Technology makes what used to require all kinds of specialized knowledge easy to do.
Take the Tom Woods Show, for example.
Stop and think about what that would have required, say, 50 years ago. I'd have needed to be in a professional studio with an engineer, who then would have taken the tape [!] and done specialized editing on it.
Getting a guest's audio looped into the studio would also have been a professional's job.
Then getting the finished product distributed to listeners all over the world? Forget it. I would have needed a contract with a radio syndication service.
Today, on the other hand?
A microphone, a computer, and the Internet take care of everything, and basic audio editing can be done with software the average person can learn in an afternoon, if not less.
This is amazing, and we should pause to appreciate it.
The technology has also made it possible for a dolt like me to run a little online store, and use basic software to do the heavy lifting every step of the way.
This is how plenty of knuckleheads are cleaning up online every single day.
Instead of really, really hard, technology has made it bonehead-proof.
This is your newbie-friendly way in to the miracle of the Internet.
Are you getting the sense that I'd like you to attend the online session we're doing on it?
Given all the demands on your time, I'm hoping this one stands out: just for attending and watching our whole presentation I'm giving you the Tom Woods Email Domination Program, which sells for $97, for $0, and I'm picking 20 of you at random to give $100 prizes to. Not too shabby.
And if we get at least 500 people to attend live?
I'll donate $5000 to Antiwar.com.
Sign up and I'll see you there: