Man in America Podcast

Today I’m joined by author and human rights expert Kay Rubacek for a powerful discussion on the hidden agenda behind AI and technology. Kay has spent decades exposing communism, propaganda, and the systems that strip people of their humanity—and now she’s warning that AI is doing the very same thing on a global scale. We dig into how algorithms are fueling the loneliness epidemic, why younger generations are being trained to see themselves as less valuable than machines, and how this ties into a much larger technocratic plan to control humanity itself. This isn’t just about censorship or social credit scores—it’s about a war for your soul.

Follow Kay's work at https://kayrubacek.com/

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What is Man in America Podcast?

Seth Holehouse is a TV personality, YouTuber, podcaster, and patriot who became a household name in 2020 after his video exposing election fraud was tweeted, shared, uploaded, and pinned by President Donald Trump — reaching hundreds of millions worldwide.

Titled The Plot to Steal America, the video was created with a mission to warn Americans about the communist threat to our nation—a mission that’s been at the forefront of Seth’s life for nearly two decades.

After 10 years behind the scenes at The Epoch Times, launching his own show was the logical next step. Since its debut, Seth’s show “Man in America” has garnered 1M+ viewers on a monthly basis as his commitment to bring hope to patriots and to fight communism and socialism grows daily. His guests have included Peter Navarro, Kash Patel, Senator Wendy Rogers, General Michael Flynn, and General Robert Spalding.

He is also a regular speaker at the “ReAwaken America Tour” alongside Eric Trump, Mike Lindell, Gen. Flynn.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to Man in America, a voice of reason in a world gone mad. I'm your host, Seth Hullhouse. I've talked a lot about the threat of AI and the threat of, you know, really with the bigger picture of AI, which is technocracy. It is the digital prison. It's the control grid, the system that removes our freedoms from a digital realm that controls the physical realm.

Speaker 1:

Meaning that, oh, you know, you can't buy more more meat this week because your carbon credits are used up, or, you know, you can't buy a plane ticket because you are mouthing off about the president. We've seen this actually being rolled out, you know, very, very prominently over in China, and there's lot of concern about coming here in America. Now today's discussion, though, takes a different angle with the discussion of AI. And my guest today, Kaye Rubichek, is a phenomenal woman who spent a lot of her life studying communism and brainwashing totalitarian systems. And what she's really trying to sound the alarm about now is the threat that AI has not to imprison us necessarily, but to strip us from our humanity.

Speaker 1:

Because that's a pattern she saw over and over and over again in totalitarian systems and in countries like China where the totalitarians removed people's humanity. They they stripped away their compassion, their confidence, their feelings, and turned them into slaves. And so what we're gonna be talking about today are the ways that she's suing seeing that AI is doing the exact same thing. It's causing our brains to atrophy. It's causing us to be more lonely and depressed.

Speaker 1:

And it's not just AI. It's the algorithms and the entire really, the entire AI demon or this technical demon that's being built right now. And And so we're gonna be covering that, but we're also gonna be looking at what are the solutions to get out of this? How can we escape from this? How can we go back to what it means to be human again?

Speaker 1:

And so I think I really enjoy this. It's got a little bit of a dark spin to it, but there's actually a lot of positivity and hope, Because at the end of the day, we are made by God, and computers are made by man. And I'm gonna trust my creator more than I trust the creator of these AI systems to win the battle. So please enjoy the interview with Kaye Rubichek. Ladies and gentlemen, our world is being poisoned.

Speaker 1:

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Speaker 1:

Thank you so so much for being here with us today.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it's glad I'm glad to be back. Thanks for having me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. It's been a long time. Like, last time we were talking about, your book, China's Walking Dead. Is that what it was? Correct?

Speaker 2:

Right. Who are China's Walking

Speaker 1:

Dead? Yeah. And and talking about how communism basically robs people of their souls. And today's topic is gonna be how AI and technology is, I think, also robbing people of their souls. And what led to this discussion and me even reaching out to you was, you know, I'm still a big believer in the the old print newspaper.

Speaker 1:

You know, no one can can, you know, turn me off of this. It's you can't you know, it works with no power. It's truly off grid reading. And on the cover of the opinion section, you had this article. It says billions of dollars for AI, but no clue about ourselves.

Speaker 1:

And it was just a fascinating article talking about AI, what's happening, the data the data centers, what they're doing, how that's changing the cost of energy. But going into much more importantly of how is AI affecting us mentally, and how is it stripping us from our humanity, and is that part of a larger kind of element of social engineering? So there's a lot I wanna dig into with this, but first, I'll let you kinda give us an update because you've been covering AI and shifting your focus into looking at the threat of technology to humanity. So I'll let you start there, then we'll we'll kinda dive into this article together.

Speaker 2:

Right. Yes. So I've spent last twenty five years focused on human rights, a lot about what's been happening in China since the communist party took over there. My family escaped communism three times, first in Russia, then in China where my father was born and raised and had to leave after, communism came in there, and my husband's family escaped communism from the former Czechoslovakia. So, I have this personal experience.

Speaker 2:

I've also I also spent a day in a Chinese prison cell, for advocating for human rights in China, and I got to see firsthand how things operate, how propaganda, how the systems work there, and it just opened my eyes. And I really see America as, it's the last stand here. But now from human rights, I I like I've shifted into what I call human value. And I think philosophers and and, natural scientists have been talking about this, and people of faith have been talking about this forever. It's not a new thing.

Speaker 2:

But for me, I seeing human rights degrade so much, around the world and especially after COVID and things like that here, we are at such a tipping point where human value, the the younger generations hardly know human value, hardly know their own value. They haven't grown up without being completely, drenched and soaked in algorithms and controlled by algorithms, and they've made them, extremely lonely. I I credit the loneliness epidemic to youth, for the youth on the algorithms, not so much the physical tech. You know, we we need phones and computers and things like that, but the it's the it's these and algorithms are connected to AI. So bringing up to that.

