Best of the Program | Guests: Jason Whitlock & Dr. John Bruchalski | 5/21/24
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Welcome.
Today's podcast is amazing.
We start with AI, things that you have not heard or seen, most likely, and the godfather of AI explaining how much trouble we are in if we don't pay attention right now.
Then we talked to Jason Whitlock about P.
Diddy, also the president's speech
where he is just telling black men you don't have a chance.
And then the most incredible interview i think i've ever done and it's a must listened uh to interview it is an ob gyn
that was performing abortions bought into all of the lies until something happened during an abortion uh and it is absolutely incredible you don't want to miss any of today's podcast here it is you're going on vacation this summer Where are you going?
Hopefully someplace fun, someplace, you know, where you're curious and you can learn a bunch of stuff with the kids.
And maybe you're going up to Boston.
Uh-huh.
That'd be fun at night.
Anyway,
are you using a Burna launcher?
You can't carry a gun with you.
You can't really fly with a gun.
It's just such a hassle to fly with a gun.
And if you're driving anywhere, you're crossing state lines and you have a gun, not with a Berna launcher.
They look like a gun, but they're not.
It's a Berna launcher.
It's a non-lethal alternative to safeguarding your home and safeguarding any potential threats that you might experience even on vacation.
Somebody comes up, you know, and is trying to rob you, hit them with a burn a launcher and the tear gas or pepper spray or just a kinetic round.
The tear gas will
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You can pack it in your checked luggage without the need to declare it.
It is legal in all 50 states.
No license, no test, no nothing.
And it has a 60-foot range.
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My wife, all my children now, that my daughter just turned 18, all of them have a Burna launcher, B-Y-R-N-A dot com/slash Glenn.
That's burna.com/slash Glenn.
Do it now.
You're listening to the best of the blend back program.
I think I'm gonna, this is gonna be one of those things.
You know, I drove by the Grand Canyon because I was moving to Arizona and I saw the exit and I'm like, nah, I'll see it some other time.
I'm gonna be living here in Arizona.
I never saw the Grand Canyon for 20 years.
I think this is gonna be one of those moments.
I hope I get a chance to be in person again, meeting somebody who is just absolutely a remarkable man.
in our studio right now is Dr.
Brukilski.
And
he was an abortionist and he's now Divine Mercy Care Founder.
And we're honored to have him.
Doc, how are you?
Oh, Glenn, I'm doing well.
And how are you and your eyes doing, my friend?
They're good.
It's pretty ugly.
It's pretty ugly right now, but it's getting better.
Well, good, good.
I'm glad to hear that.
I needed your vision
when you began your TV programs, and
we need your voice today.
So thanks for this invitation, buddy.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So tell me your journey.
I'd love to hear the, you know, where you were and then the moment where you were like, oh my gosh, what am I doing?
Sure.
So imagine yourselves in an OBGYN residency program, modern medicine at its finest, technology at our fingertips.
But it was in the late 1980s, so abortion on demand
was considered the standard of practice, the standard of excellence.
But I also realized that if it was so good, why didn't more of us do it?
There was a push even back then to say, you know, if you're a member of the OBGYN community, you really must perform abortions.
So here I was in my residency, and I'm listening to my patients, and they're telling me, ever since I was a kid, oh, we need, you know, sexual freedom.
We need to be released from the chains of our fertility.
And by listening to my female friends, just listening, being present, watching, observing, they taught me that they truly needed
a sexual revolution.
And the backup to failed contraception was abortion.
And so being a good Polish kid, growing up in a really solid family, faith-based, Bible-strong,
I began to realize the world was different from my home.
But in residency, I decided that I had a knack in medical school, I had a knack for listening to women, PCOS, PMS, menopause, irregular cycles,
you know, anxiety, sexual issues.
I loved the technology.
And
I initially bought the lie that you needed to be a great caregiver, you had to kill well.
That was the bottom line.
And this is still the lie.
They call it women's health care.
Reproductive freedom, reproductive justice.
Yes.
Right.
At every stage, Glenn.
And I, once again, I alluded that you really helped me early on in my my new pract, you know, my practice after residency has been life-affirming.
But it's, well, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's a whole nother story.
But this change of heart, to get back to it, is
I was, you know, God has a funny way of working with people.
