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Transcript: Noncompliant 4th of July | Bugle Weekly Episode 15

0:06Richard Greaser Only for the two out in 1776. Non compliant individuals had effects. They did not like being ruled by the British. They were not docile or skittish. With pen and parchment, they enshrined their defiance,

0:23Richard Greaser creating what is now called the American Alliance. Fouted on being undaunted, first time

1:23Richard Greaser so they will act hostile, but do not lose hope. The revolution is happening. The answer to 1984 is becoming a proper fool. Drive without your seat belt.

1:42Richard Greaser This is what waiting looks like. Take back your pride. Embrace freedom. Do not hide. Only fools follow the rules. All across the country, the people are awakening. Politicians are quivering and shaking. They fear a population that is not docile. They are afraid so they will lack act hostile, but do not lose hope.

2:07Richard Greaser The revolution is happening. The answer to 1984 is becoming a wonderful. Now is the time to celebrate the past by ushering in a new freedom that will last. Adopting a mindset that the rulers are tools embracing reality instead of psy ops by CIA

2:31Richard Greaser fools.

2:54Unknown There is a new digital frontier being built on non compliant protocols. These protocols power the engine for the value for value economy and communities like the intellectual Silk Road. Now you can learn about these developments by listening to Plebchain Radio. Plebchain Radio is the number one live podcast covering cutting edge tech being built on Nosta and Bitcoin. Join Plebchain Radio's noncompliant cohosts Quiet Warrior and Avi Burra Live as they record each week on Nests, Nosta's answer to x spaces. You can also listen to Plebchain Radio on Fountain FM where you can boost them SATs to support their content.

3:34Unknown A revolution in techno sovereignty is coming. This revolution won't be PodConf approved and it won't be televised or tweeted. It's all happening on Nosta and Plebchain Radio.

3:50Unknown This July 4, America will gather to remember the noncompliance of the founding fathers. While many individuals think this holiday is about celebrating complying with a government founded on non compliance, the real American experience is about reconnecting with its non compliant roots. All over the country,

4:10Unknown Americans are preparing to engage in record levels of non compliance. This July 4, the people will be driving without seatbelts, transacting without KYC, and showing general disdain for those who want to surveil and tax us. This holiday is not about celebrating how much money has been given to Ukraine, but is about celebrating all the money taken out of the taxable economy that would have been sent to Ukraine, but stayed in our communities instead. This July 4, let's embrace the cypherpunk ethos and sell each other cigarettes peer to peer. This is our Boston Tea Party. This is our Independence Day. The solution to 1984

4:48Unknown is 1776.

4:54Richard Greaser You are listening to the Bugle Weekly, the most thermodynamically sound podcast in the game. Here are your hosts, Rod Palmer and Dick Greaser.

5:05Richard Greaser Alright. We're recording. Welcome to the Eagle Weekly podcast. How are you doing today, Rod?

5:13Rod Palmer Pretty tired. It's a big it was a huge week. A lot to a lot to talk about, a lot to get to today. How was your, week? Do you have any big plans? Are you a big patriotic American when it comes to fourth of July?

5:27Richard Greaser You got anything big going on? Man, yeah, that's right on the horizon. I think on the July 4, it's very important to just act as non compliantly as possible.

5:40Rod Palmer Okay.

5:41Richard Greaser So there's nothing more American than smoking non KYC cigarettes. And so what I would suggest for everybody to do is to load up your favorite custodial lightning wallet and when you go to an event,

6:01Richard Greaser bring some cigarettes with you and just start, you know, transacting and selling them. If you're gonna go to the park, you're gonna be watching some fireworks, you know, have have a few cartons and and have a sign that's, you know, you you can make a pretty good profit on it. When when you're selling, I I I think a good amount of Satoshis to price a single cigarette is, like, 1,000 satoshis, which is, you know, like 75¢ or so

6:30Richard Greaser right now.

6:33Rod Palmer Man, I never used to be able to buy them for a quarter. Yeah. I mean, that's inflation's crazy.

6:39Richard Greaser Well, I mean, you could charge, you can charge it more, you know, fair market value, but I I just think around 1,000 satoshis is a good price. But yeah, I mean, there there's such a, you know, when you look at The US and you look at the cigarette markets, nationally, there's such a wide variance in pricing. So, like, here in New York,

7:02Richard Greaser KYC cigarettes are very expensive, but if you go to Virginia, they can be very cheap. And so, you know, when you're engaging in the non KYC markets, you can, route around all the thefts that are added onto the cigarette price,

7:21Richard Greaser and get them for more of a market value.

7:24Rod Palmer Yeah. Growing up, I knew some people that they would buy non KYC cigarettes from the nearby Indian reservations, the native American reserves, and they would buy the Indian cigarettes is what they called them. Because if you bought them from the reservation, you didn't have to pay all the state taxes and all the other taxes, that, that go on cigarettes.

7:47Rod Palmer And you used to be able to get them non KYC, but then they changed it. And this is right around the time that, the credit card started, people started using PayPal and some of these other payment processors are online and it made buying Indian cigarettes so much easier. You would just go online. You could even do a subscription to some of these places and you just put it in your, your credit card or your debit card or your bank account, and who you were, and they would mail you your cigarettes. It was so cheap and easy. And you save like more than 50% on the price. If you, from buying them in, you know, a retail location, that had to pay the state taxes and they, and the sales tax.

8:25Rod Palmer And then one day they got a big, a letter from the state of, I won't say what state it is. I don't, I don't wanna dodge them, but they all the taxes that they owed on the, you know, thousands of cigarettes, cartons of cigarettes that they'd been buying over the years with their KYC cigarettes, excuse me, with, you know, through this, with their credit card and they owed it and they had to fight it. And I think they lost, if I remember, if I recall correctly, but as it happens, they were, they had a great situation buying non KYC cigarettes. Everybody was benefiting mutually in the transaction and they were avoiding taxes. But then as soon as they KYC'd themselves, the government was able to get that information and send them a tax bill, even though they were buying,

9:10Rod Palmer from a reservation where the taxes did not apply. And it was not illegal previously, for them to do that. Like there was no law saying that what they were doing was wrong, but they still had to pay the taxes and they still had to pay the penalties for the back taxes. So that's just a cautionary tale, but if you can buy those non KYC cigarettes for cash or for Bitcoin, you avoid these problems. So it's a non compliance that also starves the state. Yeah. I mean, it's it's very American. So, like, the founding fathers, they,

9:43Richard Greaser decided to go, you know, throw a bunch of tea in the water in Boston Harbor during the Boston Tea Party because they didn't like k y c tea. Didn't like text. Tea,

9:57Rod Palmer it was Right. Like drinking tea is gay. And like now they were their identity was associated to buying and drinking tea like they British dudes. And that was really hard to maintain, like their statesman, you know, alpha, and into, you know, image as an influencer, a colonial influencer, if everybody knows you're drinking tea like the, like the damn slimy Brits. Yeah.

