I don't get the nose piercing or the piercing in the nose.

39:17

I don't, I don't.

39:17

She's got hair.

39:18

My hair is a hole free.

39:20

But I don't, I don't question or judge anybody for doing it.

39:22

It's your body.

39:23

Do you know, it's, I'm who am I to tell you what to do with it.

39:25

So she's up there like this is not terrorism.

39:30

You know, she's, I do her spiel.

39:32

This senator, he's like, enough's enough.

39:34

Pushes her out of the way.

39:37

No, not bring the video up, dude.

39:38

It's fucking hysterical.

39:40

He, and she's just like, what just happened?

39:42

She, and the way he did it, he did it very smooth.

39:46

This is an older man and he got armed first, shoulder in, and he's got like stepped right

39:51

in front of her and then twisted his body to kind of push her in the back.

39:55

And then more people filled it behind him.

39:56

So she, she's like in the back of the room, not quite the back of the room.

39:59

But she's like, I was, I was just talking to the microphone.

40:02

Yeah.

40:02

He's not in the Kennedy family.

40:04

Weird coincidence.

40:05

But I don't know who this guy is, but he's like, we're going to know what happened.

40:09

No, he's really good.

40:10

You should watch his videos all over YouTube.

40:12

Yeah.

40:12

We're not going to hide anything.

40:14

So brother, get to fucking work.

40:15

We want to know.

40:16

So his best stuff is when they're interviewing judges.

40:19

Okay.

40:19

And like he's, I guess, part of that committee or whatever.

40:22

And he asks them stuff like, what's the five prongs of the first amendment?

40:30

And he, he asked that to Amy.

40:31

With that whole Southern accident, I go, I've heard that guy before.

40:35

And, and she, she didn't know them all.

40:37

She, I think she got three of them out of the five or like he, what's, what's a Brady claim

40:42

to some other judge, judge candidate.

40:44

And the guy's like, I don't know.

40:46

I think it's something with guns or like fucking basic shit.

40:51

Or like if I were to ask you, I don't know what's the voltage on a standard outlet

40:56

and you didn't know the answer.

40:58

I'm not fucking hiring you.

40:59

Yes.

40:59

Yeah.

40:59

I've been pretty into question.

41:02

No, he's really good.

41:03

He's really good.

41:04

He's not a libertarian, unfortunately, but when he's good, he's good.

41:09

So unfortunately I have this video here.

41:11

It's just her talking, but I didn't know at this time about him, Kennedy guy, and just

41:16

like, just removing her from the front of the microphone.

41:19

Thought that was kind of cool.

41:22

I just want to check my other stories I wanted to talk about.

41:28

Lieutenant Diane.

41:29

Yeah, I saw it was funny.

41:31

Sometimes I go, he's supposed to funny shit or something I find funny.

41:34

What are you going to do?

41:36

But there's another big story I want to talk about and kind of get your take on it.

41:39

Okay.

41:41

The fog.

41:43

This is retarded, dude.

41:44

It's just retarded.

41:46

These people have never seen fog in their lives or something.

41:48

Okay, I'll probably.

41:48

I don't understand.

41:50

Have you seen some of the videos?

41:52

It looks like snow is falling.

41:53

I just don't care.

41:54

Like it's fog.

41:55

It's fucking fog.

41:56

It could be the camera causing this to happen.

41:59

Probably.

42:00

But it does not look like any fog I've ever seen.

42:03

Again, I don't ever watch fog on cameras, so I don't know.

42:07

But I can say this shit looks fucking weird.

42:10

And you know, they've been good.

42:11

The people like, oh my God, I got sick from breathing it.

42:15

Yeah, okay.

42:16

Just like you got sick from breathing COVID and you have long COVID and you have this and that.

42:19

But I'm just throwing this out there because it almost looks like,

42:25

I okay, I have no clue what cloud seating looks like.

42:28

Yeah.

42:28

But I knew I know people have over cloud seated before.

42:32

I'm just curious about this is things that make you go, hmm.

42:35

It's just foggy out.

42:37

What the fuck?

42:37

Dude, I'm not the best video here.

42:39

It looks like snow is falling on some of the windows.

42:42

I don't know.

42:43

I'm kind of thinking.

42:44

It's so stupid.

42:48

All right, let's just move on to that one.

42:49

It's just stupid.

42:51

No, it's...

42:56

I'm driven in fog where I literally couldn't see five feet in front of me.

42:59

I get that.

42:59

But there's solid particles in the air.

43:03

Not when, not then.

43:05

I mean, like somebody, she posted a picture of her dog bowl and shit was floating on top.

43:09

Maybe if it's raining or it's...

43:11

No, no, like, and actually, people are like, well, that looks like a larvae.

43:16

Because I don't know if it was moving on its own or if the wave of the wave...

43:20

Hey, I got like, look at the other direction.

43:25

Yeah, right there.

43:26

Tell me that fog, if you've seen fog like that...

43:28

That's snow.

43:29

It's too fucking cold, too warm to snow.

43:32

What do you mean it's too warm to snow?

43:34

They're claiming it's too warm to snow.

43:35

How do you know that they're telling the truth?

43:37

Because enough people have done it, I have to...

43:39

I don't know whether to tell the truth.

43:41

I have to bring it up for question.

43:43

So ridiculous.

43:43

I have to bring it up to say because, I mean, we all know clouds didn't exist.

43:49

And this one, I just found funny.

43:50

So Camilla Harris was kind of like saying, I worked at McDonald's.

43:53

Oh, that's not old, yeah.

43:54

Oh, yeah, it's definitely old.

43:56

No, that incident, the photoshop is old, yeah.

43:59

Really?

44:00

Yeah.

44:00

They photoshopped her face on another McDonald's employee's body and the background, it lays at

44:06

home as she's in some kind of like...

44:07

So it's 1970s decor.

44:08

Yeah, which was when she would have been in McDonald's before.