I'm sure my parents never gave up praying on me.
I'm sure the pro-life movement out there, one of the greatest things they have ever done.
Even in the midst of all this mess and this brokenness in the world today, brokenness and medicine, just the disgust, you know, when you abort life and you trump truth, you end up with incredible disillusion and a meth.
And so here I was, believe it or not, I was volunteering at a pregnancy resource center in Wichduck Road, Virginia, Virginia Beach, at night occasionally, once or twice a month, while I was going through my residency.
I was doing abortions first, second, and third trimester.
I was doing them for eugenic reasons.
I was doing them for,
you know, for just because it wasn't the right time reasons.
I was doing it because the child wasn't perfect reasons.
What did you mean by eugenic reasons?
Well, you know, my cousin Mike had Down syndrome.
Okay.
And he said, Johnny,
am I an endangered species?
He said it during the first two years of my residency when I was doing abortions.
How'd you answer that?
How do you think I did?
I was a weasel.
I said nothing because I can't, I couldn't lie to him like I could lie to my patients.
It's not a big deal.
It's just like taking an aspirin.
It's just like getting a tooth pulled.
You know, there's this challenge.
There's this incredible visceral.
I don't know, I think Solzhenitsyn said something like,
the world goes through the human heart.
And I have met the enemy, as Pogo says, and it's me.
Right.
And then,
you know,
the rest of scripture and the rest of freedom-loving, especially Polish freedom-loving people of my background.
It goes through the human heart, and the problem was me.
But I was perpetuating it by lies.
I was already beginning to water down the language, meaning that it really wasn't a human life at fertilization.
It was a process.
And we had to allow for IVF and we had to allow for other things.
And you couldn't believe at all for the revel, you know, for the health of women, for their happiness, that human life,
that there's a code and in the beginning is there the code and the code is in life and the code is life.
And if it's human that created the code, then it's human life.
And so I began to just morph language.
No, you don't hear a heartbeat.
Like today, we don't hear a heartbeat at six weeks gestation.
There's no valves.
There's no heart.
Really, the heartbeat is at 22 weeks, as ACOG says.
So I adapted the political action views, the political action part of the American College that once used to be a professional organization.
And I was studying to be the best OBGYN I could be.
So late one night, On labor and delivery, I have two patients, and that's where my book came from, Two Patients.
We always used to care for two patients in OBGYN.
Now it's only one, and it's, you know, it's whatever the woman wants and patient autonomy, correct?
And so in one room, I had a lady miscarrying early labor at about 23, 24 weeks.
Back then, viability was after 26, 27.
And she was an early labor infected, and she wanted the baby.
So I did everything I could to help her and her unborn child using that language, whispering in her ear.
She wanted the baby.
She wanted the baby.
It was wanted.
Not welcomed as we should welcome people, but it was just wanted.
And I, okay, she wants it.
I want it.
Very next room, separated by one of the walls you have here at Mercury Studios, there's another woman who doesn't want her baby.
Same gestational age, same disease.
There's a slight infection, possibly, but it was preterm birth.
We don't have a good idea what causes preterm birth, but she was an early laborer, didn't want it.
She said, get it out of me.
Oh, my God.
I initially said,
well, there are some options because I really believed in giving people informed consent to the best of my ability, but I was manipulating it because as a physician, someone in power, someone in the media, someone in politics,
if people believe and look up to that, my God, you can drive the narrative in any way you want.
Yep.
And if you don't provide questions of doubt, how can they learn?
How can we grow?
How can we improve our human condition?
So she didn't want it.
I didn't want it.
The hospital didn't want it.
I broke water and blew out,
gave her medicine and blew out her pregnancy.
Caught it in a bucket.
Oh my gosh.
Caught it in a bucket.
I put it down, making sh,
well, yes, Glenn.
It was a failed abortion, but we don't use that term.
We now don't even talk about it.
We now say, you must abandon the decision of that situation to the doctor, the patient, and the family in the room.
They don't want us to intervene, the pro-life nurses, pro-life physicists.
No, no, no, no.
We don't want you there because let me tell you what I did.
The baby started crying.
I didn't do a very good history on her because it wasn't wanted.
Why would I do it?
Why would I waste my time?
I was becoming a bad doctor.
I was becoming sloppy, just what abortionists are.
