0:00
Babies are being vaporized.
0:02
Adam curry, John C. Dvorak.
April 17 2022 This is your award
0:07
winning get my nation media
assassination episode 1443.
0:11
This is no agenda,
0:13
probing the poison pill and
broadcasting live from the heart
0:17
of the Texas hill country here
in FEMA Region number six in
0:19
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry
0:21
from Northern Silicon Valley
where I'm looking forward to
0:24
yakking burgers tonight. I'm
John C. Dvorak.
0:29
Buzzkill. Yes. This is a typical
California staple for Easter.
0:36
Yak burgers used to be rabbit.
0:41
Yeah, rabbit growing up in the
Netherlands. I remember that. In
0:46
the 70s people would always be
eating rabbit.
0:49
We had a nice little French
restaurant to go.
0:54
Oh, this is the one that close.
This is the one that closed the
0:57
gap.
0:58
He went to France and had a
stroke. That's great. That
1:00
doesn't know they closed. They
closed they closed and he used
1:04
to have Robert Allah moutarde
all the time and his did was to
1:09
go mele Hello
1:10
lips polishes rubbing our lips
hard.
1:13
Yeah. Rabbit lib tard
1:18
we just made a new dish. I think
we need to publish a recipe.
1:22
Rabbit I'd like to Allah lib
tard better though. Yeah. So yak
1:27
burgers. Where'd you get the
Yak?
1:30
Mimi got the Yak from a supplier
in Montana. Nice. I believe it
1:36
but there's a bunch of Yak. It
seems as though most of the Yak
1:41
grown for consumption is there
in Texas? Yes. A lot of these
1:45
ranches that take advantage
1:47
of you know, I got to Yeah,
well, we'll get into it where
1:50
everyone right now is just
collecting rice and canned
1:53
goods. Here the hill country.
It's really true. It's a silent
1:58
kind of thing that's going on.
Everyone's talking about hey,
2:02
you know, I got me these big get
these big buckets and I got some
2:04
plastic and we can do with it.
I'll put rice in there. Why? I
2:08
don't know man. Doesn't feel
right. What's going on? Because
2:10
I'm racing there. Yeah, people
getting the polishing up their
2:14
hunting rifles, the crossbows.
They're preparing here in the
2:19
hill country. One, I'd like to
get the Elon Musk news out of
2:24
the way right away because
there's something in there that
2:26
we need to discuss as it
pertains to the show.
2:29
Any Elon Musk clips? I do. I do
know me. I don't know. I have
2:35
no, no. You have some serious,
serious series and sequences. I
2:39
see. So that'll be interesting
2:41
bunches of those. Musk Musk Musk
Musk must know, how about you
2:45
actually know there is a mosque
in here? Yes. And I know what it
2:48
is. And in fact, they happen to
be part of that one series that
2:53
long series on women online.
Well, let's
2:55
wait for that. Then let's just
go through let's go through the
2:58
top line. And then if you want
we can get into women online.
3:01
Yeah, it has to do with Musk
because he's going to ruin it
3:04
for everybody.
3:04
Well, as I predicted, he's going
to ruin Twitter. And I think
3:08
he's well on his way
3:09
Twitter's board of directors
with a major counter attack
3:12
designed to block Elon Musk's
$43 billion bid members agreeing
3:17
on a poison pill strategy that
could slow or even prevent a
3:20
corporate takeover like the one
Musk proposed. But as ABC has
3:24
Kaylee Hartung tells us this is
not foolproof.
3:27
Tonight after Elon Musk's bid to
take over Twitter, the company's
3:31
board fighting back with a
corporate defense tactic known
3:33
as a poison pill. Elon Musk or
anyone else acquires 15% or more
3:38
of the social media platform.
Twitter will allow other
3:41
existing shareholders to buy
additional shares at a discount
3:44
just last week, Musk disclosing
that he now owns more than 9% of
3:48
the company making him one of
the largest shareholders. It
3:51
puts a blockade
3:52
up from us if he wants to go
down the corporate raider route
3:56
to ultimately women his ability
to build shares
4:00
it's Twitter's latest move to
box out the world's wealthiest
4:03
man. Last week, they offered him
a seat on their board. When he
4:06
found out he wouldn't be allowed
to publicly criticize the
4:09
company. He turned it down.
Twitter has become kind of the
4:12
de facto town square just hours
after announcing his $43 billion
4:16
offer to buy Twitter on Twitter.
Musk appearing at a TED
4:19
conference saying his buyout is
extremely important to the
4:22
future of civilization. But he
was evasive when asked what life
4:26
is offers rejected. Is there a
plan B? There is. And Cecilia
4:34
Twitter says this plan is
similar to other plans adopted
4:37
by publicly held companies in
comparable circumstances. Now
4:40
Elon Musk is known to be
unpredictable. So it's a wait
4:43
and see game for what his next
move will be. Yeah,
4:47
yeah, this is you know, it's
keeping Twitter alive, that's
4:50
for sure. That's all the
conversation seems to be on
4:53
Twitter to man Ilan Oh, he's
gonna do this. Who's gonna do
4:56
that? Now the poison pill is as
far as I know from My public
5:00
company experience is not seen
as a positive thing for the
5:03
market.
