Aug. 1, 2023

Absence of Trust Is a RISK - Trusting UFO News | Ep 10

Absence of Trust Is a RISK - Trusting UFO News | Ep 10

In Episode 10 of Trust Factor: One BIG Topic: - The Absence of Trust is a Risk for all of Us Some Other Recent Hot Topics:

- Do You Trust All the Recent UFO/UAP Government News Disclosures?
- A few more aspects related to the meaning of the phrase...

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Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconYoutube Music podcast player iconRSS Feed podcast player icon

In Episode 10 of Trust Factor: One BIG Topic: - The Absence of Trust is a Risk for all of Us Some Other Recent Hot Topics:

  • Do You Trust All the Recent UFO/UAP Government News Disclosures?
  • A few more aspects related to the meaning of the phrase "trust factor."
Let’s Get into the TOPICS:
  • The absence of trust is a significant risk for all of us. Trust is a foundational element in virtually every aspect of society.
  • 1. **Social Relationships Suffer**: At a personal level, lack of trust can lead to breakdowns in relationships, causing strife and discord. **Social Fragmentation**: Without trust, interpersonal relationships would struggle to form and maintain, leading to a breakdown in social cohesion.
  • 2. **Economic Activities Slow Down**: Businesses rely on trust with their customers and amongst themselves. Without it, transactions may slow or stop entirely, leading to economic stagnation or decline. **Economic Instability**: Trust is a fundamental pillar of any economic system.
  • 3. **Governance Gets Difficult**: Trust is crucial for effective governance. When people lose trust in their leaders or institutions, social order can break, leading to instability and potential conflicts. **Political Chaos**: Trust in governance and institutions is critical.
  • 4. **Decreased Innovation**: Collaboration and shared knowledge are vital drivers of innovation. Without trust, there would be less collaboration, leading to slower technological and scientific progress.
  • 5. **International Relations Deteriorate**: On a global scale, a lack of trust between nations can hamper diplomatic relations and cooperation, increasing the risk of misunderstandings, conflicts, and wars.
  • 6. **Diminished Well-being**: On a personal level, a lack of trust can lead to anxiety, fear, and stress, negatively impacting mental health and overall well-being.
  • 7. **Inefficient Systems**: Without trust, additional checks, balances, and surveillance might be necessary for systems like education, healthcare, and transportation, leading to inefficiencies.
  • 8. **Health Crises Intensify**: In the context of health, trust is necessary for effective public health strategies. For example, pandemics could become more challenging to manage without trust in health advice or vaccines.
  • 9. **Climate Change Solutions Are Hindered**: Addressing global challenges like climate change requires trust and cooperation between nations. Without trust, such cooperative efforts could falter, exacerbating global issues.


Do You Trust All the Recent UFO/UAP Government News Disclosures?


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In the episode ten of Trust Factor. One big topic this week the absence

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of trust is a risk to all
of us, and some recent hot topics

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I'm going to cover as well,
do you trust all the recent UFO,

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UAP government news disclosures, And I'm
going to talk about a few more aspects

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related to the meaning of the phrase
trust factor. And then I'm going to

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cover your lack of comments from episode
nine and why I think that happened.

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Trust Factor with Rob Greenley focuses on
all aspects to building human trust in online

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communications. Thank you for being here
with me today. The trust factor in

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your life is essential and profoundly impacts
your happiness, security, and safety.

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And as we'll find out in this
episode and a whole lot more, let's

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get into our topics this week.
The absence of trust is a significant risk

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for all of us. Now,
this may seem like a redundant topic,

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but I think this is probably the
most important Trust Factor that I've done to

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date. I think it encapsulates the
concept of what I'm trying to do with

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Trust Factor this series very well.
Because trust is foundational and it's an element

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in virtually every aspect of society.
So now while that can be maybe boring,

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or it can be thought of as
redundant to maybe what I've done in

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the past, but I'm really trying
to drive this message home. It's really

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essential for maintaining social order in our
world and personally in our lives, promoting

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economic growth and ensuring political stability,
and fostering international cooperation on a more macro

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level and more. There's so many
elements of this, I'm going to run

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through a lot of them here just
to lay that out. When trust roads

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really in these nine areas. So
I'm going to run through if you don't

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have trust in these nine areas,
you've got a problem, and it may

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be what I'm going to share here
and maybe an indication of why we're having

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so many problems in our world today. So the number one, and we've

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talked about this even back on episode
eight of this series seven eight one or

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two if you wanted to go back
and watch the topic on relationships, but

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social relationships suffer if there is not
trust, and I think that's probably obvious

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and inherent. At a personal level, a lack of trust can lead to

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a breakdown in relationships, causing strife
or discord, and also social fragmentation.

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Without trust, interpersonal relationships would struggle
to form and maintain, leading to a

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breakdown of social cohesion. People willing
to come together in communities and could become

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fragmented with increased isolation and the diminishing
level of mutual support for each other.

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And I do think that has happened
after the lockdowns that happened because of the

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recent pandemic. So I think we
have had some of these impacts happened to

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us. And I don't know that
I've talked about that here, but it's

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not so much a trust issue as
much as it doesn't bring people together.

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So number two is economic activities slow
down without trust. And if you think

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about what's happening in our world today, how we're just lacking in economic activity,

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people are losing their jobs. I
think that we're in this kind of

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this major kind of change in our
economy, our financial system, our social

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structure, and I think trust maybe
at the foundation of why we're struggling right

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now, and because economic activities,
if they slow down, that has ripple

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effects across our culture and our society
and obviously our economy. Businesses rely on

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trust with their customers and amongst themselves
because without it, transactions may slow or

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entirely stop, and that's kind of
like the flow of life for business,

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and that can lead to economic stagnation
and I hate to say, but decline

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and create economic instability, which I
think is a factor that we have in

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our world today. Trust is a
fundamental pillar of of our economic system,

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really at the core of it.
In the absence of trust, trade,

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commerce, business operations can be severely
disrupted. Just a simple example. If

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consumers don't trust a business to provide
quality goods and services, they're less likely

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to make purchases in leading to an
economic downturn. So this may have a

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foundational impact on what's happening in our
world today. And the next one is

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governance gets difficult. Trust is a
crucial factor in government and in governance,

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whether it's an institution or a leader. Right When people lose trust in their

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leaders and institutions, social order breaks
down and it leads to instability and political

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conflicts and even political chaos. And
I do think that's what we're seeing in

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our world today is political chaos.
And the question you have to ask,

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is this being driven by a lack
of trust? No matter what side of

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the political spectrum. Trust and governance
and institution is critical for societal stability.

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Without it, there could be civil
unrest. There's certainly concerns about civil unrest.

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We've had the attacks on the capital
a few years ago. A lack

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of public cooperation. We're so divisive
now. People don't cooperate with each other

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in creating laws and having some cohesion
on this, and it also creates an

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atmosphere where it's easier to potentially have
corruption. You can pull this apart and

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really think about the impacts of this
on our society, and it may be

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more related to trust than we have
even thought about. And the next one

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is decreased innovation. So as we
think about collaboration and shared knowledge are vital

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to our growth as a society and
our growth as an economy. Without collaborative

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trust, there would be less collaboration, leading to lower technological and scientific progress.

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So the next one here is international
relations deteriorate if there's a lack of

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trust in the international scale or global
scale. A lack of trust between nations

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can hamper diplomatic relations and cooperation,
increase the risk of misunderstandings, conflicts,

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and wars. Let's think about that
we're in the middle of a war with

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Russia. Now, granted it's a
proxy war through Ukraine, but nonetheless the

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world is constantly in conflict, and
you have to wonder if foundationally this is

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related to the level of trust that
exists in our human species right now.

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And the next one is diminished well
being. On a personal level, a

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lack of trust can lead to anxiety, fear, and stress and negatively impact

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our mental health and our overall health
and well being. These are things that

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have significant impact on all of our
lives, there's no question about it.

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And the next one here is inefficient
systems. So without trust, we need

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additional checks and balances and surveillance might
be necessary in systems like education, healthcare,

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transportation, and that could lead to
having some processes out there. And

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our society and our culture and our
structure and our infrastructure can lead to some

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inefficiencies. So when the next one, which will probably be pretty obvious to

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almost everybody, is the health crisis
intensifies if we don't have trust. In

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the context of health, trust is
necessary for effective public health policies and strategies

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for all of us as a society, as a culture. For example,

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pandemics right, could become more challenging
to address if we have another one,

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if trust is gone, if we
just don't have confidence, which is another

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word for trust in our healthcare system
to give us accurate and safe treatments or

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advice. I think our country here
in the US has a lot of challenges

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in this area about how we tell
people what's healthy and what's not. There's

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so much corruption and interest, economic
interests, and corporate interests behind everything that

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we do now that it may not
be in our best health interests. And

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these are fractures in our trust.
And then the last one here is climate

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change solutions are hindered as well.
If there's no trust that there's even climate

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change problem, or if there isn't
trust in the solutions to these issues,

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then I think we have a problem. I think we have a big problem.