Once you start eliminating a human life and believe that it's caring,
all of a sudden your whole world, your whole ability to look at truth and love and beauty and goodness become warped.
You know what I did?
I heard the kid crying and I said, oh my God, that's unmerciful.
She's going to hurt more.
She's going to suffer more.
Where's my lat pad?
A lat pad, man.
The mom or the baby?
Mom.
The mom.
I was worried about the mom.
I was worried about the mom's suffering.
And in a false mercy, I took a towel and I tried to suffocate the kid.
Jesus.
And it wouldn't, like, it kept moving around.
And when I tried to rearrange the head, the mouth, to suffocate it, Glenn.
I picked up the head.
Now, remember, I'm a good doc.
I mean, I'm decent.
A little decent like you.
You know, we try, we try.
It weighed too much.
It felt too heavy.
I'm like, hell, this ain't 22 weeks.
This has got to be 25.
Because I could feel it.
I threw it on a scale, 505 grams, five grams over the limit that I had to call the neonatal intensive care unit in to resuscitate the baby.
So can you imagine?
We're living in a world right now that is falling in free fall everywhere.
The word, we can't define woman, we can't define truth, we can't misinformation, disinformation, it's everywhere.
I had to call the nursery because I was compounded by law because you have to do what's legal, right?
That's moral.
And so I'm like, what the hell just happened?
Would you, would you, it would have been legal for you to suffocate the baby if it were
later?
No one would have known.
Go ahead.
How do you think we take these?
Some people who do these second trimester terminations, what do you think they do at clinics across the country?
Only about, I want to say 40 to 50% of all doctors inject the fetal heart with like potassium chloride or digoxin to stop the heart.
That means, let's say, six out of ten of these kid, of these unborn children who are being exterminated,
they often die in the process, the trauma of going through the birth canal.
However, if they don't, they come out alive.
And then they're either put in a dirty supply room, door closed,
or we just drop, because remember, they're pretty weak at this stage.
We drop a towel over them and push it down.
Oh, my God.
Yes,
that's the reality.
Because once again,
you know, this is free fall.
So I call, the nursery walks in, the neonatologist comes in, she's Dr.
Debbie Plum.
She quickly assesses the situation and goes, hey, Bruchowski, stop treating my patients as tumors.
And oh, by the way, have a cup of coffee with me tomorrow.
So can you imagine I'm now ripped?
I've been splitting probably since I began the process of medicine.
realizing that it was going against everything I was raised with, everything that I looked up to, everything that I believed in.
And I accepted it.
I take full responsibility for this because once you meet God's mercy, you take responsibility for this.
Hold on, John.
Hold on.
I got to take a one-minute break.
I'm sorry.
This is one of the just one of the most compelling stories I've heard and hard to listen to, but thank you for telling it.
If I were to ask you how many babies you think were aborted in 2023 alone, what would your answer be?
If you guessed more than a million, you'd be right.
You know, women are saying now, political women are saying now that we just don't have access to get an abortion when we want an abortion.
Really?
Because over a million, those are the highest numbers since 2012.
Why do you think that is?
Shout your abortion.
And also, you can now,
your home's bathroom for young girls is now the abortion clinic.
And
she has to go visit the scene of the crime over and over and over again every day.
That's good for her mental health after she
has an abortion from a birth control pill.
This is horrible.
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Now, back to the podcast.
This is the best of the Glenn Beck podcast.
To hear more of this interview, check out the full episode, anywhere podcasts are found.
Jason Whitlock is who we're talking to.
He's a longtime sports writer, a TV personality from ESPN.
If you ever watch ESPN, you know who he is.
I mean, he's the guy who started the undefeated for ESPN and steered Fox Sports One studio studio show, Speak for Yourself.
But he's also, and I just have to point this out because I find it amazing with people with different opinions actually winning things.
He, while he was at the Kansas City Star,
he won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award for Commentary in 2007, which is a really big deal.
He is the only sports writer to ever win that award.
Quite an accomplishment.
Jason, we only have a few minutes.
I'm going to ask you a couple of questions.
Just want a quick answer from me because I want to get into something a little deeper.
Last question on P.
Diddy.
You know, the videotape is out.
He was taping people in his house.
Is he done?
Is he Louis C.K.
at least for a little while?