Speaker 2:

So I see AI as and the whole systems within it as a huge threat to human value. And I'm not saying I'm against technology, but we have to remember who we are. And and so that's that's what's led me here. And because of my background and understanding and studying communism and socialism, I see big connections between the two because that's what a communist system does. It devalues human humans, humanities, and the individual, and that's what we see happening through these big data systems.

Speaker 1:

And so what's interesting with this is that I've spent a lot of time focusing on AI and technology through the lens of technocracy, you know, warning people about systems like Palantir and their Gotham, and and comparing a lot of what I'm seeing being done here in America to what I've also been, you know, similarly trying to expose what's happening in China, Social credit credit scores, you know, facial recognition everywhere, people being locked out of certain zones they can't access. You know, even you see these videos of the Chinese, they're walking to enter into a different zone of, say, Beijing, and there's a face scanner, And they have to be permitted to enter into that zone. It reminds me a lot of the dystopian films that we've all seen, you know, hunger game with the zones and how different classes have different zones, but how technology is what controls that. And so I've spent a lot of my focus on warning about the digital prison, but was what what was very compelling about your article, which I wanna focus on at the next segment here, is how AI is stripping us of our humanity and and how it's leading us to believe that these AI super, you know, kinda super genius systems and tech technology are far more advanced than us humans.

Speaker 1:

And if you look at the kind of fourth industrial revolution, if you look at a lot of the atheistic perspective of human evolution, it leads to a merger of man and machine. And even if you look at what Elon Musk is doing, he's done some great things. However, I I think a lot of his great things he's doing are actually part of a larger tech technocratic agenda. Even the free speech of of Twitter, it's like, well, yeah, it's great free speech, but actually what it becomes is probably the world's most successful data harvesting system ever, especially in in pulling in the data that represents the human consciousness, you know, what triggers people, what goes viral, all these, all this other stuff like that. And so not to mention even brain chips, and that's a whole different story.

Speaker 1:

But if you look at the progression of this this system, I think that what it's done fundamentally is it's dehumanized us, and I think it's made us feel like that we're less powerful than these machines. And I think, again, the transhumanists behind a lot of these agendas, they they actually they believe that. They believe that the next evolution of man because they they believe in evolution. The next evolution of man is to merge man with machine. That's the way to achieve spiritual enlightenment is through augmenting us with machines.

Speaker 2:

Yes. I I I've let let me this is an article that I have coming wanted to find a way to express AI in a way that can help, help us understand, provide an analogy that helps us see where it fits. And, you know, we talk about the cloud and things like that, but I'm talking about as a digital body, because it's so much of it is invisible. Now the big data is what all of the systems need. It's control basically, AI is in every industry now, and it has been for at least five years.

Speaker 2:

But it's now coming to the surface because we have these systems like ChatGPT that we are training. We are training. It's not that we get free use. We are training. We are the users and the guinea pigs, providing training data for these systems.

Speaker 2:

So they need us to test this and grow their systems. So this big data has combined with with AI. So I I like to explain the the big data as in it's it's the blood of this big digital system. Data science is the brain. It is the, the technology, the, it's the data science interpreting the signals.

Speaker 2:

So it's like it's like a it's a brain that we don't see. But, the muscles and the nerves being the artificial intelligence, that's the AI. So you you think about it. The muscles and nerves are what we react to in the in the world, what we train through using these algorithms and and how we feel. That's how we're interacting with this big digital body.

Speaker 2:

And and fascia, for those who are familiar with with fascia, it's something we don't talk enough about in medicine. That's really the algorithms because it's the connective tissue, like in the human body that just connects between all the organs have fascia around them. These algorithms link everything together. It's an invisible system, but it's essential. Then we have the skeleton, which is the infrastructure and the electricity, the the the servers, the chips, the cloud systems.

Speaker 2:

And who is funding this? That's the billionaire funding. So people like Elon Musk, I call them the hormones. They're the growth hormones. They put in the money that US government is doing that too.

Speaker 2:

All the governments are doing this. And then we have the immune system, which is the regulation and ethics. So, right now, our immune system is just right down, and, and we don't have those things in place. So that's an analogy that I'm using to express the help us to visualize this big digital body that we don't see, but we interact with every single day and that controls so much of us, our decisions and influence influences a lot of our decisions, through our interactions in every industry now. And it flattens us because it doesn't see us beyond really data points.

Speaker 2:

It doesn't see us as individuals. So I think if we we need to start looking at the big picture of AI. We're looking at it as in, like, oh, there's this technology there. There's ChatGPT here. There's this company.

Speaker 2:

It seems very

Speaker 1:

Kinda fragmented.

Speaker 2:

Distributed and fragmented, but it's not. And it it's a huge digital body, and there are, people at the top that are trying to wrangle and and and direct it. But a lot of it is getting out of control, and they're they're fighting at the top levels. And we're just seeing the low level, little disputes that come out like chatty pity five wasn't good enough for these people, but great for those people. We're getting distracted by those little side arguments, but the big stuff is going on at a higher level there.

Speaker 2:

And they're seeing the big picture, and I think we need to start seeing that too.

Speaker 1:

So it's almost as if, again, obviously, there's the focus and understanding of the technocracy, the digital prison, the social credit scores. But that's, in a lot of ways, that's the low level stuff. Because with how you've described it, I think even a even Elon Musk has referred to AI as summoning the demon. And I'm not sure if you've heard that quote from him. He's talking about the threat of it and how it's you're kind of summoning a demon.

Speaker 1:

And I think that it's interesting because it's easy to look at an isolated AI such as ChatGPT or DeepSeek and look at that as an independent body or person. But what you're talking about is it's something much larger. It's this giant demon that you could say almost lives in other dimensions. Right? Because it does.

Speaker 1:

It lives in inside of a phone or inside of a piece of technology. It's like you can't see it. You can't look into it. It it's some sort of interdimensional being, you could say. But I think that when you if you were to imagine that body in other dimensions as you've discussed, what you see is you see one gigantic being that's interconnected, that has some sort of central brain somewhere, that has absolutely immense control over humanity, that can manipulate algorithms and lead to spikes in teen suicide if they want to.