44:11

I think, yeah, because I think they actually tracked that uniform because McDonald's

44:15

changed their uniform and they tracked it to the exact date and they figured out,

44:19

I don't know how they figured out who the real photo was.

44:21

I think they, well, that'll be part of my topic actually.

44:24

Okay.

44:24

It's also in there, yeah.

44:27

So we got to the fog, I got to the chaos book.

44:30

You highly recommend you read the fucking chaos book.

44:33

Camilla, just borrow that from me when you're done with it.

44:35

So project paperclip or operation paperclip.

44:38

Yeah, I've heard of that.

44:39

So let me, I don't know if I brought it up or not, how am I going to find it?

44:42

Oh, I know, I know what I want to do.

44:44

That was the original H-1B program, right?

44:47

I believe so.

44:50

Because I actually just heard project paperclip today.

44:53

Really?

44:53

Yeah.

44:53

I've known about it for a while.

44:55

I actually named myself that sometimes when I sign up for accounts.

44:58

Just so people, like if people talk to me on those forums, they'd be like,

45:01

what is this operation paperclip?

45:02

Let me go Google that.

45:03

But I get really worked up in the podcast and I get really into the song.

45:07

Did I bring up the NPR title for what happened to the Tesla?

45:14

I mean, I brought that up.

45:15

So the headline to the, because I'm starting to think people work about it,

45:18

so I forgot.

45:19

The title to the article was Cyber Tesla Truck Pulls Up in Front of Trump Tower,

45:27

Catches on Fire, Then Blows Up.

45:28

Yeah.

45:29

Is that what happened?

45:31

Technically.

45:32

No, order of operation.

45:34

What do you mean?

45:34

It caught on fire, then it blew up.

45:36

No, it blew up and then caught on fire.

45:38

Isn't that two different things?

45:40

Well, okay.

45:40

So it's hard to tell from the original video.

45:43

Let's just blow the fuck up and then caught on fire.

45:45

You've got my mind about it.

45:48

I don't, I start smoking.

45:50

Like it starts smoking first.

45:53

So like you could say that was catching on fire because I've seen like cars do that.

45:57

Okay.

45:57

So this is our AI's overview of what project paperclip was.

46:01

I'm just going to read a very quick,

46:06

oh, it was a secret US intelligence program that brought German and Austria

46:13

scientists, engineers and technicians to the United States after World War II.

46:16

Yep.

46:17

What word is missing out of that?

46:20

The N word?

46:21

Yeah, the N word.

46:23

Not the N word, but the N word, Nazis.

46:27

Yeah.

46:27

So now a lot of the paperclip guys were just low level scientists.

46:34

Let me just, a lot of them were where they had no knowledge of,

46:39

now they knew there was like oppression against Jews and stuff like that.

46:42

A lot of them just kept quiet and weren't participating in that,

46:46

but some of them were really fucking into it.

46:50

Like Werner von Braun, who was like the head rocket scientist,

46:55

he fucking hated Jews and he actually knew about the death camps and all that kind of shit.

47:01

And he used slave labor from those things.

47:06

And some of the other, the non-rocket scientists guy, like the medical research guys,

47:12

were doing like fucked up medical research on Jewish prisoners.

47:15

Good.

47:16

So my question to you is who was the head of NASA during the first Moonlight Day in 69?

47:22

I don't know in 60.

47:23

Was it Werner von Braun?

47:25

Eugene Kranz, okay.

47:27

So Kranz, that's an Italian last name, right?

47:29

Probably.

47:30

Italian?

47:31

Yeah.

47:31

Or it could be Jewish, right?

47:34

It's kind of an insult that he's fucking German, dude.

47:36

He was a Nazi.

47:38

He was, he was brought over through oppression and just saying.

47:42

Yeah.

47:43

Well, no, it's weird that that's his name because almost all those, no, no, because

47:48

almost all those guys got given fake names when they were brought over.

47:52

So like if you were brought over as part of paperclip, they actually like

47:56

held you in a, in a quarantine for six months where they taught you how to speak proper English

48:01

without an accent.

48:02

Okay.

48:03

They gave you an identity.

48:04

They gave you a history.

48:05

They gave you a new name.

48:06

Like it wasn't just fucking like, okay, come on over.

48:08

Like they actually tried to make you fake being an American.

48:14

Well, you know, they have, well, there's a movie made about this, but this is actually true.

48:19

And I believe, Jesus Christ, where did it allow the Nazis to play to?

48:23

What country is that?

48:23

Argentina.

48:24

Argentina.

48:25

So in Argentina, they are German.

48:27

The boys from Brazil.

48:29

Oh, is that?

48:29

That's the movie.

48:30

Oh, boys from Brazil.

48:31

No, I think I think about a different probably that name sounds too fancy for the movie I'm

48:36

talking about.

48:36

Okay.

48:36

Because mine was like a slapstick comedy.

48:38

Oh, okay.

48:40

But in that town, he just said, I can't remember the movie was a boys from Brazil.

48:45

Well, no, but there's another movie.

48:46

It was a general revolver was that I'm sure.

48:48

General was it in that movie?

48:49

Huh.

48:50

Okay.

48:50

But it was general.

48:52

But they set up like in this case, they were talking about German towns.

48:57

Yeah.

48:57

Filled with all Russians.

48:59

Yeah.

48:59

Russians.

49:00

Acting like Germans.

49:02

That's how they train people to be something else.

49:05

And maybe I'm talking about was an American.

49:08

If they're all were Russians, but they were learning how to be American.

49:13

Um, huh.

49:14

So that is a little sketch too.

49:15

But you know, but that's fine.

49:17

And I was going to, I really want to do a little bit more research on Dr. Kurt Bloom,

49:23

which was a, he was a Nazi as well.

49:27

Um, I want to see if he did what, what he did for a living here, but it's not, that's

49:33

not my point to bring this up.

49:35

So apparently in the Nazi community, having a wound from, um, do, uh, dueling or, or what's

49:44

we, we find some other knife, not fencing with a shutter knife.

