Palantir tracks every digital transaction, IDEMIA harvests biometrics, and Allied Universal has cameras on every corner — the compliance infrastructure isn't coming, it's already here. Ron Lynch says UBI is the carrot that locks you into that stack. Without a middle class, you get feudalism with Wi-Fi; tiny homes with shared kitchens are cages with better branding. Jerremy Alexander Newsome and Dave Conley walk through what a 38-year-old's daily life looks like in twenty years under this model. The quote that sticks: "The problem with UBI is not the check, it's the chain." Ron draws the line between freedom — the ability to choose — and liberty — actually doing it.
Timestamps:
- (00:20) Surveillance stack already running – Palantir, IDEMIA, Allied Universal
- (02:31) No middle class left – feudalism returns, just with Wi-Fi
- (04:58) Tiny homes, shared kitchens – Ron calls them cages, not communities
- (08:49) Buy back meth towns – Ron's pitch for cultural villages instead
- (10:30) Three to five hours – all humans ever needed to survive daily
- (13:05) Not the check, the chain – Ron's one-line verdict on UBI
- (17:00) 38-year-old in twenty years – what daily life actually looks like
- (19:37) No collective human experience – technology breaks the last shared moment
- (20:07) Photo albums hit the table – every phone disappeared immediately
- (21:30) Freedom vs liberty – ability to choose versus actually doing it
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