Moses Itauma vs Jermaine Franklin
Will Franklin prove a solid test for Itauma?Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/shoulder-roll-virtual-boxing--6207307/support.This episode includes AI-generated content.This episode includes AI-generated content.
Shoulder Roll Virtual Boxing Podcast
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/shoulder-roll-virtual-boxing--6207307/support.
One Time vs Towering Inferno
The air in Las Vegas usually smells of oxygen and desperation, but the build-up to March 28 carries a distinct scent of absurdity. At the MGM Grand, 6’6” champion Sebastian Fundora defends his WBC title against Keith Thurman—a 37-year-old former king who has been a ghost in the division, fighting just twice in five years.The physical disparity is so comical that Thurman famously stood on a chair during the Los Angeles press conference just to look his opponent in the eye. It is a matchup that shouldn't exist by any sporting metric, yet in the "no rules" reality of the Sweet Science, name value and narrative often outweigh activity.This isn't just a fight; it’s a collision between a physical anomaly and a veteran's last-gasp gamble. We are about to witness whether the "Towering Inferno" can incinerate a legend, or if "One Time" has one more masterclass hidden in his weathered gloves.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/shoulder-roll-virtual-boxing--6207307/support.This episode includes AI-generated content.This episode includes AI-generated content.
UFOs in Control?
The architecture of the Cold War was built upon a terrifyingly simple premise: Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD). For decades, global stability rested on the absolute certainty that the nuclear "Fail-Safe"—the complex web of electronic shields, triple-redundant protocols, and hardened silos—was impenetrable. To be a missileer was to live in a state of suspended existential dread, waiting for a launch order that would signal the end of the world, while trusting entirely in the sovereignty of the machine.Yet, a growing body of declassified reports and veteran testimonies suggests that this sovereignty was an illusion. While the public imagination was fed a diet of "little green men" and pulp sci-fi, those stationed in the underground launch capsules were confronting a much more grounded, and far more unsettling, reality. They were witnessing unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) that did not merely observe our nuclear arsenal but actively manipulated it, bypassing the most sophisticated electronic defenses on Earth with a clinical, terrifying impunity.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/shoulder-roll-virtual-boxing--6207307/support.
The First AI War
The war in Iran has revealed a growing rift between Silicon Valley and the state. While companies like Anthropic have attempted to set ethical "red lines" regarding autonomous lethality—resulting in them being designated a "supply chain risk" and excluded from contracts—others, like Sam Altman of OpenAI, have "rushed in" to fill the vacuum. This race to the bottom suggests that ethics are being treated as an obstacle to be bypassed by the highest bidder.In January 2026, the Department of War released its "AI Warfare Fighter Strategy," making "maximum lethality" official doctrine. We are now standing at the threshold of a future where swarms of cheap drones autonomously hunt individuals based on statistical likelihoods. The question we must face is no longer whether we can automate war, but whether we can survive the loss of the human "friction" that once kept our most violent impulses in check. Are we truly ready for a world where the code of the machine outpaces the conscience of the man?Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/shoulder-roll-virtual-boxing--6207307/support.This episode includes AI-generated content.This episode includes AI-generated content.