49:48

I have no idea.

49:49

So, but basically he has a wound on him and other Nazis do too, because if they got a

49:55

wound from this, they wanted it to be cool.

49:57

Like a face scar.

49:58

Like they did.

49:58

Well, right.

49:59

But they would shove the wound with hay.

50:01

Huh.

50:01

So it wouldn't heal properly and the scar would be more pronounced.

50:05

Interesting.

50:06

What the fuck?

50:07

Yeah.

50:07

They were weird people.

50:08

Yeah.

50:08

You ain't kidding.

50:10

Uh, well, here's, do you know the story of Hitler's mustache?

50:13

Uh, no.

50:15

So, um, Hitler has that weird funny mustache, right?

50:20

Yeah.

50:21

So if you, if you actually look up image search, you can search for Hitler full mustache and

50:27

he used to have one of those big, uh, twirly German style mustaches.

50:30

Oh, like the Händemars?

50:31

Yeah, Händemars.

50:32

Yeah.

50:32

I can't grow those.

50:33

I so I would go.

50:35

So that's, that was the style back in, in Germany, uh, in the 1900s, in the early 1900s.

50:41

Uh, so Hitler was a soldier in World War One.

50:43

Did you know that?

50:45

I did not know that.

50:46

Yeah.

50:46

He was, he was a foot soldier in the infantry and, um, so World War One, they used gas on people.

50:53

Right.

50:53

And you had to wear a gas mask, right, to protect yourself from the gas, but you couldn't wear

51:00

that with your handlebar mustache.

51:02

So a lot of the German soldiers, they would just shave off most of the mustache, except

51:06

for that little part, the Hitler part.

51:09

Really?

51:09

And so they could fit their gas mask on and it became stylish, uh, after the war for Nazis,

51:16

because it would remind people, Hey, we're your war heroes.

51:20

Right.

51:20

So that, that's why they, that's why that mustache got popular in Germany.

51:23

Oh, wow.

51:24

Yeah.

51:25

That's really cool.

51:27

There you go.

51:27

He says Hitler is cool.

51:28

Ron said that Hitler is cool.

51:30

Yeah.

51:31

He is.

51:31

And Bob Hitler is an amazing part of that.

51:34

You didn't met Bob Hitler?

51:35

I mean, I think he should have changed his name, but I mean.

51:38

I have not met Bob Hitler.

51:39

Okay.

51:41

Oh, the movie you're talking about is Greece.

51:43

Wait, Greece with Greece, right?

51:45

John Travolta.

51:47

Uh, Saturday night.

51:48

For the second I was like, I'm serious.

51:49

I'm like, what?

51:50

I don't, I can't find anything.

51:51

I'm looking forward to, I remember seeing it.

51:53

Maybe it wasn't John, I mean, I don't know.

51:56

We, we're gonna have to move on.

51:57

Yeah, I know.

51:58

How do the experts?

52:00

The experts?

52:02

Yeah.

52:02

I have never heard of that.

52:06

Huh.

52:06

Yeah.

52:06

The experts.

52:08

I'm gonna have to find a legal copy of this and watch it.

52:11

So that would have won the, the, the Monero giveaway a couple weeks ago.

52:15

It could have.

52:16

Because it's a great movie.

52:17

I, well, it says 4.9.

52:20

So I don't, I think William Ames was in it too.

52:22

Interesting.

52:23

I'm gonna, I'm gonna go find that and, and check it out.

52:26

So, um, oh, the other thing I wanted to bring up, I didn't probably post on the X-Con

52:30

because I couldn't find a good video of it.

52:32

You know about the Christmas massacre in Germany?

52:35

Yes.

52:36

It's gotta grow up a truck.

52:37

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

52:38

Yeah.

52:38

Um, have you seen what they're doing in Germany?

52:41

They're ejecting the Middle Eastern people from Germany, the, the refugees.

52:45

Huh.

52:46

In, I mean, like seriously, like a bunch of citizens get together,

52:50

and they're like just grabbing them and taking them to the police station.

52:53

Then there's videos of the police themselves.

52:56

So here's what's funny.

52:57

This is, this is the American woke.

53:00

So there's a video of a German police officer and this Middle Eastern woman or someone

53:06

of Middle Eastern descent.

53:07

Yeah.

53:07

At least the caller, I don't know where she was, was walking away from him and he pushed her to the ground,

53:13

picked her up, handcuffed her and brought her over.

53:15

And they're like, oh my God, you can't do that.

53:18

I'm like, uh, dumbass, you're in Germany.

53:20

They can.

53:21

I mean, every military guy I've talked to that's been in Germany, he goes, they, if you fuck around,

53:27

they will hit you to have the door.

53:27

Well, what should, what should she do?

53:30

She was the wrong caller, apparently.

53:32

See, that's like this is fucking.

53:33

I get it.

53:34

It's race, but.

53:35

Oh, a Muslim did a bad thing.

53:38

So let's attack all the other Muslims who didn't do a bad thing.

53:40

That's not what I'm advocating.

53:41

No, but.

53:42

It's the immigrants coming in causing problems.

53:45

And sometimes you don't.

53:45

You see like your.

53:46

Dude, they're called a lot of fucking problems in Germany as well as here.

53:49

As well as France.

53:50

You're still attacking the ones that aren't causing the problems because you're too much of a bitch

53:55

to attack the ones that are actually causing the problem.

53:56

That's, that's the real issue.

53:57

If you can't find them.

53:59

Well, it's, it's, it's a protection of your country.

54:02

I don't agree with it.

54:04

It doesn't make any sense.

54:05

I do love the passion.

54:07

Yeah.

54:07

Germans are known for that one.

54:09

Yeah.

54:11

Hopefully that, that, hopefully that also where it stays a museum and that gets refired up again.

54:16

With them, you never know.

54:17

Because they don't like, they don't like.

54:19

Nothing jokes.