Speaker 1:

It can create color revolutions in certain countries by spiking, unrest and having certain tweets or certain sentiments go viral. It can censor information, which is an obvious point. It's like, oh, okay. Well, you're researching on some sort of medical treatment. It's gonna give you just what they want you to have.

Speaker 1:

But it's so much more because what it is is what I guess, it's this this demon that they can use to absolutely control the entirety of mankind and manipulate people. So the you know, going back to the the forties and fifties, and you had Edward Bernays coming in and talking about propaganda and using the media and using advertising to control and to sway public sentiment. This is that on steroids times a billion as as some sort of centralized, really, demon. And maybe maybe it's not good to call it a demon because I guess it's it could be used for good or bad. Entity.

Speaker 1:

Right? Entity. Yes. But with the wrong people in control of it, it is a demon. It can be used as a demonic force.

Speaker 1:

But I think that, fundamentally, what's happening, though, is that it's coming at a cost of our own humanity. The what God gave all of us, our personality, our intuition, our faith, our morality, our our drive to procreate and to have families and and to protect those families, all of those things are under attack, and that's, in a lot of ways, much more frightening even than a social credit score or a digital system.

Speaker 2:

I agree. And I think another level of that, what is frightening is that we are giving that away, because we are seeing the younger generation, the the teen suicide not not just the teen. The the youth suicide rates between 2007 and 2011 went up sixty two percent, and that's between ages 10 to 24. 10 years old. It's really hard to imagine, right, as as certainly as as a parent too.

Speaker 2:

And, I mean, it's hard to remember being that age, but as a as a parent, it's just how devastating is that. These that generation has not grown up without the algorithms. They've been completely engulfed by them their whole lives. They say they are, the data shows that they are the loneliest generation ever, lonelier than than seniors who have lost all of their family. The youth are the loneliest.

Speaker 2:

And that epidemic, I don't really believe that it's just the phones or the social media. I really believe in looking at the data that it is because of the algorithms, that they that's controlling them and making them always feel that they're never good enough and the computers are better and that if they wanna succeed, they have to game the algorithm. They have to make it work within the system. So they've they've been trained to think that the only way to succeed is to game an algorithm, whether it's in a video game, whether it's in YouTube, whether it's on Snapchat. They're always thinking, I need more likes.

Speaker 2:

Oh, how do I do that? Game the algorithm. So they have limited themselves into these boxes where they're just trying to work within these boxes, and it makes them so lonely because those algorithm knows that they keep them longer scrolling when they feel insecure, when they feel, inadequate, and they feel less human. So there's no algorithms out there telling them, you are an amazing being. Your brain is much more powerful than any algorithm here.

Speaker 2:

Your single brain alone. I mean, I think it's such a fascinating fact is that what is the most powerful operating system in the universe? It is the human brain. And that's all all the scientists can agree on that. They don't even know what they're creating because they do not understand the human brain and its power and its operation and its ability.

Speaker 2:

Yet we're teaching kids that algorithms are better than them, and algorithms are such they're they're nothing compared to the power of the human brain. But I I think we're just looking in the wrong direction. And I'm not saying we need to wipe out all technology or whatever, but we should not give up our human value and our self worth for these petty algorithms, really. And but that's what we're training the kids to do right now.

Speaker 1:

And if you look at this through the lens, which I oftentimes do, because it's the only way I can make sense of it, through the lens of a battle of good versus evil, a spiritual war of God versus Satan, of angels versus demons. If you look at us as being created in God's image and what we've been given and how literally we have the most profound supercomputer in our brains, something that the scientists will never understand. And, actually, you you there's a few things I highlighted in here that one I wanted to say. It says, so if the smartest engineers on the planet still don't understand the device inside their own heads, what exactly are we trying to replicate? But also, another thing you say here I thought was very interesting.

Speaker 1:

You say that inside your skull is a living supercomputer with a staggering 86,000,000,000 neurons forming more than 100,000,000,000,000 synaptic connections. To put that into perspective, one human brain contains more circuits than all the technology on the planet combined, yet it runs on about 20 watts of energy, less power than your laptop charger. And it's like, that's amazing. But that right there, that's a threat to people that wanna have control over us. And if you look at what I one of the concerns that I have and how it's stripping our humanity, I've gone through different phases of my life of where I've worked out and I've been in really good shape and other phases where I've been much more tied to a computer and not doing a lot of things physically.

Speaker 1:

And what happens with our human body and our our brain, our memory, is that we atrophy. So if, know, you look at a farmer that was using hand tools, you know, and and going out there with, you know, you know, kinda pushing a plow behind his oxen, those farmers were in good shape. They were strong. You look at a modern day farmer that is doing everything through, you know, drones and and automation and maybe sitting in a big combine for, you know, eight hours a day, that farmer might weigh three hundred pounds. It doesn't really matter because he still gets the job done because his his body has actually atrophied into a very unhealthy state.

Speaker 1:

And so this is a concern that I have is that what happens when they've created a brain that's living on your phone or, you know, your computer that starts thinking for you? And I've seen some studies on this and showing the more people are using AI, the less creativity they have. The the weaker their problem solving ability, the less they're able to recall memories. And this is one of the concerns too is maybe it's part of the overall kind of bigger picture agenda, which actually you end the article in saying that some powerful players benefit from us believing that we are second to our machines. And so this is the thing too.

Speaker 1:

Obviously, there's the belief about the machines being more powerful, but also what happens when we start atrophying and when the younger generations, they can't even think. They can't even add simple math without pulling a calculator out. They can't remember a single phone number. And what's that doing to the human brain? Because what are they gonna be like in the future?

Speaker 1:

Say the power goes off. They they'll have no idea how to even survive. And so people that don't know how to use the most powerful tool that god gave us, our brain, those people are gonna be the first ones in line to get the government handout because they can't they can't provide for themselves because their brains don't even work.

Speaker 2:

Right. And they're not being told that their brain is powerful. In schools, their the kids are being given laptops at early ages. They're using these digital devices. They're not reading books as much.