10:21Richard Greaser Well, that's what transacting and selling non KYC cigarettes is all about is it's our version of the Boston Tea Party. And so that's why it should be one of the primary goals this July 4 to open up this peer to peer

10:41Richard Greaser economy and to know that it's happening at scale because, you know, even if you're a pussy and you decide not to follow through with your civic duty, in doing this, if you don't post a meme about how gay the ETF is

10:59Richard Greaser and then, transact and defy their authority, even if you're not willing to do that yourself and to grow a pair, and be a real American, just know that there's millions of real Americans around the country that are participating

11:18Richard Greaser in non compliance despite you being a pussy.

11:22Rod Palmer Right, think about how when I was growing up, it was illegal to shoot off certain, the fireworks that are fun, the fireworks that are not for shit, coining little pussies, that is like a sparkler, the ones that are actually cool. Those were illegal. Of course. So we would go to another state and we would buy them. We'd found hundreds of dollars. They'd put up tents for non compliant fireworks, right on the border and we'd bring them back and we, and we'd have so much fun. I mean, we would be shooting Roman candles at each other, putting mortars in and like blasting them over the, the houses and trying to blow up the neighbor's backyard. Like, like if we were playing battleships, it was so much fun. Think about how much fun you should be having instead of using a little sparkler and be like, Wow, but the other man only lets me use this little sparkler and I'm such a bitch that I will comply

12:08Rod Palmer on, on the mayor of his birthday instead of doing what my ancestors and my my great grandfather and his great grandfather did before him, which is blowing shit up and set stuff on fire and have a good time and drink some beer. Yep.

12:22Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, the the reality is, you know, where where things have always been at historically is that anything good is inherently gonna be illegal. And so that that kinda brings us to the the first story. So, you know, Julian Assange,

12:46Richard Greaser while not being American, is is much more of an American than most Americans. He's definitely more American than anybody else in Australia. Well, I mean, isn't Tip NZ in Australia? She's pretty American. New Zealand. New Zealand. She's pretty

13:00Rod Palmer that's different. It's like the South Of Australia. It's like Atlanta. I I think there should be there should be a rule

13:07Richard Greaser where, you know, if you're a funny talker, you shouldn't be able to move to another funny talking country. And this is really this is really confusing to to us Americans who speak properly. So, you know, Tip NZ, you know, an Australian moving to New Zealand.

13:28Richard Greaser You've got Peter McCormick, a British person. You know, he's eventually gonna move to America, and we should we should borrow him moving here because it's just gonna create a lot of confusion. Like, you know, if you talk a certain way, you should live in the jurisdiction that that people talk like, you know, Bitcoin mechanic lives in Canada. He doesn't sound like a Canadian.

13:52Rod Palmer Right. And it's part of it is because people in the local area who don't talk funny like you do, they're not used to being able to discern like who's smart and who's not. Like people in a, in, in a small town in America, they might only hear the British funny accent on BBC or like some sort of movie where the person speaking it, you know, is a credentialed journalist. Oftentimes like you'll see somebody on BBC or you'll see somebody in the media who's a scientist or a credentialed journalist and they have the British accent

14:27Rod Palmer and so they think that everybody who has that accent is smart and and knows what they're talking about so that then you're able to scam people because they think that you're smart and they mistake you for being smart just because you have a British accent and like Peter McCormick's a perfect example. His podcast is very popular in The United States and people think this guy, he is really smart about Bitcoin, because he has a British access and he must be. And so that's why his podcast is so popular. And he has all these, sponsors. They're like, Oh, we have a soccer team and it's got Gemini on the front.

15:08Rod Palmer He can sponsor this, yield generating platform. And I'm like, Why trust him? Because a he's a smart person. He must be like a BBC hero. He must never recommend something like this if it wasn't a really good product. And Australians do it too. Australians are in The United States. They're selling alligator hooks and big knives and machetes because people are like, Wow, if they have that funny accent from Australia, they must really know about like wilderness and animals and hunting and being alpha and it's easy to scale. Yeah.

15:42Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, it's, it's one of the biggest sign ups that has been, hoisted on the American people is that people are smarter because they have a British accent. And it's it's just, like, so patently false. You know, it's a country where, you know, they're currently in the process of trying to ban smoking outright. I mean, there's so many there's so many aspects of of, you know, this this British royal monarchy. Like, this is something that, you know, King Charles has spent

16:18Richard Greaser a lot of time and money in the British royalty have in general is they they try to own the media and and they try to, you know, convince people that, you know, the British are smarter. And that's why, you know, people listen to Piers Morgan, is just cause they hear it and they're like, oh, Bruce Jackson. He must know what he's talking about. When, you know, Piers has, you know, traditionally been one of the he's been very anti American.

16:49Richard Greaser I don't know if you ever had the chance to listen to Piers Morgan debate Alex Jones back when Alex Jones was trying to get Piers deported. But that was a pretty good interview.

16:60Rod Palmer No. I haven't seen that one. It just makes me think that, like, another person who who has that accent, who's not even you know, he doesn't even look British, is Andrew Tate, but he knows if he has that accent that people will recognize it as authoritative.

