Congratz on the release! Is your book as complete as this video is? or are the chapters cut off and incomplete like the rest of your uploads?
@SonOfThor696 ай бұрын
@@BartT75 rude
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
@bartt75 what do you mean, sorry?
@BartT756 ай бұрын
@@KylaScanlon As if you haven't noticed, many of the comments on your YT Shorts are a variance of 'Why does it cut off?' This is because your shorts on youtube are end cropped versions of your tiktok videos; anywhere from 5 to 20 secs short with missing thoughts and cut off mid sentence. We take what we can get of your thoughts and observations on things, but it's consistently annoying and disappointing here.
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
@@BartT75 ohhh that's bc youtube only allows me to upload 60s videos!! the longer ones are available on every other app - that's a YT beef, sorry!
@paulhayes30266 ай бұрын
Hi Kyla, I selected your book as the required text for my undergraduate Money and Banking course. I appreciate the scope and grounded nature of the book, the tone, the illustrations, and the fresh look at this complex topic. I look forward to using your book, and supplementing it where I want to expand on some topics.
@DrSerendip5 ай бұрын
Kyla I really appreciate what you have to say. I first saw you when you were on the Prof G podcast. It is refreshing to have a young woman such as yourself helping to educate others on a topic that is frequently misunderstood, given way too much power over us, and is misused for personal or political purposes. You are absolutely correct that we have either lost agency or given it away, sometimes inadvertently. It is also problematic when the people we elect to solve the dilemmas we face are not problems but dilemmas by treating them as problems. A problem is a flat tire on your drive home, you stop, change the tire, problem solved. New problem, get the old tire repaired or replaced. But there is a solution. Much of what we are facing is defined by the media or pundits as a problem to be solved, but there is no simple solution only small changes moving in the right direction. That is the lie behind much of what we face as humans.
@harvir746 ай бұрын
Lol, I love your content so much! There are so many content creators that prolong 3-minute videos to 10 or 15 minutes but you give us real informative videos with so much stuff in a single video! Keep being amazing!
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
Thank you❤
@jamespardue3055Ай бұрын
Good Lord what a firehose of relevant pragmatic information! Whew!
@LapisGarter6 ай бұрын
I'm pumped, you're one of my favorite people
@nickpickle10796 ай бұрын
I love how you consistently find a way of conveying positive hope, even while discussing the “end of the world!” Also, ‘cacophony’ is now my favorite word!
@Dr_MoosaMDАй бұрын
I don't remember where I read this but I love it: When you're a child you idolize your parents. When you're a teenager you demonize your parents. When you're an adult you humanize your parents. My 6 year old niece was obsessed with Bluey. I see her humanizing her parents to a degree that I probably only did at 26.
@matthew253129 күн бұрын
Bluey is the way.
@niradgupta40756 ай бұрын
reality, trust, and basic sanity are losing to the dopamine industrial complex.
@michaelhaardt59886 ай бұрын
I like this version of your essay even more than the written one. It is constructive, not just descriptive, and it is beautiful. Very much so. Which means it is your step into how you describe to improve the world. Thanks for that gift. I'll try to do my share, too.
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
thank you so much
@lowrystcol6 ай бұрын
Your video was incredibly perceptive, intelligent, and refreshing in a way that's rare to find. The down-to-earth ideas you shared about the erosion of agency and trust, and the destruction of creativity, were presented with remarkable clarity and depth. Your insights into these complex issues and how we should start thinking about them were amazing. I particularly appreciated the references you used to convey your points, as they were both relevant and enlightening. Your ability to connect contemporary issues with historical contexts and philosophical perspectives was impressive, providing a comprehensive understanding of the challenges we face today. The discussion on agency and trust, backed by data and thoughtful analysis, was thought-provoking and resonated deeply with me. I truly love your work and find it not only informative but also inspiring. Keep up the excellent work, and I look forward to engaging with more of your content in the future. Thank you for sharing your wisdom and for contributing meaningfully to these important conversations.