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And addressing these global challenges like climate
change or not requires trust and cooperation

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between nations, because without trust,
such cooperation and efforts could and will likely

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falter in exasperating and making worse the
things that we're trying to solve. So

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therefore, maintaining and building trust at
all levels personal international is critical for a

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well functioning peaceful and prosperous world.
So I'm gonna that's the end of the

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first segment of the show. There's
another one coming up here, And do

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you trust all the recent UFO and
UAP government news disclosures? What I wanted

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to share is here. Over the
last week or so, the US government

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has come out and said that they
are going to release some documents about the

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information that they have about the UFO. So the Senate is moving towards words

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requiring that the government release US government
UFO records. So the Senate in the

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coming days is expected to consider a
bipartisan measure, so I guess it hasn't

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actually been signed yet, but to
consider a bipartisan measure that would compel the

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US government release these documents that maybe
they've been holding back from US or our

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top secret about possible UFO sidings after
decades of stonewalling or keeping these under wraps.

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So we have some of the major
leaders in the Senate coming forward.

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The Senate a majority leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat, has teamed up with

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Senator Mike Rownds, a Republican,
in leading an effort to force the disclosure

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of information relating to what the government
official officially calls unidentified anomalous phenomenon. We

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shall see. But this is an
interesting take. And why is this happening

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now? Is the question that I
have about all this. So I wanted

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to show another screenshot that shows another
perspective on this same topic, and it's

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from the New York Times. Check
out this headline. Quite a contrast to

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the US government saying we're going to
release official information about what's happening, and

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here's the New York Times speculating on
what information the US government has about UFOs

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and UAPs. Many military UFO reports
are just foreign spying, you know,

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like the Russian air balloons or airborne
trash. It seems like a weird topic

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for an article on this subject that
certainly is not taking it very seriously.

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And the subhead of this is forget
space aliens or hypersonic technology. Classified assessments

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show that many episodes of this in
the record have ordinary explanations. So why

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is the New York Times downplaying what
could happen here? And from what I

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gather, hypersonic technology is something that's
here already, So I'm not sure I

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believe Russia has missiles that are hypersonic. Just on the face of it,

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this New York Times article seems a
little sketchy. What is the agenda there

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of that? Is it playing into
people's fears or just skepticism. It has

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screenshots on the article from actual footage
of these airborne objects that don't look like

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they were made by us, but
who knows, maybe they were. I'm

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going to share you another screenshot.
I'm going to back this one down and

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I'm going to share another one here
about a recent conference at the National Press

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Club that is talking about this very
topic. There is an organization has been

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around for a while now, and
it's the called the UFO UAP Disclosure Project.

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This was a conference that was held
at the National Press Club in Washington,

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d C. On June twelfth,
twenty twenty three. So it was

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about a little over a month ago
that this happened, and I do have

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some video from it, but it
is Let me play a little bit.

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I can give you a little bit
of background on this. The person that

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you're going to see on the screen
here is doctor Stephen Greer, and he's

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deleting the world's leading authority on the
subject of UFOs and UAPs and advanced energy

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and propulsion system and has gathered an
extensive archive of intelligence, of compelling evidence

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on the subject of extraterrestrial intelligence and
covert government projects that are related to this

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that are being run illegally. So
he's captured this over the past thirty years,

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and he briefed the audience and had
a panel at this, but he's

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also briefed US presidents and senior government
officials about the documents and evidence that he

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has that a lot of these covert
government projects are basically black operations that not

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even our leaders in our government even
know about. So this is an interesting

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example here, and I can play
a video from it that will show you

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what I'm talking about here, So
let me pull that up. So what

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you're going to see is the National
Press Club for this conference on the Disclosure

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Project from June twelfth, and just
a quick trip through some of the previous

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witnesses. We had Sergeant Clifford Stone, he was on an NBC team nuclear

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biological chemical back in the sixties,
was actively involved in retrieving extraterustrial vehicle and

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bodies, what have you. They
were called Evan's extrastrial biological Entities. We

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have as testimonious there for anyone to
see. We have people like John Callahan,

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who is the top accident investigator at
the FAA when the Japan Airlines event

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happened in eighteen eighties during the Reagan
years, and they try to cover it

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up. He took the original fa
tracking tapes. The Disclosure Project have the

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originals, and you're welcome to see
them. Those who view in the media,

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we can try to get those two. So all of these sort of

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testimonies and witnesses have come forward already, but now we're at the stage where

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there's real utility because if official law
now is that the government has mandated the

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Pentagon, the intelligence community to research
this and report back to Congress, now

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there's problem. We'll get into a
moment with that whole process, which is

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important that you understand and particularly the
media understand. But first I want to

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tell you what we've handed off this
week to the Congress and to the White

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House and to the Pentagon Aero Office, the rooffice that's tasked with investigating this.

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So we can go through the list
of the material in the archive.

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It has government documents in the tens
of thousands from the all those countries,

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United States, Canada, Australia,
Russian, United Kingdom and others. We

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have one hundred and forty five top
secret facility, some of which are black

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sites that are named an on a
map and you'll see them in a moment.

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The supporting documentation of it are in
the archive, meaning the witnesses testimony,

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who they were, when they were
there, where the locations is sometimes

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up to where the gate is,
and that's been handed over to the United

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States government this week. There are
seven hundred fifty two and counting whistleblowers who

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come forward over the years. Some
of them are now deceased. But what's

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important, even the ones who are
deceased, if you go to their history

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and their command and what they provided, there is an investigative thread to follow

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back in very important. There are
also files with all these witness testimonies that

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have been provided up to date in
the archive or one hundred twenty one.

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We learned of another one last night
from a very high level whistleblower who is

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not ready to come forward. So
there's actually one hundred and twenty two crash

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retrieval cases of these UAPs, and
those are documented. Michael Schratt, who

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is an aerospace historian and is working
full time with US beginning in November.

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Had worked for Lockheed, but not
the skunk works on conventional operations, and

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he is doing those investigations for US. And also the beautiful illustrations of what

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these witnesses have at share, and
you will see those. Then we are

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also have the documents that include clues, names of witnesses, in other words,

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government documents that are not declassified that
we have. Now we'll get into

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this in a minute. And there
are many deep throws who provide intel in

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the background who are working with us, some of whom are very senior in

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these operations. Others are people who
have just incidentally been involved. Okay,

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next, so this is just a
thumb pictures of all these guys that we

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already have come forward. They're there
for you to see. They run from

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NASA, folks, and all that. It's in the YouTube channel, it's

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in the archive. Those were done. All these were up to two thousand

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and one. So we're talking a
long time ago, but that exists.

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It's perhaps a tree that fill in
the woods a lot of you didn't know

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about. Next, and I want
to go through this very quickly. This

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is just a scrolling list of the
witness list. Each one of these witnesses

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has a file where they have either
been interviewed or provide intelligence and corresponded with

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me, and that I have debriefed
personally over the last thirty years. So

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you're going to see this goes on
for about one hundred named persons and then

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it becomes a black list. It
just has been blacked out. Why I'm

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not holding anything back except what I've
been requested to by people whose confidence I

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have told them I will keep.
So I'm a medical doctor. We understand

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patient doctor confidentiality like an attorney understands
that. But until these guys want to

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be unmasked and come forward, we
will not disclose their names. Except the

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redacted list is something available to the
media and to the public. Now.

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On addition to that, it's very
important the unredacted list and the full files,

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including all my correspondence files, are
in the unredacted archive. It's about

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let's see, Nick, cool that
you can put terabytes on something like this.

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This is all it is, But
it's about terabyte. We have about

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eight terabytes of information. We're in
the process of scanning it and trying to

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put it into a searchable database.
This has been provided to the intelligence community,

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as I mentioned Pentagon Congress, in
the White House. It is also

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the redacted version would be available to
the media if you can help us fit

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it on a hard drive. We're
really not funded properly in Each of these

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costs several hundred dollars, so we
gave up a thousand of thements, more

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than we've ever had. But nevertheless, it is an open archive. Eventually

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we want to have it on an
Internet site. But the names that you're

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seeing now, you're going to see
all their information is blacked out, and

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it's because they've asked not to be
named. Now they can be known by

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people who are working in a skiff
and have a vault and who have the

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ability to then pursue it in the
interests of national security. That has been

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provided to these key offices. So
I just wanted to give you that as

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an overview of how the list was
constructed. It is by no means complete.

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We have a new whistleblower coming forward
every week or two now at this

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point, and Michael Stratford nod in
his head, yeah, this has become

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a torrent, and so we want
to set up a mechanism. We're recommending

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that you'll hear what our recommendations are
for the President and Congress to resolve this

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crisis. Next. So I wanted
to mention that these bases, if you

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look at them, let's go to
this is where all these illegal operations have

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happened. I'm saying illegal because we
can prove that this information as centered in

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you we said you'll hear his statement
in a moment, has been run by

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a very shadowy, deep black operation. And we're not talking the legal black

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budget of the United States. We're
talking about projects that presidents and CI directors

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and Secretaries of Defense, members of
the Congress who have a need to know

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and are clear TSSCI in skifts secure
compartmented information facilities have been blatantly either gas

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lit denied access. That is the
foundation of everything we've done is that these

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projects are a priori illegal and therefore
unconstitutional and have to be reined in because

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not doing so as a threat to
the national security. So here's your list.

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I am not going to go through
one hundred and forty five sites.

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Some of them are black sites,
some of them are basis about right Patterson

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Edwards nellis every fifty one, but
all of them are based on witness,

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testimony and intelligence we've gathered over the
last thirty years, and it's time for

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it to be disclosed. And so
now you have it. Next here's one

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and people go just go out in
the Hobbi Desert. Michael Schrett took this

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picture when it was okay to fly
near it and a prob small private plane.

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It is the site of the Lockheed
Range underground entrance. What's in there

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there are man made and this is
the big story. No one's telling you.

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A large number of the UAPs are
in fact deep black budget electrogabetic electromagnetic

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field propulsion devices based on the study
of extraterrestrial vehicles that began in the nineteen

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forties. That is a fact.
We can prove it. So when you

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see these sort of places, just
remember many of them. I want to

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be careful what I'm saying. Here's
someone who is in charge of the black

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budget of United States in twenty twenty
two and went out to the Lockey skun

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Courts based on some information he had. He was shown a bunch of old

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jet aircraft. He knew he was
being gasolate. Okay, I figured I

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played enough of that, but it
does raise some questions in my mind about

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what is going on here? What
are we being told? Is there trust

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in what we're being told? And
why would we be told? Is the

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other question seems to me like if
there is advanced technology that the government would

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like to keep it secret from us, So will we find out what's really

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going on here? And do we
trust that we're being told what's accurate?

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That's always the question here, So
I'll leave it up to you. There

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is a movie that you can see
that doctor Greer has put out that you

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might want to go check out.
It's available, i believe, on YouTube

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and a lot of the streaming video
sites right now. And it's called The

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Lost Century and How to Reclaim It
And it was put out on June sixth,

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twenty three, and it details a
lot, because I've seen it about

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the technology that has been withheld from
all of us, whether it be local

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inventors that are right here on this
earth that have come up with amazing ways

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of generating electricity out of the air. Nicola Tesla invented some methodology for creating

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electricity that has been withheld and suppressed
from our society and our world and for

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what purpose was this done? So
that's what this movie is about, and

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if you want to see it,
it's available out there. It's not being

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censored, it's not being taken down, you know. But it is something

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that you have to build trust to
be able to accept that maybe what this

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movie is telling us is accurate and
true. So I will put links in

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the show notes to all the resources
and all the things that I've talked about

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here, the National Press Club event, the YouTube video that I played for

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you. It's about three hours long. So there's a lot of information and

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00:29:00.599 --> 00:29:06.720
for some reason, the world is
changing right now. The question is do

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00:29:06.759 --> 00:29:11.559
we trust what's changing into So that's
all I wanted to cover on this big

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of the topic at this time.
But I would hope that you would trust

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me and my gut instinct on these
things. I've been doing some research on

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this. I'm not trying to play
some conspiracy hoax on you with any of

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this. I think this could be
serious, but we could be being played

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00:29:33.599 --> 00:29:38.759
though, we could be not being
told the whole truth here. That is

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00:29:38.799 --> 00:29:44.480
a definite possibility. So you kind
of have to approach this like anything else.

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Do we trust what we're being told? So the next segment of the

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show I wanted to talk a little
bit about and some of these topics are

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00:29:55.359 --> 00:30:00.079
a little redundant to I think some
of the earlier episode that I've done.

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But what I'm wrestling with this this
concept of talking about things that are similar

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but in a slightly different way,
as we look at the trust factor that

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exists in our world, in our
society today. And the first one really

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is deep diving into the meaning of
the phrase trust factor and why did I

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pick that term, what are the
implications of that term, and are what's

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the spectrum of the kind of content
and topics that I can discuss in this

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series, And really the meaning of
the term trust factor really is some key

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things here. Trustworthiness, the trust
factor itself is a phrase reflects the perceived

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00:31:00.480 --> 00:31:07.880
reliability and dependability of an individual,
organization, or entity. So when I

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00:31:08.039 --> 00:31:15.200
talk about topics like this, and
I think to some degree, this spectrum

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00:31:15.240 --> 00:31:23.599
of trustworthiness is broader than even that
by saying individual, organization and entity may

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00:31:23.599 --> 00:31:29.920
not be as big as it is, but that certainly does cover a lot

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00:31:29.960 --> 00:31:37.160
of ground. And really it's a
measure of how much confidence others have in

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their ability to act in an honest
and consistent and ethical manners. I think

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at the core that's a challenge of
our day. And the next one of

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it is decision making, So the
trust factor in decision making. Trust plays

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00:31:56.559 --> 00:32:02.759
a crucial role in the decision making
process. When there is high trust between

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00:32:02.880 --> 00:32:09.759
parties, it can lead to a
more efficient collaboration and to agreements and to

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00:32:10.240 --> 00:32:19.680
transactions. Trust can influence choices in
business partnerships, investments, and personal relationships

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00:32:19.759 --> 00:32:25.599
quite obviously. And then the next
aspect of this is reputation. The trust

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00:32:25.640 --> 00:32:35.119
factor is closely linked to reputation.
Positive reputation obviously builds trust, while a

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00:32:35.200 --> 00:32:43.480
negative reputation can erode trust. So
those are obvious concepts, and trustworthiness is

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00:32:43.559 --> 00:32:52.039
often built over time through consistent actions
and transparent communications and fulfilling promises. And

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00:32:52.119 --> 00:32:58.000
I think we all struggle with this. I think these are all things that

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as human being who can procrastinate or
can have the wrong intent on things,

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00:33:08.720 --> 00:33:19.400
can make mistakes, and thus your
reputation could be eroded by making mistakes.

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00:33:20.039 --> 00:33:24.720
But humans are not perfect either.
But trust is always there, and trust,

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00:33:24.799 --> 00:33:30.960
that trust factor is increasingly a phrase
that's coming up more and more in

334
00:33:31.559 --> 00:33:36.200
so many aspects of how I think
about the world. And then the next

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00:33:36.400 --> 00:33:45.440
one is risk assessment. The trust
factor needs to be considered when assessing risks

336
00:33:45.480 --> 00:33:52.480
that are associated with a particular situation. What's the trust rating of a particular

337
00:33:52.920 --> 00:33:59.839
situation? Say, This can help
individuals or organizations evaluate the likelihood of trust

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00:34:00.119 --> 00:34:08.760
that may be breached compromised. These
are risk assessments. Assessing the risk factors

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00:34:08.920 --> 00:34:17.039
or the trust factors can help you
determine whether to engage in something with someone

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00:34:17.079 --> 00:34:23.360
else, invest or just rely on
someone. And then the next one is

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trust indicators. Various indicators contribute to
the trust factor right These may be honesty,

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00:34:32.199 --> 00:34:39.920
transparency, competence, track record references, reviews, testimonials, certifications,

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00:34:40.000 --> 00:34:45.000
and security measures. Sounds like a
process that we all have to go through

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when we want to get a job. Trust is a big part of that.

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00:34:50.320 --> 00:34:57.000
When smary, the trust factor really
relates to the level of trust and

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00:34:57.119 --> 00:35:05.079
confidence in someone or something that has
an impact on decision making, building relationships,

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and the perception of reliability, which
may at this point be pretty obvious

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if you've watched all the episodes in
this series. Trustworthiness, reputation, risk

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assessment, and trust indicators are the
key here. So that's that segment that

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actually wraps up most of the segments
in the show today. But I did

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00:35:28.039 --> 00:35:31.920
want to talk a little bit about
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352
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353
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361
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pick this program up in any of your

369
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podcast listening platforms. It is a
couple of episodes behind on the audio side

370
00:37:22.320 --> 00:37:28.800
compared to the video side since it
is primarily a video program. So given

371
00:37:28.840 --> 00:37:32.679
that this is on YouTube, you
can like or subscribe right below. So

372
00:37:32.920 --> 00:37:37.960
get that click, those buttons and
those bells. That would be fantastic.

373
00:37:37.679 --> 00:37:40.719
So the last segment or the last
part of the show, I wanted to

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00:37:40.719 --> 00:37:46.400
talk about comments and show feedback from
episode nine or I guess might be a

375
00:37:46.480 --> 00:37:51.440
fairway say, or is the lack
of it I wanted to talk about here.

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So I think one of the reasons
that happened from last week's episode is

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because of the serious topics that I
talked about in last week episode trusting AI

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based law enforcement of human laws.
That is a concept that is coming rapidly

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to all of our lives. I
also believe that human freedoms to actually break

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the law is going to be challenged
and even social norms and laws or rules

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00:38:27.920 --> 00:38:30.840
might be a better way of saying, it may be challenged by this tech.

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00:38:30.920 --> 00:38:45.840
AI surveillance and enforcement control technology enables
enforcement of these human laws and social

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00:38:45.920 --> 00:38:51.840
norms. So that's a pretty serious
topic. I would hope that there would

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00:38:51.880 --> 00:38:53.760
be some folks that would want to
give me some feedback on that, because

385
00:38:53.760 --> 00:38:59.800
I did share some elaborate thoughts on
that. And the last topic I talked

386
00:39:00.000 --> 00:39:02.800
about, which maybe people didn't want
to talk about too much or comment on,

387
00:39:04.440 --> 00:39:08.039
was do you trust climate change?
Do you trust it as being a

388
00:39:08.079 --> 00:39:13.639
real thing or is it, as
some people say, it's an exaggeration.

389
00:39:14.760 --> 00:39:19.599
I don't doubt that there is climate
change the actual concept. This whole earth

390
00:39:19.639 --> 00:39:22.920
has been changing its climate for millions
of years. But the question gets back

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to is it being exaggerated right now
to create fear or is there something foundational

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about it. There's people that are
on both sides of the fence, and

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who do you trust. Who do
you trust to give you the accurate information?

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Who has a vested interest in driving
an agenda that's fear based around climate

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change or global warming or any of
these concepts. But I do think that

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there is climate change. There's no
question about it. The question gets back

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to really, do we trust what
we're being told about the urgency of it

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and it's potential catastrophe that is being
portrayed out there, and do we need

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to act in the next five years? Also our Earth is going to boil

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over or something like that. I
think there are exaggerations to produce an outcome.

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And so these could be the topics
that maybe you felt uncomfortable talking about.

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And I'm hoping that you will give
me feedback on all the topics that

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I have in this show, and
so I wanted to share ways that you

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can reach me to share your thoughts. So I have an email address,

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Rob dot Greenly at gmail dot com. If you have any topic ideas for

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00:40:40.840 --> 00:40:44.840
me too, I wou'd love to
hear that as well. I'm also available

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00:40:44.880 --> 00:40:49.800
on Twitter and those are two terrific
places, and you want to drop my

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00:40:50.159 --> 00:40:54.119
address down if you're listening to the
podcast, it's just Rob dot Greenly at

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gmail dot com and then my Twitter
address at Rob Greenley as well. And

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if you're interested in getting Streamyard going, I put on the screen here to

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00:41:08.119 --> 00:41:15.039
the Streamyard address. It's streamyard dot
com forward slash Rob G that's where you'll

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find that. So thank you for
joining me today in episode ten of this

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series. I certainly appreciate it.
I usually put out episodes on Mondays,

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so come back and check out the
channel every Monday. And I certainly appreciate

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00:41:31.880 --> 00:41:37.880
you being here today with me,
and thank you so much. Bye.

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Trust Factor with Rob Greenley focuses on
all aspects to building human trust in online communications.