Well, all right, ladies and gentlemen, here we are.
Blair:Martin and I are here today with our, with ourselves.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:This is, I believe, episode 82 of the secular Foxhole podcast.
Blair:And today we both have some news issues we want to cover and some.
Blair:What's some.
Blair:Martin has some bitcoin news and some
Blair:statistics about that and about our show, I think, and things like that.
Blair:But I do have some good news and some bad news, so we'll do.
Blair:Try to do a new sandwich.
Blair:Stealing that from Amy Peekoff.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:Which we hope to have her on our show one day.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:But how are you, Martin?
Martin:I'm fine.
Martin:And yourself?
Blair:You know, I'm hanging in there.
Blair:We.
Martin:Is it spring forward now? Yeah, 5 hours difference now.
Martin:So now we.
Martin:Again, they.
Blair:We already did ours here in America.
Martin:Yep.
Blair:So that's where we're there.
Blair:And that was a week or two ago already.
Martin:Yeah. And then I have to take that joke and see if we could find the original
Martin:creator of it.
Martin:But you know, Chris Brogan, that has his, for
Martin:example, my three words for the year.
Blair:Yes.
Martin:Great guy.
Martin:And he is a Batman fan.
Martin:And when he said spring.
Martin:Spring.
Martin:How to say a spring? Well, a spring forward.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:Spring forward and then fall backwards.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:But the Robin bird could be an example of spring is coming.
Martin:But then it, in the cartoon, it was Robin, you know, for Batman there.
Blair:I don't think so.
Martin:That was funny.
Martin:Okay, Robin, it's spring.
Blair:You know Chris Brogan.
Blair:Yeah, sure.
Blair:He's a very popular.
Blair:What's the word I want?
Blair:Productivity expert, maybe, if that's correct.
Martin:Yeah. And new media now is working for an app company owned by.
Martin:And I think it's funny that we talk about it.
Martin:The company name is something with Atlas or at
Martin:Leon, at Lian or something like that.
Martin:That's something to think about.
Martin:And maybe we could ask them where the name came from.
Martin:But it's a big app company, and he's working in human resources and this kind of thing.
Martin:A position there, so.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:And if he's a fellow podcaster and whatnot.
Blair:Yeah. Yes. That's off to Chris Brogan.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:But. So if you don't mind, I want to jump into my lead story, which is good news.
Blair:This is actually from last month on Reuters.
Blair:JP Morgan, State street quit climate group.
Blair:Blackrock steps back.
Blair:And this is a Reuters story by.
Blair:Oh, come on now.
Blair:Simon Jessup and Ross Kerber.
Blair:And this was dated February 15, 2024.
Blair:And it says the summary quickly.
Blair:It says, biggest firms to leave CA 100 plus group since its launch.
Blair:CA 100 plus looking to toughen stance on corporate laggards.
Blair:Hahaha.
Blair:State street sites move as a threat to its
Blair:independence.
Blair:No kidding.
Blair:Anyway, the story goes on to say JPMorgan Chase and State street investment arms on
Blair:Thursday both quit a global investor coalition pushing companies to rein in climate damage,
Blair:climate damaging emissions, while BlackRock said it has transferred its membership to its
Blair:international army, limiting its involvement.
Blair:The decisions together removed nearly 14
Blair:trillion, that's trillion with a t of total assets from efforts to coordinate Wall street
Blair:action on tackling climate change and came after the coalition known as Climate Action
Blair:100 plus or CA 100 plus asked signatories to take stronger action over laggards.
Martin:And basically, and what's a laggard is people.
Martin:Laggard means party line or.
Blair:Yeah, right.
Martin:You're not going to have a chance.
Blair:You're not goose stepping with the rest of them.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:Financial arm financial firms have faced
Blair:growing pressure from republican politicians over their membership of such groups amid
Blair:accusations that committing to shared action could breach, could be a breach of antitrust
Blair:law or fiduciary duty.
Blair:The key thing is, yes, it's a breach of
Blair:fiduciary duty.
Blair:Your main purpose as a corporation is the
Blair:fiduciary responsibility to your shareholders.
Blair:Then this stakeholder thing is another
Blair:socialist gambit to control corporations by the unknown majority are massed.
Martin:But of course, now I interrupt you Blair, go ahead.
Martin:That's good that you quoted.
Martin:And if we to joke, if we link to Reuters,
Martin:we'll see if he accepts the link.