Yeah, I think he's Russell Simmons.
He was Russell Simmons, another rap mogul who got me too'd and I think now lives in Bali and basically had to leave the country for peace.
And I think that's where Diddy's going to end up if there are no criminal charges.
I think he just ends up moving out of the country and existing from afar.
I want to turn quickly to Donald Trump.
I have a theory, and I'd love to hear your thought.
This Donald Trump trial in New York, I just don't think, I mean, the judge is so biased.
The jury is full of New Yorkers.
It is clear they have no case.
If If you look at this the opposite way of
O.J.
Simpson, where the jury, they even have admitted they just wanted to see the black man win one,
you know, at a different time, stick it to the man.
And so while they might have thought he was guilty, they voted
to say not guilty and he was set free in justice.
I think that for political reasons, not race race reasons, I think we're looking at the O.J.
Simpson kind of trial with Donald Trump, where they might know he's absolutely not guilty, but they'd vote just because they hate him as a politician.
What do you think of that?
I think it's a real possibility.
I think the 2020 election was based on stirring up enough hatred so that people thought they were stopping Adolf Hitler 2.0.
And if you thought you could stop Adolf Hitler, there's no lengths you wouldn't go to.
If you needed mail-in ballots from dead people or whatever, you're well, God, I'm stopping Adolf Hitler.
And so that's what they've done to Donald Trump.
And so could I see people in that jury room saying, yeah, but he's Adolf Hitler.
They've convinced me of that.
And I got to stop him.
Yes, I think we could see that.
And I agree with you, Glenn.
It's clear-cut.
They have no case.
This deal is a farce.
But yeah, our, you know, thank God.
I mean, New York is bad.
But if this trial was in Washington, D.C.,
I would be totally convinced he would get convicted.
Me too.
So Joe Biden spoke at Morehouse and gave a,
I thought, an astonishing
negative speech.
What did you think about it?
Yeah, going to a bunch of 22-year-olds and telling them, hey, you're going to have to work 10 times as hard to accomplish anything in America is not an appropriate speech.
That's not going to fill anybody with confidence.
It's going to fill them with animus.
And to have that coming from the President of the United States is a joke and a disgrace.
I was, though, pleased, Glenn, that the response was very muted.
It was very muted.
People were aware, like, this guy's lying to us.
This guy's full of BS.
And so they didn't really know what to respond and they didn't respond.
Honestly, I was shocked that any university,
the audience, the graduating class would respond to him like that.
When he said those lines, I expected a real roar, and
it was shockingly muted.
And it's more than just the kids, because you've got to remember that there's the kids graduating, and then it's their family and friends who also had a muted reaction so that was a large cross-section across age and generations that like ah you need to sing a different tune man we're just not hearing that from you is
is the black vote changing enough to change the outcome this time around i mean i can't think of anybody whose life has gotten better and especially if you're at the bottom of the scale your life is has really gone down the tubes because of inflation and everything else.
I think what's happening is the stench and the stain
of not supporting Democrat policies and candidates is starting to be removed where you can
because I think people just know it's BS, that it's insanity, doing the same thing over and over and over again and expecting different results is insane.
And I just think people's eyes have been awakened enough that
they know
they're being lied to.
And so now, because as a black person in social settings, it's been very, very uncomfortable the last
50 years, 60 years, to be a Republican or a non-supporter of Democrat policies.
Now I think that stain has been removed and you can move in those social circles and people not disavow you or treat you like you're an alien.
And so I think that's a significant change.
I think people are being given the permission.
You know what?
vote however you believe, or if you want to abstain and not support this insanity, this demonic stuff from the Democrats, go ahead and do it.
It makes perfect sense.
So
the same thing, I think, is being given permission is happening through people like Bill Maher.
When Bill Maher, I mean, Bill Maher's been amazing recently.
You know, I don't agree with him on a lot of stuff, but he is actually a classic liberal,
not a mad, crazy, woke progressive.
I almost...
am willing to go there, but I'm really not just because, and again, this isn't me being a Trump worshiper,
but the things he says about Trump are so insincere and inaccurate.
And
last night on Gutfeld, he called Trump an insurrectionist.
Bill Maher is way too smart to believe Trump is an insurrectionist.