17:16Richard Greaser I mean, just because you have a British accent doesn't mean you attended Oxford. Like, that's yeah. I mean, would you would you consider Tate one of those scammers that you were just talking about? I don't know if there's enough evidence to show say that that Tate is a scammer,

17:33Rod Palmer but if anything, he is using the tactics of a scammer, which is disguising his voice to sound really smart. So it's something to keep an eye on. When you see somebody who is using all the same tactics as a scammer or the same tactics as a politician but they seem to be different You're like, oh, this person is different They are the hack They're actually trying to out me But they're just using the tactics of the enemy

17:60Rod Palmer against them. Well, I understand that, you know, it's more likely than not that they are also part of the bad side of the enemy

18:10Rod Palmer and A) that's why they're so good at using those tactics because you can't get that good at using those tactics or having that accent 20 fourseven. If you haven't, if you haven't lived and you haven't experienced or you haven't been a part of that, that culture or that, that group.

18:30Rod Palmer So there's even if you if they say they're out of it, that still very much influences everything that they do and say.

18:37Richard Greaser Interesting. Yeah. I mean, I I'd be curious to hear what Pleditor's opinion on Andrew Tate is because he's the residential expert on exposing scammers.

18:49Rod Palmer Pleditor has Bersh accent, but it's it's real. You

18:53Richard Greaser well, man. See, and this is this is, you know, one of the dangers of having all these nims online is we need to be able to to hear their voices, to be able to determine, you know, whether they're funny talkers or not and whether we should take them serious or not. Because, like Or if they have deep voices.

19:16Rod Palmer Yeah. Or if they have deep voices. Or if they're whiny. You know? If they sound whiny, or they just sound they just don't sound alpha.

19:26Richard Greaser Yeah. Or if they're weird. Yeah. If if people if you sound like you'd be a good cast member on The View, you probably don't have a very good opinion on things. That's a gay axiom. Okay, so

19:45Richard Greaser the initial topic that I think is important to talk about, you know, before we got sidetracked by all these incredibly inconsiderate funny talkers, is Assange. So he's he's out of prison, he's back in Australia,

20:05Richard Greaser and I think it's a it's a major victory for journalism, and I I have a little bit of a contrarian take. So, like, a lot of people on Twitter and, you know, just around people that, you know, float their opinions online, a lot of them are upset that he was he was

20:27Richard Greaser charged with anything and that he wasn't just completely, Exonerated. Exonerated. Yeah.

20:35Rod Palmer He deserved he deserved to be pardoned and let go because people believe this. This is the majority opinion which is that he deserved to be freed and pardoned of all crimes because he did nothing wrong. Journalism is not a crime And so it was unjust for him to

20:56Rod Palmer be detained in the first place to be, sent back to The United States for any trial at all because there was no crime committed. That's what many people believe. However, in your opinion, that is not how you think it's good that he made this plea deal.

21:13Richard Greaser Yeah, I think it's very important because the people out there need to understand, one, that Julian Assange is easily the most important, you know, journalist in history, in my opinion.

21:29Richard Greaser You know, and and part of the reason why is because he was, you know, the first noteworthy journalist to get deplatformed and shut out from the banking system. And so Bitcoin allowed him

21:43Rod Palmer He was the person who basically invented the Bitcoin value for value economy.

21:48Richard Greaser Yes.

21:49Rod Palmer The pioneer, the OG of the value for value, getting boosted for your content. That was, that was Julian Assange in WikiLeaks.

21:58Richard Greaser Yeah. And and even as he got released from prison, he had to take an expensive plane ride to make sure that the spirits didn't, you know, try to pull any funny business on him, you know, because there's a lot of people that that don't like him. But, no. I mean, somebody somebody donated to him, you know, and continued the value for value, you know, platform forward. You know, somebody gave him half $1,000,000

22:23Richard Greaser in Bitcoin, which is, you know, very, very impressive. I mean, imagine getting a fountain boost of that size. That'd be great. That is probably

22:33Rod Palmer the the the record, podcast fountain based or article based right there. Like that is a, some sort of signal that that is his work, his entire body of work that, he's done up until this point is worth is very valuable.

22:53Richard Greaser Yeah. But, anyway, so the the reason why I think it was important that he took the plea deal and that he was, you know, agreed to be in the wrong, is that people need to understand that that real journalism, not only is it cypherpunk,

23:13Richard Greaser you know, like like he was doing that in the way that he was using, you know, the Bitcoin value for value economy, but, you know, also using, cryptography, you know, to communicate, and using the Internet to publish, you know, all of it being very, cipher punk. But, you know, real journalism is always illegal and it's always non compliant.

23:40Richard Greaser And part of the reason why is because the people that make the laws are also non compliant but they use those laws in order to try to force you to just accept, you know, whatever their dastardly, plans are. And so when you call them out for what they're doing, that's inherently gonna be a non compliant activity. And so he he showed he showed the world, you know, just this week, you know, by accepting that plea deal that journalism

24:14Richard Greaser that cypherpunk journalism is non compliant.

24:17Rod Palmer Yeah. If a journalist has a Pulitzer prize or a Nobel prize, that is a fiat award. The only way that you can tell the best journalists

24:31Rod Palmer from the LARPs, the pretenders, is the real journalists, the best journalists, they have criminal records. The plea deal is proof in putting

24:43Rod Palmer that Julian Assange is a noncompliant journalist and that his journalism is real, that his his story is that he's exposing real problems. Yeah. I mean, he

24:55Richard Greaser he was one of the first, you know, if not the very first notable example that was able to show the world how non compliant the CIA is. Right. And and that is one of the most important services to humanity, you know, any

25:15Richard Greaser any journalist could ever do.

25:17Rod Palmer You could you could almost look at it through the lens that the CIA is giving Julian Assange an award. It's saying real, recognize real. We're non compliant, and we recognize that you're non compliant too.

25:32Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. Even though they gave him that award, they they sure, you know, made him feel you know, really work hard for it. He he had to spend twelve years, you know, essentially locked up between the the Ecuadorian, like, I think they made it very difficult for him to smoke cigarettes the whole time he was incarcerated.

25:54Rod Palmer Exactly. He was held or he was forced, he was clonored into places that were, you know, no smoking allowed. And as a non compliant journalist,

26:09Rod Palmer if he, you know, tried to not comply and to smoke, he he would've gotten kicked out. So he had to, I mean, he, it was, it was, that was the torture. Yeah.

26:21Richard Greaser And this is so you know, if you're a journalist and you're listening to us, I think this is an important thing to, you know, to think about is, you know, if you're gonna continue on the path forward and you're gonna do real journalism, like we are, you're gonna eventually, you know, no matter how hard you try, you're gonna get to a point of noncompliance. And with that carries, you know, the risk of, you know, of coming into

26:50Richard Greaser the scorn of these three letter agencies, the these other noncompliers, you know, and getting similar treatment to Assange. And, you know, if that's the case, why would you wait to learn how to transact

27:07Richard Greaser in the value for value economy and and to to, you know, be know how to properly trade non KYC cigarettes. Because that's like a very that's like the entire prison economy runs off of non KYC cigarettes. And so why would you wait till you're on the inside to figure out that market instead of just starting out on it now?

27:31Rod Palmer Right, why would you even have an old Bitcoin if you're not going to pay non compliant journalists for their work? And it's, you know, we talk a lot about credentials and I think that a lot of people agree with me. If you don't have a bachelor's degree in journalism, but

27:51Rod Palmer you do get a criminal charge, from The United States or any government, any state, for the work that you've done, for the journalism you've done, the content you've created I mean, that's like that's kind of the other way you can get credentials as a journalist in my opinion

28:08Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. If you earn enough street cred, through personal work, you can get, like, an honorary degree.

28:16Rod Palmer When do you think is next for Julian Assange?

28:20Richard Greaser Well, you know, my hope for him is I think he's earned retirement. And and I think this for, you know, multiple reasons. I think, you know, ultimately, so I read the book Nineteen Eighty Four recently

28:36Richard Greaser and I was kind of shocked at how similar George Orwell's, you know, writing style was to mine. I had never noticed that before. But, if I, you know, had been around when he was writing that book,

28:54Richard Greaser I could have probably given him a few tips to improve it. But, you know, essentially in the story, this guy gets, you know, treated like Julian Assange did, where he gets locked up in a cage for a very long time and, you know, essentially forced to, you know, comply and, you know, get gets his brain pushed to the edge

29:18Richard Greaser of losing his sanity and isn't allowed to, you know, smoke cigarettes for a very long time. It's just kind of a gruesome, you know, brutal story that it that I think is important for a lot of people to read, you know, and that's why it's considered one of the classics. It's because people foresee, you know, foresaw stuff like this happening to Assange.

29:43Richard Greaser But anyways, you know, at the end of the story, these people didn't comply, and they were just kinda, like, beaten down and broken afterwards. And and so,

29:56Richard Greaser you know, he's been through a lot of, you know, psychological damage. He's been he's been like, I I hope he's smoking a lot of cigarettes right now, you know, kinda decompressing. But I would I would say, hopefully, he's having, you know, a good time. He he's doing some of the stuff that,

30:15Richard Greaser you know, he wasn't able to do when he was in prison. I mean, you know, during the time he's locked up was really the time that the Lightning Network, you know, was becoming popular. And so, hopefully, he'll be able to have the opportunity to sell some custodial Lightning transactions, you know, buy some non KYC non KYC cigarettes.

30:41Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. I know a lot of people are expecting him to go on the PodCon tour, but after what he's been through, I don't think he's gonna be going on any podcast here anytime soon nor nor should he. I mean, he he deserves he deserves some time, you know, to spend with his wife, you know, with his family.

31:03Rod Palmer Yeah. It's his first time he gets to see his kids and really, like, raise his sons. Yeah. Yeah. And it, I think you're right. I, I, one of the things I would say is that because he's such a OG cipher punk, I think if anybody knows how to hold out and keep that light burning, if ever

31:27Rod Palmer so softly, deep, deep down, buried by entropy that the state still can't reach, it's him. So if anybody

31:37Rod Palmer has that, that light left inside of them that they can burn again once they've gotten out of the deepest clenches of the state, I would say it's him. I would hope it's him, so that would be encouraging. I think that he could resist the Orwellian

31:57Rod Palmer punishment or humiliation, whatever you wanna call it, better than anyone. If anybody's been prepared, it's him.

32:04Richard Greaser Yeah. I I think that could be the case, and it would be pretty awesome if he got back in the arena and started, you know, practicing journalism again. But I also think, you know, while while

32:21Richard Greaser we wait in anticipation to see how he responds and and what he does following his release, that there's nothing stopping us from, you know, kinda carrying on the work that he did. And that's the important message that I think. Instead of, you know, begging him to go on what Bitcoin did or or,

32:44Richard Greaser you know, whichever other, you know, Rogan or whichever other, you know, podcast that's out there in the pod comp toward, you know, wanting him to speak at the the Bitcoin Magazine conference in Nashville. You know, how about we how about we try and, you know, support the journalists that, you know, are working in his stead? Yeah.

33:07Rod Palmer Or better yet, be be the noncompliant journalist that you wish would get interviewed by Peter McCormack or that you wish would get interviewed by Stefan Lavera, be that non compliant journalist who exposes the powerful

33:23Rod Palmer institutions that, that kind of control what freedom they think that we're allowed to have. I think that's an important message right now for people like me. I don't know. Maybe you have thoughts on this. Maybe you don't. But maybe it's sidetracked, but I wonder you said that it's

33:44Rod Palmer good for people to read nineteen eighty four, which I agree it's a great book. Like, do you think that there's, there's a certain amount of people in the world who I think and this is an age old debate, too, that a brave new world is a more fitting

34:02Rod Palmer story to explain the lives of a lot of people where it's not the state using these punitive measures. At least not from their perspective. They're just happy to take the pill that makes makes the stress go away and to watch the cool the cool technology and the and the and the the exciting sports or competitions or just garbage bullshit that's on the TV

34:29Rod Palmer and they comply with the state out of willingness. They don't need to be forced. Yeah. How how do you think about that? Do you think a lot of people are are feeling

34:41Rod Palmer they live in an authoritarian state or they're just completely zoned out? Yeah.

34:47Richard Greaser I mean, I think it's a mixture of both. I'm I'm currently in I'm I'm in the middle of Brave New World right now. And, so I I sorta get the references, but I don't wanna comment on it too much before I finish it. But it is very very I mean, what are your thoughts on it? Have you read have you read both?