54:19

Germans, man.

54:20

Well, that's the thing is like they've always been, they never stopped being Nazis.

54:24

They just relabeled it.

54:25

I'm not kidding.

54:26

It was a billion.

54:27

Okay.

54:27

So like, well, Germany split into two, right?

54:29

And there was East Germany and West Germany.

54:31

Yeah.

54:31

For a while.

54:31

And the Soviets controlled East Germany and they were just basically fucking Nazis that hated Nazis.

54:37

Literally.

54:37

I mean, that's what they were.

54:38

Yeah.

54:39

They had the Stasi, the secret police.

54:41

I mean, they're fucking insane.

54:43

And even the West German side, which had like free markets ish, they still have these weird, like,

54:50

they didn't repeal a lot of the Nazi laws.

54:53

Huh.

54:54

So there's still a lot of laws in place that the Nazis created these laws and they're still there.

54:57

Like for example, the band and homeschooling.

55:00

Hitler banned homeschooling.

55:02

And that's still the law in Germany today.

55:04

And if you ask a German about homeschooling, they will be fucking adamant, like, homeschooling is bad.

55:11

Like, they start fucking like doing this shit.

55:13

Like, what the fuck, man?

55:16

Why is homeschooling bad?

55:17

So because of not because of Nazi made the law in the 1930s.

55:20

So we got a southern accent out of you today and now a Nazi accent out of you today.

55:24

Homeschooling is bad job all.

55:26

Come on.

55:26

I mean, they're fucking nuts.

55:27

You're an alien one.

55:28

They're not gonna cancel us.

55:31

Would you like to squish it with that?

55:33

I can do a lot of accents, actually.

55:35

Oh, too funny.

55:36

Um, all right, where are we sitting now here?

55:38

We're already 55 minutes into the show.

55:40

So I think it's time to start the training classes.

55:42

So let's learn about OSINT.

55:45

OSINT is an acronym for open source intelligence.

55:51

And this is basically learning info about people from publicly available sources.

55:55

Oh.

55:57

So there's both black hat purposes and white hat purposes.

56:01

For example, you can use the blackmail people,

56:05

stalk your ex-girlfriend or boyfriend.

56:08

You can use it to swat people.

56:09

Now, like, obviously we don't condone any of that stuff,

56:13

but this is how a lot of these people get this information to do these things.

56:16

So you want to be able to be on guard against it, right?

56:20

So what are some white hat purposes?

56:22

Um, knowing the info that is available on you and your loved ones, right?

56:26

So if you think, if you talk a lot of shit online, like some of us do,

56:31

you want to know what info about you is available

56:33

that other people might use the blackmail you, right?

56:37

Skip tracing and bounty hunting.

56:39

So when someone has a warrant out for their arrest,

56:42

it's not always the cops that go after them.

56:44

Okay.

56:44

Right.

56:45

So there's a private market where you can be a bounty hunter

56:49

and you would basically go collect the bounty.

56:52

And then you would be able,

56:53

you want to be able to figure out where this guy's hiding, right?

56:56

How do I find this guy?

56:58

And there's a whole entire profession dedicated to this.

57:01

Also government accountability, right?

57:03

So if, if your representative is doing shady shit,

57:07

you want to be able to find this info and be able to expose it, bring it to light, right?

57:11

Yeah.

57:11

So this is one way you might be able to do that.

57:15

So the best way to do this these days is social networks.

57:19

I mean, this is a fucking like God's gift to the bounty hunting profession, right?

57:24

Or the FBI or the federal government.

57:25

Right.

57:25

Right.

57:25

Yeah.

57:26

So what you, what you want to do with social networks is a lot of them are spying on you,

57:31

right?

57:32

So you don't really want to use them per se,

57:35

but you do want to have an account, right?

57:37

Because if you don't have an account, well, you can't search it, right?

57:40

Having an account is what lets you search these sites.

57:43

Uh-huh.

57:44

So like a Facebook, for example, if you go to Facebook with no account, no login,

57:47

you can't see anything.

57:49

But if you make a blank login, you can start searching people.

57:53

Right, right.

57:53

Okay.

57:53

Yeah.

57:54

Yeah.

57:54

That's right.

57:54

Okay.

57:55

So, uh, I mean, like most people on these sites, they just share everything about their lives,

57:58

right?

57:58

They'll just tell you everything you want to look for.

58:00

Take pictures that are geotagged.

58:01

Yeah.

58:02

Geotag pictures, all that stuff.

58:03

Now, I think a lot of the sites will scrub the geotag, but some of them don't.

58:07

Well, Facebook, they're used to.

58:09

Yeah.

58:09

Do they do it now?

58:10

I don't know because a lot of times when people post this stuff,

58:14

they actually want to tell people where they are.

58:17

Like, hey, I've got the Grand Canyon.

58:18

Look at my photo of the Grand Canyon.

58:19

So, I actually have a picture that was posted on Facebook.

58:21

I would love to do the geotag off.

58:24

I cannot figure out how to do that, but what about that?

58:25

Yeah, I know how to.

58:26

Um, it was on our, uh, Stegonography show.

58:30

How to do that stuff.

58:31

Yeah, I know.

58:32

I, I, I, I get lost in the computer talk.

58:35

Um, okay.

58:35

So, when you're, when you're surfing Facebook or, or X or whatever, uh, take note of people's

58:40

usernames, right?

58:41

Because the name that they use for the username, uh, is often searchable.

58:45

Right.

58:45

So, if you, if you have your real name up there,

58:49

that's an addition to the username.

58:50

That's, that's two different things.

58:52

Uh, emails, those are searchable birthdays.

58:54

That's a very important thing to note because people reuse these things all over the place.

58:59

Right.

59:00

Another thing you want to do is go through friend lists.

59:02

So, if you are searching for Jim Bob, uh, look at Jim's Bob friends list,

59:07

because you never knew who might be in there.

59:09

Yeah.

59:09

Uh, the connections you can find, flow through.