And so what Bill Maher is basically to me, I'm talking about this today on my show, he's just greedy.
He wants Republicans and Democrats to feel comfortable coming to his comedy show.
There's no real conviction here.
There's no real moral clarity.
There's no real authenticity.
And again, I'm a longtime viewer of his show and have enjoyed it.
But this new little gimmick of,
hey, hate Trump, hate Trump, hate Trump.
But yeah, the left is a little bit out of line.
It just, it bothers me.
He's too smart for it.
If he's really authentic, and again, it's not about, he doesn't have to say he likes Trump, but let's just move away from the lies.
Let's quit pretending like Trump is some evil dictator.
So
how does somebody like Bill Maher that's known for one thing, but maybe does have
strong
classic liberal roots, how do they change?
Because when I started to say, I don't like Trump, everybody said, oh,
you're just a shill.
You're just trying to
have ratings.
It hurt me to say that.
It hurt me a great deal to say those things.
But I believed it.
And I said, if I'm wrong, I'll apologize.
And then when I apologized, people said, well, he's just doing that for ratings and money.
How does somebody who actually has conviction in today's world
prove it?
Okay.
Well, at this point,
Glenn, I think Bill Maher needs to apologize because I think it's so obvious the lies that have been told about Trump.
Is Trump
mean-spirited or rude or
not polished the way we would want a politician to be polished?
Absolutely.
In public use.
All of this other stuff is just...
It's a joke to me, and it's been a joke, and it's been a joke to me from day one.
And I used to I would argue with my family.
And again, I come from a black family and a that have all voted Democrat their entire life but I said in real time when this all started I was like hey this stuff that you're accusing Trump of how is that any different than my father my uncle everybody that hung out at my dad's bar the Masterpiece Lounge they all talk the way Trump did
say seriously the whole and I'm talking about grab them by the you know what I know at the Masterpiece Lounge Lounge, this is commonplace.
I got an uncle that my mother's brother, who is, who's passed now, but he was my favorite uncle and my mother's love.
And I was like, how are you?
And your mom, if I remember right, was like really, she was a deep Christian that really pushed it.
Right?
Yes, she's definitely in church every Sunday and Wednesday right now.
But I was like, how's Trump any different than Uncle John?
And Glenn, I have to admit this.
And it's not, it's embarrassing to admit.
But like, my uncle gave me his porn collection in his will, in his death.
In his will?
Well, he gave them to me.
He knew he was dying.
Oh, my God.
Oh my gosh.
Oh, my gosh.
You know, 20 some-odd years ago, or I can't remember the year, my uncle.
I'm just like.
And y'all think Trump is worse than Uncle John?
Or would Uncle John and Trump hang out with each other?
And if I can love Uncle John, why can't I tolerate Donald Trump?
What'd they say?
What they said.
They don't really have an answer for that, Glenn.
And again, this is my father, his friends, again, because my father's bar was my favorite place on the earth.
And everybody talked the way that Trump talks.
And no one was polished.
They were all driven by common sense.
And I'm not saying Trump's driven, but they were all just driven by common sense.
And they all thought,
you know, they were
ghetto superstars and Playboys,
you know, in the inner city community.
Everything to Trump.
And I was like, if you had a choice, and I ask people this all the time, you're going to go out for a beer with Trump or are you going to go out for a beer with Joe Biden?
Yes.
And if you have to think long about that question, I got questions about you.
Because one of these guys' daughter wrote a diary that said,
my father took showers with me, and one of them's daughter didn't write those things.
Yeah.
I just know which one I'm more comfortable hanging out with.
Me too.
Jason, thank you.
I'll see you a week from Saturday at the Fearless Army Roll Call in Nashville, Tennessee.
I invite you all over the country.
Please come to this.
This is black and white men and their sons coming together.
to make a pledge to be a man, to know what it means to be a God-fearing man.
I'll be there and teach a little bit of history and help out any way that I can.
But I urge you to come.
And, Jason, no comment on this, but I just know you've been taking arrows for me.
And
I just bless you for just standing tall.
And whether we agree on things or not, it really doesn't matter.
The Lord needs all of us on deck right now.
He'll sort everything out afterwards.
But thank you, Jason.
Thank you, Glenn.
Appreciate it.
God bless.
This is the best of the Glenn Beck podcast.