Martin:Back in the day Reuters had problem that you
Martin:linked to their articles.
Martin:That's another story for another day.
Martin:But then for example, if you have some opinion about so called climate change because it's
Martin:changing, as we learn from Andrew Bernstein, we are not against climate change because it's
Martin:changing.
Blair:Yeah.
Martin:For the good or for the bad or what will we do about it?
Martin:But I remember some story back in the day, it was some nuns, religious people joining,
Martin:buying one share so they could go to the annual, how do you say?
Blair:Yeah, the annual shareholders meeting.
Martin:Yeah. And then starting complaining and so on.
Blair:Right.
Martin:So that's the risk also with this one, if you're on the, involved in the stock
Martin:exchanges and other exchanges and open to the public instead of being a private company.
Martin:So it's interesting how this push and lobbying groups and whatnot.
Martin:So yeah, it's all good if they back it out of that.
Martin:And of course people because this is push here in Sweden also with different funds that where
Martin:is the funds going? For example, I don't think the russian fund
Martin:isn't so popular anymore.
Martin:That was back in the day also.
Martin:So it's important for people investing or so on in different ways.
Martin:But we have something to do here.
Martin:But I see.
Martin:And now I'm rambling a bit, but I saw in a magazine called Fukus here in Sweden, they had
Martin:this story.
Martin:But then you have to be a subscriber.
Martin:Maybe I will buy the article as such.
Martin:It's like $5 to get that.
Martin:It was about this cult now around Greta Thunberg.
Martin:Now she's really, I would not say her, but she is.
Martin:But her what she is standing for in her campaign and the organization this, how we
Martin:call this, what is called this organization that this human race will be go out or
Martin:something like that.
Martin:The name is similar to that.
Martin:Extinctions or something like that.
Blair:Oh, yeah, the extinction.
Blair:I can't think of it off the top of my head,
Blair:but yes, similar.
Martin:To the show notes, but everything now around her and she's.
Martin:Maybe I shouldn't say this on the air because it will then maybe happen.
Martin:I have his magic powers.
Martin:And now please follow me along now, Blair.
Martin:It will be the Eurovision Song contest here in Sweden because they won last time.
Martin:And now it's lots of pressure that Israel shouldn't be.
Martin:Of course, Israel is not a european country, but european in soul and heart and mind, you
Martin:could say.
Martin:And they are very into Eurovision and melody,
Martin:this kind of music, same as Australia, that they want to watch it.
Martin:And they are also in the Eurovision.
Martin:Russia are not that for the moment, for
Martin:obvious reasons.
Martin:But now you have pressure that Israel
Martin:shouldn't be able to compete.
Martin:And I'm very afraid that it will be some kind
Martin:of, how should I say, attack in one way or another at this event in Sweden.
Martin:So now you know where you heard it first.
Martin:I hope they will have security and be
Martin:protected and see what's going on.
Martin:And this is what's going on with her group
Martin:that they are very against Israel for different reasons, I think.
Blair:Right, right.
Martin:And this is what is turning into.
Martin:So first is climate change against humans and
Martin:now it's against certain, you know, of humans, individuals for.
Martin:And we are, I mean, we have our stance on religion in Israel.
Blair:Yeah.
Martin:And for the secular version there also.
Martin:But yeah.
Martin:So it's something to think about what these
Martin:groups are doing.
Martin:So thanks for sharing that news, Blair.
Blair:Well, you're welcome.
Blair:But so anyway, that was pretty good.
Blair:I think that's positive news.
Blair:The companies are realizing, oh, wait a
Blair:minute, these people are death worshippers and, you know, and it's time to back away from
Blair:them.
Blair:But so that's one good thing that I've found
Blair:to report.
Blair:And now let's see the next thing I want to
Blair:talk about.
Blair:I got this from the committee to unleash
Blair:prosperity.
Blair:And this, I think, is Stephen Moore's, a
Blair:newsletter.
Blair:Stephen Moore's Forbes editor or contributor,
Blair:and I think he even ran for president here one time, some time ago.
Blair:The first story, the opening story, is the Justice Department is the worm in America's
Blair:apple.
Blair:Tongue in cheek there, because of the first
Blair:paragraph is it is a truism that in Washington, no good deed goes unpunished.
Blair:And so we have the Biden Justice Department laws, Justice Department's lawsuit against
Blair:Apple for being a smartphone monopoly.
Blair:It's like a dystopian scene from Ayn Rand's
Blair:Atlas Shrugged.