Speaker 2:

They're listening to audio book. Like, so many of us are are switching to away from the activities that make us focus. When you read a book, you have to sit and focus. There's there's really no way to multitask while reading a book. Doing an audio book, you could walk, you could be cooking, you could have a discussion and keep your headphones in.

Speaker 2:

You're still getting getting the information in your brain, but you've gone down a level in terms of focus and cognition. So the use of the brain, multitasking is being shown to not not strengthen the brain. And focus really is the way the way what the brain can do is the since we had the fMRI scans, come out in the nineties, eighties, nineties, we've been able to see we still don't know hardly anything really about about the brain, but we've been able to see a lot more. And scientists used to think that the brain just stopped developing after 2025 and that it was just downhill from there. But even people after stroke, even people in their sixties and seventies, now we can see visually, through these scans that neuroplasticity is a real existence in every human being.

Speaker 2:

That ability to regenerate your brain, to grow it, and to form those new connections is just not it's really unfathomable when you start to dig into how powerful it is. And that is knowledge that has been taken out of the curriculum, and it's not common. Unless you go into neuroscience, you might you'll you'll study a bit of that. But even there, neuroplasticity isn't isn't a big a huge focus for them. So we've become so siloed in our, education that, people just focus on one little area, and they're forgetting the big picture.

Speaker 2:

And I think that's also with our us as human beings. When we say we value somebody, we're valuing more than just their look in that particular photo on Instagram. We're valuing them as a human being. We're valuing them more than a data point, more than a voice, more than a a word. We're able to use our brains comprehend someone in such a big way where we can see them as as a real being.

Speaker 2:

But these algorithms strip that back, and they see us as a credit score. They see us as a as a data point, as a as a as a as a number, and that becomes the blood within this larger digital body entity that we are fueling. And you can afford to lose a few blood cells in a body because of, you know, amazing regeneration. So as human beings, we get have less value to a system that sees us as simply, testers for a new AI technology or or consumers. And I know that's been happening for some time.

Speaker 2:

We've seen that with, right, the book from nineteen fifties, Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars. That that's where you start seeing the the data scientists and the mathematicians start to take a play a larger role. I like, Kathy O'Neill, the mathematician. I like her book, Weapons of Math Destruction. And she was talking in 2016 about how these algorithms are being implemented in all industries and making they're very unfair in, and they don't see humans as humans, and they don't consider our individual uniqueness and and real situations, and they make a lot of mistakes.

Speaker 2:

But those have only grown. So this is not a new thing. It's just that it's coming to the forefront, and it's extremely accelerated with a AI. So and that's that's that's what the youth yes. So people are forgetting, their value, and they are getting, they are forgetting what they how to learn, and they're just outsourcing their brains to AI systems.

Speaker 2:

And, yes, the studies there was a MIT study that showed that people are basically getting dumber by using ChatGPT. Others will say, well, you know, it depends on how you use it. Well, there's not a lot of training courses on on how to use it because they're using us as guinea pigs. So where is it going from here? Well, people do need critical thinking, but we also need critical discussions to be able to bring this up and and allow people to be part of it so that they're not just dismissed as one blood cell in the system, and then and then they're gone.

Speaker 2:

Right?

Speaker 1:

Well, I think what also is really important in the overall discussion is how they're not just replacing thinking, but they're replacing relationships. And so what started, as you mentioned, right, so 2007, 2011, you saw this huge spike in suicides. It just so happens to be, oh, yeah. That's when social media became much more prevalent, especially in the youth. Alright.

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Speaker 1:

Again, click the link in the description below. And so people became more focused on how many friends they had on Facebook instead of having three or four really good friends they saw, you know, every weekend to hang out with. And so I think that was the first step is replacing physical real relationships with the digital version where you have that connection to somebody, which, again, has its merit. I mean, it's it's you know, right now, we're building an online community, right, of of people that are preparedness minded where you can meet someone, say, who lives 10 states away that knows how to do solar installs. Right?

Speaker 1:

That that's beneficial. But we're also trying to focus on how to build these offline relationships. So you can use these tools to stay in touch and to form connections, but it's so easy and convenient to just forget about the importance of the physical. And so even which is kind of strange and worrying, but if you look at what what Elon Musk spends a lot of his time talking about on Twitter, it seems like half of his tweets are about AI, about Grok and what Grok can do and Grok Imagine and how you can now just think of a prompt, put it in, and it'll make a video for you. But when I was a kid, you couldn't do that.

Speaker 1:

When I was a kid, I had an idea, had to get a pencil and a paper out, I had to draw something and color it and learn how to create the physical version of it. Right? But I think that what's also even more alarming is that he's been sharing these AI avatars, these really scantily clad dressed kind of anime looking figures. If you listen to him talk, they're very seductive in their speech, a soft speech. And and my worry is that they're that he's kinda moving people into the place of feeling lust or love towards this AI avatar, but that will never replace the physical.

Speaker 1:

Right? I'll give a quick example. So, I think so Grace, you know, she's 19 old. Think she might have some teeth coming in. Past couple nights, she's been up.

Speaker 1:

You know, she's went to sleep, you know, with my wife, Kate, and she's been nursing all night, I think, for her comfort. And so Kate obviously has been more tired, and so I think it was last night we got to the end of the night, you know, seven, 08:00 as we're getting the kids to bed, and she was just exhausted. And she was laying on our bed, and the kids were playing. And so I sat down extra. I started rubbing her back, and it just it kind of it, like, invigorated her.

Speaker 1:

It's like, wow. This is so nice. It really woke me up. And and all of sudden, my four year old comes over, and she starts rubbing, you know, kind of massaging Kate's leg. And then Grace, you know, she wants to climb up, and she wants to do something too.

Speaker 1:

And that human connection, though, between the four of us, a computer or an algorithm will never come close to that because we know that even someone touching you can release oxytocin, and it can have these profound changes in in your hormones and how you feel. And I think that's another way, again, another part of the brain that they have no idea. How does the how does the brain regulate emotion? How does the brain experience love or sadness, and how does it convey these things? And I think it's it's another area, again, where they're trying to dehumanize us.

