so walk us through. hey, fred. this is a big day yesterday. when we got this document. we learned a lot, frankly. and you almost never get this level of transparency. these are documents that the doj wanted to keep secret. thankfully it was released yesterday with some redactions. remember the timeline here. this was the warrant application that they submitted to get permission to search mar-a-lago. that came months after the national archives had already gone to mar-a-lago to retrieve 15 boxes of information that former president trump voluntarily turned over. voluntarily. once they looked in those boxes, they were alarmed with what they found and here is why. look at these numbers, fred. 67 confidential documents. 92 that were marked secret and 25 marked top secret going in ford from the least serious to the most serious. not only that, fred, this affidavit that we finally got to look at yesterday, it gave us new details about the classification markings on some of th
for those people on board. my heart and prayers goes out to them and their families right now. what a terrifying story and terrifying experience. i note last year, it was reported one such excursion run by oceangate costs upwards of $250,000 for a group of guests to take that submersible the 2.4 miles down to where that infamous titanic wreckage lays. and, you know, notably and cbs sunday morning piece six years ago as a submersible titan was under construction. the oceangate founder said by the time we re done testing it, we believe it s pretty much invulnerable. the reporter chip reed noted at the time, that s pretty much what they said about the titanic. it is my understanding that there is a safety feature of this submersible which means that in the event of an emergency, it will automatically float up to the surface. obviously, as details emerge, as the developments of the
shadow self and that s when you got all of this weird and disturbing stuff, i wonder, obviously this hasn t been rolled out to the public. you re testing it, and microsoft says this is good, we re going to create guardrails, but my concern about this is if you are somebody who wants to be convinced to do something terrible to yourself or others, could you theoretically push this chatbot far enough to help convince you to do that. is that the real concern here? yeah, that s certainly one of them. i mean, before this encounter i had concerns about this ai search engine, right, because we have seen in testing that it s not always factually accurate, that it sometimes gives people the wrong facts and there is danger in that certainly, especially if you re using it for searching for information about a medication or something, but this new category of worry that i have since this conversation is exactly that. it s that users will be manipulated, that the ai even
that s one of jesse s favorites. and do your obs own research. my wife s favorite, calm down. i say a lot of these. i just read the list. i reject the premise of that question, that last line. everything happens for a reason. say it to my wife. welcome to my world. that s basically my tagline. then it s all good. so you re super annoying? i m annoying. you do and peter go back and forth with these? because he s british he comes up with sayings i ve never heard before, but they re usually charming. the one about trust the science, i learned something over the weekend from listening to adam grant s podcast. oh, my god. i listen to podcasts. not just trust the science, but the scientific method. if you keep testing it, you might come up with a different answer. smart. thank you. that s why i listen to podcasts.
they now know that there is more free money. they are not changing the system at all. so dana knows my daughter. she is 17 looking at colleges right now. a high school senior. so they have this perception that college is going to be free. it s not. someone is going to be on the hook for that. bill: it could be the most expensive executive action in history some believe. congress didn t score it. the wall street journal said it s great to be king. it is for king charles. he doesn t have to do anything. joe biden, our president, should not be acting like a king and not be able to make decisions like this and why you are going to see court challenges here because it is just too expensive and with inflation as it is, this will only exacerbate the inflationary environment. dana: 42.4 million people are eligible for relief. they aren t means testing it. no, they re not. that s a great point. yes, there are people in this