Blair:I quote in the next paragraph is, has any
Blair:invention so far this century contributed more to America's economic prosperity and our
Blair:health, safety, and convenience than the iPhone?
Blair:Steve Jobs, once seemingly utopian vision that soon nearly everyone in America on the planet
Blair:would have access to this life changing device has come to the fore.
Blair:Nearly everyone, rich and poor, has a smartphone with a price that is continually
Blair:falling.
Blair:If this is the evil work of, quote, a greedy
Blair:monopolist, unquote, we need an Apple disruptor in every industry.
Blair:And this article goes on and on about this, then it ends with this lawsuit is a toxic
Blair:assault on property rights, economic success, innovation, and our system of free market
Blair:capitalism that gives the world life changing products like smartphones in the first place.
Blair:And I want to end that segment with a quote from Harry Binswanger about this.
Blair:This is Harry Benzwanger, objectivist scholar, on a proper response to the government with
Blair:respect to their antitrust attack on Apple.
Blair:Quote, you are attacking us because we are
Blair:successful.
Blair:The flimsy excuses you offer for bringing on
Blair:the state apparatus of coercion and compulsion have been exposed many times for the
Blair:deceptions that they are.
Blair:It is not Apple but the government that forces
Blair:people to do its bidding.
Blair:Apple, like any business, can only make
Blair:offers.
Blair:The government issues commands.
Blair:If Apple's offers are not attractive to someone, he can walk away.
Blair:If anyone disobeys the government's commands, the police come.
Blair:Prison awaits.
Blair:We do not recognize your right to inject the
Blair:police between our products and those who want to buy them.
Blair:To paraphrase a famous character, quote, get the hell out of.
Blair:Get the hell out of our way, unquote.
Blair:So that's.
Martin:And the famous character is John Galt.
Blair:From Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.
Martin:And that was that.
Martin:You sent me a link to.
Blair:Jack Spirko.
Martin:Yes. The survivalist podcast or the survival podcast.
Blair:He's basically a prepper.
Blair:Yeah. Prepper, yeah.
Martin:And he talked about the John Gault, right?
Blair:Yeah. The inventor of bitcoin.
Blair:Is he like a modern day John Galt or something
Blair:like that was his.
Blair:Yeah.
Martin:And then he also talked about the bureaucrat and the thing that are doing so
Martin:called their job.
Martin:And that's what we see here, I think they are
Martin:sitting here waiting and they have to so called justify their paycheck to the voters or
Martin:whatnot.
Martin:So they go after the one that at the moment
Martin:are the most successful, the best, the best, you know, the deep pockets because Apple is in
Martin:plus.
Blair:Oh, yes.
Martin:They are not bleeding in that way, even if they are as a apple fanboy.
Martin:But I'm also critical to what Apple are doing, especially in, you could say, podcasting and
Martin:others.
Martin:And also with their fees, they decide whatever
Martin:they want to do.
Martin:Right.
Martin:They are now so strong.
Martin:So it will be even better if the market will
Martin:be even freer so more players could be on the market, like with apps and so on.
Martin:So it has come.
Martin:And that's why we're talking about new podcast
Martin:apps and modern podcast apps.
Martin:Well, yes.
Martin:So we could support new entrepreneurs and creators and capitalists.
Martin:So I think that's the thing.
Martin:But this is a pattern.
Martin:We saw that back in the day with Microsoft and the Explore browser, and then it was Google
Martin:that was behind the scene, you know, and then they got a hit of it later on, and now it's
Martin:Apple.
Martin:So this is what they are doing.
Martin:And in a way, maybe they want to crush them, but maybe it's that they want to have an
Martin:example, stationary example, and then drag it and then justify their own existence for some
Martin:reason.
Martin:Because as Pin Swenger said, we could choose
Martin:ourselves.
Martin:We don't need their command and what they are
Martin:doing.
Martin:And it's pretty.
Martin:They don't know about how it's working.
Martin:That's laughable, right?
Blair:Yes.
Martin:So that's why I'm saying the same thing.
Martin:I am now jumping with this podcasting and podcasting 2.0 and how you could apply it on
Martin:music.
Martin:I remember, what do I call it?
Martin:Long hair music.
Martin:Like soft rock or not hard rock, but play like
Martin:Twisted sisters, for example.
Blair:Okay.
Martin:And they were, in a way, a joke band, but they were playing.
Martin:But this Ed Schneider, I think his name was Tipper Gore.