It's a compilation of clips from various episodes.
If you want to dig deeper into this interview, check out the full podcast episode.
Well, hello to my executive producer, Mr.
Stuber here.
Welcome.
How are you, Stu?
Mr.
Beck, how are you feeling today?
You know.
You know,
as I was saying that,
the reason why I paused is I thought, my God, I'm turning into Don Imos.
You are.
I mean, you have a giant ranch.
Miserable.
You have a giant charity.
Yeah.
You have
multiple health problems at any given moment.
Yes.
You're looking great.
So it's all working together.
Okay.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Okay.
So I have to tell you about
the godfather of
artificial intelligence.
He's the computer scientist that is regarded as the godfather of intelligence.
He says the government has to establish a universal basic income now to deal with the impact of AI and inequality, and it's coming soon.
He was on, Jeffrey Hinton is his name.
He was on BBC's Newsnight, and he said, look,
we need something.
Give everybody some fixed amount
because he's very worried about the first step of AI taking a ton of mundane jobs.
He said he just met with Downing Street and said, you got to do it.
And this is something that I may have bored you with to death over the years.
And a lot of conservatives
didn't understand why I was saying we have to talk about universal basic income right now.
I don't think it's the right idea.
Personally, I think we should all own our own information because these companies like Google and ChatGPT and everybody else, they've gotten rich off of our information.
And that's got to stop.
We should be paid for our information.
And that would be instead of a tax, which I hate, instead of a tax, they would just have to pay us a fair sum for all of our information.
And you could sell it or not sell it.
But jobs are going away.
And they're going away soon.
He says within 20 years,
at least half, there's a probability of half that we will have not just the problem of no jobs, but within 20 years, we will have a 50% chance of confronting the problem of AI taking over.
He said, and I'm quoting, this is an extinction-level threat for humans because we have created a form of intelligence that just may be better than biological intelligence.
And that's,
I love this understatement, and that's worrying for us.
He said AI could evolve to get the motivation to make more of itself and can autonomously develop a sub-goal of getting control.
He went in to talk about how
it soon could start to replicate itself and hide.
And this is something that I talked about before.
This is a reason why I've said for so long, I think the Tower of Babel story, I think these solar flares, et cetera, et cetera, could actually be a blessing.
I know this sounds horrible.
It would kill millions of people, but it's the only thing that would shut down AI because it's going to hide in every single chip.
So you would have to, to kill it, you would have to shut down all electronics, all electricity, and then take all, every single one of the silicon chips and destroy them.
If you had a
refrigerator in
Malaysia that didn't destroy it, when you turn the power back on, AI would be in that refrigerator and it would spread all over the world again.
It's really bad.
And he said, we are on a very thin edge right now.
He said, I'm most concerned about when these, when AI can autonomously make the decision to kill people.
He said, I don't think the world is going to do anything until something very, very nasty happens.
Well,
yeah, but then it's smarter than us.
And it, you know, we have to think of these things now.
There's another story out, and this is from the Spectrum, and it's the theory of mind.
And the theory of mind is something
that
it gives you the ability to understand someone's mental state.
Okay.
And that's really important.
And this is why I've said five years ago, maybe I told my son, who's a really compassionate guy, and so is my daughter, really compassionate.
They have big hearts.
And I said, you both need to go into nursing.
You don't have to be a nurse right now.
Just get licensed to be a nurse.
Because AI will assist and do a lot of the stuff that nurses do right now.
But somebody will have to be there as a nurse to when the patient says, I've got to talk to a human, or it doesn't understand the emotion behind the words.
It will require an actual human and a human face to be able to empathize.
Well,
the theory of mind, which is,
you know,
the idea of it can understand when you're sad, when you're lying, when you're cheating, whatever it is, it can empathize with character.
Okay.
So it just went through ChatGPT
4,
and
there was another one that I've never really heard of that also did it, and it didn't do well.
But ChatGPT 4.
They looked at,
they gave it tests, theory of mind tests.
And ChatGPT solved 75% of the tasks correctly, which he said matched the performance of six-year-old children.
Now that's what was observed in past studies.
Not anymore.
They completed all five typical kinds of theory, mind tasks.
The first three are understanding hints, irony, and a faux pas.