@MrGelly706 ай бұрын
The Queen of ASMR in numbers! With the most beautiful face! ❤
@Tom-zionfinancial6 ай бұрын
Your personality is actually phenomenally refreshing amidst this intense society
@m.v.t.e.o6 ай бұрын
ANOTHER BANGER SCANLON
@Zero_Zero_Zero_Zero6 ай бұрын
How does Kyla only have 40k subs? That's crazy. It's like people don't want useful information.
@MrAmmo20216 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video.
@eaolson14Ай бұрын
My absolute favorite analysis of yours so far. Thanks, for the framing of a loss of agency, it applies to everything. Also thanks for the Bluey episode recommendation!
@Caver426 ай бұрын
Again, another great post. Easily the best content creator on KZbin. Book is on my Wishlist. Looking forward to reading.
@jacobayers91256 ай бұрын
First off, congratulations on the book! It has been really cool seeing your rise in popularity, I first came across your commentary from your GoodworkMB interview. It has been super cool seeing you interview growing figures such as Scott Galloway and showing up on my daily news source, PBS Newshour. Your point on the Portugal article rings true to my personal experience. I am a Master's Student at a high ranking university in my field of Electrical Engineering and I have accepted a PhD offer in Switzerland. I have a running suspicion that more Americans will begin to seek out opportunities outside of the U.S., this is already beginning in the tech industry after the large batch of layoffs in what people viewed as the most stable industry... For me, this decision is largely stemming from the deterioration of the social infrastructure and lack of a sense of basic civic duties to one-another in the U.S. This is compounded by clear large steps back in women's rights, voting rights, and a lack of care for the education system.
@xFayze6 ай бұрын
Always appreciate the way you verbalize concepts that are usually multi layered and hard to grasp on the first read! Btw, if you ever need thumbnail help, lmk
@johnlaverty92174 ай бұрын
Hi Kyla. I'm a big fan (and also from Kentucky!) and really enjoyed your interaction with Scott Galloway. Well done! You have so much to say and you back up what you say with the thoughtful use of facts. Please don't take this the wrong way, but slow down when you speak. I suspect you will get better at this as you get more practice. Also, count the number of times you said the word "like," and work to cut that down. I think if you do these two small things, your delivery will be much more powerful! Also, congrats on the book. I can't wait to read it.
@hamernick6 ай бұрын
Your faux locality point is making me think about how technology (infrastructure) shapes culture. Social media goes by a lot of names - content driven platforms, consumer social etc. It in many ways drives the economy since a thriving economy needs more people buying more AND more people working more. (Among other things ofc) I think a lot about how we have an overabundance of consumer tools and not enough producer tools to balance culture thats being shaped by economic infrastructure. Producing is just work. Work = relationships. If you want to produce, earn a living, build a career etc, it's about who you know. It's about talking to the right people. Relationships. Our phones have more computational ability than the computers used to put us on the moon but the majority of our screen time is being occupied by entertainment media scrollers to sell us things. Our communication is getting shaped by these tools -> tiktok wants you to post shorter form content because that means more adserve opportunity. Then Jaden Smith gets up on stage at Summit (a very expensive conference) and tells you that it's actually amazing and better that way and then goes on to advertise his Smart water company. lol? I think the next "facebook" will look much more like a flashlight or a compass than another media scroller.
@Nedumgottil6 ай бұрын
Kyla, you make my favorite video discussion pieces on KZbin. These are all videos I continue to rewatch. You have a great taste in quotes you add to the videos.
@MindFieldMusic6 ай бұрын
Congrats on the book! 🥳 Best wishes!
@lamb_2146 ай бұрын
“Eyes on the road buster!” LOL
@AndPennyThought4 ай бұрын
I have heard of trust as a thermocline; that is goes down and down until there is a sudden crash and it begins to vanish much more rapidly.