59:11

Um, now, there's a lot of weird network effects in the way this stuff works.

59:17

So, if you, if you note like mathematically, there will, there will usually be like 10%

59:24

of people that have a shitload of friends, right?

59:26

Right.

59:26

And like most other people only have a couple of friends.

59:29

Okay.

59:30

So, what you want to do is find those nexuses, right?

59:33

Find these people that have a shitload of friends and then go to their friends list

59:37

and then like find, you can scroll through and find who you're looking for.

59:40

I used to play a game on Facebook before they, before the game everybody,

59:44

the, or before everybody started locking their prayer files down.

59:47

Yeah.

59:47

I would just have a random name in.

59:49

Yeah.

59:50

And then I would start going to their friends list and clicking on their friends list

59:54

and see how many, how many spots of separation we have to be able to be a true friend.

59:57

Yeah.

59:57

You should get with a 10 or 12.

59:59

There's actually programs that do that for you too.

1:00:01

Uh, I would just, or, um, the other thing.

1:00:03

Cables out or something.

1:00:04

Uh, you know, you can get work history, like people say,

1:00:06

oh, I got a new job and so and so, like look through their posts.

1:00:09

They might say that stuff.

1:00:10

Where they've been, where they used to live, who they used to date, all that kind of stuff.

1:00:13

They, they all, it's all up there for free.

1:00:15

People don't usually scrub their history.

1:00:19

Um, so another thing you can do, uh, is you'd search engines intelligently.

1:00:24

So a lot of people don't know this, but there's special characters you can type in on a lot

1:00:29

of search engines that will modify the search.

1:00:32

So for example, uh, Google is the, is the prime example of this because they do all the features.

1:00:37

So if you put the word, if you put the plus character,

1:00:40

yeah, it will guarantee that that word must be in the results.

1:00:44

Oh, okay.

1:00:44

Because a lot of times you'll, you'll type in a phrase and like it doesn't include your phrase.

1:00:48

Yeah, because like the first result, oh my God, this is what I'm looking for.

1:00:51

And then go, excludes two or three more words.

1:00:53

I'm like, ah, shit.

1:00:54

But so if you put the plus next to a word, it will always guarantee that that word's in there.

1:00:58

Uh, now if you put quotes around a phrase, it will search for that phrase.

1:01:01

Yeah, they're not the, not the, not the components of the phrase.

1:01:03

That's what I knew.

1:01:04

Yeah.

1:01:04

Um, you can do, you could do a minus, which will say, don't include this word.

1:01:08

Anything that has this word, ignore it.

1:01:09

I like that one.

1:01:10

Because, um, so a lot of times, especially if you're searching for people

1:01:13

and someone shares a name with a famous person, right?

1:01:17

Like you want to, like for example, someone was searching for me, uh, through our X account.

1:01:22

And apparently I have the same name as a guy in a band.

1:01:26

Okay.

1:01:26

And the band's called the monks.

1:01:28

So if you're looking for me, you want to actually put minus monks.

1:01:32

So now none of the searches relate to that guy show up, right?

1:01:35

Uh, you can do site limiting.

1:01:37

So you can say site colon and then the websites.

1:01:41

And now all the results will be on that website only.

1:01:44

So you want to learn all these things.

1:01:45

And there's a, I don't know how to get to it exactly, but Google has like the full

1:01:50

details on how to do all this stuff, all the special characters.

1:01:54

So yeah, you want to like search for that username that you recorded,

1:01:57

search for that email, search for his phone number, and make sure you do exact max searches.

1:02:02

You could restrict searches to cities or locations, right?

1:02:04

You could say only Las Vegas, only Chicago.

1:02:07

Now do you put any special characters when you do that?

1:02:09

Um, well, put use the plus or use the quotes.

1:02:12

Yeah.

1:02:13

And then like you can use combined info in intelligent ways.

1:02:16

So make sure you're doing that.

1:02:17

So, uh, right, put someone's real name and their username,

1:02:21

or put someone's real name and their birthday.

1:02:23

And that narrows it down to that person in case there's shared names or all sorts of weird bullshit.

1:02:29

archive.org is another thing you want to look at.

1:02:32

So archive.org, what they do is every time interval, they take a snapshot of a website.

1:02:38

Yeah.

1:02:38

And they take everything, right?

1:02:39

Yeah.

1:02:40

No, I was, yeah.

1:02:41

So now if that website, if the owner of that website deletes something,

1:02:43

it's still up on archive.org.

1:02:45

It doesn't, yeah, it doesn't delete that.

1:02:46

So if someone runs a website that has info on somebody or something,

1:02:51

and maybe they delete old posts because, you know, you don't want to store data forever,

1:02:55

you can go find that stuff on archive.org.

1:02:57

And it is searchable.

1:02:58

So the search is not great, but it is doable.

1:03:01

I think it was twice.

1:03:02

Yeah.

1:03:02

Learn how their search works.

1:03:04

And like when someone tweets something or posts something on X or Facebook,

1:03:09

get an archive link yourself.

1:03:11

So you can tell archive, hey, go archive this.

1:03:13

And then if they delete it, you have evidence that they actually did it.

1:03:16

They're ex tweets or their tweets.

1:03:18

Politicians.

1:03:19

Oh, they said some stupid or they had pictures they want to get off with.

1:03:22

Yeah.

1:03:23

With Diddy or absolutely.

1:03:24

Yeah.

1:03:24

Okay.

1:03:24

Yep.

1:03:25

Just check it.

1:03:25

So business searches.

1:03:27

Most governments require all businesses to have registration info.

1:03:30

So you can go search that info or go down to the government office.

1:03:34

They handles it.

1:03:35

Maybe the clerk or whoever the fuck like asked them, you know,

1:03:40

I need to search it on this business.

1:03:43

So that you can get a lot of info from that, like who runs the business.

1:03:46

Yeah.

1:03:46

You know, is this Joe Biden's secret shell corporation, all that kind of stuff.