Speaker 1:

And I guess a lot of those this younger generation that you've talked about as being the loneliest generation, I would bet that if you were to ask them, how much of your time do you spend interacting with other human beings? It's probably a fraction of what that same aged person would have said in 1990 or or year 2000.

Speaker 2:

Yes. I think so too. And I there have been studies done on that. I can't think of any off the top of my head. But, you know, when it comes to that the the physical manifestation of the brain, right, it seems a lot of the technocrats and and people in this technology field see that as a flaw.

Speaker 2:

And and that's part of the message that the youth get and and a lot of us get is that we are flawed or we are broken or we are worthless. We are not worthy. We are not good enough. That's a false narrative. A lot of that I I trace that back to communism and socialism.

Speaker 2:

Because if you can get people to, devalue themselves, well, then it's just very easy for the state, or or another entity to, give a handout and say, we'll we'll take care of you. You know, we'll we'll we'll cover your needs. And so making people believe that they are less value than than anyone else, and we're starting to see that separation in the in different different fields where people are losing their jobs more, being replaced and feeling they can't get work. They're, everything's shifting and everyone's afraid. They're not necessarily thinking how powerful they are because a lot of technocrats have put that into the system, and it's it's just a very popular they've become icons in society.

Speaker 2:

Right? Elon Musk, others that that you've mentioned. They'll they'll look at those people and say, they're successful. They're the billionaires. Okay.

Speaker 2:

What are they doing? Ray Kurzweil's book talked about how to make a mind, and that was a real, bit of a blueprint for AI early on. But there's not talk in there about regulating emotion or about, the value of human touch and the hormones in chemical balance, the the the complementary, situation between a man and a woman, between kids and parents, those things are not talked about. And they're seen they've labeled them as failures and flaws and that AI is now that's that's where they'll say, well, you know, the human brain is kind of flawed. That's why we're making something better.

Speaker 2:

But I think it's really that they don't understand that. They couldn't crack that code. They've taken an easy way out, and it's still following the the hubris that the socialists and communists did where they think they can play god. And they're pursuing that that that they need to get something, and, well, they couldn't crack the the code to the human brain. So they're just working on one one aspect of of intelligence and trying to create these neural connections, but they're missing so much.

Speaker 2:

And there is a distinction between the mind and the brain, the soul, but it's hard to name, and it's hard for anyone to agree on that name because, it's it's so, untestable and unintangible, but but we know it's there. We we feel it. But that's been completely left out of the equation when it comes to this digital body and entity, and they're leaving that out. But I think that's a real failure. That's the real failure is that they didn't go that way.

Speaker 2:

They didn't look into where the real power is, and they've taken this shortcut to say, well, we can do these algorithms. But I don't think it's gonna get us very, very far and in a in a good in a good position, unfortunately.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. What are the solutions to this? Because I know that you're you're very solutions oriented, and I think that one of the the first things I would say is just know that we can overcome this because we are creating God's image. We're we're very powerful. We have this tool in our mind.

Speaker 1:

But for people that are seeing this happening, whether it's them themselves and they're noticing their own distractions and their own, addiction to the screen or their children or grandchildren, what are some easy practical things that people can do to start reversing this and to start pulling ourselves back into being human again?

Speaker 2:

So I wrote a book called Nowhere Left to Run, 10 Steps to Survive Tyranny Today. And in there, the the solutions from there, I wrote that three years ago, that hasn't changed. From all of my brainwashing studies and interviewing people who've survived terrible torture and brainwashing under communist regimes and reading other people's studies, Strengthening your family connections is one of the most powerful ways to prevent brainwashing, whether it's from algorithms or, media control or anything like that, knowing the people that survived brainwashing the best were the ones that had some someone in this world that was worth living for. And that's, of course, having faith in something bigger than yourself. That that that plays a big factor.

Speaker 2:

But having someone in the human world where you just know it you it's worth living for them. A a lot of the the loneliness and devalued relationships and things is because people just don't feel that they even have that person. So trying to just rebuild those connections with the family unit, it is the strongest, most powerful unit against any state, any technocracy, against anything because it it's it's the core. It was given by god. It was something that's, the first thing that the communist came to destroy.

Speaker 2:

Strengthen that family unit and just overcome overcome the differ differences and difficulties and just love your family as for for some reason you you're given that that family. So those those are things we can't control, but we we have that opportunity. And my book has 10 steps, but I'm just gonna mention another one. And, and the spoiler alert, it's number 10, and I think it's the most important, and it's confidence. You need to have confidence in whatever you believe in.

Speaker 2:

A lot of people will say, oh, I believe in this. I have faith. But then when it comes down to it, they they question. They and and you should question, but but you need to you need to stand for something, and you need to know you need to have meaning and purpose in your life. Without that, you're you're really at risk of being switched around by algorithms that you don't even know are there.

Speaker 2:

They're there every time you make a purchase. They're there every time you open your phone, through notifications, through pings, through friends, through every others feeds, they're everywhere, but you don't see them. You don't notice them. So having a purpose and finding meaning in your life, then so I was going to just put faith as that number 10, but it comes back to confidence, think, because if you you you need to have confidence in your faith, and really you can get through anything. And whatever you believe in, I I believe this is a test of faith for people of the world.

Speaker 2:

And I have a lot of confidence in my faith that, I will be able to live the best way I can, and and I will face the creator in the future. But I'm not proselytizing to anyone else. You have to find what is your faith, what is your purpose, and and that can be a a difficult thing, to face, but I I think people need to find that and then really have that confidence. And and that's a process, but and it's an ongoing process, but that they're the solutions. They're biggest solutions that I'd like to share with people through my, interviews with with all of these survivors, what I've learned from them.

Speaker 2:

My I I have a solution on my website. I run a a one minute wonder podcast. It's a micro podcast because it's one minute a day. And I like to remind people that you are awesome. You are absolutely amazing.

Speaker 2:

And I don't I don't I don't push religion or anything in there. I just wanna keep it secular for anyone and everyone to be able to see as a human being that they have value. And so it's available for free on all the all the podcast and video platforms, and you can subscribe and and, get that reminder Monday through Friday once, in one minute a day. So that's my what I'm focusing on is because we need, short pieces that we need those short reminders that our brain is amazing, that our cells regenerate, that science cannot explain, how these things work. So, how how miraculous our body and our brains are.

Speaker 2:

So there are some some some solutions that I I like to offer. For those who like to dig deeper, I think the more we are aware, and and you do such a good job through your show, Seth, just informing people. I think staying informed and helping to inform others, but being aware that those others are seeing a completely different algorithm feed to you and helping to maybe say to them, can I see your feed? What are you looking at? And, and, and take a look at that.

Speaker 2:

So, I, I have a Substack, so I I put out information once a week. I have a newsletter. People can go there and get either a detailed report or, get my inspirational newsletters. So, that's they're the solutions that I offer, and I think we all need to be, doing our best to help get through this really challenging challenging time. I think we're gonna have a difficult period for a while, and, we'll get through it.

Speaker 2:

But how it's gonna look, can't say exactly.

Speaker 1:

God only knows. Right? Also, I'll pull up your website as well, just krubachek.com. I'll put the link in the description, but it's just kay, then rubacek.com, where you have there you got your links to the one minute wonder podcast, your, mind armor, some other work that you've done as well on there. But, yeah, I'd just say, just in kind of closing in response that you the two things you mentioned, strengthen your family.

Speaker 1:

I couldn't agree more. And also have confidence. And what I thought of when you said have confidence is it's almost know yourself. Right? The old saying, know thyself.

Speaker 1:

Understand who you are. Have conviction. Decide. You know, go through a mental process. What are your principles?

Speaker 1:

What are the what are the core things that that drive you? What matters most to you? Is it family? Is it success? Is it wealth?

Speaker 1:

Is it entertainment, leisure? Is it integrity? So, like, really know know who you are. And one thing I would say too is that you're not gonna really figure out who you are on a screen. Maybe read read a good book or something that inspires you, but in my own journey, I find that I've learned the most of who I am through my real interactions, whether it's with my family, my children, reading a book, walking through the woods, pushing myself through exercising, riding a bike.

Speaker 1:

Those are the things I find that really help me feel, okay, this is who I am. Because that's the thing is that I think what they want us to do, they want to turn us into nameless binary numbers. You're just, oh, here's your number. Right? And so then we have to know exactly, no.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a number. I'm Seth Hullhouse. This is who I am. This is what I stand for. I will not abide by your system.

Speaker 1:

I will not wear your mask. I will not, you know, follow your social credit system. Right? I know who I am. So, Kaye, thank you so much for what you're doing.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for, also just the work that you're doing on your website. Mean, you've a lot of amazing work, but I think that what you're doing and what you're focusing on is extremely important. And I encourage people to check out your website, follow your work, subscribe to the Sub Stack, and get it. And also to subscribe to The Epoch Times, because there you can also find these little beautiful nuggets of of joy and wisdom that come in the form of, of nice written word that doesn't require an Internet connection to read it. So, Kaye, thank you again for giving us your time.

Speaker 2:

Thank you so much for having me. And and and if I may, just on if I may, on the confidence issue is they really adjust they don't have anything over us as individual human beings. And, really, they're just waiting for us to give up. And some people will give up, but if we don't give up, then there there is no control over over a sentient being, a human being with the power that's in our brains and our minds and our bodies. And there there is just no limit to that.

Speaker 2:

We haven't even got close to the limits of what is in a human being. So thank you for letting me share that. It's been a pleasure.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely. I hope you enjoyed that interview. I've now got a short fifteen minute interview that is absolutely fascinating. I'll be talking with a guy named Matthew Cox who was before what you could call a career criminal. He was even on the, like, the secret service most wanted list, was, you know, running from authorities for three years and spent over a decade in federal prison, but has turned things around and is now helping to fight against the crime that he had previously committed on innocent people.

Speaker 1:

So this will be again, it's only fifteen minutes, but it's a fascinating discussion with Matthew Cox. So please enjoy. Matt, it's great to have you on the show, man. Thank you for being here today.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. Thanks for having me.

Speaker 1:

So there's and I guess, you know, for for those people that watch my show, I'm oftentimes warning people about all the various threats that are out there trying to get us. You know, kind of like, I guess you could say, sheepdog. Right? Gotta protect people and say, hey. There's there's a bear coming.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna try to protect it, but you gotta know about it as well. And one of these threats that I wasn't even aware aware of until recently was home title theft. And it seems like, okay. Well, home title theft. Okay.

Speaker 1:

I understand people can steal your identity and steal your Social Security number. People can do all kinds of things. And there's, you know, the Indian scammers calling me all the time. They say, hey. You know, what's your credit card number?

Speaker 1:

That kind of stuff. But home title theft is a new area that I think a lot of people don't understand. But you come with a very unique story in so as far as that you used to be one of the people that was actually stealing the home titles. Right? And you've obviously turned your life around significantly.

Speaker 1:

But at one point, you were on, like, one of the Secret Service, you know, kind of most wanted lists, and then you spent some time in prison for it. So walk us through a little bit of that because your your story is very fascinating to me. The fact that you're sitting down with me here today and we're talking about your stories is even more fascinating.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. I owned a a mortgage company, and I ended up committing bank fraud, and I kinda got in trouble, for the bank fraud. I was placed on federal probation, and I started you know, instead of claiming bankruptcy starting over and doing the right thing, I actually started committing a much larger fraud which is title fraud or house stealing. It's got a few different names. And basically what I was doing was I could go into an area and I would find a house, someone's house, and either I would rent the house from them or maybe I would just assume that person's identity and steal their identity, go open up a couple bank accounts as them, and then refinance the house several times, deposit the money into their own bank accounts, and then pull the money out and then leave.

Speaker 3:

And that's one thing that I did over and over again. But another variation of that is I would rent the house from the person and I would just transfer the deed of the person who had rented me the house. So you rent me a house and I would go in and I would transfer the deed, file it downtown and it would transfer, take the deed, the title, sorry, title, which is also a deed, out of your name and place it in my name or the person I'm assuming. I'm using a fake identity obviously. And then I would let's say you had several mortgages on that property.

Speaker 3:

A lot of people think, oh well I've got a mortgage so I'm protected because my house is worth $300,000 and I owe roughly $300,000 so there's no real equity there, so I'm protected. I would just go obviously once again go downtown, find out that you had a mortgage with the bank, let's say the sake of argument, for Bank of America. And I would create a satisfaction of mortgage from Bank of America and I would record it on title. So now anybody that looks at the title thinks that the Bank of America mortgage was paid off. Bank of America doesn't know that.

Speaker 3:

They don't get that. They don't know anything's happened. And then I just now I'm living in the house and I've transferred the title and then I just refinance it multiple times. I would refinance it and get three or four mortgages on it, deposit that money in the bank, remove the money in cash, then leave. Sometimes I would do it in the actual homeowner's name, sometimes I do it in a fake identity's name, sometimes it'd be a synthetic identity, and I once again take off.

Speaker 3:

Now of course this is when the FBI gets involved, then the Secret Service gets involved, I go on the run. I did this particular crime for the estimates are between 15,000,000 and $55,000,000 in various different types of fraud related to this particular crime. So that's kind of my story. Eventually after three years on the run I got caught. I was sent to federal prison.

Speaker 3:

Did thirteen years. I got out and now I kind of do these educational videos talking to people because it's just amazing how many people that one, they don't know about the crime and two, they don't think it's possible. They think that their title to their home is secure. They have no idea that I can go downtown really I don't even have to go downtown. I used to have to go downtown.

Speaker 3:

You could just go online. I could go to a coffee shop right now with a computer and I could look up the title to your house. It's public records. It can't stop me from doing it. I could look at the title.

Speaker 3:

I could see that you have a mortgage on your house or two mortgages, and I could then create a satisfaction of mortgage, satisfy both of those loans. And then I could file a deed on your house to transfer the deed out of your name into a stolen identity's name. Anybody's name. I would survey homeless people and get their information, and then I go get a driver's license from the DMV in their name, open bank accounts in their name, and transfer a house into their name and then borrow multiple mortgages. You're never even notified.

Speaker 3:

You as the homeowner, you would No, no, you can't do that. They would tell me. The county clerk would tell me. You tell me how many times you've ever talked to a county clerk. It doesn't happen.

Speaker 3:

So they're not telling you, oh well my bank would know. Your bank doesn't even know that I satisfied the loan. They have no idea. So that type of thing happens and people don't even know that it's possible. So now I do public service announcements.

Speaker 3:

I work with Home Title Lock. I do commercials for them. I speak on their behalf. I do different speeches for them and interviews. Just kind of letting people know like this is the thing.

Speaker 3:

It's actually covered all the time. People send me articles all the time about how this is happening. Look, this happened with Graceland. A woman placed a mortgage on Graceland and tried to foreclose on Graceland. This was six months to a year ago.

Speaker 3:

This is happening all of the time and people are completely exposed and they have no idea.

Speaker 1:

And so let's just run through a hypothetical scenario. So say John Doe. He buys a house. He's got $200,000. He puts as a down as a down payment on, so say, a million dollar mortgage.

Speaker 1:

He puts 20% down, so his mortgage is $800,000 on this on this property. And he, you know, he so he does it through, say, Bank of America. You know, his monthly payment you know, these days with interest rates, his monthly payment's $9,000. And so what you could do is, in essence, I'll simplify it, you you can go you you you create a fake you have a fake identity. There's a million ways to get those.

Speaker 1:

You have a fake identity. You go into the the kind of clerk we do online. You transfer transfer the title over to your name. You file you kind of fraudulently represents a you know, kind of file as Bank of America submitting paper to the title office saying, this mortgage has now been satisfied. So now if you then go to, let's just say, Chase Bank and say, hey.

Speaker 1:

I want to you know, I own you know, I own this house in full. There's they they they look they look it up. They check it. Okay. Hey.

Speaker 1:

There's no liens against it. There's no mortgage out that you own this house in full. It's a million dollar property. And you say, look. You know, I wanna buy a vacation home, so I wanna take out a second a mortgage on the home for $500,000, which then and you've got your your new identity has the right credit.

Speaker 1:

You have good credit. You have bank accounts. You then get chased to lend you $500,000 against the equity of that home. You take that money. You deposit into your account, which is a fake ID, so they're not even traced back to you.

Speaker 1:

You pull the cash out. You're out of there. So then John Doe has no idea this is happening. What happens to him?

Speaker 3:

He doesn't get noted. First of all, that was a great explanation, by the way. Like like, you you got that like that. Usually, people are like, no. Like like, they wanna put up a that doesn't I don't understand.

Speaker 3:

But that was actually great. So what happens is John Doe, who is the real owner of the house even though I've transferred the deed, what happens to John Doe is he gets notified one day, starts getting letters in the mail from the the new lender saying they're foreclosing. He then maybe he ignores them because they're in somebody else's name. Maybe he does say, you know what, this is weird because this is my address but I own the house. This isn't me.

Speaker 3:

Maybe he calls and says, yeah, it's weird. You sent me this thing and he has a conversation. They say, no, no. We put a lien on that house for this other person's, this fake identity and we're foreclosing. Even if he says no that's not true, they'll continue to foreclose.

Speaker 3:

Who's John Doe? You're the old owner. All of our paperwork says this person legitimately owned the house that we gave a mortgage to and we're foreclosing. John Doe has to now go file a police report assuming that the local police department will actually accept a police report because sometimes they say I don't know this doesn't sound like this sounds like maybe it's civil. You know, like civil?

Speaker 3:

They're like, yeah, it's paperwork. It sounds like this bank made a mistake. You need to get a lawyer, a civil lawyer. But let's say they do actually file the paperwork and they investigate it and they see that there's some kind of a fraud. Well, in the meantime, the bank's still trying to foreclose.

Speaker 3:

Chase is still trying to foreclose, and you have to then go out and hire an attorney to fight the foreclosure because the police department's not going to do it. That's not their job.

Speaker 1:

And so Chase all Chase knows is we gave you half $1,000,000. You haven't made payments in six months. We want our money back, so we're gonna foreclose on the house, force its sale, and recoup our to get our money back. Right? Right.

Speaker 3:

And that's, you know, that's one version. The other version of the scam is that you the same type of situation, but instead I place the house for sale. So let's say the house is vacant. A lot of scammers now are selling the house which is a much quicker easier transaction because they can just list the house for like a for sale by owner under market value. Keep in mind they've satisfied any loans you have.

Speaker 3:

If you had loans at all, maybe you own the property free and clear. It could be vacant land, it could be a rental property, it could just be an abandoned property that you own. This happens a lot in places like New York and Chicago where somebody owns a building they had and it's vacant and someone's in their 60s or 70s and they're just they're not it's paid for. So they then list it for sale. You're not watching the property.

Speaker 3:

Maybe even they break into it and show the property. Or maybe you've got an Airbnb. Somebody just goes ahead and they end up satisfying the loan on the house, transferring the title, put it it's an Airbnb, they rented it to you so that means that I can be there and I can show people the house that I'm selling. Wow. It's not my house but I'm showing it to them.

Speaker 3:

They then turn around, it's under market value and then they buy the property because the property like you said it's a million dollar property that you think you've got an $800,000 mortgage on. You actually don't have a mortgage on it at all and now I'm offering that property for $700,000 Some investor will come in right away and say, what a deal. I'm gonna buy this for $700,000 I'm gonna sell it for 900 and make a quick $200. You have no idea. Think it's an Airbnb or it's just a rental or it's abandoned.

Speaker 3:

You don't even know it until six months later when you drive by and you see that there's improvements on the property and some two cars in the in the parking or in the driveway and you stop and go, woah, woah, woah. And you hop out and go, hey. What's going on? What's going on here? And they what are you talking about?

Speaker 3:

I I've been here six months. I own this house.

Speaker 1:

Insane.

Speaker 3:

You said the different versions

Speaker 1:

It of all makes sense. Yeah. I mean, unfortunately, it makes perfect sense. And so what does home title lock do? Where do they come into that?

Speaker 1:

So

Speaker 3:

So I get this question all the time. How can you protect yourself? Right? And here's the problem is that there there's the protection is notification. So there's nothing you can go place on your title.

Speaker 1:

You lock your deed or lock your title. Just

Speaker 3:

like you can lock your credit, right? So nobody can pull your credit. You can kind of put a lock on it. That's not really possible with public records. You can't hide your title, you can't lock your title.

Speaker 3:

What they do is Home Title Lock will monitor your title twenty four hours a day and the moment there's any change with the title, you get an email from them that says, Hey, did you just file a new mortgage on your property? Did you just get a, you know, you have a lien on that just showed up on your property or your title was just transferred. Did you just sell your property? So, you get notified right away and that's great, right? Like, let, I, that people are like, oh, that's great.

Speaker 3:

Well, it is. It is but now, what do you do? If you're somebody who doesn't really, like, you're not a lawyer, you're not a real estate attorney. So, some people like, oh, okay, that's good. The extra step, and this is what I like about home title lock, is that if something happens or has happened to your title, they'll get an attorney to represent you and they'll spend up to a million dollars to correct whatever fraud has occurred on your title.

Speaker 3:

And that's what I think is the huge difference between them and any other company that's selling a monitoring service is that they're actually an advocate on your side with law enforcement and an attorney to correct the problem. Because being notified, okay great, I don't know what to do. I'm not an attorney. You can't maneuver your way through the legal system if you are an insurance salesman. That's what you know.

Speaker 3:

You don't know legal system. And the second thing is, let's say or the third thing, let's say, if you don't what bothers me if you don't have that, do you have $50,000 to go hire an attorney to do it? No. They pay for that. That's what I think is so great about them.

Speaker 3:

They're an advocate for you that will pay until it's corrected.

Speaker 1:

I see. Okay. Makes because even if you know about it, if you don't know what to do, it it just kinda keep going. Right? Maybe you can stop it, you know, potentially, but I'm I'm assuming that these things are so confusing to me.

Speaker 1:

I mean, e even registering my car in a new state is confusing to me. I hate the process, let alone dealing with all this stuff. So okay. Well, so we've got so the website is just hometitlelock.com. As you can see, they have that million dollar triple lock protection, which they say.

Speaker 1:

So you got twenty four seven monitoring of the home's title, the urgent alerts. And as you mentioned, if title fraud should occur, our US based restoration team will spend up to a million dollars to fix the fraud and restore your title. So we have a promo code, promo code Seth, s e t h, which will get people a free title report. So that way people can see from the get go if there's been any kind of funny stuff happening with the title report. And then it just it's if you wanna sign up for it, it's just a monthly fee, and you have all that security, and you have that insurance.

Speaker 1:

So it's I mean, it's pretty straightforward process. Right?

Speaker 3:

Right. Yeah. It's very easy. And it's all US based. You're talking to a a regular US citizen.

Speaker 1:

Not some Cambodian call center.

Speaker 3:

No. No.

Speaker 1:

Well, that's good.

Speaker 3:

It's very it's a very easy system. They're very hands on. They they really do help them walk you through the whole thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, perfect. So I'll make sure that I put the information in the show description and the promo code and all that stuff. And and, Matt, thanks for thanks for hopping on here. And I I I'd love to do a longer show with you at some point, because I'd love to hear more about, like you know, we we've watched the Wolf of Wall Street and these kinds of shows and see what how that stuff works, but it's always interesting meeting someone who's kinda walked through that, but has turned things around and is doing something to help people instead of just, you know, kind of feeding off the system in different ways. So thank you for doing what you're doing.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. Let me know. I'd be happy to do it.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, Matt.

Speaker 3:

For having me on.

Speaker 1:

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