@marcosandonato99845 ай бұрын
I heard you give an interview yesterday and I bought your book. It's wonderful and I wish you all the very best.
@yummybearblue58086 ай бұрын
I just preordered your book! Looking forward to it :) . Keep up the good work
@marcgorcey81946 ай бұрын
When I was young, in the early 1970s, I used to sometimes drink too much Hawaiian Punch. My head would spin, I would feel giddy sugary pangs of ecstacy, and then I would feel exhausted and downbeat. These videos are my new Hawaiian Punch I think.
@redcoltken5 ай бұрын
Ohhh Ya!!!! You are so right!
@CJusticeHappen216 ай бұрын
Actually, I trust all these institutions. What I don't trust are people or programs who ask me questions that attempt or seem to attempt to gauge my level of trust.
@samwhitman32426 ай бұрын
I love how you describe a map of the maze of roadblocks for our society. I feel closer to a functional future for our collective.
@hannahjoanPOV6 ай бұрын
Eyes on the road buster 😂 Just pre ordered, cannot wait to read it ❤
@raulplacido14633 ай бұрын
this is my favorite video of yours, always seem to come back to it
@drama_rama_6 ай бұрын
thanks for this amazing content! i missed your videos and will preorder the book :)
@Adrian-fi7ni6 ай бұрын
Waiting for the 3 hour long video of Kyla going through a half thrown together chart showing exactly how every issue in society is related like a schizo conspiracy theorist lmao On the real though I love your work, one of the few no-nonsense content producers out there. Looking forward to reading your book when it drops! 🙏
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
Im def becoming that 😂 but thank you!!
@BougieButler6 ай бұрын
Wild how 1/2,000 words you speak is just covered in a deep southern accent. I dunno if it's just me but every so often the accent kicks and I love it because as far as I know, you're not southern at all? Anyway, I'm pre-ordering your book and I appreciate your thoughts and energy before the workday zaps it out of me.
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
im from kentucky
@BougieButler6 ай бұрын
@@KylaScanlon Oh hell yea! I'm from NC. Game recognizes game.
@dmfoneill6 ай бұрын
Trust may not be as important as skeptisism in times of change, particularly where the issues can be complex and intractable. The crucial problems are resignation and oversimplification, which can stall and thwart the search for solutions as "agency" is percieved and effected as useless.
@plateoshrimp96856 ай бұрын
It seems to me that it really is just as simple as: Increased wealth inequality means most people see their wealth decreasing and so they (rightly) have anxiety about that. They're bummed, they want their wealth to not decrease, but they don't have any means of collective action to stop it. The statement that people struggle just to struggle is a complete fiction.
@CarlosV3Dartist6 ай бұрын
Kyla great video, i got a suggestion for the hot shirt issue while recording. Throw one or two shirts (possibly flannels) into the freezer a few hours before you record, and then once you're ready, just pop one on and it will stay cold longer. if it warms up too fast you have another ready!
@athilla105 ай бұрын
Whew! A lot in this video...thanks for sharing. From "Eyes on the road, buster" to Calvin and Hobbes, I think I understood many of your points. It seemed to me like you are advocating for an individual's right to enable one's own potential.
@Poocher776 ай бұрын
Glad you are back! Looking forward to the book!
@brickexposure76796 ай бұрын
I’m just excited to have like a physical piece of information that you put together. I love books and trinkets from my faves. ❤️
@yeahlol89266 ай бұрын
One of the few channels I still listen to at 1x speed. Your book is going to do great. 15:00 it's funny how this is going on in the west at the same time as one of the most just struggles in recorded history is ongoing in Ukraine. And some certainly are struggling against it. Ukrainians are a great example of agency in this age.
@gerhardleroux22846 ай бұрын
Lovely, honest thoughts. Your bravery is inspiring.
@hhjhj3933 ай бұрын
Well before even watching the video I can say this. Me and my mom have been getting so scammed by everyone that I think it's mentally messed us both up. I just don't trust anyone, so naturally I have become very hateful to people because everyone is just an enemy scammer. I have to do everything myself which means I am always physically and mentally exhausted because in a complex world I have to learn how to do things myself. I have formed the belief that complexity needs simplicity. A complex structure is made up of smaller, more reliable, simpler structures, BUT if those small, simple structures fail then the complex structure fails. I bring that up and it sounds vague, but I notice it everywhere. Cars are insanely complex, if I can't trust someone to do an oil change, or if I can't trust the parts of the vehicle then the car is unreliable meaning I can't work, meaning other things fall apart in society. If you can't trust businesses, tradesmen, politicians, amyone then all these small parts build up and complex structures fail. If I can't maintain a household I can't produce. Also in these times I have become obsessed with simplicity if I can't trust auto manufacturers then why would I ever want to buy a car? They are complex machines and engineers constantly change them, and they constantly change parts and there is so much room for planned obsolescence. I don't trust any machine really, modern fridges don't last like 5 years... Not to mention all this stuff we have is built on exploitation. How many billions of people have to be exploited just so I can have cold food? Just so I can have chocolate? Just so I can have a washing machine? If I am in a low trust society I am forced to give up the complex in search of the simple. Why even go to college? Why even try to do anything when I know I will just be scammed and I the opportunity to climb is just a lie and an illusion? Only attractive people, and chosen people get to climb the rest of us are bullied down and exploited. There is no point even caring about the complex and instead just focusing on the BASICS.
@thephoenix215-po2it6 ай бұрын
Only thing in my head as the video plays "it's the end of the world as we know it"... ok I'll leave now
@pascalscissortail6 ай бұрын
this is so legit thank you kyla!!
@nimsbhide6 ай бұрын
Great video as always and am looking forward to buying the book! Congrats, Kyla!
@Icynova6 ай бұрын
When you do your book tour for press, you should do an interview with The Financial Diet. I’ve really enjoyed both of your content and a link up would be 🤩
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
big fan!!
@symboleyes13 күн бұрын
Have you heard the sounds of a woman giving birth strictly behind a thin, but secure wooden door? Neither have I, but I imagine it would feel something like how I presently feel every time I wake up... The shift is profound, and it'll never be something I can completely put into words--but I'll keep trying, with the help of the words you shared here. Thanks.
@CJ_Walks2 ай бұрын
I am so so curious what your media consumption / brain food looks like! Wicked sharp intellect! Will definitely check out that book!
@f.b.65696 ай бұрын
Waiting is trusting. Genius
@ezyryder116 ай бұрын
Coffee price index is the only stat to watch. Thanks for the video!
@davidguerrero16365 ай бұрын
You have really helped my anxiety thank you
@tomburton60576 ай бұрын
Kyla, Insurance increases are not inflation, it is a tax. You cannot opt-out unless you want no car, no house, no healthcare. For one, auto insurance companies are experiencing increased claims, even if there was no inflation. The price would have to go up regardless of inflation.
@SweeshFeesh6 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Really enjoy the insight
@todorkolev75655 ай бұрын
got here from Prof G media. People need more content that is genuinely informative and not just "This is why USA will crash next week:..." (every week)
@backbay22426 ай бұрын
Not only post truth, but post competency.
@gmosworld6 ай бұрын
Kyla always providing the word salad for my daily greens
@swaggitypigfig84136 ай бұрын
“What is money?” 🤔 that’s a thing in monopoly isn’t it?
@f.b.65696 ай бұрын
Kyla, you're astonishingly bright and quick - a source of wonder and inspiration. What's your take on the success of podcasts? What is this TYPE of medium doing to our sense of agency?
@hsscha6 ай бұрын
congrats on the book!
@redcoltken5 ай бұрын
OMG....I just realized ... She has the same vibe as Buckminster Fuller!!!!!
@flakeyjay6 ай бұрын
All ready pre-ordered! Wishing you the best!
@Theripper32136 ай бұрын
What is the way to preorder the book that helps you the most?
@ajw99aАй бұрын
Good stuff. Thanks.
@DD636706 ай бұрын
I’ve recently been studying the difference between monetary and fiscal policy effects on the economy and thought to ask you a question. Which do you think is more powerful in our economy? Do you think monetary policy is still the all powerful tool that many believe it to be or do you think fiscal policy is overtaking it now? Perhaps just a combination of both? I listened to a recent interview with Lyn Alden, who has an interesting book called Broken Money that just came out that I think you might like, and she argues that we are shifting from a monetary dominate economy to a more fiscally dominant economy where fiscal policies have more of an outsized effect than monetary policies do. What do you make of this? And are there any good books or resources on this topic that you know of? I’m reading more on it, but I don’t always know where the best places to look are. And thanks for your work, I plan on picking up your book when it comes out.
@supersleepygrumpybear6 ай бұрын
I like Lyn until I don't. She is one of the most well-spoken financial communicators, but she ends up peddling commodities like any other gold/bitcoin bull. Soooo- I look at the monetary/fiscal policies with a grain of salt; I do enjoy Jeff Snider and her arguing their own take on the Eurodollar (I miss Emil, was never the same without him), and so I usually think about money in terms of international collateralization, and, more importantly, the power of the pension systems (between the Japanese Pensions and the American Firefighters Pension: you're talking about trillions of dollars~ trillions that gets traded as derivatives for low-risk returns). Overall, I don't think those things matter as much as we imagine. 2007 and the GFC marked the turning point, when Europe and Japan were caught holding useless debt form an oversaturated American housing market, and modern policy decisions are still trying to make up for the erroneous mistakes that were made back then. That's why, as Emil said back in the Eurodollar University days, we are in a "Silent Depression." One where economists can never admit to the capital D word. But now, where are we at today, well for perspective, the Great Depression ended in 1933, but, if I were to ask my grandma (RIP), I'm guessing she would say it lasted until the 50s; but still, people were living with the trauma, the hunger, so the Great Depression never really ended; just as the Great Financial Crisis never ended~ Thanks for reading 😅
@beancount8113 ай бұрын
Next book - 'Cacophony for Buster'.🥸
@ypey16 ай бұрын
Its impressive how much she can talk
@cetriyasArtnComicsChannelАй бұрын
I'm going to have to look into your archive but wanting to watch a video on student loans and art and creativity as an industry vs expression
@Zeitgeist90006 ай бұрын
Loved this thank you
@jayk35516 ай бұрын
Your book better have pictures. I can't read books without pictures... and it better have pop up art that moves when you pull a tab or something like that.
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
It has SIXTY ILLUSTRATIONS!!!!
@Aerik6 ай бұрын
@@KylaScanlon Silly question, I have the audible version on Preorder, will it come with a companion PDF or the like with the illustrations?
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
@@Aerik not a silly q, it will have a pdf!
@M-Wulff6 ай бұрын
Getting your book for my kid so he knows how society works...
@quasarlgq6 ай бұрын
The video is great! Would be amazing if you could link or a name in the description all the interviews you mentioned. They sound so interesting but I want to keep watching the video instead of pausing and searching for them
@henryfield156 ай бұрын
Thank you
@ammaraliasghar64476 ай бұрын
Kyla I think you coining a new pronunciation of the word cacophony will not fly like the term Vibecession. Thanks for the video. You are awesome!
@BillPetrovas5 ай бұрын
Question. More context would be appreciated about self and what's behind the scenes that drive your opinions and perspectives. Look forward to the book. Enjoy the humility. More people need to say " We don't know ". Less fear mongering will help with anxiety. Whitney Webb and Candace Owens are other young women worth taping into. More perspectives the better.
@gregorybryon98516 ай бұрын
If anyone mentions Bluey I’m gonna listen to
@ridif6 ай бұрын
Great content and poignant indeed. New Philosopher Magazine #43 has an issue on Wealth and an in depth interview with Samuel A. Chambers .. I'd be interested in hearing your views on his take on money. Another interesting perspective is found in the book ' Discourses of Trust ' ( Palgrave 2013 ).. selections by linguists and discourse analysts studying the phenomenon of trust through language use. Here too .. I'd be interested in hearing your perspective on their contribution. Congrats on 'VIBECESSION' as a new lexical entry ! Am looking forward to reading your book.
@effingfawkes6 ай бұрын
24:37 Why are you apologizing for getting excited?
@FinancialFIRE-Fighter6 ай бұрын
Very refreshing
@lostlandmarks83055 ай бұрын
Fantastic 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@billySquanto6 ай бұрын
Their world is ending! Who's world is it next? 🤔
@frankb13 ай бұрын
I thought it was a pretty good commercial.
@Iradeedub6 ай бұрын
hey, that's TODAY
@tomaszmycielski65886 ай бұрын
Book kindle version when?
@samwhitman32426 ай бұрын
“ kuhkoffuhnee “
@paulwilk28546 ай бұрын
Was this video A/B tested in regards to the title? I clicked through on the one with the negative title if it was...
@KylaScanlon6 ай бұрын
Sure was
@Apollo10386 ай бұрын
Book on audible?
@quantumcrypto646 ай бұрын
"Knowledge disguise does understanding"🤯🤩 Can you expand on that ?🤔
@TakunaNuva6 ай бұрын
knowledge disguised as* understanding. the idea is that just because you've looked something up, and you now know it, you don't necessarily yet understand it
@quantumcrypto646 ай бұрын
Information disguised as knowledge. I don't know that you can call Something knowledge if doesn't have the understanding component
@TakunaNuva6 ай бұрын
@@quantumcrypto64 I think you're using the terms differently to how they were used in the video. My takeaway from it was that "knowing" and "understanding" just represent different depths to which something is understood. For example, if you study for a test, you may learn enough to be able to answer the questions. In this sense, you know a lot of facts, but you may not have delved into the subject deeply enough to say you really "understand" it. I believe that's what's being said anyway.
@matt.stevick6 ай бұрын
Hello 👋🏻
@brianmurphy53136 ай бұрын
Good talk 👍👍 I'm a supporter of RFK Jr. In quick, random order, here's some of my reasons for supporting RFK Jr... -genuinely wants to heal the 'culture war' divide in our country, and he has the ability to, being liked by many different 'types' of people from across the spectrum of issues and ideas, who are tired of the 2-party duopoly -calm, humble, has integrity, has courage, truth seeker in general, thinks for himself (not a DNC/RNC puppet) -not phony -incorruptible, cannot be bought or bullied -thoughtful and introspective -deeply considers problems and possible solutions -vocal about the corruption of 'Citizens United' and the power of the big private money controlling government -vocal about putting an end to corporate capture over government (pharma, banks, oil, military industrial complex) -wants to get us out of 'forever wars' and to pull back on and expose the corruption within the military industrial complex -wants to pull back NATO and resolve the Ukraine problem via negotiations -vocal about the dishonesty and agendas of commercial media -wants to abolish all pharmaceutical advertisements on television (this has major influence on the 'news' narratives) -wants to keep the pharmaceutical industry honest with safety testing, transparency, etc -wants to get rid of government assist crony capitalism and subsidies for big ag, oil, etc -advocate for civil liberties -vocally against censorship (will free Snowden and Assange on 'day 1') -against mandates and police state-like policies -classical liberal sensibilities with respect of others (without the 'woke' or fake identity politics) -vocal commitment to transparency regarding FBI, CIA, NSA over-stepping and out-stepping -passionate about environmental and ecological concerns -passionate about investing in regenerative farming practice -passionate about cleaning our food supply and exposing the unhealthy ingredients in processed 'foods' -wants to bring preventative health more into public discourse; nutrition, exercise, etc -will immediately close the border (this is not some republican scare issue, it is a very major issue - for many reasons) -will send the necessary Asylum Judges to the border to expedite the process for legal migrants -has an excellent plan to make homes affordable for all, including a program that backs mortgages at 3% and a tax structure to keep Black Rock from continuing to buy everyone out (this also will bring rent costs down dramatically) -due to his family/background, he's well-learned from the inside of the various power structures -due to his decades as an attorney successfully taking on major corporations, as well as government regulatory corruption, he is exceptionally well-suited for taking on the myriad of corporate capture over our government *I wrote the list above many months before Oct 7, 2023. I should add, especially directed towards my brothers and sisters of the populist 'left' and populist 'right', 'progressives', 'libertarians', and people who are just antiwar, in general... -RFK Jr. is in support of Israel (as am I). However, this in *no* way means he isn't also in support of helping the innocent people within Gaza. RFK Jr. has always been very aware of the conditions for the people within Gaza, and is especially aware of, and feels deep heartache for, the Hell they are living in now. As President, he is a person who would do all he could to help seek lasting peace and prosperity for all in the region -although RFK Jr. is a supporter of Israel, he is not a fan of Netanyahu, and has said repeatedly that he would *not* be writing him a blank check with American dollars to do with as he wishes -there is no one who would fight harder or more tirelessly to reach out to everyone involved, as well as to leaders outside of the region, to try to negotiate and implement a sustainable peaceful solution for both the Israelis and the Palestinians. RFK Jr. would bring many ideas and a commitment to approaching the problem there from several different angles, and involving several other players. In fact, he would have been doing this before Oct. 7. (Simply yelling 'apartheid', 'genocide', etc is *not* in service of an actual *solution* - ask Hamas) -and unlike anyone from the 2 major parties who supports Israel, RFK Jr. would never be lead by the corrupt (and disgusting) sheer financial interests of the Military Industrial Complex when it comes to *any* of America's foreign policy; including with Israel
@_rongos_6 ай бұрын
What a word. Ka-kaw-funny
@symonym724 күн бұрын
I'd like whatever Kyla ingested prior to recording this plz.
@spencerjames94176 ай бұрын
Did your TikTok get hacked
@bennyadrianmartinez6 ай бұрын
I feel like the audience for these messages are not universal and are aimed at middle class folks who’re too wrapped up in social media and their “struggles” of not having enough EXTRA resources. Greed is the cause of all this BS.
@bennyadrianmartinez6 ай бұрын
Ought to be*
@Tzeentch99996 ай бұрын
Do you ever take a breath Kyla?
@brianmurphy53136 ай бұрын
Do you sometimes dissociate?
@hawaiiguykailua69284 ай бұрын
Well, we're certainly spending it like it's our last night on the town ever. We're not even hiding it, hell we're sending out vites to get in on the cash grab before the nights over. I mean, doesn't this $5mil Bugatti I just paid for (with your great great grandkids ice cream money) while in Paris look good on my ass? Party on, the nights almost over -Global Controllers. In other news, "reality" is fake anyway, you're just a harvest farm to us😏
@chris2ferUtoob6 ай бұрын
I don't know. This period of history feels different than any in human history. We seem to be approaching the point where Technology turns on the human. Every upcoming technology has a very dark aspect to it. Capitalism is clearly failing as wealth is gathered up from the bottom 99 percent and the top 1 one percent seems hell bent on not giving it back. So Capitalism, as we know it, is going to die shortly. That alone will bring about tremendous instability. Add that to the fact that humans now have technologies to wipe out every living organism on earth and you really get the sense that we are about to hit The Great Filter behind Fermi's Paradox. This moment we are in is actually the calm before the storm. I see nothing but dark clouds ahead. I hope I am wrong.