Joe Rogan is FREAKED Out by "Murderous...Flesh Eating" Robots

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Russell Brand

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Russell Brand is a comedian, actor, author, activist, and host of the podcast "Stay Free with Russell Brand." www.russellbrand.com

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You know what once scared me more than anyone that I've ever read? I read about this thing that DARPA was putting together. It's a robot called the EATER robot. E-A-T-R robot. It's a robot that fuels itself on biological matter. So it essentially could eat bodies. So you've got a murderous robot that eats people. It's like the worst kind of things that human beings could achieve. It's like people are sat around trying to come up with them. Well, they're responsible for a lot of really crazy innovation in terms of like military stuff, you know, but Boston Dynamics, you know, they're the ones that make those crazy robots and they work with DARPA and those are the ones that make those robots that you can't kick over. Right. You know, I mean, that's what you need. One of those that eats people and you send them to the battlefield. Kick it over. No, that's the first thing we established is you can't kick it over. I just think that's that's the big fear is that future warfare will be our robots versus their robots. You know, if we're starting to bring about the worst aspects, the worst things that a human being can conceive of, let's channel them through into reality. Yeah, it does make you feel that the apocalypse is real. I thought it was bad enough when in the malaise of my younger days, I like for a while. Imagine if there was a cleaning service where the person would come around and clean dressed scantily. They do that. They do that. Whatever devious shit you can dream up, someone's trying to turn a buck off it and they've taken it to the extent of the non-kick over robot flesh eating robots. Yeah. Yeah. What is this, Jamie? This is a new one. This is a new video today. Watch this. This is so scary. This is Boston Dynamics. Yeah. There's something very eerie about that type of motion. You know that the way that the movement of a snake is deeply coded to be unpleasant when you see it. They say, you think that movement, you think that ain't good. And the truck is telling. Wow. Oh my God. They're pulling a truck when it's tiny little tootsies. Those that they're that strong to pull a truck and little robots. That's a giant ass truck. I mean, it is also just a Husky sled made out of expensive robots and a truck. They've spent a lot of time and endeavor to go backwards. I guess kind of, but to an eagle Santa Claus. They're showing how strong these things are. I don't like, I don't like their gate, Joe. That's an unpleasant gate. Yeah. You should be on. You should be uncomfortable with it. Yeah, that's not easy at ease with that. Well, it's not human. It's not animal. And there's no compassion in it. This is it's it's feeling less. But that's what you got to worry about. You've ever seen that episode of Black Mirror where the lady gets chased down by the drones? I've not seen that. What are the one where they're bees? No, there's a woman who's being haunted. She's being hunted by a robot. And it's terrifying. Because of its remorseless lack of humanity and empathy. Looks just like that. Looks just like those things. Those are real. Charlie Brooker, he's yeah, he's plugged into it. That man's got good imagination. He's amazing. He's amazing. That show is fantastic. But these things, what we have to worry about is once artificial intelligence becomes sentient and you can somehow or another attach it to these objects that move. And they run on solar power or they have, you know, nuclear fuel cells or some crazy shit that allows them to exist for a long period of time. I mean, you don't have to worry about them contaminating environments if you plan on killing everybody in the environment. Oh, man. And also, there's no means of regulation, is there? Because this because this is the apex of human endeavor. They're in. What what can govern that? What can regulate it? And like you say, there'll be a Chinese equivalent for any of this stuff. There's nothing that's above it going. Is this a good idea? Should we pull back? What did it eat on? He just pulled up a thing that said they're making that now. You've got that one. I just showed you. There are a hundred different models of it are going to be available starting production this summer. Doesn't say how much they're going to wow. But available for people to buy. Well, it's a hundred different models has produced 100 models. That probably means it'll produce 100 of them. Like a hundred different companies are going to want them. But I bet it's more than that. Yeah. Depending about how much they cost. It doesn't say how much it's going to cost. They're going to announce that later. But they showed like a robot arm coming out. That looks so creepy. Look at that thing. Imagine we have one of those things in the room filming. We should get one. No. No. What it takes over one day we come here. It's got red eyes. It's like fuck you. Fuck you. What if the lights were the first ones to help it? Don't try and befriend it. You're listening to us like Alexa. That's how it begins, isn't it? There's something arachnoid and eerie about that. It's almost like, you know, now to see if this tunes into the DMT component of what we've been talking about. It's almost as if we've already experienced this reality. We've already been through the version where those evil insectoid robots take over. So when we see it on the screen, we think, oh, no, we're doing that thing. We're doing that thing where we create those things that bring about our destruction. And I believe it's because we've become biased to commerce and a particular type of progress. One narrative has succeeded because we necessarily had to throw off religion, you know, at the dawn of the secular age, because religion was becoming systems of bias and systems of oppression and systems of what do I want to say, elevating certain types of power and supporting it at least. But hang on a minute. This religion, a lot of it seems like bullshit. What we've done is we've abandoned the sacred. And I think if you abandon the sacred, meaning there is more to life than what we can understand. I listened to the Brian Cox episode and I spoke to Brian Cox, the British physicist, astrophysicist on my show as well. And when he talks about, like he said, that, you know, we know that there's not some additional component to a human being because we can break down everything that happens when you move an arm, you know, whatever. And I feel like we only have limited instruments. We only have limited instruments. There's certain frequencies that we simply cannot read. What else is going on when people are having these transcendent, psychedelic experiences? We're accessing elements of consciousness, energies and frequencies that we are not able to access while we're in this state. And everything we're achieving and everything we're building, we're building on this platform. And the bias of this platform is towards progress and materialism. And I think the result is fleshy in robots and those evil monkey warrior soldiers. And we might want to calm down, have a little talk about what it is we're trying to design. Yeah, I don't know if I agree with Brian on that particular point that we think we know everything about where consciousness emanates. I don't think that's necessary, but I like the fact that he thinks that way because he's such a rigid hardliner for science. And the guy works at CERN. I mean, he's a brilliant, brilliant man. So of course he thinks that way. I also don't think he's ever had a DMT experience.