So if, you know,
if
the scenario is two people are at a reunion and somebody says something and it offends the other person,
can it look and say, oh boy,
that's a faux pas.
Shouldn't have said that one.
They also answered false belief questions that are used to determine if young children have developed theory of mind themselves.
And it goes something like this.
If Alice moves something while Bob is out of of the room where will Bob look for it when he returns finally they answered a complex series of questions about strange stories that feature people lying manipulating and misunderstanding each other overall chat GPT 4 came out on top its scores match those of humans for false belief test so it can tell if you're lying as well as a human this So you know, a year ago, six-year-olds.
Now it's up with all humans in false belief.
It was also higher than the aggregate human scores for irony, hinting, and strange stories.
The only thing it performed worse than humans was the faux pas test.
However, once it started asking,
let me see what was the question.
It started asking,
oh, shoot, I can't find it now and I can't remember what it was.
But it was a question that you would ask.
You'd be like, wow, that, I mean, is she fat?
You know, it then said, well, while she's fat,
they probably shouldn't have said that.
So it is advancing rapidly.
Now,
let me give you some things that you may not have seen, how far chat GPT has uh come and not just chat GPT but all open AI stuff.
Um
here is a guy who says I'm going to to chat GPT
uh
version four
and he's looking into the camera of the computer and he says I'm going for an interview.
Am I dressed right?
Listen to this.
Hey, how's it going?
Hey Rocky.
I'm doing great.
How about you?
I'm awesome.
Listen, I got some huge news.
Oh, do tell.
I'm all yours.
Well, in a few minutes, I'm going to be interviewing at OpenAI.
Have you heard of them?
Open AI?
Huh?
Sounds vaguely familiar.
Kidding, of course.
That's incredible, Rocky.
What kind of interview?
Well, it's for a software engineering role, but I just need to know, do I look presentable, professional?
Well, Rocky,
you definitely have the I've been coding all night lookdown, which could actually work in your favor.
Maybe just run a hand through your hair or lean into the mad genies vibe.
Your enthusiasm is what's really going to shine through.
I don't have a lot of time, so I'm just going to throw this on.
You put a goofy hat on.
Rocky, that's quite a statement piece.
I mean, you'll definitely stand out, though maybe not in the way you're hoping for an interview.
Okay, I got it.
I got it.
Hello.
Now,
that's the beginning of this.
It sounds hokey.
She sounds, you know, overacting and everything else.
By the way, I think that's the voice that
Scarlett Johansson says sounds too much like her and she's really upset about it.
We can get into the voice print thing later if he wants to, but
that's the beginning of it.
Imagine two years from now.
For instance,
remember in Star Trek, the Universal Translator?
We don't have to worry about it.
It automatically translates.
Here's OpenAI's ChatGPT 4 translating in real time.
Listen to this.
Hey, ChatGPT.
I'm here with my coworker today.
We'd like you to act as our translator for us.
So every time I say something in English, can you repeat it back in Spanish?
And every time he says something in Spanish, can you repeat it back in English?
Sure, I can do that.
Let's get this translation train rolling.
Hey, how's it been going?
Have you been up to anything interesting recently?
Well, yeah, como te ahido.
Has echo algo intellect ultimamento.
Hola, bien, si un poco cupado aquí preparando un evento para sima aque bene.
Hey, I've been good.
Just Just a bit busy here preparing for an event next week.
Can you tell me anything about it?
That sounds really interesting.
I can't say much, but I think the rest of the world will see it soon enough.
Stop.
Do you hear the terrorist attack?
That's what it was.
It was a terrorist attack, Glenn.
Yeah, I know, I know.
You'll know who I am soon.
You notice, though, even the emotion and the way it was repeated back in real time.
I told you, we're going to take a real quick break, but I told you yesterday about
a device now, a GPT device, that
you can be in a crowded restaurant, you can target a table across the restaurant, and you can say, tell me what they're saying.
And it will
try to tell you what they're saying.
If it can't hear, reduce, and you can listen to it in your ear,
reduce
the sound around the room and isolate only their voices.
What you hear, the entire room goes silent, and you just hear them talking.
And then they say,
translate that into English because they're speaking a foreign language.
And you hear their voices speaking in English.
We're entering a whole new world.
As I've told you before, by 2030, you will not recognize the world when it comes to technology.
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