Blair:I remember Tipper Gore.
Blair:Sure.
Martin:Yeah. She was very afraid about lyrics.
Martin:I have my.
Martin:I mean, own person views about certain words
Martin:and how you use them or lack of vocabulary.
Martin:Yes.
Martin:F word, for example.
Martin:For example.
Martin:Yes.
Martin:But I think you should be able to say it.
Martin:I mean, if you don't like that kind of music, you could tune out and you don't have to buy
Martin:the records.
Martin:And they have like so called warning labels.
Martin:Of course, if it's kids, I mean, it's up to the parents and whatnot, but typical.
Martin:She wanted to have that on the album, that this is advisory language or what do you call
Martin:it? Like adult language or.
Martin:Be careful about this.
Blair:Right.
Blair:Yes.
Martin:And this character as a private person, stand up in court with suit and so on
Martin:and defending, really.
Martin:It was like almost taken from the scene of a
Martin:movie, the fountainhead, I could say.
Martin:And of course, the book, beta book.
Martin:But when you saw him with his long blonde hair and this suit and tie and you know that he had
Martin:songs about that.
Martin:It's one about what you learn in school and
Martin:you should.
Martin:So called revolt and so on.
Martin:We have to add some in the show notes that you could listen to.
Martin:But that was so good.
Martin:So you have to stand up for this.
Martin:So, and regular folks have to do that also and say that this is b's.
Martin:But, yeah, I mean, it's a sign of a times.
Martin:And so we'll.
Blair:Let me, let me, Martin, let me just, I'll finish the apple if I will, or.
Blair:I'm especially saddened that my fellow, the vast majority of my fellow Americans don't
Blair:understand the difference between production and force, in other words, between business
Blair:and government.
Blair:That is, it's, especially conservatives who
Blair:are the weakest of the two.
Blair:They are pathetic nonetheless.
Blair:That's, but it's, but, you know, the distinction between production and force,
Blair:it's, in my mind, it's so basic and so simple, yet it's like the, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm
Blair:talking to a vacuum.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:And here in America.
Blair:But anyway.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:I'll wrap up my, my new sandwich with another good story, if I may, and then we can
Blair:talk about bitcoin and our staff.
Martin:So this sandwich is bread.
Martin:Bread and bread, right?
Blair:Well, no bread and some sludge.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:And then some bread.
Blair:So. And this is also from the committee to
Blair:unleash Prosperity in Maine, a citizen revolt against gas car ban succeeds.
Blair:While Biden's EPA was rolling out as his EV mandate this week, Maine Governor Janet Mills
Blair:saw her own plan to adopt California's total ban on gas car sales.
Blair:Rejected by the state's board of environmental Protection.
Blair:Now there's an ironic twist.
Blair:The board had been set to adopt the gas car
Blair:ban in December when a major winter storm and widespread power outages caused a
Blair:postponement.
Blair:Three months later, the board voted to reject
Blair:the governor's proposal.
Blair:Even though the mills appointed every member
Blair:of the board, a citizen backlash made the difference.
Blair:The Maine Board of Environmental Protection received nearly 1800 comments from the people
Blair:of Maine and nearly 84% were not in favor of this EV mandate.
Blair:Maine Senate Republican leader Trey Stewart told Fox News Maine.
Blair:Maine is far too rural with far too few charging stations.
Blair:And many Mainers are also concerned about the reliability of these vehicles in our extreme
Blair:cold weather months, unquote.
Blair:So that's, again, people, if people band
Blair:together, they can protect their freedom.
Martin:Good for them.
Martin:And I've been in a neighboring state studying
Martin:in New Hampshire.
Blair:That's right, they're here.
Martin:But I will also say that I'm for, again, the free market here.
Martin:And if your fancy is electrical car and it's not so much mess compared to a regular car,
Martin:why not? And they will be able to put up with charging
Martin:stations also, if a free market will prevail and it is possible to drive this kind of
Martin:vehicles in harsh weather also, that's for sure.
Martin:I have seen examples of that.
Martin:So let the market decide.
Martin:And over time, if a market wants to have more electrical cars, that will happen, right?
Blair:That's true, yes.
Martin:But then, of course, right now, the price compared to regular car and electric
Martin:car, pretty big difference, right?
Blair:So, yes, well, plus the Biden administration is essentially forcing
Blair:carmakers to do more ev cars.
Blair:So there's your production versus force.
Martin:Yeah, so that's a problem.
Martin:And now I wanted to say, and that could be for
Martin:some other episode here, maybe we should plunge into the history regarding the force.
Martin:I mean, in America, sadly, it was pretty early, you know, against the so called robber
Martin:barons and others.
Martin:And you said with antitrust laws and
Martin:regulations.
Martin:So America hasn't been the pioneer here in a
Martin:way.
Martin:But it's interesting, I think it was Robert
Martin:Tracinski talking about this short era that was really, you know, free, really less
Martin:affair.
Martin:Yes, that would be interesting to say how it
Martin:came about.
Martin:And also similar to the second renaissance or
Martin:the first Renaissance and also the founding, that it was this movement or opportunity
Martin:window of opportunity, but then somebody shot it or didn't protect the base.
Martin:Same thing with the founding fathers.
Martin:It would be interesting to zoom in and zoom in
Martin:on this and say who was the leading characters or individuals and why did it.
Martin:Of course, it again, philosophy, implementation.
Martin:But it would be interesting, I have this idea, the freedom ideas and individuals individual
Martin:rights and so on.
Martin:How did they come about?
Martin:Long time ago and how did they come through history and different countries?
Martin:That would be interesting to see.
Martin:Nowadays it's, and I would say positive.
Martin:It's easy to spread the good word, right? But also it's easy to spread other ideas also.
Martin:And then it's the thing for, as you said, to take it in.
Martin:And there we have again, philosophy, ideas, education, dumbing down what's happening.
Martin:But still we are receiving opportunity here, as I said.
Martin:So thanks for doing Frobie Sandwich.
Martin:I'm getting hungry now.
Blair:Hungry for knowledge.
Martin:Haha. Yeah, yeah.
Blair:Good, good.
Blair:So again, that's what I have.
Blair:So what have you got to share with us?
Martin:We could stop now.
Martin:No, we'll continue for a while.
Martin:We will try not to drag it so long.
Martin:And we know we are very open with that when we
Martin:have guests, then of course we have additional value.
Martin:An expert in the field, whatnot.
Martin:Here we are here babbling, but I think we are
Martin:adding some value too.
Martin:But now I'm rambling back and forth and now
Martin:some notes to self here in a document.
Martin:So I will start out and saying, could you be
Martin:orange pilled and a gold bug and a silver stacker at the same time.
Martin:Blair, do you think that you mean.
Blair:Be a bitcoiner and also advocate golden for gold and silver?
Blair:Yes, I already am.
Martin:And I always have a silver coin in my wallet and show that as an example.
Martin:Could I use this? And do you know what this is?
Martin:Troy ounce of silver and this measurement, because that's the historical lesson.
Martin:And it's also something that's tangible and you could hold it and you could feel it and
Martin:you could get it, hopefully.
Martin:So, yeah, I think so too.
Martin:But we will be more and more looking into bitcoin and satoshis and other things like
Martin:that and the deFi, so called decentralized financial systems, because I think it's on the
Martin:same wave relaying of our ideas and philosophy.
Martin:And we have had experts on in the field like Wechsler, Mister Wexler, David.
Martin:And we'll have hopefully a returning guest and others and a reflection here.
Martin:Blair? Yeah.
Martin:What do you say?
Blair:I'll try to get David back and also on one or two others who.
Martin:Are bitcoiners because he could really also that he could help people then over time
Martin:onboarding on this because things could happen with your what is called ledger, with your
Martin:whatever wallet, electronic wallet, with your 16 words password and whatnot.
Martin:I mean it's lots of things interview when you start dive into it and I think it should be
Martin:easier also same thing with podcasting 2.0 and new podcast apps.
Martin:Modern podcast apps and sending Satou.
Martin:She's streaming Satoshis and sending booster
Martin:girls.
Martin:It has to be easier and safe.
Martin:But it will come with guys like Sam Seti of true fans that we want to have on the show.
Martin:Also on special things about podcasting and conference and this political correctness
Martin:thing experienced and he want to talk about that and he's been great with this service
Martin:that I really think for ourselves, Blair and for fellow podcasters and for guests and for
Martin:listeners.
Martin:So truefans FM and I will include the link to
Martin:our podcast there.
Blair:Yes. Okay.
Martin:But the reflection here in August 2022 Rand's day boost number that I proposed with
Martin:221905 satoshis.
Blair:Right.
Martin:And thats Rands day rands birthday.
Martin:That time it was around $50 that I sent a
Martin:booster gram to podcasting 2.0 show.
Martin:Now its around three times that.
Martin:Yacht currency dollars I think has the value of bitcoin due to mining and interest and
Martin:demand increased.
Martin:Or is it that the fiat currency and dollars
Martin:have declined or is it both?
Blair:Well, I think one is the reflection of the other, but I could be wrong.
Martin:And when you start thinking about.
Martin:Because we want to be more orange peel and use
Martin:this now it's become more expensive with our fiat currency.
Martin:In a way that's good, in another way it's bad.
Martin:So, yeah, it's something that I've been
Martin:reflecting on.
Martin:It's time to start stacking more sats also
Martin:sets.
Martin:Yeah, yeah.
Martin:And start so called in quotation mark investing or keeping wealth in bitcoin.
Martin:But it has to be easier also.
Martin:So that's why I liked when you gave a
Martin:recommendation suggestion of sworn bitcoin.
Martin:But they have, have had some challenges also,
Martin:right.
Martin:In different states and, and whatnot.
Martin:And I've seen that on podcast apps also that it's not so easy as before to stack, how do
Martin:you say top up your electronic wallet with fiat currency because it has to be easy,
Martin:right.
Blair:Well, I think that's true.
Blair:Yeah.
Martin:I haven't had too much of a.
Blair:Problem, but yeah, we'll come back to.
Martin:That and keep in touch and talk with experts in this field.
Blair:Yes, we will.
Martin:So I think Blair, because you're paying and then the listeners could support us
Martin:with what we investing in time and money and energy on this show because we think it's fun
Martin:and we have great fun and we learn things and hopefully it will be a value for the listeners
Martin:also.
Martin:But we have to cover costs and in different
Martin:ways.
Martin:And it's so called free to listen to us.
Martin:We don't have any walled garden or pay walls whatnot.
Martin:So we believe in this value for value and donations.
Martin:In that way.
Martin:Maybe we'll have some products.
Martin:We have it already, but we don't talk about.
Martin:We have a merchandise.
Martin:You could buy the artwork that we would develop in the future in our t shirts and so
Martin:on.
Martin:So you could do that.
Martin:But I was thinking about the website and that's the secular foxhole live, right?
Martin:Yes, it's great to make.
Martin:We will do some live shows in the future also,
Martin:when we think how we could add value to that also.
Martin:But there you have an email list pop up that you have to set up there so people could keep
Martin:in touch and get app updates.
Martin:And then we have to update the modern podcast
Martin:app badges and remove some of so called, how do you call it, the old ones.
Martin:People could again and listener decide if they want to use the standard podcast catchers.
Martin:But we would prefer that we will check out new podcast apps because then you could support us
Martin:and the developers of these apps.
Martin:And then I want to give a shout out to
Martin:yourself.
Martin:Blair, you have a book recommendation in one
Martin:of your blog posts here.
Blair:I do.
Blair:I do.
Blair:Thank you for reminding me.
Martin:Outlived by Peter Attia.
Blair:Attia, I believe it's.
Martin:And it was Ian Maroney that recommended this in one of her, I think
Martin:newsletter or something like that.
Blair:Yes, she did.
Martin:So that's that.
Martin:Should we go into a bit of.
Martin:Yeah, I mentioned this about satoshis that have increased there.
Martin:So I will include Evatin.
Martin:We shown us a service called Currency World.
Martin:I think it is that you could see a satoshi and you could use different fiat currency to see
Martin:what's the value of that.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:And then we have this trust FM, Truefans FM, as we talked about.
Martin:And yeah, Spirko, he was talking about Noster.
Martin:I don't know really what that is, but I know
Martin:that one of a former person from Twitter is very for it.
Martin:But you could get satoshis in order to use Noster.
Martin:So we have to check that out.
Martin:And also gamification apps that like Fountain
Martin:app is talking about on their Twitter feeds now and then.
Martin:And also if you use fountain, you will earn status also.
Martin:So are you ready for some stats?
Blair:Sure. Go for it.
Martin:I will take a sip of tea here also.
Martin:So in a month, around 28 days, that's what
Martin:captivate is having as a cycle we have 104 unique listeners, individuals and they are
Martin:meshing it like IP and so on.
Martin:So if you're out there and change your iPad
Martin:dress or block it or whatnot and if that's okay, we don't want to have the individual
Martin:information or privacy.
Martin:Right.
Martin:But it's like this for this general statistics, but it's an IAB guidance and that
Martin:we could talk for some other time about that standard and so on and yeah, but it's a
Martin:standard of downloading and where it was 144 downloads in 28 days or roughly a month.
Blair:Nice.
Martin:So that's nice.
Martin:And at the end I will do a wrap up, a summary
Martin:of it.
Martin:Also listen.
Martin:Using Fountain.
Martin:The Fountain new podcast app is like the
Martin:latest month they're around 2%.
Martin:So we want more of these, I think new podcast
Martin:apps like Fountain and True fans as we talked about, and podcast guru and whatnot.
Martin:So we could do a list of them.
Martin:And then the Apple iOS operating system for
Martin:the phone is minority this latest month.
Martin:And also in total it's roughly about 50% and
Martin:we know that Android users are more in the world.
Martin:So various potential there more Android users.
Blair:Okay.
Martin:And then because they have the default podcast app is podcaster app, you know the
Martin:purple one on iPhones.
Martin:And still on this day I think it's no default
Martin:app on Android phone.
Martin:I mean Google was into this podcasting but now
Martin:it seems that they are more moving into so called podcasting on YouTube.
Martin:That's what they are pushing for for different reasons that we could have also have a
Martin:discussion about in the future.
Martin:So do you want to have a list of countries
Martin:here? Listen to the latest period.
Blair:Absolutely.
Martin:So then the first is United States of America.
Martin:Canada.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:Netherlands, then it's Sweden for some reason.
Martin:Then it's the United Kingdom, then it's
Martin:Australia when it's Japan, then it's Bahamas for a certain reason.
Martin:I have my guess where then it's France, then it's India, then it's Ireland, then it's
Martin:Italy, then it's Mexico, then it's New Zealand, then it's the Philippines.
Martin:And it will end here with a list of the top ten for the latest period is Switzerland.
Martin:And I have a clue of that also.
Martin:So shout out to Roland Horvat.
Martin:That's right, in Switzerland.
Martin:So thank you.
Blair:I think.
Blair:I'm intrigued by the list.
Blair:I mean Japan, France, the Philippines, those.
Martin:Yeah, and I will.
Blair:I'm touched and honored by anyone who listens to our show to be honest.
Blair:But it's it's.
Blair:It's.
Blair:This is encouraging and fun to.
Blair:To see these things.
Martin:Yeah. And in total it's now hundred countries.
Blair:Yeah.
Martin:Half about the ones that are around.
Martin:I think it's 197 or depend.
Martin:We haven't had an episode about that when we talked about the so called Palestine territory
Martin:and also the Vatican if that's.
Blair:Well, that's considered a state, so to speak.
Blair:But yeah, I don't think we have any listeners there.
Blair:Yeah, not yet anyway.
Martin:So. And then downloads in total per episodes around hundred for the latest ones.
Blair:Nice.
Martin:Like for example with the peak of.
Martin:About peak of.
Martin:So it was.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:Was it? No, it was James Valiant, right?
Blair:Yes, it was James Valiant.
Martin:And then in total, if a long list, we have one episode where I think it's Aaron
Martin:Smith. 200 plus downloads.
Blair:Sweet.
Martin:And then new listens coming and listening to old episodes also.
Martin:That's encouraging because you pick topic and so on.
Martin:That's what we will look into more.
Martin:How we could market the different episodes and
Martin:content and a regular around 70 eighties in the latest episodes.
Martin:And that's great.
Martin:And when we are talking, Blair, it's around 50
Martin:60.
Martin:Okay.
Martin:On our duo show and if we take in total downloads approaching 10,000 now that's,
Martin:that's nice and unique.
Martin:Listeners are around soon reaching 5000.
Martin:Wow, that's pretty impressive, I think.
Martin:But then it's about.
Martin:But a positive.
Martin:But compared to the big podcast is out there,
Martin:maybe they will have one our total when almost three and a half years, I think in one
Martin:episode.
Martin:But that's, you know.
Martin:Yes, I know a small percentage of the 4 million podcasts out there or the 500,000
Martin:active, I think.
Martin:But again, I see the potential here, Blair,
Martin:and I'm happy for what we have reached now.
Martin:But please, a call to action.
Martin:Tell a friend.
Martin:Listen to the secular foxhole.
Martin:So. And in summary, seven downloads per day, 50 per week, 199 per 28 days and 641 per 90
Martin:days.
Martin:Well, I.
Blair:Those statistics are heartening.
Martin:Stats, stats and stats.
Blair:That's right.
Blair:Stats, stats and stats.
Martin:Stats.
Blair:Stat stats and dam stats or something.
Martin:And now you have to be explicit.
Blair:Blair, but we can't cut sound on the air anymore, huh?
Blair:Okay.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:Well, thank you for those.
Blair:Again, those are encouraging and a lot of fun.
Blair:And I. Again, I'm honored that.
Blair:That anyone listens to our show.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:And especially for the consistent listeners.
Blair:It means a lot to me and to us.
Martin:Yep.
Blair:But otherwise I do have another, my wife and I in a mutual.
Blair:Well, I'm a friend of ours, we went to see dune two last night.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:My. I have a one word reaction.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:Yawn.
Martin:Okay.
Blair:I fell asleep during some of it.
Martin:Wow.
Blair:So the cinematography is magnificent, but the story is his books for very.
Blair:Frank Herbert's books were very dense to begin with.
Blair:And I'm not sure.
Martin:Science fiction.
Blair:It's basically fantasy science fiction.
Martin:Yes. So.
Blair:But his books are very dense.
Blair:And these is.
Blair:And I haven't read them.
Blair:So I think I read them in the night.
Blair:I read like three or four of them in the nineties.
Blair:And I think there's like 15 dune books now, which is out of control.
Blair:But the gist of the story is, I believe the movies are following the novel.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:The novels fairly close.
Martin:They're not like loose based.
Blair:I wouldn't.
Blair:I would say that they're fairly.
Blair:Fairly close.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:But it's, again, it's been since, what is it, 30 years since I read them, maybe so.
Blair:Nonetheless.
Blair:And I don't have any plans on revisiting them,
Blair:so.
Blair:But, yeah.
Blair:Go ahead.
Martin:Go ahead.
Martin:Have they done movies on.
Martin:And how do you pronounce the water that in a way, coined the phrase tan stuff.
Blair:Oh, Robert Heinlein.
Martin:Yeah. Yeah. Also freelancer.
Blair:They did starship.
Blair:Starship troopers.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:But that's the only one that I know of that they've adapted.
Blair:I would love to see a short story of his called revolt in 2100, like Netflix or Amazon
Blair:do that short story of Robert Heinlein's.
Blair:That is where a religious cult runs.
Blair:Runs the country and it's overthrown.
Martin:Okay. Yeah.
Blair:So that's a short synopsis of the story.
Martin:Yeah. Sounds interesting.
Martin:Now, we should end on a positive note.
Martin:But, you know, I watched this documentary called Armageddon about christian
Martin:conservatives in America.
Blair:Christian nationalists.
Martin:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Martin:So, yeah.
Martin:That's something to take account for the future and talk about.
Martin:But that would be interesting.
Martin:And I wonder if Scott Harder and then has
Martin:written posts and reviews about this.
Blair:I don't think you've seen it yet.
Blair:No. But keep in mind, though, the christian
Blair:nationalists are extreme minority.
Blair:I mean, I wouldn't even say they're.
Blair:I would.
Blair:I would say maybe 1%, maybe two tops.
Martin:But they're pretty loud.
Blair:They are, yes.
Blair:They do have a loud.
Blair:They do have a loud megaphone.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:But still, they're very much.
Blair:They are a minority.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:Nonetheless. But. Potential threat down the road.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:And.
Martin:Okay, but let's also give notes.
Martin:We'll wrap it up.
Blair:But we're gonna wrap it up.
Blair:That's right.
Martin:Yeah. We are here in, you know, bunkered up in the voxel.
Martin:So we are safe, right?
Blair:That's right.
Blair:At least until the bomb drops on.
Martin:Yeah.
Blair:All right, my friend.
Martin:Okay. Thanks, Blair.
Martin:And, yeah, talk to you soon.
Martin:Again.
Blair:That's right.
Blair:That's right.
Blair:Well, that's, uh, if you'll reach out to your.
Blair:Your, uh, the two that you mentioned before in
Blair:the green room.
Blair:Yeah, I will try to set that up, and I'll try
Blair:to get, uh.
Blair:I do want Andrew Bernstein back for the four
Blair:horsemen that I planned on, but, uh, we will work on that and, uh, some other things.
Blair:So, as for now, though, take care of yourself, and we'll talk again soon.
Martin:Yeah, we will.
Martin:Thanks.
Martin:Bye for now.
Martin:Bye.