0:00
They're giving away crack pipes.
Adam curry Jhansi Devora
0:05
February 10 2022. This is your
award winning get my nation
0:08
media assassination episode
1424. This is no agenda straight
0:14
out of quarantine. broadcasting
live from the heart of the Texas
0:18
hill country here in number six
in the morning, everybody. I'm
0:21
Adam curry
0:22
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where we've got a heat spell
0:26
probably hit at Jhansi Dvorak.
0:33
That's nuts, man, we just think
about it. You're gonna hit 80.
0:35
And we're at 31.
0:38
Yeah, well kinda raise the
warming. Yes, indeed. Here.
0:43
I typically wouldn't mention
this never really have done in
0:47
the 15 years have been doing the
show, but it's relevant today. I
0:51
caught the Cuf Yeah. You better
mask up, John. I'm breathing on
1:00
your right now.
1:03
You got that? Cuf?
1:05
I did. It's very hard. Yeah,
this was unexpected.
1:10
We were talking about over
dinner last night, I was eating
1:13
it with J and she has taught me
and Mimi was on the phone. We're
1:17
discussing the fact that when J
caught it this last time, she
1:21
spent most of her time like, you
know, in close proximity to me
1:26
and it was still kind of odd. I
never got it. I may have had it
1:31
as a as a what do you call it?
You know, flu, flu? Just it
1:36
would be known as demand demand.
Demand.
1:41
Let me just tell you my
experience real quick. Yes,
1:43
we're listening. Monday night or
Tuesday morning like three I
1:48
wake up. I'm sweating. I got I
have my back hurts. Like,
1:53
whatever. Oh, yeah. Then I got
up Tuesday morning. And now like
1:58
I don't feel good. And I'm
running a fever. Like, they
2:01
really now I have this. No
problem with taste or smell
2:05
throat not itchy, but totally
flew feelings off. This is so
2:11
obvious. I had hair pain if you
ever had hair pain. Where the
2:16
like, if you touch
2:17
I've never even heard where you
touch your scalp. Now in your
2:21
case, I can see it happening.
2:23
You touch your scalp and every
follicle hurts. Oh, maybe that's
2:27
just me. So what do you do in
that case? Right away, bam. Pop
2:33
that blister pack Verto kit to
the rescue. So I spent Tuesday,
2:39
kind of lethargic. Yesterday. I
even slept during the day I
2:43
watched the entire third series
of Lost in Space. Totally can
2:47
recommend. Like, Hey, man,
anyone who grew up watching lost
2:52
in space will appreciate this.
But you should watch I grew
2:56
up watching the original losses.
Yeah, but you shouldn't. I don't
2:59
know if I ever really liked it
because that guy who played the
3:02
evil character. Yeah. Dr. Smith,
there was yeah, there was
3:06
something about it was one of
those things where you're
3:09
constantly screaming at the TV.
Can't you see that? This guy's a
3:14
bad guy.
3:16
He was also extremely gay ish.
3:19
You think?
3:22
So that's played by Parker
Posey. She's really good. So
3:25
female Dr. Smith anyway. Um,
3:29
and she's played evil characters
in movies before she's good.
3:32
So I I keep I got a fever. I
just it's a low grade fever like
3:36
100 100.5 101 kind of varying
back and forth. I really only
3:41
took Advil once. Like think
Tuesday morning since then. Not
3:46
really it's like I let my body
fight it and I woke up and of
3:49
course I had more night sweats
and last night I woke up for an
3:53
hour before I get up anyway.
drenched and shivering to really
3:57
today no fever. I got aches but
not horrible stomach's a little
4:02
wishy washy and then like the
hair pain is gone. I think the I
4:09
think this Verto kit probably
averted all disaster.
4:15
But you may have been on your
way to averted averting disaster
4:20
with or without the kit. You
know
4:22
that but it was fun to do. I'm
like, Alright, emergency Yeah.
4:25
But open discussion.
4:28
The ivermectin pills in the in
the blister pack. Have a very
4:33
pleasant taste.
4:35
Oh, well. No one's reported on
this. They pink you know, your
4:40
pills before you eat? No,
4:41
no, you put I put it in my mouth
and immediately it starts it
4:44
started to taste.
4:47
Huh? Yeah. Well, you won't let
this put it this way. At least
4:51
you won't have worms. Yeah,
exactly. So I'm sorry it had to
4:59
happen. that episode.
5:01
Um, yeah, well, me too. But on
the other hand, you know,
5:05
natural immunity would be nice.
That's cool to have.
5:10
And take a test.
5:11
Today I get a couple tests in.
And I'll know for sure.
5:18
Yeah, you may have just had a
random poof Yeah,
5:21
I don't put much faith in the
tests at all.
5:26
Was nice had the test on record
because then you can make Well,
5:29
yes,
5:30
that's my point. That's why I
have six tests coming. I'm just
5:33
gonna keep trying until I do
like get one. Record. Yeah, of
5:38
course. It's exactly what I
want. And Tina, you know, she's
5:41
like, Alright, I'm not gonna
kiss you. But she's not unless
5:45
you want me to quarantine she
said from now. Oh, so she
5:52
coasted through it. She hasn't
had it. And I think we went out
5:56
to dinner and sat at the bar
5:58
of Well, fine Monday night to
get dissolute life, the way I
6:01
see it. dissolute. Yeah, that's
what I always say. I can we
6:05
haven't gotten because I don't
leave a dissolute life. That's
6:08
what
6:08
that would be me. She sees it
work amongst the public for four
6:13
times a week. Yeah. And she's
she's been in the public since
6:17
you know, after the original
salute
6:20
life. That's the problem. Does
meet Raj the drinking. Oh,
6:24
rousing. That's me. That's me.
Yeah, that's what I said.
6:29
Okay, it makes total sense. Ah,
anyway. So if anything else
6:36
happens, I'll report it. I am
weary though fatigued and weary.
6:40
But long COVID No, please don't
get me started with any of that.
6:45
Everyone I hear is like, Oh, my
God took me two weeks before I
6:47
felt better my people months,
because, you know, we got a
6:52
Nashville meetup coming up on
the 14th.
6:56
So Oh, yeah, that's right. I'm
gonna go by then you already
7:00
find seems to be sound good,
John, but I will be part of it
7:04
as John. John, the guy was on
his deathbed. Still sounding
7:09
good.
7:10
But in general, that's why I
said typically, I don't say I
7:14
feel like crap. We just do the
show. So no, and I don't think
7:19
I've ever missed a broadcast in
40 years. So Anywho. There's a
7:24
lot to talk about today. Because
it's over. They've capitulated,
7:29
the the retreat has been blown,
I guess.
7:35
We'll of course the Canadians,
as we've talked about in this
7:38
show, occasionally, but at least
my take on history is that the
7:43
big difference between the
Americans and the Canadians is
7:45
that when we get into a jam, we
start shooting. Yes, without
7:50
asking and revolting. And when
the Canadians get into a jam,
7:55
they start complaining, yes. And
they do it so well that it
7:59
eventually wears down the enemy.
8:01
I have a like a one minute
report which sums up I think,
8:04
where we are in quite nicely the
state of emergency north of our
8:07
borders and autos from ABC,
8:09
with protests over COVID
restrictions that bridge from
8:11
Detroit into Canada still closed
in one direction, as some
8:14
provinces set to scale back
COVID rules, Travolta's there in
8:17
Ottawa. Good morning, Trevor.
8:20
Good morning, George. So it's
about 10 degrees Fahrenheit
8:22
right now in Ottawa. And if
anything, these protesters have
8:25
simply further settled in, they
brought in a whole lot more
8:27
signs of support. Here we've
seen people repeatedly picking
8:30
up their food from food stamps,
they brought in porta potties to
8:33
and in fact, we've seen some
people drying their hand wash
8:36
clothes on a makeshift
clothesline between these
8:38
vehicles. Not to mention all of
those spin off demonstrations
8:41
that are happening elsewhere.
The Ambassador Bridge still shut
8:43
down from Detroit heading into
Canada that is a major lifeline
8:46
for trade. We're talking about
hundreds of millions of dollars
8:48
a day. And these demonstrators
say they are ready to be out
8:51
here until all of Canada's
COVID-19 mandates and
8:54
restrictions are lifted. In
fact, some provinces are walking
8:58
back some of their policies,
Alberta is now lifting their
9:00
vaccine passport mandate.
Saskatchewan is going to be
9:03
doing the same thing on Monday
and they're also looking at
9:05
lifting their indoor mask
mandate to but Canadian
9:07
officials insist they're not
making these changes because of
9:10
the demonstrations. They say
they're able to do it because
9:12
the vaccines are working cases
are going in the right
9:15
direction. And these policies
have served their purpose.
9:18
There it is. We did it
everybody. You can thank us
9:20
later. The vaccines are working.
You're free to go. Or not yet.
9:26
They will be so Bogut IV. Hey,
did I lose you already? Dude,
9:37
bro, that Hello? Yeah, you were
gone. You were silent.
9:45
They had to reboot the thing. A
clear feed.
9:50
Did you hear the clip? Yeah.
Okay. Respond.
9:55
Couple of things. One, uh, they
kind of soft pedaled it yeah our
10:01
news coverage of this is a big
deal
10:04
yeah well that
10:07
was the American news coverage
soft petals it because we don't
10:10
want to give anyone any ideas
10:12
well it's it's it's twofold I
think the right now everyone is
10:17
starting to live mandates you
know we we have oh stay with the
10:20
truckers for a moment but I
think that this is going to be
10:23
used now in Canada as well but
you know, they really have to
10:27
remove everything and all things
and they continue both Canadian
10:32
and US media just continues to
to spread the memes the one that
10:38
that we caught that you actually
educated everybody on with the
10:42
so called Freedom convoy. Yeah,
that wasn't an isolated incident
10:46
the so called
10:47
Freedom convoy north of the
border, so called Freedom convoy
10:50
in Ottawa, so called the Freedom
convoy, the so called Freedom
10:54
convoy, a so called Freedom
convoy, and the so called
10:57
Freedom convoy episode called
Freedom convoy, the so called
11:00
Freedom convoy, the so called
Freedom convoy so called Freedom
11:04
convoy of so called Freedom
convoy he self described freedom
11:07
convoy
11:08
self described I think is
actually valid you can use that
11:13
Yeah, I think you can but you
shouldn't use any of it because
11:17
they're if you call it the
freedom convoy in your in it Why
11:20
are you calling so called Yeah,
it doesn't make any sense self
11:24
described as your rewrite.
Unfortunately you can get away
11:27
with that
11:28
but you actually said that using
this as a very bullcrap
11:33
journalistic tactic or technique
or Shrek Tracy propaganda trick
11:37
there you go. Not even well,
journalism.
11:39
It's not journalism. It's
propaganda. That's all that's
11:41
going on right now. This this
latest stuff I'm looking at CNN
11:44
is like, now that they're
scrambling because Malone's on
11:48
his way, well,
11:49
well listen to this about you
know, because we are the analog
11:54
between January 6, and what's
happening in Ottawa is is so so
11:58
obvious that the news media
cannot leave it alone. Probably
12:03
on purpose, but holy crap,
listen to this supercut
12:06
edition insurrection a threat to
democracy?
12:10
Right off the bat. Are you
kidding me? They're using all
12:13
the same terms.
12:14
Addition, insurrection, a threat
to democracy, the city is under
12:18
siege.
12:19
They are now calling it an
occupation alarming situation.
12:21
They're in Ottawa police chief
is calling it a nationwide
12:24
insurrection driven by madness.
This is kind of our insurrection
12:29
by air horn moment. It's I think
it's part of the globalization
12:32
of Trumpism Canadians know where
I stand. There
12:35
hasn't been as much violence as
some had perhaps projected, but
12:38
that does not necessarily mean
that it has been peaceful
12:40
reports
12:41
of severe vandalism and criminal
behavior. Streets are clogged.
12:45
The honking is incessant and
definite is pandemic has sucked.
12:49
For all Canadians residents that
I have spoken to who say they
12:53
feel terrorized.
12:54
intimidated, residents say they
feel like hostages residents in
12:58
that area say that they're being
held hostage that this freedom
13:01
has essentially its freedom
convoy, as they call it has
13:04
essentially imposed a lockdown
on them.
13:07
Some protesters harassed a soup
kitchen, these anti vaxxers
13:10
actually took food from the
mouths of the homeless hungry
13:14
yeah, because
13:15
there's so put upon there have
not been any violent outbursts.
13:18
However, horns have been honking
for 12 to 21 hours in it. Small
13:23
fringe minority of people who
are on their way to Ottawa or
13:29
who are holding unacceptable
views that they're expressing
13:34
many of them are holding
Confederate flags. And swastikas
13:40
we've seen the Confederate flag,
we've seen a flags with Justin
13:44
Trudeau, our prime minister and
news. Lots of Donald Trump flags
13:47
as well people. Let's go
Brandon, actually one of the
13:50
rare times in history you're
gonna see swastikas and yellow
13:53
stars at the same protest. A few
people shouting and waving
13:57
swastikas does not define who
Canadians are. Ottawa is being
14:03
besieged by a group of anti do
anything about COVID truckers
14:07
called the Freedom convoy so
called Freedom convoy, so called
14:11
Freedom convoy of truckers, yes,
a call. Yes, it is we protocol
14:17
the nationwide insurrection
threat to
14:20
democracy and insurrection
sedition. This
14:23
is a moment for responsible
leaders to think carefully about
14:26
where they stand and who they
stand with. Okay.
14:31
There it is the Sedition
occupation insurrection. Yeah,
14:37
it's an it's another
14:39
species that media is out of
control. Lawrence O'Donnell, you
14:44
could hear him in a Yeah, what a
creep
14:47
wasn't, you know, the we've been
looking at the 1919 flu pandemic
14:51
and, you know, we have a
timeline. Things are still a
14:56
little bit early, what's
happening now. So in order to
14:59
hit the that April. I think
it'll go slow. But there was
15:03
there's an analog to this Ottawa
protest as well. The 1919
15:10
Winnipeg general strike
15:14
Hey, I'm glad you know I'm glad
you keep coming up with little
15:18
discoveries that keep backing up
this thesis is a beautiful
15:23
beauty I had really did not know
this.
15:26
So check it out. So this was the
Winnipeg general strike the
15:30
largest most influential strike
in Canadian history. Let's see
15:36
angry at this and then you had
of course you had strike
15:40
breakers angry the strike
breakers
15:44
that's interesting to strike but
this is interesting because to
15:47
the way I see it. Today's strike
breakers is the media.
15:54
Well, then they better be
careful because angry at the
15:58
strike breakers hired to operate
the transit system in place of
16:02
the striking employees several
people in the crowd began
16:04
rocking. This is a trolley car
from side to side unable to tip
16:09
it over entirely. They set it on
fire. And soon military
16:14
personnel from Fort Osborn
barracks arrived along with
16:17
machine gun units who marched
into the melee
16:21
at the end to peep now that's
that's a match That's unusual
16:25
for the Canadian that day
16:26
became known as Bloody Saturday.
Two people died 35 to 40.
16:32
Is the student of the week had a
right.
16:40
Also, there was it was a convoy
that came towards Winnipeg,
16:45
Ottawa. And most of the people
didn't even make it. They just
16:49
broke down on the way.
16:52
Yeah, those are the days yeah,
16:54
but this, there are photos of
this. You know what they had?
16:58
They all had cool hats.
Everybody wore hat back in the
17:02
day, ma'am.
17:03
Yes, they did was that it was a
period where everyone wore a
17:06
straw hat
17:08
in America or everywhere,
everywhere, really? So that was
17:11
just a worldwide fashion trend.
17:13
Hmm. Yeah, it was in the I think
it came after the first hat to a
17:17
dead dude wearing hats all
along. And then they there's
17:19
this very short trend. I don't
know how long it lasted.
17:23
Somebody might know but but you
could find pictures of Times
17:26
Square. Winners lay some big
event and there was crowded in
17:30
there and it's like, endless
straw hats. Um, it's weird.
17:38
This police chief in Ottawa is
interesting. His name is Peter
17:44
slowly S L O L Y. And someone
tipped me off. One of our
17:51
producers actually tipped me off
to this guy. Check this guy out.
17:55
He's got quite the resume.
Apparently he left in 2016 and
17:59
came back and people weren't
even that much of a fan of him.
18:02
But if I just look at his his
Wikipedia page. He was he had
18:09
FBI training. Let's see
educated. Let's see Bachelor of
18:16
Arts sociology. Pippa Baba,
where is it here? Criminal
18:21
Justice certificate from
University of Virginia. Incident
18:25
Command System certification
from Justice Institute of
18:28
British Columbia and graduate of
the FBI National Academy. The
18:37
real hard ass and he has
connections he hired a crisis
18:42
management firm right away. You
see if I could find the name of
18:47
this thing. Navigator. Never
heard of them. Navigators
18:52
navigator and ilina inexpensive
crisis management firm. And I
18:57
think it's a business. Oh, yeah.
I think this guy is quite
19:02
dangerous to the Canadian
people. As he tells everybody
19:06
what's going to happen no matter
what happens with this protest
19:09
when everybody's gone. It's not
going to be over again. Shades
19:13
of January six, we have
increased ability to identify
19:17
and target protesters and
supporters of protesters who are
19:22
funding and enabling unlawful
and harmful activity by the
19:28
protesters themselves.
Investigative evidence gathering
19:32
teams are collecting financial,
digital vehicle registration,
19:39
driver identification, insurance
status, and other related
19:43
evidence that will be used in
prosecutions. Believe me geo
19:47
fencing, everyone's phone has
been tracked.
19:51
Well this is good. This is good
because this will be this guy's
19:55
gonna have to butt heads with
it. If they finally give in
19:59
complete which they sounds like
they are in the process of
20:02
doing. He's gonna butt heads
with these guys because they
20:06
can't do this. You can't. You
can't say okay, okay, you guys
20:09
when we're going to end all this
and then start going after,
20:11
after people in a vindictive way
like that this guy's bad news.
20:16
It sounds like,
20:17
also we got reports, you know,
back to the 1990s that there's
20:20
all kinds of machine guns and
assault rifles going into
20:24
buildings.
20:28
Back to 1919
20:29
Yeah. Where they had machine
guns and they had bloody
20:31
Saturday. Oh, back in the day.
Yeah. Back in the day. So that's
20:35
that's being reported is now
they're everywhere. And you're
20:39
right. The debt Whitehouse
certainly desperately trying to
20:44
downplay what's going on here,
which includes blocking the
20:49
bridge to Detroit. And what's
the other one? We have another
20:54
border that's been blocked one
20:56
down in Montana. I think he's
been blocked completely. But
20:59
that bridges that 25% of all
import exports goes over that
21:03
Windsor bridge.
21:07
Truckers in Canada last night,
shut down the Ambassador Bridge,
21:10
which carries about a quarter of
US, Canada. Wow. Were you there?
21:14
Did you hear all this ahead of
time
21:16
trading? Is no this.
21:18
What's the administration's
response to this action? And
21:21
what steps are being taken to
ensure the free flow of goods
21:24
and also, any preventative steps
be taken to address a possible
21:28
blockade on the Michigan side of
that bridge? Well, let me first
21:31
start by saying I know there's
been some suggestion not by
21:34
reporters necessarily at all,
but that this congestion is
21:38
related to the vaccine
requirements,
21:40
congestion. This is just
congestion,
21:45
not by reporters necessarily at
all, but that this congestion is
21:49
related to the vaccine
requirements. It's not I mean,
21:52
I'm saying I'm going to get to
the protests. But the protests
21:55
going on across Canada, which
has spread to a bridge are
21:58
leading to sporadic congestion
and blockages. Just to go back
22:02
to
22:03
congestion and blockages is what
did they have a sniffle point I
22:06
was trying to make is that
across what we've seen with
22:09
these requirements is across
industry range of industries
22:12
vaccine vaccination requirements
have been implemented with no
22:14
disruptions have helped increase
vaccinations these requirements
22:18
help protect more people from
COVID. And there's been zero
22:20
indication across these
industries that they would lead
22:22
to disruptions including on this
policy. We of course support as
22:27
you know, the the right to
freedom of speech and protest.
22:30
But we see some of these
conditions due to processes it's
22:34
clear that these disruptions
have broadened in scope beyond
22:36
the vaccine requirement
implementation. We beyond that
22:40
we are of course in touch with
our Canadian counterparts. But I
22:43
don't have any updates in terms
of specific steps.
22:46
Love though this should it
should have asked her where to
22:49
dose it. She's done that but I
have an offbeat clip. You
22:55
probably have it. But on some
odd podcasts, Justin Trudeau
23:01
those step brother. Oh, I
23:05
don't have this. I was COVID.
Man.
23:08
This is about okay, it's about
COVID But But, but it's not
23:12
about no
23:13
I'm No I'm saying I have COVID I
didn't see everything I normally
23:16
do.
23:17
You had quotes I didn't know
about judo, but then you might
23:21
have missed it. Yes. So this guy
who's the newest ever heard of
23:26
him? At least until now? His
name is Kyle camper.
23:32
And that's that's his what
23:34
his name is Kyle. No, no.
23:36
How is he related to Jesse's
brother? His
23:39
his mom. The heart of the
harlequin Harlequin one who had
23:45
sex with Fidel Castro. And Mick
Jagger. Apparently allegedly.
23:50
There's a I think Mick Jagger
said so. But there was a slew.
23:56
She got Pierre Trudeau divorced
or she got married to some other
24:00
guy. Then she had some kids with
that other guy and this is one
24:04
of them. So they're related that
way and saying mom, okay, and I
24:09
guess they never I don't know.
But I just thought this is a
24:12
little off the watch this sub
clip of a longer clip was
24:14
yakking away on a on a zoom call
or something is where the
24:18
background is kept changing from
downtown, some skating rink to
24:22
some flag and it's just like,
horrible to watch. But this is
24:27
kind of interesting, but it's
nothing that we've already not
24:29
discussed.
24:30
Justin is you know, the leader
of the Liberal Party, and
24:35
everything that's coming out of
his right now out of his mouth
24:38
right now is written all of his
tweets are being produced by a
24:43
team. All of his statements he
is he is the face and like you
24:48
know, the the the lead
spokesperson for the Canadian
24:53
government, but the policy and
the initiatives that are driving
24:57
it and that are driving his
Like, you know that this
25:01
narrative that he continues to
push which in my opinion is
25:03
decidedly anti Canadian and anti
freedom is like coming down
25:08
from,
25:09
you know, the higher ups from
you know, groups like, like,
25:13
like the World Economic Forum
like the Council on Foreign
25:16
Relations like Bilderberg, etc.
Hmm. Well
25:24
not surprising. It's like, Duh,
of
25:26
course we you had some clips
recently that just said these a
25:29
stooge he doesn't have a
25:32
relationship manager. Yes,
exactly. Yeah, that's what he
25:35
does job. Yeah, it's okay. But
that's interesting that he put
25:39
it out there. There was on the
podcast, though. It wasn't. It
25:42
wasn't any evidence getting a
lot of it's like, it's like
25:45
Barack Obama's brother.
25:49
Remember that? Proko I forget.
I'm grinding away thing of
25:53
Brock. Obama's all of that.
25:55
Brother. His brother's
fantastic. He's like, Yeah,
25:58
Brock's like, his name is Barry.
He's all kinds of stuff.
26:03
Huh? Well, yeah, that brother
must have been a thorn in his
26:07
side, too. Maybe still is. But
nobody, your immediate isn't?
26:11
Yeah, they don't do so well
ignore. They're told to ignore
26:15
you got marching orders. Let's
just go ahead with what we're
26:17
doing? Well, I
26:18
think we're all pretty convinced
now that the media is not
26:22
working for any of our
interests, which is why we have
26:25
this little podcast, that the
real turning point came from the
26:30
main messenger for the United
States, unless you have more on
26:35
Canada? I don't think so. No, I
don't have anything else. And
26:41
she was there at the Boston
bombing. She's been with us
26:43
throughout the pandemic, and
she's here, she's been thrown
26:46
out to change the narrative. Dr.
Lena, when do you agree with the
26:51
move?
26:52
I do, there was a is a time in
place for pandemic restrictions.
26:57
But when they were put in, it
was always with the
27:00
understanding that they would be
removed as soon as we can. And
27:03
in this case, circumstances have
changed. Case counts are
27:07
declining. Also, the science has
changed. We know that very well
27:12
against Omicron, which is the
dominant variant. Everyone five
27:15
and older have widespread access
to vaccines. And we also know
27:19
about one way masking the idea
that even if other people around
27:22
you are not wearing masks, if
you wear a high quality mask,
27:25
that also protects you the
wearer, too.
27:28
We didn't know this previously.
And so in
27:30
this case, I'm not saying I
don't think anyone really is
27:33
saying that no one should ever
wear masks, but rather that the
27:36
responsibility should shift from
a government mandate imposed
27:40
from the state or the local
district or the school. Rather,
27:43
it should shift to an individual
responsibility by the family who
27:47
can still decide that their
child can wear a mask if needed.
27:52
Let you got this clip. Because I
know about the clip I got by me.
27:56
But yeah, this is part of the
scheme. So breathless, how can
28:01
you you know?
28:05
Well, and you know, what was in
there was the science has
28:08
changed.
28:09
Oh, yeah. Science changes. You
know,
28:11
she just she just changed. And
the science and the science has
28:16
changed. Regarding maths we now
know, we now know that one main
28:20
one way masking works. Yes, you
convert your signal without
28:24
annoying everyone else by making
it aware of the mask. That's
28:27
great. But holy crap, that's a
turn around. I think the general
28:32
consensus is this was some
polling for the midterm
28:35
elections like okay, we got to
turn this around pretty quick.
28:38
And this whole thing is failing.
We're not rolling anything out
28:41
in time the vaccines are duds.
The QR never came up with a QR
28:46
platform for the for the
passport that's falling apart.
28:50
The UK pulled out, you know,
this is over this particular OP
28:54
is over it. I mean, they'll
still go linger on for years.
28:58
Here's more of lino when you
know,
29:00
K New Jersey, the case in New
Jersey, for instance, their new
29:03
case average is just over 4000.
Is that an acceptable number to
29:08
do this? Or or are they
projecting out to March seventh
29:11
at this point?
29:13
I don't think we should be
looking at case counts at all,
29:16
at this point, especially when
29:17
we're after, after two years of
it being full one center on the
29:21
right hand side of every single
screen that case counts, case
29:25
counts, case counts, sciences
changed to march 7 at this
29:29
point.
29:30
I don't think we should be
looking at case counts at all at
29:33
this point, especially when
we're dealing with a milder
29:36
variant. And when so many people
were exposed to Omicron and
29:39
therefore have have at least
some level of protection either
29:42
through vaccination or immunity.
The key number that we should be
29:45
looking at is hospitalizations.
If our ICUs and hospitals in
29:50
that particular region are not
overwhelmed if they're not over
29:53
capacity, we can set a number
for example, 75% or 80%. Foam,
29:57
then we should be able to relax.
All right restrictions and I
30:00
actually believe that we should
be starting to with the first
30:03
restriction removed should
actually be the restriction on
30:06
children. Because while for
adults, you could say, well,
30:09
what's the harm of adults
masking when they go into a
30:12
grocery store, there actually is
a harm that we should be
30:15
discussing of children
continuing to mask. That doesn't
30:18
mean that masking doesn't have
its place for children when they
30:20
are high rates of
hospitalizations. If we get a
30:23
new bearing in the future that
children are particularly
30:26
susceptible to, we may want to
bring masks back. But we should
30:29
also be intellectually honest
and say that Matthew has had
30:32
where was
30:33
this? We have to be
intellectually honest, all of a
30:37
sudden, I can't
30:39
some best. There are some
basketball players that can
30:42
actually run down the court
backwards, as fast as they can
30:47
forwards. This is the best
backpedaling this part of the
30:51
clip I didn't have. I didn't
have this one is just
30:54
astonishing in the back
peddling. And
30:56
it's unquestioned BY JOHN
BERMAN, whatever his name is
31:00
from CNN unquestioned. Okay, I
got the memo. You're here to
31:04
announce it. Okay.
31:05
Yeah. Yeah, let me think I'm,
I'm, I'm doing this interview,
31:09
and I'm hearing this for the
first time. Uh huh. And I'm not
31:13
a gas, asking, wait a minute.
No, didn't you? Why so quick,
31:19
why don't you there's too many
things you can ask. But you can
31:22
tell that this is a script,
because he's gonna be Yeah, he's
31:26
not flip flustered
31:27
now that children are
particularly susceptible to, we
31:30
may want to bring masks back.
But we should also be
31:33
intellectually honest and say
that masking has had a cost,
31:36
especially for the youngest
learners. In people with English
31:39
as a Second Language children
with learning disabilities,
31:42
there has been a cost to them.
So the risk benefit calculation
31:45
has really changed.
31:47
The rest the risk benefit
calculation, I thought the
31:49
science changed.
31:51
Oh, it's changed to Everything's
changed. In for keeping up,
31:57
reports are that the mental
health damage could last a
32:01
generation?
32:03
Oh, yeah, I think so. Yeah. And
32:05
really mission accomplished. If
you think about it, if you
32:07
wanted to kill enough people and
make enough people sick longer
32:11
term, we already have lower
birth rates than we need. I
32:14
think China had 50% of what they
had two years ago. They're
32:18
freaking out.
32:19
Yeah. Well, they got used to the
one child thing. And that was
32:22
that then then then guess what,
but also, you in the United
32:27
States, Europe, everyone's
fertility rate is is by dive
32:33
bombing?
32:34
Yes, actually, the sperm counts
go way down, which is
32:39
exactly what Bill Gates wanted.
And he would do it through
32:42
vaccines. I mean, that's, that
could be from years of
32:46
vaccinations. I don't know. I
don't want to come across an
32:48
anti Vaxxer have had
vaccinations. But this thing is
32:52
gonna list already.
32:54
Oh, well. We'll get to the list.
We'll get to the list. You know,
33:01
we might as well since we heard
from him hyping this whole thing
33:04
for two years, we might as well
listen to Pfizer board member
33:08
and former FDA. commissioner,
Commissioner, Scott, Doctor,
33:14
I'm guessing he must have an
agent at this point. Dr. Scott
33:18
Gottlieb,
33:19
and we're hearing from
governors, there was a
33:21
bipartisan group of them that
met with President Biden just in
33:24
the past few days saying they
want guidelines, guidelines
33:28
moving from pandemic to an
endemic stage here. And yet
33:32
we're at 2400 deaths a day. That
doesn't feel like we're close to
33:37
the end. No, it doesn't feel
like that we're not close to the
33:41
end right now, depending on how
you measure that I think that
33:43
this is going to be a long
struggle. This is a virus that's
33:45
going to be persistent. We're
going to have to take continue
33:47
to take measures to protect
vulnerable people. I think what
33:50
governors are agitating for is
some clear guideposts that
33:53
define why on an off ramp. We
start to roll back this mitigate
33:57
everything and move them
33:59
guideposts that are movable
Exactly.
34:02
I think what governors are
agitating for is some clear
34:05
guideposts that define what the
on and off ramp is for this.
34:08
When do we start to roll back
this mitigation. And we don't
34:10
have a agreed upon set of
nomenclature and metrics for
34:14
measuring that if you look at
CDC right now, many state
34:16
authorities and public health
authorities talk about 10 cases
34:19
per 100,000 people per day being
a metric that rates you being in
34:23
sort of a low level of spread.
If you look at CDC guidance,
34:26
they talk about 10 cases per
100,000 people per week. So
34:29
that's 1.44 cases a day. That's
a level of spread a sufficiently
34:33
low level of spread that we've
never been, at any point is
34:37
defined a low level of spread.
34:39
Remember, his job is to sell
vaccines, so he just needs to
34:42
talk a lot of gobbledygook until
he gets to the pitch,
34:46
throwing numbers left and right
then he's also backpedaling as
34:49
fast as he can, yeah, to kind of
cover somebody's bases and he's
34:53
making stuff up and he's going
by goalpost
34:56
guy. Governor's guideposts. No.
less
35:01
good name for a show
35:02
low level of spread that would
justify removing masks, for
35:05
example, in schools and so I
think what governors are sensing
35:08
is that we need to we need to
agree upon a set of metrics when
35:10
we're going to start to roll
back these mitigation steps.
35:13
Give people a light at the end
of the tunnel. What is that
35:16
point when this stuff gets
turned off?
35:18
Oh, no, no, it's not. It's not
that governors are looking for
35:22
guideposts. They want to give
everybody guideposts. They need
35:25
to get everybody back on in line
and on the same timeline.
35:29
This guy's got so many cliches
that was a record setting and
35:33
clip.
35:34
Wait, we have more can mask
mandates be lifted in most
35:38
schools? Look, I think you're
gonna see Governor start to do
35:41
well, I think we're out we've
seen prevalence come down
35:44
Connecticut, their mask mandate
is expires on February 15. I
35:48
would expect that that's not
going to be renewed and schools
35:50
in the state of Connecticut will
very quickly lift mask
35:53
requirements for students, I
think you're gonna see the same
35:55
thing in New York, New Jersey,
other states were omachron has
35:58
come down. With vaccination
rates are especially high, I
36:01
think you're gonna see states do
that. And we're at a point we
36:04
can safely contemplate that that
doesn't mean that this isn't
36:07
going to continue to spread. But
when prevalence is low, you have
36:10
a lot of people who've been
infected who have some level of
36:12
immunity for a period of time,
and you have high vaccination
36:15
rates, we can start to lean
forward and take a little bit
36:18
forward and try to at least more
risk students in schools have
36:21
some normalcy for this spring
term. A lot of kids haven't
36:25
really known a normal school day
for two years now. So we want to
36:28
we need to try to lean forward
aggressively to try to restore
36:31
that reclaim it when we can
36:33
what did you think this is a new
one lean forward? Will we see
36:35
that pop up somewhere and
36:37
lean forward twice? For some I
know what does it mean?
36:44
What does it mean? It's stupid.
36:46
The only mean the only way I can
see being used lean forward is
36:50
so that your head crosses the
finish line before the others
36:55
who but I don't really know if
lean forward is the thing lean
36:58
in is the is the Sheryl Sandberg
thing. Yeah. Lean forward. I
37:04
don't know is that is Oh, is
that maybe progressive lean
37:08
forward?
37:09
I have no idea is July no is
this guy is off the rails with
37:14
cliches and bromides. And all
these
37:18
goddesses such he's got to keep
keep it moving as much as he
37:21
can. And no worries. No worries.
Remember all that money that you
37:26
could get if you had a vaccine
consultancy? You get up to a
37:31
million dollars in Texas. Oh,
that's you remember that? No, I
37:36
don't. Yeah, well, that program
is still going
37:39
the Biden ministration is
allocating 10s of millions of
37:41
dollars to groups across the US
who are working to build
37:44
confidence in COVID-19. Here's
NPRs, Selena Simmons, Duffin,
37:50
Secretary of Health and Human
Services have your viscera says
37:53
it's important for people to
hear from trusted messengers
37:56
about vaccines,
37:58
whether that trusted messenger
is your school teacher or your
38:03
pastor or your barber.
38:05
He says this funding allows
those trusted people to guide
38:09
you on very important decision
to get vaccinated. For example,
38:12
since they received their first
stop,
38:14
just realize what I heard here.
Okay. Again, this is money going
38:21
to groups, undefined groups.
Thanks for reporting on that
38:24
groups. And listen what they say
about the groups Sure, or go
38:29
back a little bit further
scenes. Whether that trusted
38:32
messenger
38:33
is your school teacher or your
pastor,
38:37
or your barber, barber, pastor
and barber This is targeting
38:42
black Americans. That's where
the money is going to get black
38:45
Americans a das particular to
take the vaccine when you
38:49
say barbers and pastors trill
thing with barbers and barbers
38:53
and pastors now this is code is
another one. This is code.
38:56
This funding allows those
trusted people to guide you on
39:00
very important decision to get
vaccinated. For example, I
39:04
received their first funds last
June Dr. Sue MOFA Soha of the
39:07
rise coalition says groups have
learned how to reach migrant
39:11
farm workers through carefully
timed radio spots. She says the
39:15
new round of funding will allow
the coalition to build on what
39:18
they've learned and get more
people vaccinated.
39:20
Holy crap we are idiots easy
exit strategy we could have
39:26
easily written up a grant and
said look we're gonna convince
39:30
crackpots to get vaccinated we
might not work but I think we've
39:34
learned a lot so far during this
program so you should up the
39:36
money. This is we're ready for
another we've had learning so
39:40
let's try it again and do some
more. That was easy money, John.
39:44
There's probably You remember
that guy Lesko.
39:49
Now why do I Why Does that ring
a bell?
39:51
Let's go does he's the guy who
used to wear a suit, a tailored
39:56
suit that had dollar signs all
over
39:58
it? Yeah, you Yeah.
infomercials, what is the
40:01
infomercial guy?
40:02
Yeah, it was in it and he sold a
book called, you know, it's like
40:05
free money from the government.
40:06
Grab this now we're going back
to the 80s with this,
40:09
whatever happened to that guy
and whatever happened to that
40:12
book, but it was a guy.
40:13
I think he died.
40:15
Robert I think is Robert Lesko.
Look
40:17
maps Matt Lesko. Matt Lesko.
40:20
Was it Matt Lesko. It was a B,
Mark. Whatever the case it's it
40:24
this was it was all about is
like, you know, some sharp
40:28
operators and you heard things
like the rise coalition, all
40:32
these you know, so one of those
groups. Yeah. Sharp operators
40:37
that are have a nose for
government money. And it's just,
40:41
it's just stealing from the
taxpayers. Yeah, we could
40:44
probably do that. If we had a
mind to. I used to love Tality
40:49
for it. He's still he's still
alive. I
40:50
used to love his show. He's
still alive. He's 78 Show. The
40:55
other show that was a show, man.
He's getting free money from the
40:59
guy lands and bring his head
right into it.
41:03
Boy, we need to bring that guy
back. I'm sure I'm sure. I'm
41:08
sure there's some great YouTube.
You Oh, my goodness, he made so
41:13
many different books. And I Ah,
man. I'm glad you brought him
41:17
up. That's funny. Court reversed
his decision. Let me see. Where
41:27
is it on Pfizer and federal
judge restructures the timeline
41:36
for FDA to release FOIA of the
Pfizer trial vaccine documents.
41:44
And they've now back loaded the
schedule so that only 20,000
41:49
pages will be released through
April of how many pages were
41:54
there, like, half a million or
something?
41:57
It was I know it was over
300,000 or even no, I think it
42:01
was in the millions or does that
42:03
really? Yeah, it was probably
the millions. Yeah. And And
42:09
coincidentally, Pfizer has now
added some language to their to
42:17
their financial earnings report
for their I guess this is for
42:22
how they did in Q must have been
q4 people have gone through
42:30
their filing. Yeah. And see
Pfizer added new language risks.
42:36
So this is about their
42:39
I think the stock has gone down
I think because of this risk
42:42
associated with further
information regarding the
42:45
quality of preclinical clinical
or safety data including by
42:50
audit or inspection. The I'd say
they they Yeah, they tried to
42:58
cover that pretty well. It
42:59
trying to cover their ass. Again
a couple of clips I wanted to
43:03
just for the last show I didn't
get to use this is the beginning
43:07
of the end I think for some of
these guys but they did gun
43:11
after the guy who runs the
Missouri Health Department and
43:13
they're starting to go after
these health guys.
43:15
Who was always they was they the
public? Oh good. We just said
43:21
not very Oui oui oui oui.
43:23
I think this is the beginning of
this kind of thing. And because
43:27
I've noticed an NPR and other
places they're trying to soft
43:30
pedal the the good work that the
health professionals have done
43:34
and is too bad that it didn't
work out and it's bad because
43:39
they're good people that are in
so here we go with this Mo.
43:46
Health the part one,
43:48
Missouri's acting health
director because out of a job
43:51
another public health official
facing backlash over COVID-19
43:55
prevention measures. strong
opposition came from
43:58
conservatives Sarah Kellogg of
St. Louis public radio
44:02
reports. It was in July that
Republican Governor Mike Parson
44:05
announced that Don Carroll would
serve as the Director of the
44:07
Department of Health and Senior
Services karaf came out of
44:10
retirement after serving as the
Assistant Director of the
44:13
Illinois Department of Public
Health. He started the Missouri
44:16
job in September, care of said a
clear solution for reducing
44:19
Missouri's COVID rate was to
increase the state's vaccination
44:22
rate. But he was also against
vaccine and mask mandates. It's
44:27
a physician care for PETA during
his hearing this past week to
44:30
make his appointment permanent.
44:31
I've said it before. You know a
lot of people in my position.
44:34
They try to vilify those that
aren't vaccinated. I'm not going
44:37
to do that. It's their choice.
Do you have the correct
44:39
information in the site not
vaccinate? I respect that
44:43
because karaf began his job in
the Missouri Senate was not in
44:46
session. He was able to serve as
director but had to receive
44:49
approval within 30 days after
the Senate reconvened in
44:52
January. But just hours before
he sat down to answer senators
44:56
questions, more than 100
residents gathered in the
44:59
Missouri car capitol rotunda to
protest his nomination. They
45:02
claimed he was not conservative
enough. Many more stickers will
45:06
care of his name with a no
symbol in front. Others brought
45:09
signs reading stopped care off
mandates and stop communism
45:12
Missourians want medical
freedom?
45:14
So he but he sounds like he
wasn't pro mandates.
45:19
They soft pedal the story that
must
45:21
have because they had mandates.
45:25
Yeah, so man mandate. Part two
of this finishes it.
45:31
John karaf is another example of
a public health figure who has
45:34
faced vitriol from both
lawmakers and the public during
45:36
the pandemic. Lawrence Gostin
teaches global health law at
45:40
Georgetown University. He says
what happened in Missouri has
45:43
been playing out all across the
country.
45:45
I've seen public health
professionals picketed threaten
45:50
their families threatened
45:53
and literally hounded out of
office. And while we've got 10s
45:58
of 1000s of people who who
should be in public health and
46:03
aren't more or leaving every
day,
46:06
since the pandemic began,
legislators in a number of
46:08
states have limited the powers
of health officials. Gaston says
46:12
those actions have consequences
that will last after the
46:14
pandemic,
46:15
the COVID pandemic should have
made it public health empowered,
46:20
more flexible, more nimble, more
resources. And instead, it's
46:26
been the opposite.
46:27
Well, I hate to sound like a
dick, but I'm all for them going
46:31
after these people. Every single
one of them needs to be on trial
46:35
eventually, either for
incompetence or downright evil.
46:41
Most will be deemed incompetent,
but that's okay. I mean, this
46:45
whole this whole class that that
controlled everybody, huh?
46:52
Yeah, yeah, I agree. We didn't
do a good day. They got carried
46:56
they got full of themselves.
They thought they were God.
47:00
Well, that's not over, they
still may think that quick
47:04
update on that. You brought the
clip of the Department of
47:08
Defense. When they're de med.
They're the military version of
47:13
the vaccine adverse event
reporting system, and which, you
47:18
know, showed this incredible
increase in all kinds of of
47:21
issues. And as we know, everyone
got vaccinated pretty much in
47:26
the military. And now and that
came from a whistleblower that
47:31
didn't come near the Department
of Defense didn't say, oh, look
47:33
what we found that came from a
whistleblower. Yes. Now it
47:37
appears that the Department of
Defense is adding all kinds of
47:41
numbers and data to the de med
for like previous years.
47:46
Yes, they're phoning get back.
The back numbers. Yeah,
47:51
they're trying to make it look
like it isn't such an incredible
47:53
strikeout.
47:55
We have a letter raise a letter
from the guy
47:57
No, I don't know. I don't
47:59
Oh, we had a letter from a guy
who just sent in a I don't have
48:03
I thought you were going to read
it.
48:04
No, I mean, I've several
articles read it. No, no, no, I
48:07
didn't. I don't even know if I
saw it. I have COVID Man I don't
48:10
didn't read
48:10
everything. That's right. I keep
forgetting because you just
48:12
don't seem like a COVID type by
the
48:14
way. Thank you to the clip
custodian who saved my ass with
48:19
a nice helpful of clips today.
Exactly what I was looking for
48:23
as usual. Looking for the letter
48:29
Yeah, I can get it's from there.
It came into notes at no agenda.
48:34
And Eric forwarded it to us both
of course he didn't do it under
48:41
his normal name. Well
48:45
Oh, that's why it probably
didn't show up in mine either.
48:48
Because I haven't going to a
special
48:51
way does that. It makes no
sense. Anyway, I'll look for it.
48:55
We'll read it later.
48:57
Yes, let's see. We have some
numbers here I think oh yeah,
49:03
there you go. They've actually
they've made 2016 2017
49:10
yet because it's because every
hire has to fire now the five
49:13
year average is all about the
five year average episode they
49:17
had to phony you know,
49:19
but if you look at the chart,
look at the chart you see 2016
49:23
is higher than 2021 which is the
big spike at 2017 is higher 2018
49:27
is about the same 2019 is all is
like 30% higher than 2021
49:35
Okay, let's see I got the note
John, thanks for covering deem
49:39
it on no agenda can you please
also cover how the clown world
49:42
sell outs are trying to explain
this away if you cover this I
49:46
missed it. Claimed weird
covering it now. Yeah, claiming
49:49
a very selective computer
glitch. Oh, yeah. It was five
49:56
years prior to 2021. It was a
glitch And then he has a link to
50:02
a Steve kirsch@substack.com. And
people can go to Steve
50:07
kirsch.substack.com It is
probably this column at the top.
50:11
And this Steve Oh, man, I are
50:14
I need I need a clip of I need a
clip of someone saying if
50:18
someone's saying that glitch
glitch.
50:22
He was number two. I'd like to
point and I'm not sure this is
50:26
we'll just say he is a army, a
major in the army. I would like
50:32
to point out to the attached
Marine Corps Response to
50:34
Representative Eisah. He also
has a list of this because ISOs
50:38
bitched about this and he was
making them do what was this
50:42
work shows that there is no
intention to grant religious
50:46
exemptions. The only religious
exemption is granted stated here
50:51
are for three Marines who are
underway out anyway. The DoD
50:56
will of course, adhere to the
narrative of how safe and
50:59
effective the injections are,
while ignoring the reality of
51:02
fully injected servicemembers
continuing to get COVID
51:06
Meanwhile, many of us who refuse
to blindly follow this ill logic
51:11
have remained COVID free for the
last two years. Yeah, please
51:16
keep me anonymous. I use this
email to show that I'm real.
51:19
Many of us are standing firm
against clown world, but there's
51:22
not much we can do,
51:23
of course, and he's and he's
military. He's military. God
51:27
bless you, man. If you don't
have anything else, I have a
51:31
small presentation to make. on
vaccines. I'm I'm all ears. So
51:38
you want to answer your phone
first? I mean, let's just
51:41
see now if he does, is he able
to sneak over there. Now?
51:45
I want you completely focused on
the clips. I don't want. I don't
51:48
want to just answer it. Let's
see who it is. It's got to be
51:51
some douche.
51:52
Let's check it out. Hold
51:53
on a second. I'll turn off the
noise gates. So we can follow
51:56
along with the antics of John C.
Dvorak and the scam caller if my
52:01
web browser didn't freeze on me
for some reason. This is great.
52:04
Here we go.
52:07
Oh, hello. Hello.
52:14
Young up. Yeah, yeah. Lemo.
Lemass? Yeah, pretty soon they
52:22
just were like, Hey, man, if you
call this guy, this number you
52:26
get on the no agenda show.
52:30
Well, I used to take the phone
off the hook, but I'm not that
52:33
popular. So alright, I'm all
ears now. And attention is drawn
52:38
to your presentation. Yes. We've
had eclipses this
52:42
depends. We've had. We've had
the bat theory, which was
52:48
launched immediately. We had the
lab theory. We had versions of
52:52
bio weapon and stuff like that,
and we liked it. We've talked
52:55
well, then you'll probably like
these clips. Ron uns, you know
53:03
him? No. He is. I think he's
like a silicon, silicon valley
53:11
guy or he was early days. He has
some kind of software, firm
53:18
accounting, accounting software,
but he also ran the 90 for the
53:23
California gubernatorial
election. And for us, senator in
53:27
2016. We you see, the guy's like
he's, it's creepy looking. Now,
53:32
kind of Jamie Raskin esque, in a
way is pretty Yeah, that
53:37
explains it. Right. But except
he's, he's, I guess, registered
53:44
Republican. And the ADL hates
him. The Southern Poverty Law
53:48
Center hates him. But he comes
across as a really sane guy. And
53:54
he had this presentation on a
podcast, of course, which
53:59
introduces the third theory
outside of the bat versus the
54:03
lab. And its bio weapon, but not
the way you think it might be.
54:06
Then the third possibility is
that it was a deliberate bio
54:10
warfare attack. In other words,
the virus was biologically
54:14
engineered to be moderately
lethal, but extremely, extremely
54:20
contagious. And so in effect, it
was designed to be an anti
54:24
economy by war by weapon, not an
anti personnel by weapons in
54:28
that new with the fatality rate
of about point five to 1%.
54:33
Obviously wouldn't wipe out a
population, but it would kill a
54:36
sufficiently large fraction of
the population. And it was so
54:39
extremely contagious. That
countries that were infected
54:43
with it would have to take
drastic measures that would
54:47
disrupt their economy to control
it. And that's exactly what
54:49
happened in China. In other
words, when you're looking at
54:52
the details of the original
incident in China, the virus
54:56
appeared in Wuhan, China.
According to all All the best
55:00
estimates towards the end of
October are towards the
55:03
beginning of November, that was
patient zero. Now that would
55:07
have allowed exactly the right
amount of time for the virus to
55:11
become an unstoppable epidemic.
Around the time of the Lunar New
55:16
Year travels in China. In other
words, Lunar New Year is a
55:19
tremendously important holiday
in China. It's the equivalent of
55:23
Christmas, New Year's a number
of other things put together
55:26
with 450 million Chinese
traveling. Wu Han is a key
55:31
transit hub. So to the extent
that the virus became widespread
55:36
in Wuhan, invisibly, before the
government notice what was
55:40
happening, and during the Lunar
New York travels, it would have
55:43
affected the entire country and
had a devastating impact on
55:46
China's economy.
55:48
Hence, the severe lockdown. So I
was interested when this guy was
55:53
kind of bringing back that
timeline, because, you know, has
55:56
been so long, we've talked about
it so much, like, oh, yeah, it
55:59
was Chinese Lunar New Year, and
that and then that's probably
56:02
why they locked everybody down
so tight, we couldn't have
56:04
everyone traveling around. But
then he brings out the timeline
56:09
of the Trump administration, the
tension with Tutton with China
56:13
at the time, and his timeline is
pretty impressive. Now,
56:18
the virus appeared exactly at
the peak of America's global
56:23
confrontation with China. And
the suspicion that you know, the
56:28
two events connected is really
fairly obvious one. Furthermore,
56:31
when you look at some of the
details of what had been
56:33
happening in China, the previous
two years, in 2018, there was a
56:38
mysterious viral epidemic that
devastated China's poultry
56:42
industry. In 2019, there was a
mysterious viral epidemic that
56:47
appeared in China in destroyed
40% of China's pig herds. Its
56:52
primary meat source, so the
virus
56:57
these were not mysterious. We
knew what they were we knew what
57:02
caused them. Okay, we talked
about a lot on this show. Yes.
57:05
Is that African swine flu fight
for pigs so that it really any
57:10
devastate he's right about the
devastation part, but the
57:13
mysterious part I don't like him
using
57:14
hyperbole I agree is unnecessary
because and we track the the
57:19
pigs swine flu specifically.
57:21
But we we did a pretty good job
probably better than anybody
57:24
else on tracking that particular
disease.
57:26
But I do like that he had the
timeline of the 2018 to 2019.
57:30
Yeah,
57:30
I'm into his timeline. I just
don't like I got
57:33
no, I agree, I agree. And we'll
tell them that dipshit stop
57:36
doing that
57:37
30% of China's pig herds its
primary meat source. So we're
57:42
talking about a virus appearing
in 2018, attacking his food
57:46
supply, a virus appearing 2019
attacking another source of food
57:51
supply, and then a virus
appearing in at the end of 2019.
57:56
That could have devastated
China's economy in exactly that
57:59
sort of way.
58:00
Okay, so that the timeline, gets
your interest up. He also has an
58:05
actor who we can talk about,
holy crap, Robert CAD luck.
58:10
Now, as it happens, when we look
at some of the other events that
58:14
really would make anybody very
suspicious. In 2017, before
58:19
these viral epidemics began, a
man named Robert Cadillac was
58:23
brought into the Trump
administration. For decades,
58:26
he'd been one of America's
leading biowarfare experts, an
58:30
advocate of bio warfare as being
a very useful and plausibly
58:35
deniable means of damaging or
severely disrupting an
58:39
international adversary. So he
was brought in in 2017. And then
58:44
2018, and 2019, these food
supply viruses appeared that
58:49
inflicted a tremendous amount of
damage in China. Furthermore,
58:53
when we look at the events of
2019, and we're talking about
58:58
really ridiculous things, I
mean, from January to September
59:02
2019, Robert Cadillacs
department ran something called
59:07
the Krimson contagion exercise,
which was a federal state
59:12
planning process as to how
America officials would guard
59:17
America from suffering any
damage, suffering infection from
59:22
a respiratory virus that might
suddenly appear in China. So
59:26
we're talking about Robert
Cadillac, America's chief
59:28
biowarfare expert, running this
exercise from January to August
59:34
2019. And two months later,
exactly. That sort of virus
59:39
appeared in China. I mean, the
coincidences are really
59:42
absolutely ridiculous. And you
know, we're talking about when
59:45
something is called the Crimson
contagion exercise. It sounds
59:48
like a bizarre conspiracy theory
that you know, was invented on a
59:52
corner of the internet. The way
I found out about it is there
59:56
was a front page story in The
New York Times describing Get in
1:00:00
all the details. So what we're
talking about are basically a
1:00:03
tremendous amount of
circumstantial evidence pointing
1:00:07
towards America, elements of the
American national security
1:00:11
establishment, inflicting a
viral epidemic on China for very
1:00:16
obvious reasons. In other words,
China right now has one of the
1:00:20
fastest growing world economies.
And in fact, by most measures,
1:00:23
it already surpassed America's
economy in size several years
1:00:27
ago.
1:00:28
Now, remember, his assertion is
that this was an anti economy by
1:00:33
a weapon attack. And so the
claim that he's making here's
1:00:37
this, this Cadillac figure,
which is quite he went into
1:00:41
BARDA, remember, there was all
that crap about BARDA and one
1:00:44
guy get thrown out. Yeah. So
this guy comes in. And the
1:00:47
assertion is, hey, you know,
this guy, set it all up. And
1:00:50
they tested with Krimson
contagion, which it's right in
1:00:56
the New York Times the whole
thing, and then what they
1:00:57
learned if insufficient federal
funding sources for severe
1:01:00
pandemic confusion on how to
apply the defense production
1:01:03
act, current medical supply
chain, and production capacity
1:01:07
would not meet demand. I mean,
all this stuff was all known.
1:01:09
Interesting, they still didn't
do anything about it. And then
1:01:13
he makes another assertion,
which, by his timeline is pretty
1:01:17
logical.
1:01:18
Soon after the outbreak of the
original Wuhan virus in Wuhan.
1:01:22
That virus suddenly jumped
5000 3000 miles to the city of
1:01:29
GM in Iran, the holy city of
Goma, which was the center of
1:01:32
their religious and political
elites. Now, you know, if you're
1:01:36
talking about a virus spreading
from Wuhan, China, the most
1:01:40
logical places you'd expect it
to go next would be the other
1:01:43
East Asian nations bordering
China. And that's exactly where
1:01:46
a few outbreaks did occur. But
the virus then suddenly jumped
1:01:50
all the way to Iran. And in
fact, the headline in the New
1:01:53
York Times described Iran as
being the second epicenter, the
1:01:56
second global epicenter of the
virus. Not only that, but it
1:02:00
specifically targeted Iran's
political elites. 10% of the
1:02:06
Iranian parliament ended up
being infected, some of the top
1:02:09
Iranian officials ended up being
infected and a number of them
1:02:12
died. So we're talking about a
virus epidemic that occurred in
1:02:16
Iran. Just a few weeks after
America had assassinated Iran's
1:02:22
top military leader.
1:02:26
What do you think so far?
1:02:28
Actually, I've stuff I can get
an add some dimension to this
1:02:31
when you're done. It's pretty
good. Okay. So the obvious
1:02:35
question has popped out at me
when you hear this. Alright, so
1:02:38
the
1:02:38
obvious question is, it was this
Trump's operation all along, to
1:02:43
screw China, to hurt them
economically, by shutting down
1:02:48
all of the country. They tried
with, you know, Wuhan spreading
1:02:51
out to everyone at the Lunar New
Year, and therefore getting back
1:02:55
at him and then pulling a Oh,
China attacked us. Well, he has
1:02:59
an answer for that.
1:03:00
But one thing I should say is
that once the virus spread to
1:03:04
the United States, then the
reaction of the Trump
1:03:07
administration was so
incompetent, and so lazy and
1:03:14
incompetent and ignored the
whole problem. And I think it's
1:03:17
extremely unlikely that Trump
himself was aware of what had
1:03:21
happened. In other words, he
basically claimed the virus
1:03:24
didn't exist, it wasn't a
problem, it would vanish by
1:03:26
itself. He was so lackadaisical
that we ended up having a
1:03:30
massive outbreak in our country.
And, you know, from that point
1:03:33
of view, I think almost entirely
rules out the possibility that
1:03:38
he himself had authorized the
attack. Now, with most
1:03:42
administrations, most countries
around the world, the notion of
1:03:45
the top leader of a country,
having not been involved in a
1:03:49
major bio warfare attack against
the country's leading
1:03:53
international rivals, would seem
utterly absurd. But America is
1:03:57
not a normal country these days.
And the Trump administration was
1:04:02
a very strange administration.
If you've read some of the
1:04:04
accounts that have come out,
Trump's top aides and advisers
1:04:09
would often run circles around
him, they would in some cases,
1:04:12
they would hide his own
executive orders, hoping that he
1:04:15
would forget that he planned to
issue them. So under those
1:04:19
circumstances, it's easy to
imagine some of the top national
1:04:23
security officials in the Trump
administration deciding to deal
1:04:27
a body blow to China, America's
leading geopolitical rival, and
1:04:32
perhaps also Iran attacking Iran
in leadership, and doing so
1:04:36
without Trump's authorization
1:04:38
to this to me of a bunch of
nutjob intelligence people
1:04:45
pulling this off. Yeah, and then
having Fauci in on it, and
1:04:51
possibly Fauci saying, Hey,
guys, this is going to happen.
1:04:55
Finally, we get to do the mRNA
crap. Come on. partai this is
1:04:59
what we've been waiting for. And
of course, horror is
1:05:03
where it kind of falls apart.
Well, it turns into it turns
1:05:08
into a Trump hit.
1:05:10
No, no, no, no, no, it's not a
Trump pitch. No, no, no, he's
1:05:13
would you don't think it was a
trumpet when he says Trump was
1:05:16
an incompetent bonehead?
1:05:19
He's just you can it depends on
how you view it. Trump an
1:05:24
incompetent bonehead? No. What
happened was the media
1:05:28
discredited everything he said
he was not getting proper
1:05:31
advice. He was not getting
advice on therapeutics, that was
1:05:35
all that was all being denied,
and, and swept away. And
1:05:40
honestly, if you have a bio
weapon that is an anti economy
1:05:45
bio weapon, the last thing you
want to do is say oh, by the
1:05:48
way, get some zinc and, and, and
horse paste, and you're good to
1:05:53
go. Don't worry about it. So
they had this, if if this theory
1:05:56
is what it is, then they had to
keep everyone certainly Trump in
1:06:00
the dark. And if he came up with
these things himself, because he
1:06:04
did his research, then you have
to discredit that. And that made
1:06:08
him look like a bumbling fool.
But don't think this guy is out
1:06:11
to hit Trump, he's out to tell
you that it was the national
1:06:14
security intelligence apparatus,
my
1:06:18
own speculation or informed
speculation would be that all of
1:06:21
the elements of the attack
probably came from America's own
1:06:26
national security establishment.
In other words, the virus had
1:06:29
probably been developed at Fort
Dietrich or some other bio
1:06:33
warfare facility, the virus was
probably taken to China by
1:06:38
elements of American special
forces or CIA operatives, or
1:06:42
something like that. And all of
those individuals believed that
1:06:46
they were acting with the full
authorization of the top
1:06:50
American government. While on
the other hand, the people
1:06:53
actually involved were one notch
down from Trump probably small
1:06:57
group of officials who decided
that they needed to strike a
1:07:00
deep blow against China. And
they basically authorized the
1:07:04
pack on their own, with all of
the lower level officials,
1:07:07
assuming that it had Trump's
authorization, which it didn't.
1:07:11
And then, you know, once the
attack then caused massive
1:07:14
blowback in the United States. I
mean, By most estimates,
1:07:16
probably about a million
Americans have already died.
1:07:19
It's the worst disaster to hit
the United States since the
1:07:22
Great Depression. It's the worst
worldwide event, the most
1:07:26
important worldwide event since
the Second World War. So you can
1:07:30
easily imagine those officials
who were involved in at the
1:07:33
time, assuming that they did not
intend for to have blowback
1:07:37
inside the United States would
now be very, very concerned that
1:07:41
they're all might be fun. And so
you'd never get them to talk
1:07:44
about it. I mean, a million
Americans have died from it,
1:07:47
or with it, or whatever. But I
don't know. I like it. I like
1:07:52
this theory, the deep state
bunch of CIA bullcrap people
1:07:56
doing this, for whatever reason.
1:07:59
I have some issues with it. But
I have some other thoughts. All
1:08:02
right. The issues I have
involved. Well, of course, this
1:08:05
is the reason and anyone who was
smart enough to be at the
1:08:08
position where they were
involved with this sort of
1:08:10
testing and creation of this
dangerous biological weapon.
1:08:16
They always know that the
problem with it is that it gets
1:08:19
into it goes bad, do you can't
stop it.
1:08:23
They had just one they had event
201 And Krimson contagion, they
1:08:27
were supposed to be ready, they
completely failed, they had all
1:08:30
the shit that will go wrong, and
they couldn't handle it.
1:08:34
So let's look at it from some,
somebody might be able to
1:08:38
uncover the basis for this, who
is the most protected person
1:08:44
that we see as a spokes men and
he has been doing his job
1:08:49
forever in a very high up
position and is in control of
1:08:53
the billions and billions of
research dollars that are
1:08:57
involved with developing things.
So Fauci is not narrow is
1:09:02
untouchable and he's got that
he's got a kind of a Cheshire
1:09:05
cat look on his face that say
that there we're going to go
1:09:08
ahead with this and let's say
that it was our people that
1:09:11
poison the Chinese chickens and
the Chinese pigs because like
1:09:17
somebody said, If we I can
remember a lot of the details on
1:09:20
that pork swine problem is that
that they think you can eat a
1:09:25
ham sandwich and toss it to the
pigs because they'll eat the ham
1:09:29
sandwich and they get this
disease and once it start
1:09:33
spreading, it spreads really
fast. It's one of the fastest
1:09:35
spreading diseases because of
cannibalism. Well, they just eat
1:09:39
a ham sandwich just yeah, they
would eat just eat their own.
1:09:42
That's horrible. A ham sandwich
so and we're going to decide
1:09:50
that well this didn't do didn't
do the job it was does it give
1:09:54
our farmers an upper hand in
selling pork to the Chinese and
1:09:58
so this is good for balancing
Trade, although they've never
1:10:01
seem to be too concerned about
that. And now if you want to get
1:10:05
Trump out of the picture, let's
this may be part of the scheme
1:10:08
to get rid of him too, because
the intelligence community
1:10:11
doesn't like Trump, because he's
threatens them in some way or
1:10:15
other well, so he has to go. And
this got rid of him by the way,
1:10:19
it got rid of him, but but also,
I, in my mind, tie this into
1:10:23
perhaps a desire from the
financial markets to do this.
1:10:27
That's my whole thing. I won't
belabor it. But boy, that would
1:10:31
be great if you could screw
China's screw the supply chains
1:10:33
that stops the whole world
economy, and it went even better
1:10:36
than they could have hoped for
1:10:38
getting by low. So Fauci then is
given the assignment so Fauci
1:10:44
dreams up to it has to be the
guy that
1:10:46
dreamed up the scheme? Well, he
has all the the gain of function
1:10:49
we've got,
1:10:50
he listened to this, this
thesis. Okay. All right. So
1:10:54
they're working on this gain of
function thing at Fort Dietrich,
1:10:57
we're gonna keep that Archer,
and but they can't do it
1:11:01
anymore. So he says, We got to
spread, somehow, we're gonna,
1:11:04
we're not gonna be able to just
make it here and then drop it
1:11:07
off somehow, by Special Forces,
why bother doing any of that
1:11:11
complicated stuff? We know the
record of all the biological
1:11:16
labs in the world and the
leakiest. One was always the
1:11:19
land lab. Let's just give them
the assignment of them the money
1:11:26
assignment, yeah, give them the
assignment of working on this
1:11:29
thing, get it up to par, it'll
just leak out on its own. It
1:11:33
will get out of the lab within
six months to a year because
1:11:36
that lab is leaky,
1:11:38
right? Well, irrelevant, whether
they they triggered it purposely
1:11:41
or they knew it would happen
eventually, I think such an
1:11:44
operation, you'd probably want
to be a little more prepared and
1:11:46
have some kind of detonator and
not leave it up to chance. So
1:11:51
but they had people inside the
lab, anything could have
1:11:53
happened. Now I'll just take
this home.
1:11:56
There's anything but the point
is, is that is still came out of
1:11:59
that lab? Sure. I mean, it's an
interesting, fun theory, if you
1:12:05
want to call that kind of thing
fun. That it has a few holes in
1:12:10
it, but it's not out of control.
And it's believable that they
1:12:14
would circumvent, you know,
Trump, if but there was a way it
1:12:19
was it had to be Trump. I mean,
why specifically Trump at this
1:12:21
point in history, would it?
Would they have done the same
1:12:24
thing to Hillary? Would they
pull the same stunt which had
1:12:28
been more involved?
1:12:28
Yes, yes, I believe they would
have done the same things that
1:12:31
Hillary would have been in on
it. It would have been her plan
1:12:35
and it probably would have gone
much better and
1:12:37
to begin with, it might have
gone much better. Maybe this was
1:12:40
Hillary's plan possible. Yeah.
Well,
1:12:48
the timing got messed up for
sure. Because this retreat is is
1:12:51
not what they wanted. Not is not
what they wanted. No.
1:12:58
Well, that's we can't do these
things. This is also really
1:13:01
rude. Somebody under debt is a
deathbed thing. It's really
1:13:05
it's really rude to you know, to
do this to people. So no, yeah,
1:13:09
it's not so cool. deathbed
thing. And when you people how
1:13:13
many times we had some CIA guy
or Russian guy on his deathbed
1:13:18
admitted to everything the moon
landings fake. We did JFK CIA
1:13:22
hit job. And no one ever cares.
deathbed stuff is no good.
1:13:28
It's better than nothing. Yeah.
Which is what you've got.
1:13:33
Better than nothing.
1:13:35
Yeah. Yes. Good. There. I like
it.
1:13:38
I'm, I mean, feeling what I feel
now I'm not even convinced. You
1:13:42
get your your clips. No, no, no,
no, no, this was I was actually,
1:13:48
I think it's ama from the
Netherlands sent me this link,
1:13:51
and it's his YouTube and I only
got through half of it. Just
1:13:56
download it. Yes, you can do
that. Now on YouTube. You can
1:13:59
click the download. I didn't
know that there was a download
1:14:01
link. That seems to be new.
1:14:05
That seems to I have a download
link to but it's actually a it's
1:14:08
a it's a third party product.
No, I
1:14:11
don't have a third party product
is just popped up. today. I'd
1:14:15
never noticed that before. So
yes, of course, I've downloaded
1:14:18
that. This guy is not that
fringe. I mean, he's hated but
1:14:23
he's not that fringe. Anyway.
Again, I'm I'm still not sure
1:14:28
this isn't just a pandemic of
dumb testing. And the flu. Who
1:14:32
knows? I do know that the way I
felt Tuesday and Wednesday, if I
1:14:37
was completely freaked out, like
oh, COVID Oh my god. Yeah, I
1:14:44
could see what you could make
yourself feel really, really,
1:14:46
really bad. No doubt
1:14:49
that. It was definitely
everyone's pre programmed to. I
1:14:55
mean, I remember in the first
few days of this thing back in
1:14:58
the 2120 or 20. There was a I
was at the Grocery Outlet and
1:15:05
and this guy there was masked up
and they're all freaking their
1:15:10
standard dude, you don't that's
when you would walk down the
1:15:12
street and people give you a
wide berth. Yeah, remember that?
1:15:17
Yeah, sure. So this guy starts
yelling at his wife for touching
1:15:21
a loaf of bread. It may have
been touched, touched, and he's
1:15:25
just yelling and screaming going
nuts because she's touched this
1:15:29
thing. And she didn't have
gloves on. And this the number
1:15:31
one was blue neoprene gloves.
Yeah, people
1:15:34
were washing all of their food.
1:15:38
It's unbelievable.
1:15:40
It's sad. It's evil, what has
been done to the people of the
1:15:44
world. And it's the it's the
ruling class, not even the
1:15:50
elites, but well yet the ruling
class is the middle management
1:15:54
of your cities. They hate the
middle class working people hate
1:16:00
them. And I figured out that's
also Rogan's problem. Rogen
1:16:06
represents the guys in the in
the Dire Straits video, you
1:16:10
know, moving the refrigerator
and your color TV looks
1:16:13
like one up. Yes. The same says
riches. That guy is he looks
1:16:17
like a working class stiff and
muscle bound
1:16:19
because he is that's his, his
attitude is that and they hate
1:16:24
it and they hate that there's 11
million people to have these
1:16:27
degenerates these middle class
workers. tuning in, and oh,
1:16:34
look, they he talks to elites.
He had he can't be on that
1:16:38
level.
1:16:40
telling you they hate their
desk. Definitely an issue.
1:16:43
hate hate them. They hate they
hate us, John. They just hate
1:16:46
us. They hate middle class
working podcasters podcast. Oh,
1:16:52
yeah. Well, we should probably
just discuss this briefly then.
1:16:56
Man, did you see this DHS
bulletin?
1:17:01
Oh, yeah. Yeah, I should post
it. And I put a link to the next
1:17:04
news there. I was gonna post it
on the
1:17:06
summary of terrorism threat to
the US homeland. Yeah. And just
1:17:12
to mention the key factors
contributing? Well,
1:17:15
the way you explain what it is
you're gonna read it to you? No,
1:17:18
no, but I'm being explained what
it is you're reading so people
1:17:21
can get it's
1:17:21
a bulletin from the Department
of Homeland Security, which I
1:17:24
just said, it's a it's a
national terrorism advisory
1:17:28
system bulletin. And they have a
summary of terrorism threat to
1:17:33
the US homeland. And this will
last
1:17:36
i to be sure you read it. This
reminds me remember, during this
1:17:39
era, where, again, during the
Trump I think it's during the
1:17:42
Trump era, or, or even maybe
before at night, I don't have
1:17:46
the time where there was another
one of these bulletins came out
1:17:49
and said, somebody carries the
Constitution with them. They
1:17:52
have a Liberty or Death bumper
sticker. These are all
1:17:57
terrorists.
1:17:59
I'd like to remind everybody
that as far as I can recall,
1:18:02
Department of Homeland Security
was created after 911 Was it not
1:18:06
part of the Patriot Act? Yes.
And and the promise was, don't
1:18:11
worry. This is only for al
Qaeda, ISIS, Islamic terrorists,
1:18:19
everything from the outside,
we're going to be protecting you
1:18:22
in America. We'll never never
never use it on Americans. I'll
1:18:27
read a little bit from this, as
long as I just give you an one
1:18:29
are not going to read this long
but the whole thing is lengthy.
1:18:33
A couple pages. The United
States remains in a heightened
1:18:36
threat environment fueled by
several factors, including an
1:18:41
online environment filled about
how about that for some
1:18:45
hyperbole. The online
environment is filled to the
1:18:50
brim to the brim to brim with
false or misleading narratives
1:18:55
and conspiracy theories and
other forms of MIS DIS and Mal
1:18:59
information also known as MDM, I
liked
1:19:02
that Miss DIS and notice the
smell Saki has been saying Miss
1:19:11
Oh, she's missing Miss indice.
Well, she's not she's not used
1:19:15
mal yet,
1:19:16
but she better get on board
because that's the that's the
1:19:19
new direction is Miss dis Mal
and they am this this definition
1:19:27
was put in on January 31.
Anyway, let me continue here. So
1:19:37
the online environment filled to
the brim with false misleading
1:19:40
narrative conspiracy theories,
other forms of MIS DML
1:19:42
information introduced and or
amplified by foreign and
1:19:47
domestic threat actors threat
actor. These threat actors seek
1:19:53
to exacerbate societal friction
and sow discord and undermine
1:19:57
public trust in government
institutions. To encourage
1:20:01
unrest, which could potentially
inspire acts of violence. And
1:20:09
let's see, silent, you're
violent, you're silent, you're
1:20:13
violent. That's true. Here's the
key factors contributing to the
1:20:19
current heightened threat
environment. They include the
1:20:21
proliferation of false or
misleading narratives which sow
1:20:24
discord or undermine public
trust in government institutions
1:20:27
colon, for example, there's
widespread widespread, what
1:20:32
happened to filled to the brim?
Now it's widespread, it's filled
1:20:35
and wide online proliferation of
false or misleading narratives
1:20:39
regarding abstain
unsubstantiated, widespread
1:20:43
election fraud, and COVID-19.
Now there's a reason those two
1:20:49
are in the same sentence. You're
against. You're against Vax
1:20:52
vaccine mandates mass mandates
you question COVID-19? You're no
1:20:56
better than an insurrectionist?
Do you read it that way?
1:21:01
Absolutely.
1:21:02
Grievances associated with these
themes inspired violent,
1:21:06
extremist attacks during 2021.
So and this just goes on and on
1:21:13
and on and questioning question
here, even domestic extremists,
1:21:19
domestic violent extremists have
also viewed attacks against us
1:21:23
critical infrastructure as a
means to create chaos and
1:21:26
advance ideological goals, and
have recently aspired to disrupt
1:21:30
us electric and communications
critical infrastructure,
1:21:34
including here comes by
spreading false or misleading
1:21:39
narratives about 5g cellular
technology, bro, that's why you
1:21:44
were hired. That's why you were
calendar you were fired. That's
1:21:47
why you were fired. It's
1:21:48
true. Um,
1:21:51
this is this is not okay. And so
they have their own little unit.
1:21:56
They have the domestic terrorism
unit inside DHS. So what
1:22:02
happens? They just come and
knock on your door? Hey,
1:22:03
podcaster. And what can they do
is, yeah, if they show up, and
1:22:07
what do you do? Seriously, I'm
asking you a serious question.
1:22:12
Now.
1:22:12
Tell me to get the fuck out.
Now, this is not going anywhere
1:22:17
this is and you'll be taken
apart and congressmen and if did
1:22:21
the thing that's the giveaway,
there's a giveaway in here. If
1:22:25
this is all true, and all this
is going on? Why does this
1:22:28
document have an expiration date
of June 7 of this year? What is
1:22:35
the point of an expiration date?
Does the terrorism to domestic
1:22:39
terrorism all disappear on June
seventh? Oh, which is
1:22:42
coincidentally the day of the
primaries for the midterm
1:22:45
elections. Is it? Yes.
1:22:51
Wow.
1:22:54
So what does that mean?
1:22:56
It means this shake things up
the best we can to get people to
1:22:59
not vote Republican. And when
the primaries happened, that
1:23:03
this won't be this is over this
is going because now we're in
1:23:06
the real race for bring out the
big we'll do something even
1:23:10
better. I have to do something
because we these Republicans are
1:23:13
going to take over Congress and
we can't have that. This is the
1:23:17
most political thing I've ever
seen. And I hope that the the
1:23:21
Congress or the Republicans
stand up and do something about
1:23:25
it.
1:23:30
I love how you're like, I'm an
optimist. When you're like, oh,
1:23:34
yeah, people should do
something. But yeah, Republicans
1:23:37
might do something about it.
1:23:39
Yeah, you watch Tucker Carlson?
No,
1:23:42
I don't watch Tucker Carlson for
any of that. I keep telling my
1:23:46
own very own wife to Well, man,
I hope the Republicans really
1:23:49
sweep this set for what to have
more shenanigans and bullshit
1:23:53
douchebags screwing us over.
It's
1:23:55
a disgrace one douchebag taking
the place of another Exactly.
1:23:58
That's my point.
1:23:59
I'm not arguing that. But the
point is still this is still
1:24:02
political crap. Yes. Well,
1:24:04
they're not going to get rid of
the Department of Homeland
1:24:06
Security or any of the 70,000
intelligence organizations.
1:24:13
That's the only one I don't say
they're not because they're a
1:24:16
holes and the intelligence
community has six ways till
1:24:20
Sunday to get back at you. These
guys have a lock on it. They
1:24:24
have a lock on it. They have a
lock on them. People are
1:24:28
great. It's unfortunate but
true. Is
1:24:31
corrupt to the core and until
though it FBI certainly
1:24:35
and see oh, the FBI is out of
control. It's dangerous. These
1:24:39
guys are a menace to society.
Yeah, not all of course, but in
1:24:45
general, the unit the whole
organization is not pro America.
1:24:51
Produce
1:24:56
pro China
1:24:57
No. And with that, I'd like to
thank you for coming urgency in
1:25:00
the morning to you the man who
put the sea in the Crimson
1:25:02
contagion ladies and gentlemen,
Mr. John C. Morag.
1:25:07
But in the morning to you Mr.
Adam curry and Mary 70 Is your
1:25:10
magic recipe Dr. Saba dame's
nice out there
1:25:12
what happened to your Echo
machine ma'am I
1:25:14
didn't end well
1:25:15
in the morning to the trolls in
the troll room troll room.io is
1:25:22
where you can join the trolls on
the live show. Should we give
1:25:24
them a count today? We've been
up on these numbers recently.
1:25:27
Hey, trolls hands out scurry
away Oh, not bad not a little
1:25:34
lower than our previous record
24 Even 2400 Even was 2408 I
1:25:40
think wasn't it
1:25:42
on the record the actual record
yeah that we had last was
1:25:47
28 2809 of us right Wow.
1:25:53
We lost a whole bunch of trolls.
1:25:55
I know this
1:25:56
you have posted note
1:25:58
I have a sticker is a little
round stickers one of those
1:26:01
round ones nice and I put it up
it's right on the paint
1:26:05
do you need to you need on the
paint?
1:26:08
Yeah, they said they got a shelf
here and I just stick it right
1:26:11
on there and is permanently
attached
1:26:14
its interest that's how we also
run the donations for the show.
1:26:18
Similar system hey you can
listen to the shows live no
1:26:23
agenda stream.com Or if you want
you can also get it through
1:26:27
troll room.io Troll along listen
to all the live shows on no
1:26:31
agenda stream comm which has
been going along almost as long
1:26:33
as the show itself and there's
entire communities of podcasts
1:26:38
and shows that all circle kind
of congregate around no agenda
1:26:43
stream.com and the troll room
and no agenda social which you
1:26:47
can use to follow me Adam at no
agenda social calm or Jhansi
1:26:51
Dvorak at no agenda social calm
it truly is an oasis of rest and
1:26:57
calm in the oh my god so I use
Twitter as an inbox I look at
1:27:03
the what is the notifications
and that's pretty much it but if
1:27:08
you go to your maybe this has
always been this way but you
1:27:11
know um so of course I'm I'm on
my back I'm feeling crappy and
1:27:14
like I want to go through the
the home timeline of Twitter
1:27:17
This is not who you follow if
you follow someone Yeah, it
1:27:21
might show up but every other
tweet that I get is based on
1:27:26
your timeline but it just stick
and Pete random people in
1:27:31
now they put just random crap in
the in the time but it's now
1:27:35
it's
1:27:35
it's every other every other
tweet that I might be following
1:27:38
someone they throw in. It's just
like useless now. And it's it's
1:27:42
vile now what it was? Yes. I
think I think that's uh, I don't
1:27:49
know if this is new but it's a
gross mistake. And it's gross in
1:27:54
general.
1:27:55
I have I have my use for it is
to for direct messages to
1:28:01
certain people that I seem to
only be in contact with on
1:28:04
through via Twitter. A and B is
to plug the show.
1:28:10
Yeah, I only retweet pretty much
anyway, so if you're not on the
1:28:16
mastodons, you got to get
cracking on that because that's
1:28:19
where all the cool kids are.
We're We're awaiting Trump's
1:28:25
trump the true truth Yes, coming
out, you
1:28:27
bring it up. It cracks me up.
1:28:28
It's coming out in March it's
coming out in March. It turns
1:28:31
out now it may be a Pleroma
instance which is compatible
1:28:36
with with the mask bless you
which is compatible with the
1:28:41
fediverse but seen by many is
superior to the basic Macedon
1:28:47
setup and
1:28:48
I PLO Roma Exactly. So that you
know that every time
1:28:55
pretty much so that's no agenda
social.com Now let's take a look
1:29:01
at the artwork for assay MSI
1:29:05
Pleroma it sounds like a
disease. Oh, he's got PLO Roma
1:29:11
What is he gonna live
1:29:15
there's a lot of developers out
there who look who think this is
1:29:17
very funny all you're doing here
for sure. Now what the heck man?
1:29:22
Why am I why can I not get to
the just annoy balls and annoy
1:29:29
balls?
1:29:30
I for some reason can't seem to
get to the show notes for 1423
1:29:35
That's weird
1:29:36
show notes. Yeah, I just could
go to the art page.
1:29:40
Well, but do you remember what
the name of the show was? No.
1:29:43
Okay, so there's my point. This
is why I exist everything's
1:29:47
frozen here. Why did my pillow
1:29:49
Roma No, no. Well, anyway, it
was episode. You're not helping
1:29:53
to get a kick out of the art. It
just came in episode.
1:29:56
I can't get anywhere now. Oh,
you poor
1:29:59
thing. Okay no agenda show.com
1:30:03
Why don't you tell me what the
episode was and who did the art
1:30:06
okay
1:30:08
let me just type in no agenda
show up Tolan
1:30:11
baby Steelers already have it
baby Steelers and cash is taking
1:30:17
forever homeless going on today
they're already on to me John
1:30:20
they're trying to slow down my
Miss DIS and Mal information
1:30:25
we're having trouble finding
that site
1:30:29
is literally literally no,
1:30:31
no I got non agenda show that
1:30:35
non agenda show is there a non
agenda show.com That's right.
1:30:40
Anyway, so it was titled baby
Spiel Steelers Thank you Tom to
1:30:43
nail for Taunton, Neil, as we
would say in America for the way
1:30:48
thought perfectly hilarious
image of Jeff Bezos in his new
1:30:52
Dutch built super yacht. There
was a lot of perfect things in
1:30:56
that.
1:30:59
Especially in the including one
that I missed. Well, it's a you
1:31:03
the orange line, the orange
balloon with orange, blue, and
1:31:06
hello, and it's a Dutch. It's a
very typical Dutch design of a
1:31:11
boat that you might see on the
canals. X canal boat, kind of a
1:31:15
canal boat type, shorthand.
Yeah, so am I supposed to see so
1:31:18
I
1:31:18
guess legs come out of the
bottom of it. Two Phases can
1:31:23
walk along the bottom of the
canal.
1:31:25
Were there other things that we
were looking at? There was a lot
1:31:27
of Go. Blue Origin.
1:31:30
Yeah, a lot of
1:31:31
stuff on there. Let's see what
else
1:31:35
like freedom convoy, but you
couldn't see no agenda on there.
1:31:40
It was a lot of good art. There
was. It's see. Well, now they
1:31:47
say now there were I think it
was it was like the Canadian
1:31:51
goose on top of the truck, but
you didn't like that. I like
1:31:54
Viva la Liberte. Hong
1:31:56
Excuse me. The Canadian goose on
top. Oh, yeah, I thought the
1:31:59
goose was too small.
1:32:00
Yeah, you said the goose that
was to me. It was fine. Ness
1:32:03
works Viva la Liberte just below
that was quite good. I like
1:32:07
the no agenda effective safe
mRNA like the safety trigger
1:32:13
from Gabe Gabe Grider
1:32:18
Yeah, you didn't like that? I
didn't get it that much. I like
1:32:22
to honk with the boat with the
Mack Truck logo which is kind of
1:32:26
nice there's a there's a lot of
usable art but there was no
1:32:34
nothing he had jarring impact
now I base those in the little
1:32:39
boat
1:32:39
I laughed at the no agendize or
battery spin for power but
1:32:44
which one was that? It's the big
battery oh the battery
1:32:47
because you know you were
spinning your batteries trying
1:32:50
to get them to work ah and your
keyboard or whatever
1:32:54
yeah cuz I was one of your
story. I also liked in this
1:32:59
corner the vaccinated by Dame
Kenny Bender it's a muscular guy
1:33:03
you know it's just a nice piece
it would have been if would have
1:33:06
popped a bit God save the body
double like that.
1:33:11
Where's that oh keep calm it's
it's the body no no
1:33:15
not to keep cool keep calm with
his body double debt to below
1:33:18
that is the kind of punk rock
looking oh
1:33:22
god save the body. Oh yeah, the
Sex Pistols Never Mind the
1:33:25
Bollocks type thing.
1:33:26
That's a tad tanta. Neil you
using her skills as a modern
1:33:33
graphic designer
1:33:35
Well we're very happy with the
Beezus boat I think it it it
1:33:41
showed very well what we're all
about and and and I don't know
1:33:45
Do you think she enhanced his
eye or is that just as regular
1:33:47
guy
1:33:48
I you can look at a million
pictures of basil and often his
1:33:52
his left right is almost dead
closing his left eyes bulging.
1:33:58
Devers no enhancement needed.
1:34:02
It's fun to laugh about people's
physical issues.
1:34:05
Yeah, especially when they when
they're the richest person in
1:34:07
the world as snuffed out in a
second.
1:34:12
Right. Thank you very much
Taunton and thank you to all the
1:34:16
artists for doing fantastic work
always entertaining us and
1:34:20
everybody can enjoy it, you can
go to no agenda art
1:34:22
generator.com And you can see
the entire the entire collection
1:34:26
we have over close to 30,000
images, and multiple of the
1:34:30
number of episodes we done. And
also if you'd like to help
1:34:34
protect, preserve and embrace,
extend podcasting to enhance it,
1:34:39
get a modern leave the legacy
apps get a modern podcast app
1:34:43
new podcast apps.com You can see
all of these images flying by is
1:34:48
one of the many new features of
podcasting 2.0. And let us thank
1:34:54
our executive and Associate
Executive producers for today.
1:34:57
1424 Now we got a lot of Some
longest notes I see. And right
1:35:05
off the bat, like holy crap what
is going on here? Michael Minton
1:35:09
is in Louisville, Kentucky. Do
we have a term for this number
1:35:13
of threes?
1:35:15
A row of how about I'm gonna get
about this he maybe
1:35:22
$3,333.33 Here's his note. Thank
you by the way, when the going
1:35:32
gets weird the weird turn pro
kindest regards are all mittens
1:35:37
of a world distance. PS dames
nights and douchebags like Don't
1:35:41
be this didn't have a world
distance. That's what I said of
1:35:44
a world distant. PS I said, I'm
sorry. PS dame's nights and
1:35:49
douchebags like Don't be a
stranger at the Nashville skate
1:35:52
Ranger. See all soon. I'll be
there. Rona. At all.
1:36:01
No kissing.
1:36:03
No, definitely. No. Unless you
want it.
1:36:08
So what he's got no, jingles?
No, no, no, nothing. Good, man.
1:36:14
That's pretty crazy. Jason
Abbott. Apt. A BT is what it
1:36:20
says. SR $96.96 from verwacht
Veronica, Veronica veracross.
1:36:29
Gotta be that Wisconsin. ITM
guys love the media
1:36:33
assassination in the sanity it
gives us I donate 69696 plus 50
1:36:40
which I set up as a monthly
donation. These donations total
1:36:44
74696 that makes me a night.
Alright, that doesn't make him a
1:36:47
night but the bookkeeping I saw
does make him night he's been
1:36:50
donating the 15 for a while
actually. Please Knight me sir.
1:36:55
Iceman jingles get the jab No.
Shut up, slave pewpewpew little
1:37:01
go yay.
1:37:02
Get back. No
1:37:10
couple of his cute couple of
programming notes. There is yes,
1:37:16
for the producers. If you want a
jingle please do not be cutesy
1:37:22
with get the jab. Because I
looked for quite a while for a
1:37:25
get the jab ISO until I realize
you want to get vaccinated. And
1:37:31
again, I just have to be harsh.
The next person who sends me a
1:37:36
screenshot without a link, I
will personally come to your
1:37:40
home and beat your ass. I am so
tired of this. And people love
1:37:45
the show notes. Man. We can
research everything. It's easy
1:37:48
to search. Not if you're sending
me screenshots of articles you
1:37:52
just read. Ah, so for that,
okay. I'm really mad about that.
1:38:01
Program note. Adam has COVID
1:38:05
Yes, exactly. Stephen King. from
Grand Rapids, rapids rapids,
1:38:10
Grand Rapids, Michigan. 3808. I
like that. It's like a three
1:38:17
boob 380 dot O eight. Out here
we go in the morning first time
1:38:22
donor longtime douchebag please
rev up the deed douching
1:38:26
machines.
1:38:28
You've been D deuced.
1:38:32
F. I tried to keep this note
succinct, but if Too Long John
1:38:36
can entertain himself by reading
it in a disparaging voice. Now
1:38:39
I'll do that. I'm good at that.
This donation is for three 8008
1:38:44
Is the alien three boobs
donation. See I got it for
1:38:47
anyone into more exotic views.
No boobs. That's it. I mean, how
1:38:56
many dogs have only three.
Normally, I would put something
1:39:00
like this on a subscription
model but designed to cover that
1:39:03
executive producer credit left
me hanging. My workaround was to
1:39:06
set aside a little bit each
month and then send it all over
1:39:09
in one big lump sum. Well, thank
you. That's very cool. I presume
1:39:12
the sustaining donations will be
preferred to have a more stable
1:39:15
income, so perhaps some kind of
other recognition would help by
1:39:17
quite sure what you meant.
Regardless, no agenda is clearly
1:39:21
the best podcast in the universe
and my main source of news you
1:39:24
will want to diversify.
alongside other value for value
1:39:28
podcast like congressional dish
and Mo facts have not tried DH
1:39:32
unplugged yet, but probably will
at some point. No agenda helps
1:39:35
keep things real, keep it real,
and avoids falling into mental
1:39:39
traps on both the right and left
as someone who was disposed to
1:39:43
lean far in either direction and
he was had struggles with more
1:39:46
radical outlooks than the Insell
movement. The whole agenda helps
1:39:50
me see a real human connection
is key to it all. In my eyes,
1:39:54
male and female relations in the
West art and all time low on the
1:39:57
M five M seems to refuse to
cover anything related to Such a
1:40:00
media blackout will be fit for
deconstruction, though the lack
1:40:03
of clips does make things a bit
harder for the show curious and
1:40:06
how you and John feel about it.
About men and women not getting
1:40:13
into relationships at the
typical age.
1:40:16
No, the I think he's what he
said specifically, if you want
1:40:21
to deconstruct it, he wants to
know how we feel about the fact
1:40:25
that that media has not covered
this. Oh,
1:40:28
all part of the plan. Why do we
do that? We don't want to alert
1:40:31
anybody to the fact that we're
not having babies or anything
1:40:34
like that, or even having four
bags. We don't want any of that.
1:40:37
So that's how we feel about it.
Trying to kill us all. That's
1:40:40
Hello, is this is what the whole
show is about how they're trying
1:40:43
to kill us all. Lastly, could I
get a dose of relationship karma
1:40:48
to get my single ass out there
to mingle, as well as the most
1:40:51
obscure jingle? You can dig up?
Yes, I'll get the most obscure
1:40:56
jingle I can dig up because
whenever I asked for it, or
1:40:58
never to ask for I can never
find it. Oh, there's no
1:41:01
winning. We don't like to foster
a competitive atmosphere. But we
1:41:05
laugh a lot. Now everyone share
a secret.
1:41:08
You've got karma. That's
obscure. Love is lit and he says
1:41:13
By the way, love is lit. Thank
you.
1:41:16
You remember where that was?
clipped from?
1:41:22
No, I think it was years though.
Yeah.
1:41:25
It was clip from the spin OSH
spin OSH spin offs of Family Guy
1:41:30
American Dad
1:41:32
Oh right which lasted what a
season
1:41:34
it's still on No really? Yes
Wow. On cable Oh wow. Oh wow.
1:41:41
Did you say oh wow, I
1:41:42
just said Oh, wow. Ah,
1:41:43
and I didn't catch it. Idiot.
Cam Warren 33333 I gotta get
1:41:51
back on the Oh, wow. Oh, wow.
Oh, wow. Far out man. Guru.
1:41:58
Don't big message rights. Cam
Warren came in 33333 No big
1:42:04
message. Thank you. Just keep
seeing that number over and
1:42:07
over. Since we're about to go on
a quick vacation. I thought I'd
1:42:09
better donate and ask for some
karma. I would like to call out
1:42:13
Susan as a douchebag. She's a
friend that I hit in the mouth
1:42:19
over a year ago and I know she
loves the show. So
1:42:24
no jingles just the karma. Keep
up the good work. You can you've
1:42:29
got karma. Richard Harris is in
Provo Utah. Now another perfect
1:42:34
333 33 help. He says I need
help. I need medical dispensary
1:42:41
job karma and some relationship
karma. They might be able to
1:42:45
come together Wouldn't It Be
Nice thanks for the twice weekly
1:42:49
reality check maybe a D
douching. Since it's been over a
1:42:52
year
1:42:54
you've been d do
1:42:56
jobs jobs and jobs let's go for
jobs are my time limits on the D
1:43:06
deuced? William wild in
Baltimore Maryland. Three Three
1:43:13
another perfect donation it I'm
John. I'm watching old computer
1:43:18
Chronicles episode and saw the
one where you take apart the IBM
1:43:22
PS two a classic classic Did you
ever get that thing put back
1:43:29
together? Yes I did. It was very
modular machine was extremely
1:43:33
interesting from an engineering
perspective. Keep up the good
1:43:36
work Adam and John I need some
goat karma today. Well, we can
1:43:41
do that. Hey, go you've got
karma
1:43:52
that wasn't mentioned. I'll give
you this one. I'll take this one
1:43:56
chap Williams that came in with
33333 from Edmond Oklahoma and
1:44:00
this is a bank cheque that came
in from the those bank payment
1:44:04
systems we get lots of those and
it shows no note you can even
1:44:09
attach them so I was expecting
email and I said this is the
1:44:12
second or third time chap has
sent in this donation so thanks.
1:44:17
But I have no we have no
communications at the moment.
1:44:21
Oh no comms calms her down. No.
1:44:23
Comms are down.
1:44:27
Hey, he's gum gummy nerds.
Everybody knows gummy nerves are
1:44:30
down calms her
1:44:31
down. Which by the way, sounds a
lot like calms her down.
1:44:38
I like calms her down. I like
calms her down it's it sounds
1:44:46
okay. Here we go. Gummy nerds
who doesn't know gummy nerds.
1:44:51
3311 from Green Bay, Wisconsin
in the morning darling crackpot
1:44:54
and deer is buzzkill thanks to
your continued efforts to no
1:44:57
agenda show remains the best
podcast in the universe. As many
1:45:00
of our stalwart producers are
aware, Mr. Adam curry visited
1:45:03
Dutch troops in Iraq during
February of 2004. This was the
1:45:07
same month I arrived in Kuwait,
Kuwait to begin a year long
1:45:11
deployment with the US Army's
first infantry infantry division
1:45:14
as an infantry men assigned to
the first battalion 26th
1:45:17
Infantry Regiment, the blue
spiders poop. This past October
1:45:22
two men I served with created
their own podcast they call
1:45:24
their show before I forget to
quote from this shows
1:45:28
description before I forget his
two US Army combat infantry
1:45:32
infantry men telling their
perspectives pre and post 911
1:45:35
and their experiences in Germany
and events during the early days
1:45:38
of Operation Iraqi Freedom and
life after the war. These two
1:45:41
gentlemen were gracious enough
to invite me to be a guest on
1:45:44
the show. I was honored to speak
with him a bit giddy, I must say
1:45:47
because I had not spoken with
him and more than 16 years, the
1:45:49
first part of our conversation
was published. You mean the pod
1:45:52
was dropped? This past Monday
February 7. Knowing the kindness
1:45:55
generosity and humanity of our
no agenda tribe, I would like to
1:45:58
ask something of our show's
producers please give a listen
1:46:01
to before I forget. Oh, and
before I forget, may we have
1:46:04
some combat karma for all people
who have been touched by war?
1:46:08
And one jingo please have pod
fathers choosing love is lit and
1:46:12
such. Um,
1:46:16
well, you're digging that out. I
would have like, go ahead. I
1:46:19
just wanted to ask him to just
get so gumminess Did you plug
1:46:23
the no agenda show where you're
on the other podcast?
1:46:25
Oh, because if you if you
didn't, there will be.
1:46:29
I'm sure he did. Cuz he's, he
must have it would be
1:46:33
crazy to think he didn't. Thanks
gummy nerds. That sanded all
1:46:38
hell is gonna break loose and
you're gonna need a Bitcoin.
1:46:43
You've got karma. She had to
read the next one because this
1:46:48
one goes right off the edge of
the spreadsheet into oblivion.
1:46:51
Yeah, I actually looked at this
and I am able to redact it on
1:46:56
the fly. This is from Frank
sito. In Los Angeles,
1:47:00
California. This is his first
donation. He says he's ready for
1:47:03
a D douching.
1:47:06
You've been reduced.
1:47:09
And it is clearly it's the first
donation because this is
1:47:12
probably the longest note
anyone's ever sent. And we'll
1:47:15
we'll we'll skirt from the
beginning to the end because he
1:47:18
has a whole report here. I
started listening to no agenda
1:47:21
very recently, after your
previous not most recent
1:47:24
appearance on the Joe Rogan
experience. Your analysis of the
1:47:27
news provides much needed sanity
and clarity as the M five M is
1:47:30
hell bent on creating a
simulated reality. I recently
1:47:33
found myself a fulfilling new
job. And I'm happy to say that
1:47:36
I'm no longer an English
teacher. I believe all the jobs
1:47:39
karma helps. Now I finally have
enough extra money to give some
1:47:43
value back to you and Adam and
John. I'm a millennial producer.
1:47:46
I've been living in South Korea
since the start of the pandemic.
1:47:50
So here's a well overdue boots
on the ground report. And I can
1:47:54
skip around through this, the
government seemingly did a good
1:47:57
job keeping cases down at first
with curfews and restrictions on
1:48:00
gatherings as well as mass
testing with contact tracing.
1:48:04
But when the winter months
arrived, it became obvious that
1:48:06
the virus was well out of
control of any policy.
1:48:09
Nonetheless, restrictions were
increasingly tightened over the
1:48:12
months until the government
could shift the narrative to
1:48:14
vaccinations or to save face for
their failed policies that
1:48:17
damage so many small businesses.
Yeah, sounds pretty much like
1:48:22
everybody they're now going to.
There has been there's been
1:48:30
pushback, I want to make God it
doesn't even fit on the I need
1:48:35
to like another Excel just to be
able to get this out. There's
1:48:40
been some pushback from the
people, a group of doctors,
1:48:42
lawyers and brilliant high
schooler named young Darien that
1:48:47
have sued the Ministry of Health
due to them trying to force the
1:48:49
jab on minors, small businesses
have been protesting and
1:48:52
organizing as best they can.
Tragically, some owners have
1:48:55
tried to take large loans to say
financially solvent, others have
1:48:58
taken their own lives due to
financial burdens of the
1:49:00
restrictions to their business.
Yeah, this is bad. You have to
1:49:03
scan your QR code wherever you
go will loudly announce if
1:49:06
you've been vaccinated. How
about that?
1:49:09
Oh, please.
1:49:10
That's cool. So you scan your
code, vaccinated, a good human
1:49:16
resource or just plays adult
melodic beep if you're not
1:49:20
jabbed. Be the businesses need
to foot the cost of having this
1:49:27
QR infrastructure of course.
Furthermore, the government
1:49:29
doesn't acknowledge foreign
vaccinations so this had caused
1:49:32
some foreigners to get an
unneeded additional job.
1:49:34
Needless to say that terrible,
horrible life has been
1:49:39
increasingly tiresome with the
policies from the government
1:49:41
here my girlfriend I are both
unvaccinated. So we cook at home
1:49:44
every day and have been
expanding our culinary
1:49:46
repertoire. Yes, we are making
the best of things since we
1:49:50
really cannot go out anymore.
We're looking to get out of this
1:49:53
dystopian hellscape and I want
to move back to Hungary and she
1:49:56
wants to come with me. I want
Ashiya Korea Curious, she is
1:50:01
applying to university in
Budapest and we request some
1:50:04
goat karma for her round of
interviews coming soon. And then
1:50:07
hopefully her admission to uni
as the start of a new journey in
1:50:11
life. Wow.
1:50:12
I mean Hungary is what a
contrast as say anger is a very
1:50:18
open and free normal place.
1:50:22
Yeah
1:50:25
it's nice they're actually
performing their bankers kid
1:50:28
went down from vacation a couple
of couple of weeks ago he
1:50:30
say he loved it is supposed to
be clean. It's like it's just
1:50:34
really gussied up.
1:50:37
See that boy is really really
pretty. He's like, What 19 or 20
1:50:42
and immediately all these people
like hey, you know all you can
1:50:45
have dinner over my place. Girl
guys all the girl Oh, yeah, he's
1:50:50
definitely one of those.
1:50:51
That was reminds me of a 30 rock
episode where a Jon Hamm played
1:50:56
this good looking boyfriend and
a part of Tina face and
1:50:59
everywhere they went, they got
in free.
1:51:02
Of course. Thanks for all you
do. I look forward to reaching
1:51:06
my knighthood and seeing you all
at the roundtable Lastly,
1:51:08
requesting a vocal fried jingle.
Okay, well, luckily, I have that
1:51:12
set of,
1:51:13
you know, obviously, I read I
read The New York Times, like
1:51:17
all day long, mainly on my iPad.
1:51:23
You've got karma. Alright.
Thanks. Thanks, Frank.
1:51:28
I believe next on the list is
Carl Leipold in Arnold,
1:51:34
Maryland. To $6,260, Associate
Executive Producer as I prepare
1:51:41
for my 65th revolution, entering
the medical care age on February
1:51:46
9, I look to further pursue my
quest towards knighthood. With
1:51:50
this donation I am halfway there
no jingles job karma for lo and
1:51:55
behold, poor Mo. And many thanks
for the best podcast in universe
1:51:59
Carl lipu. i As someone who has
gone through this, the Medicare
1:52:03
thing, I have a recommendation
for people up there coming up on
1:52:07
this. And it's a good one. In
some areas, in most areas of the
1:52:12
country, there's a social
security office where you can go
1:52:15
in and you take a number you
wait, you know hour, and you go
1:52:19
in and start going into the DMV.
But disclose what you just wave
1:52:23
just described already sounds
incredibly appealing.
1:52:27
I know that sounds like okay,
I'm not arguing the point.
1:52:32
That's what you would think but
then when you go to this guy's
1:52:34
these guys, to tell you the
truth are so helpful. There's a
1:52:40
bunch of different little
toggles and stuff that they can
1:52:43
fix and check off. So you get
your you get maxed out benefits
1:52:48
to to an extreme you'd never be
able to do this yourself.
1:52:52
You have to go to the Social
Security office. Yeah.
1:52:55
And you run into these
bureaucrats are more than happy
1:52:58
to help do
1:52:58
they paid for your No It sounds
weird. No, no. So your eye
1:53:02
surgery all that stuff was
completely covered everything
1:53:05
I had to pay extra for it was
elective? No, my No. The eye
1:53:10
surgery was paid for. Yes, it
was paid for. I had an upgrade
1:53:15
job. That's right. The bionics I
had the bionic eyeball put in
1:53:20
that that cost me cash money
1:53:22
is that the business version is
bigger now. I
1:53:26
didn't get the business version
otherwise I wouldn't be doing
1:53:28
this show. I'd be rich.
1:53:31
Thanks, Carl. Hey, there's
Jackie green no note but you
1:53:34
know who doesn't know Jackie
green?
1:53:36
I looked him up I looked for
notice. I didn't see anything.
1:53:39
Jackie green is famous. Jackie
green is famous. Yes, yes.
1:53:44
Jackie
1:53:44
green is famous to two to 33
from Orangeville California
1:53:47
Thank you Jackie. Jackie green
famous Jackie green. No, no,
1:53:50
he's so famous like man just
don't need to know I don't need
1:53:53
a note. On your note man. I'm
Jackie green Jackie green.
1:53:57
Jackie green. Mike Robinson in
Salem Oregon comes in right
1:54:01
after Jackie Greenwood road
ducks tu tu tu tu tu ITM sir
1:54:06
furry furry gives a call out to
all get mo nation citizens in
1:54:10
the Willamette Valley including
our can be real estate gal and
1:54:16
Millennial Mel join our meetup
at sparkies brewing in Salem
1:54:22
Saturday, the 19th trivia and
prizes in the offing.
1:54:27
Wow that's a cool way to promote
your Promote your Meetup.
1:54:33
I think so. Excellent.
1:54:35
Baron anonymous cop. He's in San
Carlos California and a row of
1:54:40
ducks or geese? I think we
should call it geese still
1:54:42
decently drinkies John Adam in
the morning donation of tu tu tu
1:54:46
tu tu from the unofficial
tactical patch supplier of the
1:54:49
no agenda show i Yes. I'd like
to announce a discount code at
1:54:53
the 41 patches California shop
on Etsy in celebration of the
1:54:56
upcoming tu tu tu tu tu tu tu tu
Palindrome with five dollars off
1:55:00
the purchase of $15 or more with
the code ITM to to to get to the
1:55:05
end of the month should help get
some of these off my hands and
1:55:07
into the wild. These are these
are very nice. Patches by the
1:55:11
way. Very nice patches. I have
some stickers coming out very
1:55:14
soon be John big fan of the
stickers. You've always been a
1:55:18
fan of stickers. Now you just
walked away. If you didn't hear
1:55:25
you'd literally walked away.
1:55:27
I had to go grab this note off
the desk.
1:55:29
I know. I have some stickers
coming out very soon, which will
1:55:32
be perfect for slapping on a
laptop on your local street
1:55:35
light nor your kid sister along
with the last patch for a while.
1:55:39
Oh this the last one 3.0 coming
out in March just for teaser.
1:55:42
It's tactical AF involves black
and gray along with the words
1:55:47
Consulting Group on it. Okay. Oh
I can't wait for that one. Yeah,
1:55:53
consulting group. Yeah, the
tactical consultant, whatever I
1:55:57
look forward to perfect for the
spook go bag or tack vest.
1:56:02
Imagine a bunch of like, CA guys
just have these. Oh, man, a man.
1:56:07
It's cool. I'd like to extend a
heartfelt thank you to all the
1:56:10
producers who have purchased
items and are showing off the
1:56:12
goods to help propagate the
formula. Finally, I'd like to
1:56:15
request some dog karma for the
truckers and producers in Canada
1:56:18
fighting the good fight. Stay
safe. Take care all Baron
1:56:22
anonymous COP of the Bay Area
1:56:34
Yeah, I don't know if this came
from a Barisan Baron anonymous
1:56:37
cop or someone else but someone
and I thank you. I unfortunately
1:56:41
lost track of specifics. But
somebody sent me some what was
1:56:46
called collectible stickers for
the Biden I hate Biden if Biden
1:56:50
all that kind of stuff. But he
also had these stickers. Which
1:56:53
I'm not going to save because
they're just too great. I got
1:56:57
the Donald a little bitty Donald
Trump pointing his finger saying
1:57:00
Biden did that. And the Biden
won. You seen these pictures of
1:57:04
these things? The Biden when
were Biden's pointing his finger
1:57:07
saying I did that and you put
him on gas pumps? Yes, yes. Yes.
1:57:11
Yes. Yes. I've seen the price
point the price thing or at the
1:57:14
total or whatever you
1:57:15
call yourself a Greta one isn't
there? Greta?
1:57:17
I didn't get it. Right one. But,
but to me, and I know exactly
1:57:22
where I get my guessing when I
go put one of these stickers up
1:57:25
and it's away from the you know,
there's no way they can see me
1:57:28
doing it like a vandalism. But
it's vandalism, but it's funny.
1:57:32
vandalism. I did that. I did
that. You know the price is 775
1:57:38
bucks for half a tank of gas. In
California. Yeah. Yeah. Well,
1:57:43
California. Yeah. Weird. 524
premium to go to call. Yeah. And
1:57:48
we also are our gasoline
producers in this state. So
1:57:52
yeah, we're paying the most Are
you kidding me? No. Anyway, all
1:57:55
this photo man again. Yeah.
Dakota coal in Pineville.
1:58:01
Princeville Princeville, Oregon.
222 22. Hello, fellow
1:58:06
degenerates. Thank you for what
you both do. I look forward to
1:58:11
when your podcast comes out.
Please de douche me.
1:58:16
You've been de deuced
1:58:19
and I'm calling out. Riley
arrival. I know our why Ellie's
1:58:24
at Riley rial I don't know for
being a douche. Give me jobs
1:58:30
Carmen, a dealer's choice. Put.
This does an interesting day
1:58:32
today. With all these.
1:58:34
I'd like to make another point
of personal privilege and a
1:58:37
production note. dealer's choice
is not cool. Just request your
1:58:44
jingles. Because if I say
dealer's choice and John
1:58:48
dealer's choice, dealer's
choice, John dealer's choice
1:58:52
what is it watching? Go?
1:58:53
Greg. Yeah,
1:58:55
exactly. See, the show comes to
a screeching halt dealer's
1:58:59
choice
1:58:59
it's called the jingles yourself
put put this toward my
1:59:02
knighthood he says which is of
course as you do the bookkeeping
1:59:04
you can put it towards your
knighthood. Exactly.
1:59:08
Jobs karma for you of course
jobs,
1:59:10
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs. I
have an idea. For jingles
1:59:20
choice. Just do nothing but play
the word that No.
1:59:25
Every time from now on no.
1:59:28
If you do it every time people
will stop asking. Yeah, and
1:59:31
how do we get people to stop
sending screenshots without a
1:59:33
link? Just keep going. Just keep
1:59:35
no send him. No.
1:59:38
No, just send it send them I
know. Michael day is in Fuquay
1:59:43
Varina North Carolina row of
geese for you. He says credit
1:59:47
this donation to my wife Kelly
switcheroo. Okay. Kelly. Kelly
1:59:54
got it. The first South Wake
County resist we much meet up
1:59:59
with was a success. We ended up
with 13 folks coming out to a
2:00:04
local brewery and picked up a
couple of onlookers that we hit
2:00:07
in the mouth excellent work
that's that's rare doesn't
2:00:11
happen that often. No, it should
happen more often. It should and
2:00:14
I think a lot of bar staff
definitely start to hang out
2:00:18
with our people. These guys over
here cool. It's nice to network
2:00:22
with seeing folks these days yes
community and human contact is
2:00:26
what it's all about good
conversations about the usual
2:00:28
stuff in a judgment free zone.
One person mentioned it was nice
2:00:32
to know that she wasn't alone in
her line of thinking these days
2:00:35
it's refreshing to know that
other people out there actually
2:00:38
understand your perspective and
concern looking forward to the
2:00:41
next one jingles resistive you
much and ooh. And you have a
2:00:45
truck horn somewhere in your
audio files give a blast to our
2:00:49
friends up north. I have
something for me. We must we
2:00:56
must and we will much about
that. Be committed to Okay,
2:01:10
listen to that horn best I could
do. flying by the seat of my
2:01:14
pants here.
2:01:16
Onward with Sir Matt of the
growing tree and bend soup club
2:01:23
in Bend Oregon I say nice to
1183 ITM John and Adam, I was
2:01:28
hit in the mouth after Adam
stored Rogan appearance and
2:01:31
haven't missed an episode since
my smokin hot wife was hit in
2:01:35
the mouth soon thereafter, and
we hope to hit our good friend
2:01:39
Evelina in the mouth. With this
very episode, please de douche.
2:01:47
You've been de deuced
2:01:49
my donation of 211 got a three
is an honor of my partner slash
2:01:54
wife of almost 17 years. Deborah
Couzens 39th trip around the sun
2:02:00
tomorrow on 211 Would you please
add her to the birthday list?
2:02:05
That's Deb. Deb boar. Ah,
Deborah, ah, not Deborah or
2:02:10
Debbie.
2:02:11
Deb Bora. Do we say to Bora or
Deborah?
2:02:15
Deborah? Deborah. I've heard to
Bora Bora. Okay. Make it the
2:02:20
board. No, I
2:02:21
want to do it right. So you know
he's already now he's made it
2:02:23
worse. Well, yeah. Or up
Deborah. Okay. Is this dashes
2:02:29
Deborah? Hello, Deborah. Or
Hello, Deb. Ora? Hey, Deb or Ah,
2:02:36
okay. We got it.
2:02:37
Add cousins pronounced cousins.
We got that. Got it. Nailed it.
2:02:42
Jingles are Please don't eat me
Bo Jaiden You're so scary.
2:02:46
Obama, you might die and goat
calmer for all of our central
2:02:50
Oregonian comrades. Thank you,
Mr. Matt of the growing tree and
2:02:55
Ben superclub.
2:03:01
You might know you've got up
next Maria Cole to 1113 33 I
2:03:12
should say New York New York
birthday donation for myself.
2:03:15
First donated last year but
forgot to ask for D douching.
2:03:18
was left off of the birthday
list. Wow. That's no good. Thank
2:03:22
you for keeping this sh M. of
three Sham. No, no, it's S A is
2:03:33
single. Some of
2:03:34
us some
2:03:36
Yeah, it's an acronym John S H M
which is single American human
2:03:43
mother. How the hell am I
supposed to know what that is?
2:03:48
And it's a mother of three
sentences very bad.
2:03:52
I don't know. single adult human
male
2:03:56
Ah, there we did you look it up.
2:03:58
No, I just dreamed it up. No,
you
2:04:01
know I think you read the
classifieds. single adult human
2:04:06
male
2:04:08
classifieds
2:04:10
karma for all New York City
parents fighting their human
2:04:14
resource there. Ah ours Yes. I
gotcha. Sharpton jingle Sharpton
2:04:19
jingle. We should do a resist
then. I didn't see that. Not a
2:04:25
resist respect. That's what we
want. Oh my god, I have Corona.
2:04:30
Say no.
2:04:32
I've coviz got Corona. That's
why I must slow
2:04:36
COVID COVID Wrona ESP AIC Gothic
Oof. There we go. Java Since
2:04:45
none, I'm sorry. No, I said John
Lesinski for mu Wellington,
2:04:49
Florida to 1058. Greetings Adam
and John. I make this donation
2:04:53
on behalf of my father Michael
Lesinski. In honor of his
2:04:59
birthday today, I hit him in the
mouth back in 2016. He's been an
2:05:02
avid listener since I request
the de douching for him as well
2:05:06
as goat karma.
2:05:10
You've been you've got karma
nearing the end here we've got
2:05:20
Rebecca Joka I think from Salt
Lake City, Utah to 1019 in the
2:05:26
morning, John madam Happy
anniversary to my smokin hot
2:05:28
boyfriend Steven Streeter,
February 10 marks three years
2:05:32
together, and they never had a
fight. Steven, I love you madly,
2:05:37
but I've got to call you out as
a douchebag still gotta call it
2:05:45
as a douchebag for listening so
long without donating please de
2:05:48
douche me. Oh, yes, of course.
2:05:51
You've been de deuced
2:05:54
Wait a minute, then credit half
of him half the donation to him
2:05:57
and dee doo Shem. I'll do it.
But I think you should keep that
2:06:01
douche all over versus D deuced.
How it should really go. Stephen
2:06:07
hit me in the mouth some time
ago on one of our many road
2:06:09
trips. Unfortunately, he didn't
turn me on to the show before
2:06:12
COVID. So I was temporarily
swept up in the lies of MSM.
2:06:16
Thanks a lot, baby. But it
wasn't too long after the world
2:06:19
went crazy. That introduced me.
And after a few episodes, I was
2:06:22
hooked. If the show falls on a
travel day, we promise each
2:06:26
other to save it for the car.
Nah. Ah, thank you for supplying
2:06:31
us with the entertainment and
conversation topics during our
2:06:34
long drives. By the way, my 14
year old son also enjoys the
2:06:37
show. Of course, he's been it's
been very good for my kids to
2:06:39
learn how to spot the lies in
the media and at school. Wow, we
2:06:44
never had that before, did we
John, where the kids had to spot
2:06:47
the lies at school?
2:06:49
Probably they're just all lies.
2:06:52
This is a must for kids these
days for helping us with this.
2:06:55
Thank you very much. I'm so
grateful. Jingles Boom shaka
2:06:58
laka little girl China's a whole
get vaccinated and new
2:07:04
requirements to go with that.
shaka laka
2:07:11
No, no.
2:07:14
Now we go on to Joseph Sternhell
in John's town, Pennsylvania.
2:07:20
I'm gonna skip that because I
can't find his email but it's
2:07:22
$200 from him and we'll look for
it. This is Deaton in Dayton.
2:07:27
And he got a handwritten note
here or hand typed this type of
2:07:32
an old machine I suspected to be
an Olympus or something along
2:07:36
those lines. Please accept this
cold hard cash donation in
2:07:40
support of no agenda its hosts
producers in the value for value
2:07:44
model as a concept. The pandemic
has highlighted how important it
2:07:48
is to have a community This
prompted me to start digging
2:07:52
deeper into the no agenda nation
and finding his outstanding
2:07:54
denizens waiting for me I
encourage everybody listening to
2:07:57
check out the highly highly then
he's got a crossed off high
2:08:03
quality podcast to be found in
the no agenda stream the SS
2:08:07
missing and join their
associated chat rooms and he
2:08:11
goes on. I would also like to
mention my smokin hot wife mousy
2:08:16
bears delicious and nutritious
wellness gummies he makes them
2:08:21
by hand with only essential
ingredients elderberry and honey
2:08:24
you'll find no wood pulp.
2:08:26
Oh how disappointing I always
like to
2:08:29
Genda to 10% off
2:08:34
a gummy usually filled with wood
pulp
2:08:37
noises a joke is we're always
talking about hamburger meat and
2:08:41
ah mostly wood pulp.
2:08:45
I believe it I believe though
like that I believe it I believe
2:08:50
people put wood pulp into our
food
2:08:52
yeah is good for you if you're a
beaver Oh orders he was in the
2:08:59
morning is the code discount
code in the in this mousy MOU
2:09:03
spy bear.com And so he I don't
know how to have a viable kind
2:09:08
of viable business these are
shipped with the dry ice these
2:09:12
gummy bears. Oh, and they're
quite tasty. I don't know what
2:09:15
they cost but you can go to my
superior.com and check it out
2:09:18
and use in the morning as a code
you get some some 10% off. So
2:09:22
that's your plug. And they're
Tate they're good. They're
2:09:24
elderberry. gummies I don't know
why. Yeah, they
2:09:28
sent them to us. I haven't
picked them up yet. Or the
2:09:30
pendant Oh, they're
2:09:31
gonna be melted into a gob know
that
2:09:33
the P O Box. They're safe. It's
air conditioned. Okay, hey, I've
2:09:38
COVID Okay, yeah, you have COVID
Be nice to me.
2:09:42
You just say you could use is
that just use that constant I'm
2:09:48
using it on you. I know be nice
to be nice to me getting
2:09:51
beat up.
2:09:52
I got COVID Man Nice.
2:09:54
Oh you poor thing.
2:09:55
We do have we did get a wonder
Do you remember the
2:09:57
blisters? I said I told my had
COVID it Oh, you okay
2:10:04
yeah, you know what? So Tina
because we were supposed to do a
2:10:07
show yes they teen up posts like
oh yo Adams podcasts are down
2:10:11
Adams got the got the Rona and
instead of people like, oh man,
2:10:15
are you okay? No. Instead I get
a million goat gifts. Goat gifts
2:10:20
on the Twitter screaming goats.
No one asked you if you're okay
2:10:25
anymore with this stuff?
2:10:26
No, none of our members will do.
2:10:29
What they're not stupid.
2:10:30
It's a weak point and they
should be more concerned.
2:10:33
I got COVID Man. So we got a
late donation from Sir dude. Why
2:10:38
he's not a dude yet, but he will
be this mic. And this came in
2:10:46
this morning. Do you remember
what we're talking about here?
2:10:49
John? Just checking.
2:10:51
Yes, the donation came in at
845. The show really begins at
2:10:56
8am. Pacific time you're
supposed to send these notes in
2:11:01
before midnight tonight before
you don't send them in during
2:11:05
what what amounts to during the
show and expect them to be read.
2:11:09
I just happen to catch it by
accident. And I asked Adam if
2:11:13
you wanted to read this no,
because it is a knighting. And
2:11:15
it could it would have normally
been pushed off to the next
2:11:18
show. And it came in with a $50
donation. And it was just it was
2:11:22
I mean, I realized that we
haven't bitched about this
2:11:26
midnight deadline for probably
six months. Yeah,
2:11:30
people need to know they need to
know give and give everybody
2:11:34
these notes. Can you please give
everybody the guideposts?
2:11:38
The guidepost is when the clock
strikes 12 in Pacific in the
2:11:42
pacific time region midnight
that's it it's over we the show
2:11:46
is already does put to bed,
2:11:47
you're done. You're done yeah.
But it was he becomes a night
2:11:52
today and so we thought that
would be the right thing to do
2:11:55
in the morning gents. I'll
please ask for D douching. Since
2:11:58
I've never asked for one okay.
You've been d do check it out.
2:12:04
I've been listening since John
was still welcome on twit
2:12:08
pool what
2:12:11
Wow man, I sage thank you guys
for the 14 years of sanity
2:12:15
here's to many more I wish to be
known as Sir dude named Mike
2:12:18
have not that Paris and I humbly
request double doubles and
2:12:23
Belgian triple at the round
table you got a man love His
2:12:26
lips are dude named Mike though
he'll be sir dude named Mike
2:12:29
have not that Paris and you want
a couple of jingles whole load
2:12:32
Fauci wheeze and Lady Mugdha
2:12:35
I'm gonna give you the whole
loan today.
2:12:38
So I mean that is the land of
unconfirmed Yes, we came we saw
2:12:43
he died you've got karma
2:12:55
and that's it. I think that's
all we have thanked everybody we
2:13:00
need to thank these people, our
executive producers and
2:13:03
Associate Executive producers of
episode 1424. These are credits
2:13:09
that are real they are if you go
anywhere where credits are
2:13:13
recognized, these will be
accepted. Just look at IMDb and
2:13:16
look up no agenda executive
producer, you'll see how many
2:13:19
Hollywood bigwigs actually have
been awarded these titles and
2:13:22
it's something you could put
onto your resume.
2:13:24
It's not really an award. It's
something you've earned.
2:13:28
Awarded. Yeah, okay. earned.
Yes, I'm sorry, earned. Good
2:13:32
point. If you do would like to
earn this. Go to this website to
2:13:38
learn more vo rack.org/and A
thank you all for bringing your
2:13:43
time talent and treasure to
Episode 1424 Our formula is this
2:13:49
we go out we hit people in the
mouth
2:14:05
so harsh.
2:14:07
So I have a biting clip going in
and I have this some information
2:14:11
about the America COMPETES Act.
What's that
2:14:14
America COMPETES Act?
2:14:16
It's an American. Well, from the
sounds of it. It's obviously
2:14:20
something that will take away
our competition
2:14:23
or sounds like something that
will strengthen our competition
2:14:26
by making us crap. Yeah.
2:14:30
Okay, let's go but first, I want
to do these Biden because
2:14:32
because still bothers me as you
know, that I am irked by Biden's
2:14:38
just casually saying not a job.
Yes, exactly. And so I gotta go
2:14:47
first. Let me play this clip. So
this is about Biden in this
2:14:49
competition. I want to make some
comments on this before I get
2:14:52
into the no joke and then the
American competition. This is a
2:14:56
short clip. 29 seconds. Biden
made in America. We've heard
2:15:00
this, this clip came out last
week. And I want to say some
2:15:04
something about it.
2:15:05
There's a law that's existed for
a long time. There's too many
2:15:09
exceptions like this one had.
And that is that by America, as
2:15:14
President knighted states, I
award contracts. And I'm now
2:15:18
making the case and was working
is one reason those jobs are up
2:15:23
is unless the product I'm
purchasing for the American
2:15:27
people was made in America. And
all of its component parts are
2:15:32
made in America weighing fine.
2:15:38
You see the problem here?
2:15:40
Can I insert one little thing
about that before you please?
2:15:45
The tests that you ordered
probably have not received yet
2:15:48
from the government the free
test. Right? Yeah, you didn't
2:15:53
get them yet?
2:15:54
Did you know No, still?
2:15:56
Do you know what these tests
are? I have no idea made in
2:16:00
China. I'm not. So if the
government sends you something
2:16:05
to stick up your nose, and it
comes from China, How stupid do
2:16:09
you have to be?
2:16:13
Well, I would take what brought
was brought to mind by that
2:16:17
clip, when he said it is that
was another clip we played
2:16:22
probably, I don't know, two or
three shows ago, moaning and
2:16:26
groaning about the semiconductor
shortage. And we were told that,
2:16:31
as of now, only 10% of all the
semiconductors in this country
2:16:36
are made in this country. So how
does everything have to be made
2:16:42
in this country, when we only
make 10% of the semiconductors,
2:16:45
which are in everything?
semiconductors are in the cars
2:16:49
that for refrigerators,
everything's a smoke screen, the
2:16:51
radio is your alarm clock that
computers I'm using here,
2:16:55
everything's got semiconductors,
except for a stick of wood or
2:16:59
round ball, and that probably
took a semiconductor to make. So
2:17:04
how does that work?
2:17:05
It's a smattering. You know what
I'm telling you, it's a
2:17:08
smokescreen to pretend to prep
courses, bull crap, when I'm
2:17:12
doing we have nothing to buy. We
barely make anything sadly.
2:17:16
Right. But that's just one
thing. Before I, before I get to
2:17:20
the long version of this same
came from the same clip, but
2:17:25
this is where and I was saying
what do I have to do to make
2:17:28
these clips make sense? I'm
going to have to sweeten them by
2:17:31
hand. So it makes some sense
when you listen to the flow of
2:17:35
things. And this is the example
I've put together, I'm going to
2:17:38
probably start doing this
routine that you tell me if you
2:17:40
think I shouldn't do it. Ready?
Yeah.
2:17:45
Is unless the product I'm
purchasing for the American
2:17:50
people was made in America. And
all of its component parts are
2:17:55
made in America weighing fine.
We're just simply not buying it
2:18:00
what's gonna happen here. Not a
joke. To fact, it's not a
2:18:07
violation of international laws
either. We're talking about
2:18:11
here, with three exceptions I
won't bore you with and they're
2:18:14
highly unusual. With three
exceptions. Every single project
2:18:21
we're talking about is paid for
federal dollars and as a federal
2:18:25
project, it's going to be union
jobs. Every single one so many
2:18:33
exceptions. I think only 1920
jobs are gonna be 1000s 1000s
2:18:39
people put to work not a joke. I
mean, this is serious. And guess
2:18:46
what? The American public could
be safe. And it's gonna be
2:18:51
cheaper.
2:18:53
Well, since it's your actual
peeve about him saying not a
2:18:56
joke, yes. Okay, but
2:19:00
what as you get a better laugh
that's a cartoon laugh. Yeah,
2:19:03
it's like a I read good to get
thought maybe a woman
2:19:07
needed variety. Okay, how about
camera but camera was laughing
2:19:13
there now that's a laugh.
2:19:14
Oh, listen, interesting thought.
Okay, I'll work on it. I will
2:19:19
improve
2:19:20
this. So do we have the these
exceptions if you have any info
2:19:23
on that? We're
2:19:24
not yet but you know what they
are? Yes, I know exactly what
2:19:27
anything that is not made in
this country
2:19:30
impractical or inconsistent with
public interest, non
2:19:33
availability or unreasonable
cost. Yeah, there you go. Which
2:19:37
is everything is everything, of
course total bullcrap once
2:19:41
again. So let's
2:19:42
go to the American Competes Act
and understand what this might
2:19:47
be about this part one new exam,
a
2:19:49
house today approved legislation
that lawmakers say will help
2:19:52
ease the supply chain crisis and
curb mass retail thefts.
2:19:56
The measure is called the
America COMPETES Act if passed
2:19:59
it would require online
marketplaces to verify the
2:20:02
identities of sellers and
collect information from them
2:20:05
like a government ID and
techshow require sellers to
2:20:08
attest that their products are
authentic and would hold them
2:20:11
liable for certain violations.
2:20:13
Wow. Do we get to request the
same from our representatives?
2:20:18
Make sure no one's sleeping with
China? Or has China driving them
2:20:23
or in their office?
2:20:25
I'm asking you what what is this
got to do with competition?
2:20:30
American Competes Act is we want
your ID.
2:20:33
Yeah, we want your ID and by the
way, Etsy. You got an Etsy
2:20:40
you're gonna have to prove show
your ID. Yeah. Nice eBay. This
2:20:45
is control. It's a critical
control mechanism. Oh, no, it's
2:20:48
for competitions
2:20:49
competitive act. If this is the
part two of this
2:20:52
legislation also takes steps to
try and ease some of the supply
2:20:55
chain problems and shortages
caused by the pandemic, the bill
2:20:59
puts $45 billion towards
strengthening supply chains and
2:21:02
52 billion to boost
manufacturing of semiconductors
2:21:06
in the US, a shortage of
computer chips, most of them
2:21:09
made overseas is led to higher
prices for electronics, cars and
2:21:13
medical devices. But House bill
would also put tariffs on more
2:21:16
Chinese goods, eliminating an
exemption for products worth
2:21:20
under $800.
2:21:25
Okay, I still don't see. So
2:21:26
it's a giveaway. There's some
money because you know, the
2:21:28
semiconductor companies? And
have you checked out the price
2:21:31
of the stock price of AMD, which
went from $3 to $100? Sure. It's
2:21:37
let's give them some money. So
they can build some fabs over
2:21:40
here, because they don't have
any money. They can't build
2:21:44
their own fab on their with
their own dime. So let's give
2:21:48
them 50 million 50 billion
sorry, dollars to help build
2:21:52
semiconductor please
2:21:54
these guys and and that takes
forever. Yes, it does. It takes
2:21:59
you don't just pop a fab out of
the ground or, you know, they're
2:22:02
building one here in Texas, not
not far from us think it's the I
2:22:06
want to say Samsung. So they do
semiconductors that Intel? Yeah,
2:22:10
they do.
2:22:11
They're one of the leading
semiconductor makers, they make
2:22:14
non volatile memory, they're the
almost the flash drives the hard
2:22:18
disk they
2:22:18
are, they are, in essence,
almost taking over the tiny town
2:22:23
of Taylor, which is better. I'd
say from my husband hour and a
2:22:29
half, you know, it's probably
about 45 minutes, north of
2:22:34
Austin. And there that's where
their new, the new fab will be.
2:22:38
$17 billion semiconductor plant
2:22:44
didn't wait for the government
money.
2:22:47
Maybe they had more knowledge.
Yeah, of course.
2:22:52
Honestly, the third part of this
clip
2:22:55
COVID 19 pandemic taught us many
hard lessons, including that we
2:23:00
are far too dependent on other
countries like China, for
2:23:04
critical goods and our national
security. Just 30 Some years
2:23:09
ago, we were producing upwards
of 40% of the world's chips. And
2:23:12
today, it's hovering almost at
10%. The Senate passed its own
2:23:18
economic bill on China eight
months ago. And now the House
2:23:21
and Senate will have to resolve
differences between
2:23:23
the two.
2:23:25
So these bills are competing. So
So yeah, so get your check ID
2:23:32
that's gonna debts a supply
chain issue. If you don't check,
2:23:35
Id check your ID slay major
supply chain dining, and then
2:23:39
give money away. There you go.
They fix the problem.
2:23:43
So Tina comes home the other
day? And she says, Yeah, this
2:23:47
monetary, modern monetary
theory, like what? And she knows
2:23:51
who first introduced this, and
she's done all this research.
2:23:55
And she says, I have a question
about this. And I said, You know
2:23:58
what, I'll ask John this because
John is a fan of modern monetary
2:24:01
theory correct.
2:24:03
A huge fan.
2:24:05
You've always said, we need to
be pouring money in it doesn't
2:24:08
seem to you said just on the
last show. seems to be going
2:24:11
fine. Everything's good.
2:24:12
I have taken that that stance.
Yes.
2:24:18
So she says, if we can create
all these trillions and
2:24:22
trillions of dollars, and this
is a very normal question. Why
2:24:27
are we still paying taxes? Why
are our taxes so high? And her
2:24:33
conclusion is, it's Ctrl. Yeah,
and I have to say yes, there's
2:24:39
absolutely no reason we should
be paying taxes. I mean, you
2:24:41
could give you could fix the
whole racism, debate debate.
2:24:45
Here's $1,000,000,000,000.08 us
we got more. Hey, let's take tow
2:24:53
let me just seriously what is
the point of taxation when you
2:24:57
can and it is accepted? fiscal
fiscal policy. I think fiscal
2:25:02
policy is monetary, modern
monetary theory. You can just
2:25:05
keep making the money and put it
in. How does that jive with
2:25:09
taxes? It doesn't. It's his
right is purely for control.
2:25:13
Yep. Well, that's disappointing.
Why we're getting disappointed
2:25:19
getting screwed by our
government.
2:25:21
This need to be controlled.
Let's face it. Oh, yeah.
2:25:25
I really need to be control this
true. That's true.
2:25:29
All right. The Olympics, check
out some of the Olympic stuff
2:25:34
here.
2:25:34
Have you watched any Olympic
stuff? Yes, I have. Cuz I've
2:25:38
watched literally three
freestyle jumps yesterday. And
2:25:44
that was it. And it's just it's
so hilarious to see
2:25:47
they have watched the best of
the Olympics. Like, what's so
2:25:51
hilarious
2:25:52
is to see that you know, the
freestyle guys and then you look
2:25:56
off to the right and there's
these the nuclear stacks. The
2:26:00
complete barren ground behind
it, they really didn't do
2:26:03
much at first. This is the first
winter olympics in the history
2:26:08
of the games, where all the snow
is artificial.
2:26:13
Wow, that's pretty good snow.
2:26:15
Well, I don't know if it is
because I've seen people's, you
2:26:18
know, expert skiers not you
know, doing as well as they
2:26:22
should have though. Or was
Shiffrin or whatever name is
2:26:24
that our superstar ski or is
fallen down twice, right? Yes,
2:26:29
crappy snow.
2:26:30
But the whole thing is. It's
pretty sad. I mean, there's no
2:26:34
ratings. No one cares. There's
no one talking about it. Have we
2:26:37
even won a medal? Yes, we
2:26:40
finally won our first gold
2:26:41
out of the Dutch doing was with
speed skating. I haven't seen it
2:26:45
that you've won more
2:26:46
medals than we have. But they do
speed skating. The Russians are
2:26:49
the ones kicking gold and the
Russians are kicking their wins.
2:26:52
They're not even rushes anymore.
They're the Orosi
2:26:57
they're not allowed to say
Russia. It's still the Olympian.
2:27:01
Oh, geez.
2:27:03
Now ROIC, which I think is the
Republic of China. But you know,
2:27:06
they're not going to do that. In
the end. These games are Oh, C
2:27:09
stands for the Russian Olympic
Committee. Yes. Correct. They
2:27:12
can't be a Russian. Yes.
2:27:13
That's unbelievable. Why did
they even show up? I'm like, You
2:27:17
know what? Screw you. We can't
We can't even be called Russia
2:27:21
in these games. I did watch. I
did watch a little curling
2:27:26
yesterday. I have to be honest,
childish
2:27:27
child.
2:27:28
I do like the curling.
2:27:30
I like curling pusillus this
into the this is the NPR is the
2:27:33
indicator which is one of their
little specials that are got the
2:27:38
squeaky voice Millennials giving
us the news.
2:27:41
No offense to our millennial
producers.
2:27:44
Well, no offense to the ones
that aren't squeaky voice here.
2:27:48
Here's not an NPR indicator. On
the Olympics,
2:27:52
the games are happening. But
this is a really unusual year
2:27:55
and not just because of the
pandemic, China, which is
2:27:59
oh man, you're so right. This is
this. It's not the squeaky
2:28:03
voice. It's the read is the
intonation. It's the up and down
2:28:07
to kind of it makes it cutesy.
cutesy is that it? That's kind
2:28:11
of the games
2:28:12
are happening. But this is a
really unusual year. And I'm not
2:28:17
just because of the correctness
2:28:19
of it talk to you. This is
really unusual here. Not just
2:28:23
because it's
2:28:25
China, which is hosting the
Winter Games in Beijing is
2:28:28
facing a lot of criticism for
its human rights record. Its
2:28:32
restrictions on the press
censorship of everyday citizens,
2:28:36
and especially its treatment of
weekers and use of MSG and their
2:28:40
food. The USD Department says
the Chinese government is
2:28:43
carrying out genocide, forcing
people to live in detention
2:28:46
camps, forcing weaker women to
undergo abortions and forcing
2:28:51
them to undergo sterilization.
2:28:53
And because of that a number of
countries including the US,
2:28:56
Britain and Canada have declared
diplomatic boycotts. And it's
2:29:00
against this tense backdrop of
politics and human rights
2:29:03
issues. That businesses you
know, the Olympics, corporate
2:29:07
sponsors, they're trying to keep
a low profile. Usually when you
2:29:11
watch the Olympics on TV, there
will be tons of ads. But this
2:29:14
year has been relatively quiet.
Sponsors are caught between a
2:29:18
rock and a hard place. If they
owe up their sponsorship, they
2:29:21
risk alienating some American
consumers. And in fact, last
2:29:24
summer a congressional hearing
called on American businesses to
2:29:27
withdraw their sponsorship of
the Olympics.
2:29:30
On the flip side, if businesses
speak out against the Chinese,
2:29:33
they risk losing China's almost
one and a half billion customers
2:29:36
which is like about for
America's blind chips. And I'm
2:29:42
Adrian Ma. Today's indicator is
$200 million. That's around how
2:29:46
much it costs to become an
Olympic sponsor. Today on the
2:29:50
show, how do you navigate when
you know no matter what you do?
2:29:54
You're gonna lose.
2:29:56
Wow. $200 million What a gyp?
They didn't get it. They didn't
2:30:04
get any of that value this time
around.
2:30:07
Who are the sponsors?
2:30:09
at Nike FC Nike logos, that's
about it. Probably
2:30:12
Coca Cola, Coca Cola. And they
said later is a guess or some
2:30:17
sort of one of these kind of
extortion deals is that you know
2:30:21
about these where you said no,
well, you could if you drop out
2:30:24
of these, I know it's costing
you money, maybe not get your
2:30:26
money's worth, but then you
won't be able to get any other
2:30:28
ones in the future. And so they
pull that stunt, right. This is
2:30:33
reminiscent of the of the Jay
Leno brought to us out in one of
2:30:37
his car shows about how Ferrari
is now at the point whoever's
2:30:41
managing the company that you
can't buy the Ferrari you want
2:30:44
until you own a couple other
junkier ones. Oh, yeah,
2:30:48
you have to be in the club. You
have to be a valued customer.
2:30:53
Yeah. So this is I don't know if
you want to listen anymore.
2:30:57
These Sure I do. Okay, let's go
with part two. And if this one
2:31:01
doesn't, jet Jack Jack up a bit,
I'm gonna kill it.
2:31:05
For athletes. The Olympics is
one of the biggest events in the
2:31:08
world. And you know what, it is
the same thing for advertisers.
2:31:12
You're talking about one of the
most recognizable brands in the
2:31:14
world. Scott Rosner
2:31:15
is an industry consultant. And
he's advised brands from adidas
2:31:19
to the NFL. And he says, to get
ready for the Olympics, brands
2:31:22
have signed deals, written
contracts, and spent hundreds of
2:31:26
millions of dollars on rights
and ad campaigns.
2:31:29
Okay, we know what you get if
you're an athlete, and you win
2:31:32
the Olympics, undying glory, an
amazing medal, maybe the best
2:31:37
feeling in the world. But what
do you get if you're an Olympic
2:31:41
sponsor?
2:31:41
At its baseline, what you're
talking about are those five
2:31:45
interlocking rings, you're
talking about the right to call
2:31:49
yourself an official sponsor of
whatever games you're talking
2:31:54
about, right? You're an Olympic
sponsor. And those in and of
2:31:58
themselves, while some people
you know, will snicker at that.
2:32:01
Those are incredibly valuable
pieces of intellectual property.
2:32:07
Yeah, we're not talking about
like a small local events,
2:32:10
right, we're talking about one
of the biggest sporting events
2:32:12
in the world. Games only happen
every four years, and
2:32:16
practically the whole world
tunes in at some point, so
2:32:19
sponsoring the Olympics can cost
hundreds of millions of dollars.
2:32:23
But it can be worth it. Coca
Cola has been a sponsor since
2:32:27
1928. And it's back again this
year. And you've also got
2:32:30
companies like Panasonic, Toyota
and visa,
2:32:34
but this year sponsors are faced
with making this impossible
2:32:37
choice. Who do you keep happy,
2:32:40
it's hard to to be a global
brand and avoid China. Scott
2:32:45
says on one side of the
equation, there's America. And
2:32:48
in within that you've got three
groups of people that you're
2:32:51
trying not to upset, do you risk
angering some of your American
2:32:56
customers who are maybe
questioning your ethics. But you
2:32:59
also don't want to anger
customers who would be furious
2:33:02
if you pulled sponsorships for
an event that supports hard
2:33:05
working American athletes.
2:33:07
I kind of liked this, this topic
because it goes along with the
2:33:12
destruction of Hollywood and
influencers and how broadcast
2:33:17
television is falling apart. I
would say advertising
2:33:20
interrupted content, which is
what the Olympics is, unless you
2:33:25
have the peacock, so you're
paying for it's a peacock. So
2:33:28
some other way. Radio shows that
all the multi channels like they
2:33:32
used to, I believe the Olympics
will never recover. I think
2:33:35
people are sick of this shit.
They're sick of the dumbness.
2:33:38
They're sick of the everything
about it. They're sick of it.
2:33:41
They're sick. Sick of
professional sports in general,
2:33:47
just because no one wants to
watch live television anymore
2:33:50
with ads. Unless it's like the
Super Bowl, I think that would
2:33:54
that to me truly is where the
ads are the star. The ads for
2:33:58
the Olympics are not stars and
not like, oh my god, did you see
2:34:02
that ad? No. You know what I
mean?
2:34:06
I know exactly what you mean.
I'm not in full agreement with
2:34:09
it. Because I think people can
be talked into anything. But
2:34:15
these ads, just just complaining
about them, I think is I don't
2:34:21
know why anybody goes to a live
event to watch professional
2:34:25
sports. You go to a live event
and they stopped to show at the
2:34:32
event. They'll show you the ad.
2:34:36
They stopped so the ads can run
and they stop everything stop
2:34:39
play.
2:34:40
Yeah, yeah. And so you're
sitting there and you wonder
2:34:44
Wait a minute, this game was
getting pretty good. Why or why
2:34:48
certain ones for dentists not
just for 30 seconds for a 32nd
2:34:52
ad it's for a two minute block.
And first you got to get out of
2:34:56
the into the block so that stops
play and then they get And then
2:35:00
they play the ads to two and a
half minutes where the ads where
2:35:04
you sit there doing nothing
twiddling your thumbs then they
2:35:06
bring the players back under the
court because the ads are over
2:35:10
and they got to start playing
again. It's like it just ruins
2:35:13
the game. I mean I've been to
football games where I've got I
2:35:16
won't go to a professional if
people have asked me hey, I got
2:35:19
some seats over here at the game
you want to come but no
2:35:23
football team the football play
stops I thought it's like
2:35:26
timeouts and stuff but if
they're not back from commercial
2:35:29
then they hope that they keep
the plate suspended
2:35:34
know what they do they have a is
called official timeouts and
2:35:37
they have the there's one
referee supposedly on the field
2:35:40
and he has a yellow flag or semi
holds it up is never shown on
2:35:44
the television. But once he does
that, and it's usually between
2:35:47
plays. Normally you stop the
game from commercials after a
2:35:50
punt after a kickoff. But if
there's no punter, kickoffs and
2:35:57
the games going on too long and
no use you can also stop it when
2:36:00
one team calls a timeout. Those
are all Okay, great. This is
2:36:04
great work
2:36:05
so there's a ref who you never
see on TV who can call a timeout
2:36:09
when they need it for the
commercial break. Exactly. I
2:36:13
always wonder what Matt Lauer
was doing these days.
2:36:18
All that route drives to
Tipperary.
2:36:27
No agenda, imagine all the evil
Oh yeah, that'd be fun.
2:36:38
We have a few people to thank
starting with Colleen Garrett
2:36:40
and Cary, North Carolina for
$100 Kevin fogger Berg Fager
2:36:46
Berg. fahcsia Berg, I'm not sure
in Lincoln, Nebraska. 100 brob
2:36:51
Van Dyck as Sir Rob 100 It's in
Holland. Michael Gaston 100.
2:36:56
Adrian Danna Meyer in Boston,
Massachusetts. 100 Pete Federici
2:37:03
in Dallas, Texas. 808. Which
brings us to tour Kevin
2:37:08
McLaughlin, the Duke of Luna and
lover of American lover of
2:37:11
boobs. Yes. in Concord North
Carolina. 808 also Kevin Primo.
2:37:20
I'm guessing in New Port Richey,
Florida eight. Oh and
2:37:25
listen to what he says because
it's contagious. I love your
2:37:27
show. Love the boob gut Luth
love the boob guy and I love
2:37:30
boobs. My wife and I have
listened for the past year don't
2:37:33
bother reading on air okay.
2:37:38
He loves the boom. Boom guys.
Sir Kevin McLaughlin. You
2:37:41
got the lover of America and
boobs and you've got the lover
2:37:45
of the guy who's the lover of
America and yeah, I guess you
2:37:49
call it recursive. Something I
don't know
2:37:52
exactly a curse a recursive
skinny recursive. Adam re in
2:37:57
Labrador, Queensland. 566 or Tom
Darian de force Wisconsin. 5510.
2:38:04
Dame Nancy of the confused
she's. She thinks she's in San
2:38:09
Bruno California. She doesn't
know 5244 Teresa is stod Haim in
2:38:16
Plymouth in Minnesota nuts 5150
Mike Sisk 5050 Kyle Hendrickson
2:38:25
in Carpentersville, Illinois
5033 Zane Peterson in Monte Utah
2:38:32
at 50 and a whoa these are all
$50 donors name and location if
2:38:36
I have it. Brent of being stun
in Kearney, Nebraska,
2:38:42
Christopher Rivera in Nederland,
Colorado. And Matt rest rest
2:38:49
Lake. Sounds like a list in Fort
Wayne, Indiana. Greg firerock
2:38:57
are for AQ Fr. Ira K in Chicago.
Jonathan Meyer in Xenia, Ohio.
2:39:04
Margaretha venden hood, in
orange Vale, California. Michael
2:39:10
painter in Paris, California.
David a show Winninger in
2:39:16
Woodbridge, Virginia. See what
he says there? He's got Chris.
2:39:19
He's about the normalization of
teenagers having heart issues.
2:39:23
This is the new thing. It's on
buses. It's everywhere. You
2:39:26
know, teenagers get heart
attacks all the time. It's
2:39:29
always been that way. Nothing
new but we just want to let you
2:39:32
know now that you know it. Don't
worry if your kid has a heart
2:39:35
attack. It's normal.
2:39:39
Yeah. I remember when I was a
kid. Everyone had nobody had a
2:39:45
heart attack. Okay, you
2:39:48
had a heart attack. You died on
the job at your union job. Yeah.
2:39:52
You died with a hammer in your
hand paying union jobs. Yeah,
2:39:55
not not from just going to
school.
2:39:57
Jesse Hall in Friendswood,
Texas. is Edward Mazurek Sir
2:40:02
Edward in Memphis, Tennessee,
Ashley Ferreira, who's also got
2:40:06
a birthday coming up. Steve
Abbott and I think he's come up
2:40:11
in the conversation before in
verwacht Ba ba ba ba, Wisconsin
2:40:16
and Jason deluzy. Oh sir Jason
in Miami Beach. William dole gay
2:40:22
and Bristol Ville. Ohio is our
last guy. And we want to thank
2:40:27
all these people for supporting
show 1424 and making it all
2:40:32
possible.
2:40:33
Yeah, we have a couple of make
goods people try to get your
2:40:35
notes in properly because it
just slows everything down. This
2:40:39
is past Patrick master.
Masterson was think exact on the
2:40:44
executive producer on the four
on the pre comp speaking Dutch
2:40:47
on the previous episode. I have
COVID John, I'm getting towards
2:40:52
the end here. In the morning,
gentlemen from notice. From the
2:40:56
frozen wasteland of Kentucky
Stan where Beaver and moose rule
2:40:59
with an iron fist. I was punched
in the mouth by my brother in
2:41:02
law Ryan in the summer of 2020
had been riggers listening
2:41:04
rigorously twice a week ever
since. I would like to like a
2:41:07
deducing for myself. You've been
de douche Tana douchebag for
2:41:14
Ryan? A Your show is my
informational advantage in a
2:41:18
world gone mad. Thank you for
your courage. That's a good one.
2:41:22
And we also have Sir Richard
Garrett. My note should have
2:41:30
said F. Maple Leaf emoji UK
Trudeau law and Thunder Bay is a
2:41:36
17 hour drive northwest of
Toronto. Definitely not a
2:41:40
bedroom community Keep up the
great work, Sir Richard Garrett.
2:41:43
And that was also from his note
for 1423. Thank you all very
2:41:46
much came in
2:41:47
F. Because he deconstructed set.
It stands for some game play
2:41:52
where you've got f there was
this?
2:41:55
It was just an F but the emoji
killed the rest of the sentence
2:41:58
in the Pay Pal trans
transcription or something?
2:42:01
Yeah. Be
2:42:02
careful with what you put in
these notes in general,
2:42:06
emojis in the subject line of an
email. Get you in the same
2:42:10
department as people who send
screenshots without links to
2:42:15
emojis in the subject line?
2:42:17
I do it all the time. Yeah,
well, why do I do it? Why do you
2:42:21
do it? Why do you do it? John?
I've tested it.
2:42:25
Tested what?
2:42:27
I've tested it a B comparison
test and it as a couple points
2:42:30
to the open.
2:42:32
Oh, yeah. Um, so you're talking
like one emoji?
2:42:35
That a Christian? Yeah, how
many? Oh, John. Oh, I get I
2:42:39
can't use a bunch of emojis I
get like not right. Like you
2:42:43
fist up, hand clap, wave hug.
You know, eggplant, all that
2:42:48
stuff is too much. It's just too
much. But thank you to these
2:42:52
producers. Also everyone who
came in under $50 to remain
2:42:55
anonymous, but also our multiple
subscription options that you
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have that is for sustaining,
sustaining donations, and
2:43:02
they're very much appreciated.
Thank you to everybody. And of
2:43:04
course our execs and Associate
Executive Producers find out
2:43:07
more over here. VO red.org/and
Make sure everybody has the jobs
2:43:13
they need the car jobs, jobs,
jobs and jobs. Let's vote. Karma
2:43:30
here's our list for today and
with the mid valleys is helpful.
2:43:32
Happy Birthday do a smokin hot
sweetie Dame Draya Ashley
2:43:36
Ferreira Happy Birthday to Ryan
Hendrickson celebrated on the
2:43:40
eighth car on Les Paul 65.
Yesterday Happy birthday man.
2:43:45
John loves sinky Happy Birthday
to his dad Michael sinky
2:43:48
celebrates today dude named Ben
named Brian 39 years old
2:43:52
tomorrow. Matt Cousens cousin
sorry. Happy birthday to his
2:43:55
wife, Deb or cousins 39 tomorrow
and Maria Cole celebrates
2:44:01
tomorrow as well. Happy birthday
for everybody here the best
2:44:03
podcast in the universe. So we
have now a second we have two I
2:44:12
didn't put them in SE I knew I
would mess it up where's that
2:44:16
other night note here is this is
Mike. Okay, yeah, we got it we
2:44:24
got it all set up here. Do you
have a blade we got to play with
2:44:27
two guy
2:44:28
got this special Deb or Ah? Oh
lay
2:44:31
nice is that not that she's
becoming a dame or anything but
2:44:39
we have a sword for her. Jason
and Mike. Like the guy who came
2:44:43
in early this morning late last
night step up on the podium
2:44:46
gentlemen both of you have
reached the podium at the
2:44:50
lectern it is time tonight you
as knights of the no agenda
2:44:53
roundtable proud to pronounce to
Kate the as Sir Iceman can sir
2:44:57
dude named Mike have not that
Paris for you. We've got hookers
2:45:00
and blow rent boys and shark
named double doubles in a
2:45:03
Belgian triple we also have diet
soda and video games fish pine
2:45:06
fellatio harlots and how dough
we got. Redhead and rise we got
2:45:10
two Brazilian hotties and Kasha
also we got ginger ale and
2:45:14
dribbles ball hits and bourbon
the meat is right there for you
2:45:18
as well all of that here for the
Knights in danger the no agenda
2:45:21
roundtable go to no agenda
nation.com/rings And we'll make
2:45:26
sure that we get everything out
to you as soon as possible.
2:45:29
Thank you again for your
unwavering support of the best
2:45:33
podcast in the universe. It's
really appreciated. Report from
2:45:46
the Fraser Valley slaves meetup
from Sir dude named Kelly and
2:45:50
Dame Sarah of the Fraser Valley.
The meetup in Abbotsford British
2:45:54
Columbia on January 29, was a
huge success. We doubled our
2:45:58
numbers from the last meet up
with 14 slaves in attendance.
2:46:01
The group included a dame three
knights and the Baron of British
2:46:05
Columbia. Hello. That's you got
the trifecta there. Many
2:46:10
attendees have been longtime
listeners of the show thank you
2:46:12
to all who attended with a
special shout out to Erica for
2:46:15
the longest distance traveled.
How long does she travel?
2:46:19
Everybody had a great time and
we're all looking forward to the
2:46:22
next one. Thank you for all your
courage and to Adam and John for
2:46:25
keeping it real. To do named
Kelly and Dame Sarah of the
2:46:29
Fraser Valley. We also have a
report from the February 6
2:46:32
tucson arizona meetup
2:46:34
what's shakin, Gizmo Nation? I'm
here in Tucson from Philly
2:46:38
vibing with my tribe at the old
father in my old neighborhood
2:46:41
where I went to high school.
Here's the crew.
2:46:45
I'm Ryan keep it real. Hashtag
Vince's mom. This is David
2:46:50
hanging. Hey, Adam. F Ricky
Rachman and John F. Laporte.
2:46:56
Certainly mofos stay dangerous.
This is Amy from Eva Valley. All
2:47:03
right. Nice. I was good to have
everybody hanging out together
2:47:07
for a meet up and you can do
that on Friday tomorrow. The
2:47:10
11th at the north Idaho
emergency meetup 5:30pm. At the
2:47:14
house of Scott in Post Falls
Idaho. On Saturday the
2:47:18
crossroads of America ITM tribal
gathering three o'clock at
2:47:21
bearing bear injures Tavern in
Indianapolis, Indiana. On
2:47:25
Monday, the Valentine's Day
skating meet up of love six
2:47:28
o'clock at Rivergate skate
Center in Madison, Tennessee.
2:47:32
The Duke of the South Sir
Patrick Coble, he's arranging
2:47:35
and the Korean the keeper or
cufon the keeper will be in
2:47:39
attendance. I will let you know
if I'm negative. And you
2:47:44
probably don't want to kiss me
anyway. Not that the keeper
2:47:48
likes that thing happen and
general reliably informed. We
2:47:54
also have a ton of meetups for
the rest of February and already
2:47:57
into March. You can find all of
this at the producer organized,
2:48:02
no agenda meetups.com website it
is a great place for you to
2:48:06
connect with human resources
wherever you are in the world.
2:48:10
That's the best part of it. You
need that human contact and
2:48:13
community especially in these
days. It's a complete judgment
2:48:17
free type of deal. You'll love
it. You'll have a good time.
2:48:20
It's always like a party. If
you'd like to find one go to no
2:48:23
agenda meetups.com If you don't
find one there start one it's
2:48:26
easy. Sometimes you want to go
check it off everybody okay, I
2:48:50
do have a couple of ISOs
2:48:53
I have some from my guess. Best
source. From your what? Best
2:49:00
source?
2:49:01
Oh, your best source. Okay.
2:49:04
Laietana Okay, well, let's do
it. I got
2:49:07
one that your best source is
that Sophia show? Yeah. Like
2:49:13
this slap me daddy. What's it
called?
2:49:16
No, no, that's the that's the
old show. Her show is just
2:49:18
Sophia with an F. Oh, okay. All
she talks about is well, yes.
2:49:23
Yeah. I try ISO state dumb.
You're trying to make a
2:49:29
statement and it just looks dumb
2:49:31
too long. I like the millennial
sound but it's way too long.
2:49:36
Let's go with a show. Hi, yo.
2:49:40
Hey, everyone. Thank you so much
for being with us this week. No,
2:49:45
no, these are too long Johnny.
We need snappy shit.
2:49:48
Oh, okay. Well, let's go short.
2:49:50
Oh, see you set me up for this.
Didn't you give them the boots?
2:49:54
Show them the sneakers and now
will you make me buy the pumps?
2:49:57
Here we go. I so sad. ad sad.
2:50:02
blatantly sad and embarrassing.
Yeah. Also Okay, also a tad
2:50:08
long.
2:50:09
It's two seconds. Okay, let's
drop it to one second Dan. Dumb
2:50:17
Olga. Energy just looks dumb.
Oh, okay.
2:50:24
Let's see if you'd like any of
mine
2:50:30
astounding. Mom. Come
2:50:33
on. It's not bad. We have this
one and it's so juicy. Come on,
2:50:40
man. These are good.
2:50:42
Wait, we have more debt. Last
one reminds me of how does this
2:50:45
guy? What's his name? The
Intern? Ross, the intern. Oh,
2:50:52
where
2:50:53
is Ross? The intern what he's
working
2:50:55
full time on the show with
what's her name? The the one of
2:51:00
the daytime talkers. Woman
what's her last name? She's got
2:51:03
to faint Barrymore. She's on.
He's on the Drew Barrymore show.
2:51:07
Being Ross, the intern talking
about Hollywood
2:51:10
Gossip. Drew Barrymore has to
show.
2:51:13
Yes, she's had a show for a
couple years. Man is it actually
2:51:18
is it's not one of the best
daytime talkers. But it's funny
2:51:22
because she's so predictable.
She's just like in tears. We
2:51:25
just have to talk.
2:51:27
Alright, so that I think that's
a contender. So juicy. more from
2:51:31
that like, yeah,
2:51:32
the other one is actually better
the astounding. Play that one
2:51:35
again.
2:51:35
Oh, I got more, but I'll play
astounding for you. Astounding.
2:51:40
That's pretty unique from Amy.
But wait a minute. I have a
2:51:42
couple more. Love it. And then
and then the one that that oops.
2:51:50
Got it. Jack that sound up here.
Ha second. What happened to my
2:51:53
levels? People check this out.
The science has changed.
2:51:58
Yeah. So I like to juicy the
best coffee to
2:52:03
double check and it's so juicy.
Come on, man. That's
2:52:07
a winner. Usually you win. You
actually have three you beat all
2:52:10
mine. I'm sorry.
2:52:12
Yeah. He's like okay, I have one
clip. To one last clip for me. I
2:52:22
have lots but
2:52:23
I have I have a bunch of clips,
but I'm gonna I want to play two
2:52:26
of them. Okay, because I'm
really tired now. Yeah, you are.
2:52:29
So I just want to get this out
of the way because even Mimi was
2:52:32
all over this. Oh, my God. The
Daily Mail. They're giving away
2:52:36
crack pipes.
2:52:39
Yes, this is a this is quite the
the meme bubble mission. They're
2:52:44
on with this one. Yeah,
2:52:45
I think there's some truth to
it. But they but that there's an
2:52:47
official denial and this is it.
2:52:50
Oh, what's the clip I'm looking
for crack pipes. That would make
2:52:56
sense.
2:52:57
The White House wants to make it
very clear. A new grant program
2:53:01
aimed at lowering drug overdose
deaths does not include the
2:53:05
distribution of crack pipes and
bears. Isa Rosco reports the $30
2:53:09
million program will provide
items such as fentanyl test
2:53:12
strips and clean syringes along
with support for medical
2:53:15
services to
2:53:16
drug users.
2:53:16
White House press secretary Jen
Psaki says that some reports
2:53:19
about the grant program have
been inaccurate. She said that
2:53:22
misinformation has overshadowed
the purpose of the grants. We're
2:53:26
losing an American life every
five minutes to overdose. We
2:53:29
don't have time for political
games. The President's focused
2:53:32
on saving lives through harm
reduction programs. That's
2:53:34
exactly what we're talking about
here. They work in red states
2:53:37
and they work in blue states. We
know they save lives.
2:53:40
Some Republican lawmakers
accused the White House of
2:53:42
encouraging drug use. Florida
Senator Marco Rubio said he
2:53:46
plans to introduce legislation
that will quote prevent the
2:53:49
federal government from
supplying crack pipes or other
2:53:51
similar items. If I were to
guess, I would say that the
2:53:57
crack pipe meme was very,
someone created that someone in
2:54:01
a PR firm someone knew who knew
what they were doing. So we said
2:54:04
let's turn this into this. Yeah,
could be do we know the Genesis
2:54:09
though? Because it was I think
Tucker
2:54:10
Carlson was allowed to hit like
a ton of bricks.
2:54:14
Who did it who started with the
cracker?
2:54:16
We don't know. Yeah, that
that's, that's Oh, let me guess
2:54:20
who it was. It was the White
House. Crack pies were in play
2:54:26
about that for a theory. And
they backed off they backpedaled
2:54:30
How about that? Is that
possible?
2:54:31
It's very possible. I like that.
But the whole thing is, I mean,
2:54:38
even the White House, certainly
in in less unless, ooh, how
2:54:42
about this? What if it's
actually someone in the White
2:54:47
House? Who started this crack
pipes? To furthermore give more
2:54:52
ammunition to the Republicans to
call out the president son crack
2:54:56
pike Hunter Biden.
2:54:58
There seems to be some kind of
because everyone who does the
2:55:01
crack pipe pipe story on Yeah,
2:55:04
of course always. There's
there's under. Yep,
2:55:08
they bring Hunter into the
picture. Yeah. And it could be
2:55:11
White House personnel because I
think a lot of them don't like
2:55:13
Hunter, or the fact that he's
hanging over there, everyone's
2:55:16
had this like, we're not going
to get the Democrats themselves.
2:55:21
Look, we're not going to do very
well in these midterm elections
2:55:24
if we don't do something about
this 100 thing. Let's fess up
2:55:28
and get it out of the way. You
got to do it sooner than later.
2:55:30
You can't let it just sit there
and fester. Maybe some by
2:55:36
something,
2:55:36
but for sure. You know, when you
see that going around, and like,
2:55:39
Okay, why don't you show me
where it actually says crack
2:55:42
pipe? And of course, it doesn't
say that
2:55:44
No, Rubio is the one who said
it. Yeah.
2:55:48
I have something about the White
House that may or may not play
2:55:52
into this. This is a report from
Bloomberg. It's not like not
2:55:55
great. But we have something
that seems to be a changing,
2:56:00
I feel like this is legislative
whack a mole that we're playing
2:56:03
today. But honestly, that's what
it feels like in Washington DC
2:56:05
with the Democrats and the
various issues that you're
2:56:07
trying to cater to. And this
brings us to where President
2:56:10
Biden's gonna be today at 2:30pm
when
2:56:12
he actually meets with the head
of utilities to try to talk
2:56:15
about build back better. I mean,
come on what's going on? Are
2:56:18
they actually going to break
this off and do something with
2:56:20
it? Or is this just another one
of the issues to put into whack
2:56:22
amole Congress? So Lisa, I doubt
he's even going to utter the
2:56:26
words build back better? I think
there's been a tactical shift at
2:56:29
the White House to not actually
use that term anymore,
2:56:33
but just talk about issues. No,
I think it's true.
2:56:37
I'm gonna reckon it
2:56:39
well, there's all kinds of
reports that they're they're
2:56:41
softening back on build back
better, they don't want to use
2:56:44
that they want to, I don't know
if they're gonna rebrand it, but
2:56:47
I think it's true that they're,
they're backing off a bill back
2:56:51
better because the whole thing
failed. It was supposed to go
2:56:55
into total destruction of
everything so they could build
2:56:58
back better.
2:56:59
And the potential chunks that
were originally supposed to be
2:57:02
part of that legislation that
they can see get through because
2:57:05
Senator Manchin has said how
many times that legislation as
2:57:08
one cohesive piece of
legislation is dead.
2:57:11
I think that's really so build
back better than that's that's
2:57:14
how it has to get killed because
that's what the bill is, what
2:57:17
are you drinking?
2:57:18
Pellegrino Urantia. And FICO
India post is at the you know,
2:57:27
the
2:57:27
build back better bill is dead,
and so they have to pull that
2:57:30
apart and they've tainted their
own bill.
2:57:33
And no, I agree with that. I'm
not arguing that point. I'm just
2:57:36
doubting that Biden has the
wherewithal to stop saying it.
2:57:40
Oh, well, that'll be
embarrassing. Joe is called New
2:57:47
Horizons if we changed it from
Bill,
2:57:51
back horizon this no joke.
2:57:55
Anything else you say? Yeah, two
clips.
2:57:57
I just this is a kind of a just
an informational clip about the
2:58:00
cassette business is booming.
Did you know that
2:58:03
the cassette business No.
2:58:05
Between the streaming services
and digital downloads, there are
2:58:08
so many ways to listen to music
in quality. So why would anybody
2:58:12
still buy cassette tapes?
They're known for being scratchy
2:58:15
and hissy and way less cool than
vinyl.
2:58:22
That fast forward sound. That's
what happened to the cassette
2:58:25
tape business. Right now we're
selling every inch of tape we
2:58:29
make before it comes off the
line
2:58:31
that Steve step of the national
audio company in Springfield,
2:58:33
Missouri, we are the largest
manufacturer of the raw cassette
2:58:37
tape, and have duplicated audio
cassettes in the world.
2:58:47
By movie Guardians of the Galaxy
help the cassette tape come
2:58:50
back. It featured Chris Pratt
blasting alien bad guys while
2:58:53
listening to an old mixtape. But
the cassette market was already
2:58:57
trending upward by that and
sales have increased by double
2:59:00
digits every year since 2017.
Step says his company sold about
2:59:04
25 million cassettes last year,
2:59:07
and the market is not one that
you would suspect. It isn't old
2:59:11
geezers like me. It's the under
35 age group buying audio
2:59:15
cassettes now. Right beside
2:59:17
me I have tapes, tapes, tapes,
tapes, that's Lars got rich of
2:59:22
NPR music. He's one of those
young old people who's a fan of
2:59:25
cassette tapes.
2:59:26
His home is stuffed full of
them. So this is a lady affair.
2:59:30
She is Oakland based rapper.
This is a Polish black metal
2:59:36
artist whose name I can't
pronounce.
2:59:40
He thinks cassettes are
appealing because you can hold
2:59:42
them in your hand. A whole new
generation has embraced these
2:59:47
little spools of sound and tie
about Generation Z. This is the
2:59:51
generation after me. And the way
that I think Generation Z thinks
2:59:56
about nostalgia is not something
that has passed but is something
3:00:00
that can be claimed for the
first time so it is still
3:00:03
incredibly fresh to them
3:00:05
Ah wow that's cute and it's
3:00:10
exactly the right response I
never thought of it is cute
3:00:16
and it's interesting because you
know I have the wall of fame
3:00:19
with Tina hung up all my stuff
yeah every single gold or
3:00:24
platinum record I have includes
a gold or platinum cassette tape
3:00:30
Oh in the in the actual award so
it's it's the album then a
3:00:34
little cassette tape. So now I'm
hip again. Right everybody? Hey,
3:00:41
kids are like this cassette
tapes. I got gold ones. That's
3:00:46
right. Collect them all.
Alright. Sunday we'll be back. I
3:00:55
will have another Rhona report
but I think it'll be okay. Just
3:00:58
weary
3:01:01
and
3:01:02
be good. You should be good by
tomorrow.
3:01:04
Yeah, no, I think so too. On
Live the blister pack man goes
3:01:08
Verto kid no matter what, what
it is that help. And coming to
3:01:15
you from the heart of the Texas
hill country here in FEMA Region
3:01:18
number six in the morning
everybody. I'm Adam curry.
3:01:22
And from Northern Silicon Valley
where it's becoming quite nice
3:01:25
out 7080 degrees maybe if we're
lucky and this wish everyone
3:01:33
else getting this kind of
weather and Genesee report
3:01:35
coming up next no agenda stream
calm up is down episode 123 End
3:01:40
of show Mixer from Jeremy
Cartwright and Tom Starkweather
3:01:43
who now has a podcast melodious
owls on value for value
3:01:47
podcasting 2.0 Check that out
and remember us at DeVore
3:01:50
ak.org/na And till Sunday,
adios. Such we know the way
3:02:06
through this pandemic is by
getting everyone vaccinated.
3:02:18
Small fringe minority following
the science horn thing all day
3:02:26
long.
3:02:29
Yep, protesters are demanding to
be heard. Driver crazy. The
3:02:39
sound is deafening. All day
long. all hours of the night. I
3:02:51
haven't been three days. We know
the way through this pandemic.
3:03:02
When the government mandates
when you want to change
3:03:07
something in history, there's
always going to be some
3:03:09
uncomfortableness involved in
that. Someone makes a different
3:03:23
choice about whether or not they
are vaccinated. That's the
3:03:26
right. And this government is
going to respect that right.
3:03:30
It's time for us also to heal
the divisions in our communities
3:03:33
over vaccination. Those
divisions are in our families
3:03:36
there. They yes, they're in our
communities, but they're across
3:03:39
our province and they're across
this nation. Let's not judge our
3:03:41
neighbor, because they may be
vaccinated or because they may
3:03:45
not be vaccinated. It's time for
each of us as individuals now to
3:03:48
make a conscious effort to treat
everyone in our daily lives that
3:03:51
we encounter equally. It's also
time for the proof of
3:03:54
vaccination mandate and so
effective at midnight this
3:03:58
Sunday, February the 13th, all
provincial proof of vaccination
3:04:01
requirements will end. Let's
work together to heal some of
3:04:04
the divisions. Let's understand
that we can forgive our friends
3:04:08
or family members, maybe even
ourselves, if that is necessary.
3:04:13
As we move forward, and we truly
want to get back to normal. We
3:04:17
shouldn't be dwelling or
focusing in on you know, what
3:04:21
other people's decisions are. We
all need to make an extra effort
3:04:24
to to understand and respect
everyone, everyone's right to
3:04:28
make their own decision. And
there's been divisions in our
3:04:31
communities, the convoys came
up. Oh, you know, we have
3:04:33
convoys literally in every
province. I'm from my
3:04:36
understanding across the nation,
we have borders that are being
3:04:38
blocked it and multiple,
multiple areas. And these are
3:04:43
for in a large part, people that
want these divisions ultimately,
3:04:47
to go away. The only thing that
would prevent us from achieving
3:04:51
all that we can be is for us to
be arguing amongst ourselves.
3:04:56
Let's come together as friends.
Let's not lose a friend due to
3:04:59
this virus. Let's come together
as family. Let's not lose a
3:05:02
family relationship regardless
of what conversations have
3:05:07
occurred over the last number of
months, as we look ahead, let's
3:05:10
come together as a communities
within a great province and
3:05:14
achieve what we know we can
achieve. It's the opportunity is
3:05:17
there force?
3:05:26
mopho.org/n A and it's so juicy