35:08Rod Palmer Yeah. I need to read me reread Brave New World. It's been a long time, but it's to me like, I'll just read you kind of the the synopsis here. It's like largely set in the futuristic world state. The people, the citizens are environmentally engineered into intelligence based social hierarchy and not only anticipates huge scientific advancements in reproductive technology, sleep learning, psychological manipulation,

35:34Rod Palmer and classical conditioning that are combined to create a dystopian society, which is challenged by the story's protagonist. So as somebody going into this world, it's everybody's been engineered medically, biologically, mentally to kind of try to find this

35:52Rod Palmer optimal life, and they've got bread and circuses through, you know, described through other terms They've got these pills like Selma that just relax them and it takes away their anxiety and makes life tolerable And they seem to like that

36:09Rod Palmer and they don't see the harsh, you know, maybe they do see the harsh consequences to not playing along and they just choose to it's better, it's more comfortable, it's more fun,

36:24Rod Palmer it's more mindless to just go with the engineering, go with the social engineering. It's society's trying to take you down.

36:34Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. I mean, they it's kind of incredible because I I think it's an important book to read for understanding the mind of Vitalik Biederin because he's a big he's for a while, he's been a big advocate for, you know, exploring the technology that's talked about

36:53Richard Greaser in Brave New World. Like, he he really wants and and Charles Hoskinson too. Like, the for whatever reason, these guys, they have a fascination with the idea of putting babies on the block. They want they want children grown in what are called artificial wombs, which is very similar to the world. They're groomers. They're digital

37:13Rod Palmer groomers. Yeah.

37:17Richard Greaser So I think, you know, it's showcasing what a lot of these these shitcoiners in the world view are, like, what they wanna usher in. And so

37:31Richard Greaser I think it's good to be and and this is why, you know, cigarettes in particular like, cigarettes are they they cause your brain to think better and to, you know, essentially be able to get out of the matrix that's created by the by the CIA journalist.

37:52Richard Greaser And this is something this is something that was amazing to me. So I, you know, I think I'm not sure where you watch it, but I I watched CNN, for the presidential debate this week. And I don't think there was a single

38:12Richard Greaser commentator on that on that video stream that was not employed directly by the the CIA. And I think a lot of the country was unable to see that, but because I was smoking cigarettes actively as I was watching it, I was able to see that they were all spooks. That's interesting. I mean, there's a reason

38:35Rod Palmer that they've banned smoking virtually everywhere. I mean, where where's one of the most illegal places to smoke cigarettes? Schools. Because they don't want kids to learn anything except for the narrative that they're teaching. Cerets are definitely illegal in hospitals.

38:54Rod Palmer Why? Because hospitals are full of, of information and if you could see the chart through the bullshit,

39:04Rod Palmer you know, you could avoid a lot of paying a lot of high expensive bills procedures you don't need I mean, this is they they've done everything they can to ban cigarettes and they they push to the point where there's just all this peer pressure from society, not even the government, not even the laws that smoking is bad. And you have to go to these tiny crevices outside, even in the winter, in the cold or the rain. And you have to stand outside

39:31Rod Palmer 20 feet away from a building, to smoke a cigarette. You know, very few people are willing to go that far, but the non compliant people who resist those, those peer pressures who resist the state, they resist the taxes, everything to continue to do what they love smoke cigarettes, to use the natural medicine

39:51Rod Palmer of seeing through government bullshit and status lies and marketing nicotine and to smoke that like that those people are enemies of the state and those and the state wants to cut them out, but they can't. They can't get rid of it. It keeps coming back,

40:09Rod Palmer but it helps you see through the bullshit and it helps you to see like during one of the most important productions, the presidential debates, it lets you see who's really in charge It's the spooks Everybody there was controlled down to the microphones being cut, the audio that was allowed, the questions Everything was CIA approved And they had their own people in there to make sure that the content was created exactly how the CIA wants it to be. Yeah. I mean, the the CIA, they definitely

40:39Richard Greaser they know how to do a good production. I'll I'll give them credit on that.

40:44Rod Palmer And the best time with producers and directors are CIA.

40:49Richard Greaser Yeah. Well, I mean, that's, like, you know, the the fast track to having a successful career in Hollywood is, like, you have to you have to eventually you have to first get on the Epstein client list and then get referred into the CIA. And then Right. Then you can be the next Harvey Weinstein.

41:08Rod Palmer Exactly. Yeah. I mean, it's it's it's go ahead. Go ahead. We'll get to that. Yeah. So so you touched on something very important. So you you're talking about

41:19Richard Greaser you're talking about all these control mechanisms that are used to make smoking very difficult. So, like, if you if you ever go through an airport on an airplane, they say you can't smoke literally everywhere you go. There there's, like, a billion signs. So they're trying to they're trying to use this control reinforcing

41:40Richard Greaser of this social conditioning by saying that you can't smoke a billion times all over the place. And so that's like that's kind of like the Orwellian

41:54Richard Greaser side of things where there's all this reinforcement to, you know, support big brother, you know, yada yada yada. You talk about thought crimes because, you know, smoking cigarette in our society is inherently a thought crime. And then, you know, what they try to do, you know, and this is where the Brave New World side comes into it. They they try to get you connected with, you know, the synthetic alternatives, which, you know,

42:21Richard Greaser lack a lot of the the beneficial qualities of of the tobacco.

42:26Rod Palmer Right. The carcinogens.

42:28Richard Greaser Yeah. Because the the nicotine is not necessarily, you know, the sole chemical working in the in the cigarettes that that helps you think better. It's all the other stuff that they put in there. Right.

42:42Richard Greaser It's the the pesticides that are used to to grow the tobacco. I mean, you don't get that when you're using a product like ZYN or JUUL.

42:52Rod Palmer Well, it's divorced from its roots. It's divorced from a plant. It's divorced from Earth. It's divorced from from God. If that's what you believe it's divorced from truth. It's it's isolated. It's so that only the CIA knows exactly which chemical you're ingesting on every puff. And so they know the content they can give you with the cigarettes. There's there's so many chemicals. There's so many benefits that it's impossible to isolate. They can't control your,

43:20Rod Palmer your experience, but with isolated isolated chemicals, They know exactly how you'll respond to to their content when you hear it.

43:32Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, tobacco is just a plant, man. Right. And, like yeah. I mean, they're they're essentially taking, you know, something really good and important, you know, and a lot of Americans don't understand the importance of tobacco in American history as being one of the most important crops in North America

43:51Richard Greaser historically. But, yeah, I mean, they're taking it and they're they're making a mockery of it and they're they're providing people these, you know, pharmaceutical products kinda lauded as safer alternatives,

44:11Richard Greaser when in reality, they're not safer alternatives because they're they're one I mean, they don't they don't they don't help you become more of a, you know, a masculine free thinker like cigarettes do. Right. I mean, you just look at the Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Go ahead. Take take a poll, like, here here's the homework for the listener this week. Take a poll of the people that you know and and find the people that vape and compare them to the people that smoke.

44:40Richard Greaser And you you I mean, you could get real scientific with this if you wanted to. If you wanted to, like, take their testosterone levels and, you know, various things like that, you know, rank them by BMI or various stuff like that, but inherently what you'll find

44:59Richard Greaser is that the smokers are more masculine. They're the free thinkers, they're the smarter individuals.

45:07Rod Palmer Think about it. If you go back to 2000, George W. Bush was president and the vice president, a lot of things happened during George Bush's first presidency, his first term. And a lot of people are under the, the belief that from that point on

45:27Rod Palmer that Dick Cheney, the vice president was actually running everything because he was smarter. He's more decisive. He was, had more vision. He was more disciplined politically. And Cheney was a, you know, a long time smoker, a cigarette smoker, George Bush wasn't. And so even, even in a position where you have a president and a vice president when one smokes and the other doesn't, the vice president, at least the least the most recent example I could think of, the vice president actually

45:54Rod Palmer ran the country. It was because, you know, he was smarter and he was a better decision maker and it's, you know, very I think a very, not it's not unrealistic to think that cigarettes played a big part.

46:08Richard Greaser Totally. Yeah. I mean, anybody in any political administration that that calls the shots. So, like, I know I know a lot of people have been thinking that, Michelle Obama and Hunter Biden have been running the Biden administration.

46:24Rod Palmer I've heard rumors that they they thought that they were giving Biden's zen to help him during the during the debate that he was given a nicotine, but imagine how much better he would have been if he was smuck at cigarettes instead.

46:37Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, that's a problem. That's I think that's that's the reason why he sucks so bad in that debate, was that he was cigarette deficient. He might not have been nicotine deficient, but yeah. I mean, Trump's whole family, they're they're

46:57Richard Greaser they're closet smokers. Like, this is something, you know, I had David Bailey reach out to me and that was one of his impressions that he want of of the former president that he wanted to pass along to me

47:09Rod Palmer was that, you know, behind the scenes he would smoke. I mean, that makes sense. I mean, that might be why his face has stayed from the smoke. That's maybe that's what he's trying to try to make sure people recognize the signal saying, hey, things are safe, like I smoked before this.

47:28Richard Greaser Yeah. Well, and this was a topic that we talked about before, which was interesting was that this is the first presidential debate that I'm aware of, at least in recent history. I'm not a credentialed historian even though I'm a credentialed journalist, but,

47:48Richard Greaser it was the first debate in recent history that one of the candidates was openly non compliant. And what I mean by that is that Donald Trump has a felony on his record now.

48:03Rod Palmer Right. Exactly. This was the first felon versus non felon presidential debate in history. And it's, it's interesting because the media,

48:16Rod Palmer the consensus by just about everybody who watched it is that the felon won. And that is a big turning point, I think, in this non compliant movement Donald Trump, you know, you can accuse him of a lot of things, but you can't accuse him of not being,

48:38Rod Palmer a civilly non compliant actor right at this point He's doing it for a bigger cause and he won that debate and he's winning in the portals When you see the presidential polls, it's kind of a are we making the noncompliant government

48:56Rod Palmer comply through our civil law compliance? So far, the polls are saying that we are winning. Yeah.

49:03Richard Greaser I mean, it's pretty interesting. It's just like it's been a really big week for the compliance strike, and I think that's something that's really important to to notate, and and hopefully the listener understands is, you know, we have noncompliance all around, top to bottom. You know, Julian Assange getting released, admitting to his own noncompliance,

49:31Richard Greaser you know, a noncompliant individual winning a presidential debate on a large scale. I mean, the people are seen right now. Yeah.

49:42Rod Palmer Representation is important. When you are a noncompliant person and you sit down at night with your kids and you watch a presidential debate or you watch the news and you see

49:55Rod Palmer a non compliant person in a position of authority or winning you know, a debate, which is a presidential debate is one of the most intellectual and genuine conversations and debates about what is right and wrong and what a country's

50:12Rod Palmer values are. And when you see the non compliant person winning and everybody agreeing with that, I mean, it's it's it's just that representation as a non compliant person, you feel like you can do anything, you can be president. If a non compliant person can become pro's a felon, then you you can too.

50:31Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, I'm sure what every what everybody, you know, sitting in prison today is thinking is that they could be the next president of The United States. And like maybe this this could be an interesting path forward for Ross Ulbricht once he gets,

50:48Rod Palmer he gets pardoned and released. Yeah. I mean, maybe the next time Disney makes a new remake and, you know, they should change the main character to not apply it.

50:58Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. I mean, yeah. I think that would be that would be an issue. Like, I I don't have a lot of hope for Disney. I mean, they they've kinda they've they've essentially moved headquarters to Langley, and I don't think there's coming back from that.

51:16Rod Palmer It's sad to see. Ron DeSantis made Ron DeSantis basically told them to run back to Virginia.

51:24Richard Greaser And that's what they're doing. Alright. Well, let's do some found a boost. But but before we get into those, I wanna I wanna talk about something interesting that's happening right now. So currently, we're let me refresh the page. But on,

51:43Richard Greaser Lincoin mining pool, so the the mesh to Dell, if you're not familiar with who the mesh to Dell is, it's a group of individuals that, you know, are pretty tight knit with the ungovernable misfits guys. But they have directed, 670 terahash at us, so almost a petahash. Wow. So they're

52:05Richard Greaser they're launching a a hash rate drive to see how much hash rate they can get us. It's been pretty cool to launch. This is great. This is

52:13Rod Palmer this is intellectual Silk Road type of value for value. Yeah.

52:20Richard Greaser I mean, it's they it's really cool, you know, because journalism is a proof of work activity in the same way that mining is. And,

52:34Richard Greaser you know, to fund proof of work journalism with proof of work mining is a very interesting thing to think about. I don't think a lot of this has happened yet, but I think it could be

52:46Rod Palmer a good funding mechanism going forward. Yeah. I mean, it's such a deep topic. There's a lot to unpack, but having journalists having half rate is gonna be a really powerful concept. I mean, which which which outlet, which media organization do you trust,

53:09Rod Palmer the one with the most proof of work behind it is a good start? Yeah.

53:13Richard Greaser Well, if there's any if there's any media companies out there with more hash rate than us being directed at them in a value for value way, I wouldn't really consider the hash rates that Swan has. You know, they're a media company. You know, Tether has been funding their hash rate. And and it's, you know, it's similar to the value for value economy, but I would I would consider it a bit different because it's more of like a business partnership than it is, like, actual,

53:45Richard Greaser you know, like, donations to them.

53:48Rod Palmer Right. Right. It's gotta be it's gotta be more of a a grassroots ASHRAE than a than a fiat ASHRAE. One of them's directly funded by fiat, the other is directly funded by value.

54:05Richard Greaser Yeah, I mean, it's like complete converse of the intellectual Silk Road. So I think a good a good way to describe it would be the most compliant, you know, online market, which is, Amazon. So it's the, intellectual Amazon is what I would, refer to that relationship.

54:24Rod Palmer Interesting. Yeah. But thank you so much. This is really exciting and it's really cool. And, if you have an ASHRAE that you're not sending to the to the buccal,

54:38Rod Palmer Why not?

54:40Richard Greaser Yep. Yeah. I mean, if you if you got a little miner that you're you're solo mining on CK Pool, it'd be pretty dope if you, you know, mined it our direction. Solo mind for the bugle. But no no pressure.

54:57Richard Greaser We want, want people to feel good about what they're doing. So, yeah, I mean, those guys have done governableness. So it's big fans of their show, Big fans of what they're doing. You know, John has been leading the charge on this one. Big shout out to him. But, yeah, let's get into those found booths.

55:19Rod Palmer Yeah. First one for Go ahead. Go ahead. You do the first one. Alright. Alright.

55:24Richard Greaser We I I don't have it pulled up on my computer. So, like, you know, for whatever reason, found in, ordered these it looks like it's biggest to smallest on my phone.

55:34Rod Palmer That seems right.

55:35Richard Greaser That's a computer. I meant typewriter. My bad. Pretty tired today. Okay. Rob one ham, so Rob Hamilton, boosted us for 15 or 50,000 sats. Big boost. Says, in parenthesis,

55:52Richard Greaser he, him, so thank thank you for sharing your, pronouns right off the bat. It's really helpful for, you know, knowing how to talk to our listeners when, what would you do?

56:03Rod Palmer It's paramount to surprise me. I was froze he went with you again. So thanks for sharing it. So not as not always obvious.

56:09Richard Greaser Yeah. Appreciate it, Rob. Well, we don't wanna make assumptions by people about people. Right. So Rob says, even if we are on the opposite sides of the compliance side wars, I want to make sure you guys can buy your Marlboros. Journalism has always been

56:27Richard Greaser a great tool in helping compliance, and I hope we can all at least agree on n g u. Yeah. Thanks. Thanks, Rob. I

56:35Rod Palmer I think we can all agree on n g u, and I'm definitely gonna smoke non t y c cigarettes with the with the SADC scent. So, you know, it's not going to be used in a compliant way. I want I want that to be transparent.

56:51Richard Greaser Yeah. I I want to take a portion of, like, my Boost. I'm going to buy cigarettes. I'm going to sell them, non compliantly at the fourth of July event that I'm going to. That's what I'll I'll commit to you. So, you know, I appreciate

57:09Richard Greaser your compliance and and how it's able to, you know, support non compliance. It's kind of an interesting,

57:19Rod Palmer paradox that we got going on here. The, the next one is just me. I donated 21,000 SAVs because I wanted my message to peer towards the top, which is that the new Cypherpunk mailing list will be built on the intellectual Silk Road. I truly believe that. I just wanted to make sure that everybody was able to see it. Nice. That's a good one for sure.

57:41Richard Greaser The next one is from our good friend, Fundamentals, for 10,000 sats. He says, congrats on separating from PodConf. How you handle this will set the example for others. Glad for you guys. Well, yeah, thanks. We're the Bitcoin standard of news.

58:01Richard Greaser That's who we are at the Bugle. We're setting we're not just setting the standard for others on how to interact with PodCon, but just how to do journalism in general. Alright, the next one is from,

58:13Rod Palmer another good friend of the bugle, Orange Mart. Orange Mart, theythem in parenthesis, so thank you for the pronouns, is proud to identify

58:23Rod Palmer as a supporter of the Bitcoin Bugle, AKA the Bitcoin Bitches, an inclusive group that doesn't care if you're a heher or a sheshein. All are welcome. Many in many linear era that all

58:38Rod Palmer are welcome. If you want to donate sats, value for value, to the bugle, we do not care what your pronouns are, but we do want to know them. Yep. Thank you for the boost, Orange Mart.

58:52Richard Greaser The next one is, from Chad F for 3,333 sats. Very good number. Who says, my pronouns are Stack sats. Well, thank you, for sharing your pronouns, Chad. And and I think, you know, SnackSats

59:12Rod Palmer That's a good pronoun set for Chads.

59:15Richard Greaser Yeah. I mean, it it it's not it's not very, what's the word? It's kinda out of the box. They're they're not very common, you know, so you have very common ones. And so I think where our listeners can get very creative is, they can they can explore

59:36Richard Greaser the world of pronouns a little bit more thoroughly because there there's a lot to be explored out there. They're constantly, you know, evolving and expanding every day. So that I'm glad glad for you, Chad, that you've chosen those ones. The next one is from expatriotic.

59:53Rod Palmer It was just 3,000 sats. He said frauds. Don't listen. So sad. Hashtag Trump 2024.

1:00:02Rod Palmer Well, I, I, I don't know how to, to respond to the frauds allegation or telling people not to listen, but I disagree with that.

1:00:14Rod Palmer We have credentials. We're not frauds. I think that, you know, and it goes without saying. Yeah.

1:00:20Richard Greaser I mean, it it in being some of the world's best, journalists out there, you know, we're we're inherently gonna get criticism for people. And I welcome I welcome the criticism and the fountain boost. I think it's a great medium. And and what I would challenge you to do next time, expatriotic,

1:00:40Richard Greaser is instead of just being vague, is to to give specifics as to what your, what your disagreements, with us are. But it appears that this person is supporting

1:00:57Richard Greaser Trump probably due to the former president's non compliance stance. That sounds right. Yeah. I'm good with that. Yeah. I mean, I I've been really, like, disappointed in the amount of hate mail or lack thereof that the beagle has received. It, you know, it seemed like early on I was getting a lot more hate mail. I I suggested to to people to to email

1:01:23Richard Greaser me at thebitcoinbeagle@protonmail.com to, you know, send their hate mail. But the the fountain boost or or even Twitter posts, those are those are both great great mediums to to send that to us. It just you know, it makes it makes the show, I think, a little bit more valuable when we can deep debunk

1:01:45Richard Greaser all of these, you know, kind of frivolous criticisms of our awesome work.

1:01:51Rod Palmer Agreed.

1:01:53Richard Greaser Next one is Enoch for a thousand sats who says, Grieser and Palmer are the pop rocks and soda pop of internet news. Great alone, but explosive together. They're without equal. It's very high praise. Thank you, Enoch.

1:02:10Rod Palmer Hey, Yoch. I'm gonna, I'm definitely gonna share that one so everybody knows what they're getting when they listen to the Bugle because I think that's a great description of me and Richard. The next one is, Thousand Deaths from

1:02:26Rod Palmer b o I z z a h. Hard hitting her gentle, credentialed journalism here. Yes. That's another great description of the show. Couldn't agree more. Glad others are seeing that in the fountain feed. Thousand stats signal, and that's thousand stats, that's one cigarette.

1:02:46Richard Greaser Yep. PIES, PIEZ boost for four twenty stats, it says, Thank you, gentlemen. Thank thank you, Pies.

1:02:58Rod Palmer Almost half a cigarette there. Thank you. Thank you. And the last one, Expatriotic, again, boosted 100 sats. Here's money for a fag. Well, thank you, Expatriotic, for the second boost. Need 900 more of those for cigarette, fag, of course, is what they call cigarettes in England.

1:03:20Rod Palmer So he must be British. Oh, yeah. Thank you. As soon as I get 900 more sads, I will buy a non KYC cigarette.

1:03:30Richard Greaser Yep. And feel feel free to if you're boosting, feel free to ask us questions too if you want us to expand on anything because we want this to be kind of like a dialogue back and forth, between us and our listeners.

1:03:43Rod Palmer And if you, you know, if you if you wanna boost a SaaS and you don't have, you know, a thousand SaaS, for example, to boost this one full cigarette, which is what a lot of our listeners like to do, maybe band together with some other people in the intellectual silk road and start a stack chain for, a fag chain or a cigarette chain. So people, you know, you can boost a portion of the cost of one k one KYC cigarette and somebody else can can boost on top of that making like a stack join or fad join,

1:04:15Richard Greaser to get us more cigarettes. I'm seeing I'm seeing in the the ClubMiner mafia chat that more and more people are are, directing hash rate. It seems like there's a goal to get us up to a petahash by the end of the evening. So I assume by the time I get this,

1:04:34Richard Greaser published Wow. We'll be up there. Alright. Well, that's the final boost. You you got any final thoughts to to close the show? Yeah. I think,

1:04:43Rod Palmer I think it's gonna be a crazy week. We had a way to smoke cigarettes, shoot off fireworks, maybe light some cigarettes with some fireworks this weekend and just be free. Don't be a cock. Don't be a status cat. Don't comply.

1:04:58Richard Greaser Yeah. Yeah. I I guess, like, the final thing so we're we're working through a media partnership with Ordinals magazine. We're gonna be at the event as journalists on the ground, but I'll make sure to make some time to

1:05:17Richard Greaser sell some non KYC cigarettes. So if anybody wants to hit me up, let me know. I know, you know, it's gonna be it's a very, like, high risk activity to do in an event like that because of, like, how many spooks are there. And I got I imagine there's probably gonna be more spooks than ever at the event. But, yeah, we can we can we can talk incognito. So hit me up if you're you're interested. See you there.

1:05:47Unknown Thank you for tuning in to and boosting this week's episode of the Bugle weekly podcast. This July 4, remember that this holiday is about noncompliance and being free. Instead of only talking about freedom, make sure to actually experience it. Drive without your seatbelt and engage in the peer to peer non compliant economy by purchasing and or selling non KYC cigarettes. Even if you are not American, you can still celebrate a holiday about non compliant individuals,

1:06:14Unknown throwing off the shackles of being ruled by funny talking tea drinkers. This is our Boston Tea Party, so get ready to rock and roll. Thanks again for tuning in, and we will see you on next week's episode.

1:06:33Richard Greaser Only for the two lions, seventeen seventy six. Non compliant individuals had effects. They did not like being ruled by the British. They were not docile or skittish. With pen and parchment, they enshrined their defiance,

1:06:50Richard Greaser creating what is now called the American Alliance. Fouted on being undaunted, but we carry the torch, smoking on KYC cigarettes on our front porch. All across the country, the people are awakening. Politicians are quivering and shaking. The fear of population night is not docile. They are a fight,

1:07:26Richard Greaser Drive without your seat belt. This is what winning looks like. Take back your pride. Embrace freedom. Do not hide. Only fools follow the rules. All across the the people are awakening. Politicians are quivering and shaking. They fear a population that does not go solve.

1:07:49Richard Greaser They are afraid so they will act hostile, but do not lose hope. The revolution is happening. The answer to 1984 is becoming a proper fool. Drive without your the people are awakening. Politicians are quivering and shaking. They fear a population that is not docile.

1:08:29Richard Greaser They are afraid so they will act hostile. But do not lose hope. The revolution