1:03:51

Now, every publicly traded corporation has to disclose their executive board,

1:03:56

their financial statements and a whole shit of other stuff.

1:03:59

And that's all public.

1:04:00

So you can go to their website.

1:04:01

You'll be able to find it there, read through it all,

1:04:04

and get a lot of the info you need from there.

1:04:07

So a freedom of information act.

1:04:10

And I'm going to do a future episode on just this.

1:04:12

Oh, cool.

1:04:12

But I'm just going to give you the quick rundown.

1:04:15

Freedom of Information Act will give you things like criminal records,

1:04:19

civil trials, any government affiliations.

1:04:22

Have you ever done a FOIA before?

1:04:24

So I've tried to and I don't want to get into the whole thing

1:04:28

because I want to save the episode for that.

1:04:30

But.

1:04:32

No, this was a Henderson police.

1:04:33

We actually were very, well, I told you that story, didn't I?

1:04:37

Yeah, you told the story on the show.

1:04:38

But Henderson is very good about it.

1:04:40

But I'll give them credit.

1:04:41

Your biggest is not.

1:04:42

I might do that next week.

1:04:43

I might do it next week.

1:04:44

So stay tuned next week if you want to get more info

1:04:46

on Freedom of Information Act.

1:04:49

So map websites and not just Google.

1:04:51

There's a lot of good map sites out there.

1:04:53

There's one, there's like Open Street Map.

1:04:56

There's D Flack and I want to do a future episode on these things too.

1:04:59

Because map stuff can just go on forever.

1:05:01

There's a ton of info.

1:05:03

Is there more than sites Google that use the government satellites

1:05:06

to get the mapping stuff?

1:05:08

That's what Google does.

1:05:09

I'm pretty sure because that's all public.

1:05:11

That's actually unencrypted data and you could do that yourself.

1:05:14

Okay.

1:05:14

So if you have a satellite dish

1:05:16

and you figure out where their satellite is in the sky,

1:05:18

you could get that image.

1:05:19

Well, no, because Google's in NGO, they're not government organizations.

1:05:23

They had special permission to use the military grade mapping system,

1:05:28

which maybe I'll sleep by now.

1:05:29

I don't know.

1:05:30

But yeah, that's why their mapping system was actually pretty good for a while.

1:05:33

Interesting.

1:05:34

So but they tracked the fact.

1:05:35

You can get GIS info on map on certain map sites.

1:05:39

And like this will tell you what's a public right of way,

1:05:42

what's public property versus private property.

1:05:44

And that's going to be important to

1:05:46

something important.

1:05:46

Besides if you want to do certain things.

1:05:49

So again, you can get addresses in nearby landmarks

1:05:51

and that can help you track someone down.

1:05:53

Like if someone posted a photo

1:05:55

and they had a McDonald's sign in the background,

1:05:58

right, like you can maybe narrow down where that location is

1:06:01

based on that McDonald's sign and map websites.

1:06:03

Dark Web and also leaks.

1:06:05

So there's data that gets leaked on the dark web.

1:06:07

Okay.

1:06:08

You can find a lot of info on this.

1:06:09

I know I talked on the episode a couple of while ago

1:06:12

about the MPD leak.

1:06:14

Okay.

1:06:14

Which had everyone's social security number

1:06:16

and address history and all that shit.

1:06:17

And that was legit.

1:06:18

So if you can get a hold of these leaks,

1:06:21

you can get info on people, right?

1:06:23

Cryptocurrency.

1:06:24

So almost everything other than Monero can be traced.

1:06:28

So if you're trading Bitcoin, Bitcoin cash,

1:06:31

Litecoin, Solana, all these fucking nonsense things.

1:06:37

Every trade you make is on the public blockchain

1:06:40

and anyone can figure out what money came in

1:06:43

and what money went out.

1:06:44

Okay.

1:06:44

Right?

1:06:45

So if you can learn somebody's Bitcoin address,

1:06:48

for example, you can trace that all the way back in time

1:06:51

and figure out who they buy and sell with,

1:06:53

what their income is, what their net worth is.

1:06:56

So learn how to do this stuff.

1:06:58

Use the Explorer tools for all these crypto chains

1:07:03

and be comfortable with it.

1:07:05

Figure out how to trace crypto transactions.

1:07:08

You can learn a lot from that.

1:07:09

Okay.

1:07:09

And there's one website where all this info

1:07:12

and a shitload more can be found.

1:07:14

It's called osintframework.com.

1:07:17

Okay.

1:07:17

And I'm going to have a link to it on the website.

1:07:20

And it just gives you all the rundown of the steps you want

1:07:24

to take based on what you're searching for,

1:07:26

who you're searching for, all that kind of stuff.

1:07:28

So yeah, you should be able to use the knowledge gain

1:07:32

to solve our Monero challenge and do anything else

1:07:35

that you want to do with that info.

1:07:36

Oh, yeah.

1:07:37

Okay.

1:07:38

Now, that's not like my name.

1:07:40

I was even at the hot tub store.

1:07:43

I bought a hot tub like three or four years ago.

1:07:45

Yeah.

1:07:45

And I went there to buy a part for it,

1:07:47

but I didn't bring the model number.

1:07:48

It was all just looking up.

1:07:49

I go, last thing's Morgan, right?

1:07:51

He's like, dude, I got like six pages of it.

1:07:53

It's a fucking tiny little hot tub store in Vegas.

1:07:56

Yeah.

1:07:56

So I, my mind is just flooded with idiots.

1:07:59

I mean, I don't know.

1:08:00

Oh, you know, you can legally change your name too.

1:08:02

So like if I want to, I could be Ron Morgan.

1:08:05

Well, you should get buried in the Internet service.

1:08:08

And you, and you go up like three levels of awesomeness.

1:08:11

So you're, I mean, you're a, so you're a crypto guy.

1:08:14

Yeah.

1:08:14

And you just brought that up, but you had mentioned

1:08:16

some cryptocurrencies, but I think you left one off.

1:08:18

Oh yeah.

1:08:19

Lowish coin.

1:08:20

Butt coin.

1:08:21

Butt coin.

1:08:21

Have you heard about this?

1:08:22

Yeah.

1:08:23

Okay.

1:08:23

Fart coin.

1:08:24

There's all bunch of, there makes me laugh.

1:08:25

Fucking stupid.

1:08:25

It's butt.

1:08:26

It's butt fart, penis.

1:08:28

All those words make me laugh.

1:08:30

And one thing I did miss with the fake fog.

1:08:34

No, no, no, there's a patent on fake fog.

1:08:37

It's a, that's a patent number right there.

1:08:39

You the stuff they put in movies, you mean?

1:08:41

No, no, no, no.

1:08:42

About prison, you know, faking, making fake shit.

1:08:45

And I'm telling you, they're trying to seed.

1:08:48

I'm telling you, they're trying to fucking seed.

1:08:49

Oh my God.

1:08:50

We'll see.

1:08:50

You know, you seed first and then Bill Gates

1:08:53

comes through with his hurricane bus.

1:08:55

Mer, mer.

1:08:56

And that's where it goes.

1:08:58

So, you know, that's, that's being stupid.

1:09:01

So I'm going to do another training one on, on welding.

1:09:04

It was a request to do it.

1:09:07

I, I have welded.

1:09:08

I just don't do it a lot.

1:09:10

I sweat, pipe together and braze.

1:09:12

So sweating is, is joining copper pipes together.

1:09:15

And brazing is joining copper pipes together for AC units

1:09:19

because the free-on runs out of higher pressure.

1:09:21

So you got to use a better metal to bond it together.

1:09:25

You can't, I, I have seen the issues solder

1:09:28

when they're trying to braze.

1:09:29

I think it's going to hold.

1:09:30

It's not going to hold.

1:09:32

But what, what we didn't find out is what the purpose

1:09:35

of the, what welding they wanted to do.

1:09:37

Because welding has so many different varieties in a, in a,

1:09:40

in a home, there's not a whole lot of uses for welding.

1:09:44

I mean, unless you're fixing like metal furniture,

1:09:47

a metal fence, or you want to make the, or you have the,

1:09:51

the grates over your windows and you can, you, you can well

1:09:54

drone together.

1:09:55

I don't know.

1:09:55

I think one of the U-Haul trucks just blew up.

1:09:57

I've got, I've got, sorry.

1:09:59

I got three U-Haul trucks parked outside my house,

1:10:02

all within like a quarter of a block.

1:10:04

And they've been there for like five days and nobody

1:10:07

that ever knows who's they are.

1:10:08

So I used to assume that they're going to blow the U-Hauls up

1:10:11

while David and I are in here to try to kill us.

1:10:13

I mean, that's just the most logical, that's Octom's razor right there.

1:10:16

What's the most obvious solution?

1:10:18

They're trying to kill me.

1:10:19

Because we, we've tapped into something that they don't want us to know about.

1:10:22

So, so, but with, you know, with welding, welding can be a lot of fun.

1:10:28

It can be used for industrial purposes, military stuff, and even art.

1:10:32

I mean, maybe somebody wants to talk about the art, but you just got to know what kind of

1:10:37

welding you want to do.

1:10:38

You got, you got MagTig, stick and flux.

1:10:41

This I actually looked up.

1:10:41

I've only, I mainly deal with Mag and Tig when I have done it.

1:10:47

And I've been, I had a friend of mine teaching me how to do it

1:10:49

where I was building one of my trikes.

1:10:52

But I mean, for, for, for welding, the best I can say is kind of like just go online

1:10:57

and find out what your purpose is.

1:11:01

And then kind of go from there.

1:11:05

Yeah, it's just you're joining two pieces of metal, whether it be for art or for,

1:11:09

I mean, or maybe you want to build your own Tesla truck.

1:11:11

I don't know.

1:11:13

No, it's just, I don't know.

1:11:14

It's, so it's, it's kind of hard for me to break it down.

1:11:17

One, because I'm not real knowledgeable on it, but I also do know about it.

1:11:23

Trying to see what else is here.

1:11:26

You know, sort of like a specific kind of torch that is good.

1:11:30

Well, it's, it's, so it's Mag and Tig and it's all that stuff kind of comes into play.

1:11:33

Some has got gas, some doesn't.

1:11:35

Some, like I mainly do wire fed, but I have done it.

1:11:39

And that's just a machine that's, you just kind of puts the wire out and you just kind of like do it.

1:11:45

You know, and there's, there is, there is a, there's definitely a talent to it.

1:11:50

It's funny.

1:11:51

Welding is one of the things that comes up a lot.

1:11:52

They're like, well, we want to pay well over 15 bucks an hour.

1:11:56

Or, you know, they would do like a real shitty well, well, that's your fucking well for 15

1:12:00

dollars an hour.

1:12:00

If you want this, well, this is more like 45 or 50 and it's really nice and tight and pretty.

1:12:05

You know, you kind of grind it a little bit, smooth it out.

1:12:07

You know, you could, if you're doing car repairs, you use welding to, well, in the old days,

1:12:12

when we actually had metal on cars.

1:12:14

Yeah, you know, they, even the metal cars aren't real metal.

1:12:17

So, running for office, I wanted to,

1:12:20

The bodies aren't metal.

1:12:22

Well, no, but like two years ago, two and a half years ago, when the first time I ran for

1:12:26

office, I wanted to get, I wanted to get magic science from my Jeep.

1:12:30

And he goes, oh, I'm glad you brought your car in with you.

1:12:32

I need to see if the magnet sticks to it.

1:12:33

I go, dude, it's a Jeep.

1:12:35

The magic's gonna stick to it.

1:12:36

It's, you know, he's like, let's go out there.

1:12:38

Sure, nothing goes on there.

1:12:39

It's just slides to the floor.

1:12:41

But you knock on it, it sounds, it feels like metal.

1:12:43

So it's, it's a version of metal, like pop metal.

1:12:46

It's just like,

1:12:47

Could be like aluminum, or it's not magnetic or,

1:12:49

Yeah, no, that's a pop metal.

1:12:51

It makes a bunch of different metals together and it ain't really that strong,

1:12:55

which kind of questions Jeep right now.

1:12:57

But most of my Jeeps are old, so they're steel.

1:13:01

Yeah.

1:13:02

Yeah, so it's just, well, it's something that takes some time to learn,

1:13:07

but it's actually kind of fun.

1:13:08

I mean, if you want to do an art project, just, well, yeah,

1:13:11

so you can just buy a cheap wall or go to a state sale or a flea market,

1:13:15

pick one up and play with it.

1:13:16

Understand though, you got gloves are important, the mask with the,

1:13:19

these you don't want to burn your eyeballs up.

1:13:21

Here we go, Ron, the advocating mask again.

1:13:23

Yeah, no.

1:13:25

And it's just, there's a lot of stuff you can do with it,

1:13:27

but understand the safety precautions because

1:13:30

well, they can kind of fuck you up if you don't know what you're doing.

1:13:33

And that's why the few times I have wallet,

1:13:35

I've had a friend that knows what they're doing with me

1:13:38

to kind of make sure I'm doing it right.

1:13:40

But I mean, and honestly, just go, I mean,

1:13:43

there's artists making tons of money, just welding shit together.

1:13:46

And in some kind of like thing, and they call it something and people like,

1:13:49

Oh my God, that's beautiful.

1:13:51

But I mean, in all seriousness, my grandfather used to work on a plastics

1:13:55

factory back in the 70s.

1:13:58

And the machines would discharge like the leftover plastic and just into a blob.

1:14:03

Yeah.

1:14:03

He was some as grouch though.

1:14:05

People would eat that shit up.

1:14:06

Oh, this looks like cousin Bob.

1:14:08

Well, like what the fuck is cousin Bob look like?

1:14:11

But I mean, it's, but it's, I mean, so people buy weird shit.

1:14:14

So if you want to just play around, I recommend starting that.

1:14:17

Like what I taught a person how to, how to sweat pipe.

1:14:21

I'm like, well, here's some copper, here's some fittings.

1:14:24

Tell them what the preparation is, how you got to prep it and how you got to do it.

1:14:28

With, with sweating.

1:14:29

So it's just, it's really easy.

1:14:31

You clean it, flux it and then and sorry with the, but with the,

1:14:35

when you join the two pieces of copper pipe together,

1:14:37

you have a fitting that's holding them together.

1:14:39

You heat the fitting and it sucks in the solder.

1:14:41

So it's that simple.

1:14:43

And that's, that is for home repairs.

1:14:45

You can do it for home repairs a lot, even though they're kind of getting away from copper now,

1:14:48

which is still weird to me.

1:14:49

Um, I mean, copper is like the perfect metal for water.

1:14:54

Well, it's expensive.

1:14:55

Well, but it creates a barrier between the metal and the water.

1:14:57

It's expensive.

1:14:59

It's better than pecs.

1:15:02

I'm, I'm trying to get to like pecs.

1:15:04

I just pecs in the new plastic pipe.

1:15:06

Well, it's been out for a while.

1:15:08

It's just, it's, um, brazing is kind of cool because you can, like,

1:15:14

you can control the brazing with the, with the torch and it follows the heat.

1:15:19

That's always kind of fun.

1:15:21

But yeah, just, I mean, I would recommend playing with it.

1:15:24

You could buy a cheap welder.

1:15:26

Again, learn the safety precautions, learn the preparation and just learn.

1:15:30

Um, you might become a famous artist.

1:15:33

I don't know.

1:15:34

Maybe I might.

1:15:35

Maybe they could make a canary in the cage.

1:15:37

A cage for us.

1:15:38

Oh, an actual like, like full on like caveman cage.

1:15:41

Yeah.

1:15:42

They actually use instead of that one that I bought in the antique store and painted black

1:15:45

because it was like yellow.

1:15:46

I'm like, I'm not having a yellow cage.

1:15:48

Oh, we're tough.

1:15:49

We're, we're men.

1:15:50

We need black.

1:15:53

That means, uh, um, there was a friend of mine from back in the days of the black guy

1:15:58

and he was making a post about racism and he put the white egg, the beige egg and the

1:16:04

darker brown egg.

1:16:05

And then the post below was all three yolks looking the same.

1:16:09

Yeah.

1:16:09

And he goes, see racism, stupid or something like that.

1:16:12

I go, huh, I expected one of the yolks be bigger.

1:16:16

God.

1:16:17

Hey, he understands me.

1:16:19

He understands that.

1:16:19

It's just, it's all for fun.

1:16:21

Um, yeah, I think that, I mean, we're at an hour 15.

1:16:26

That's not bad.

1:16:28

Um, yeah.

1:16:29

Well, and actually if you got any, uh, questions you have about something that you

1:16:33

can learn from, you've got a computer guy and a home guy.

1:16:36

Um, you know, like, so I can learn about stuff.

1:16:39

I don't know about it, but I have a basic knowledge of most everything at this point.

1:16:43

Um, cause I'm old and I like to tell stories.

1:16:46

Um, so yeah, just sit as a message.

1:16:48

Let's know what you want to talk about and we'll figure it out.

1:16:50

Cool.

1:16:51

See you next week.

1:16:52

Have a good, have a good new year and see you next week.

1:16:54

Goodbye.

1:16:55

Thank you for joining us at the Canadian Caged Podcast.

1:16:58

Don't forget to like, subscribe and share us to help build the community.

1:17:01

You can find us at Odyssey, rumble, YouTube or your favorite podcast app.

1:17:06

And even on the dark web at I2P.

1:17:09

Thanks for listening and see you next time.