5:07
I think you're right. Yeah.
poison pills are considered a
5:09
negative thing.
5:10
Because even if someone else, I
mean, I thought that at least
5:13
maybe we'd get a bidding war.
I'm sure there was maybe one,
5:16
perhaps two, maybe existing
shareholders who would have
5:19
wanted to counter Ilan bid, but
they too would be subject to
5:23
this poison pill. Correct.
5:26
Everyone would be Yeah,
5:27
yeah. So that. I mean, Monday,
this seems like the stock should
5:31
open down, and Elon should be
selling into it.
5:35
Well, that may be his Plan B.
Yeah.
5:38
I don't think he has any other
plan B. But as I said, What Ilan
5:41
does is he destroys things comes
in, and he destroys things. And
5:45
this is a destruction of
Twitter, which I'm personally
5:47
quite happy about. Now, what was
interesting is the the response
5:54
from in this case, I just have
to say, the left the politically
5:58
left leaning, who dominate
Twitter, thanks to its content
6:02
policies. And I was so surprised
how well this one, and it was
6:09
not wrong, to look at Mika
Brzezinski saying, hey,
6:14
controlling the message, the
narrative, that's our job. But
6:17
of course, I have this clip
because we played it for the
6:19
first time in 2017.
6:22
Is it new version of it? No.
6:24
It's the same clip. It's the
same.
6:27
Yes, you're talking about about
Twitter being taken over by
6:30
musk. Now
6:31
note that if you if you look at
the tweet that everyone
6:36
retweeted, it says Mika
Brzezinski talking about Elon
6:39
Musk, he's not this was talking
about Trump back in 2017. About
6:43
him possibly creating a media
company etc. She does not
6:49
mention trumping Ilan in this.
It is the same clip I went back
6:53
to chatting me that that clip. I
don't have a copy. I do. I have
6:56
three copies, of course. But I
don't know about the of course
7:01
part of that. But well see. I
mean, this is just a recycled
7:05
old clip as being pawned off.
Yes, sir. I'm not an officer.
7:10
But okay. Nor gentlemen. I did
not catch that. Yeah.
7:14
Well, this, I was going to say
that this is why you support the
7:18
show. Now, there's two ways to
support
7:21
this show.
7:22
There's two of us. There's two
of us, luckily, and I caught
7:26
this right away. I'm like, Oh,
my God. This is a recycled clip.
7:28
But it was so interesting that
whoever launched this first put
7:33
in Mika Brzezinski talking about
Elon Musk taking over Twitter.
7:37
And if you listen, there's no
mention of Elon in the clip, and
7:39
I went back. And yes, I do have
three copies of the clip,
7:42
because we've played it three
times throughout the show's
7:45
history since 2017. And although
she still said it, which is the
7:51
beauty of it, he got almost no
traction back then. But be aware
7:56
that when people post stuff,
this is manipulative, and lots
8:01
of people fell for people even
argued me on it. It's like,
8:05
well, here, why don't I send you
the clip from 2017? Here it is.
8:09
Exactly. That is that's exactly
what
8:12
I hear what you Misha said, is
what I hear from all the Trump
8:16
supporters that I talked to who
were Trump voters, and are still
8:20
Trump supporters, they go, Yeah,
you guys are going crazy. He's
8:23
doing what are you so surprised
about? He's doing exactly what
8:26
he said he's going to do?
8:28
Well, and I think that the
dangerous edges here are that
8:33
he's trying to undermine the
media, trying to make up his own
8:36
facts. And it could be that
while unemployment and the
8:41
economy worsens, he could have
undermined the messaging so much
8:45
that he can actually control
exactly what people think. And
8:50
that is the that is
8:51
our job. Yes.
8:54
Yeah, that was 2017 but she said
it because that's exactly how
8:58
the left in the United States
think they think hey, we need to
9:02
control this. Everything that is
that we deemed dumb is
9:06
unscientific, stupid
conspiratorial, that should be
9:10
kicked off. So now let's play
something from the tardes from
9:13
2022. This is my hate Listen,
the professor and cairanne,
9:19
better known as Scott Galloway,
and Kara Swisher, but that's not
9:24
my new name, the professor and
caravan and they're talking,
9:27
they can't get enough of talking
about Elon, but listen to what,
9:33
what the thinking is. It's
really outdated thinking
9:37
considering how this podcast has
thrived for 15 years.
9:42
And when he has a vision for
Mars. It's the right vision and
9:45
I think he can articulate
something really compelling and
9:48
I don't understand half of what
he's saying, Well, I'm like this
9:49
guy knows what he's talking
about when he talks about moving
9:52
equipment into the atmosphere
for less money using reusable
9:55
rockets when he talks about
electric vehicles. He He has
10:00
absolutely no vision here other
than First Amendment blather he
10:05
hasn't been able to articulate
him. Yeah, okay it but there's
10:10
none of that makes any sense.
What does it want to kill a live
10:12
puppy on Twitter spaces? What
would it? What is he talking
10:15
about recently? Yeah.
10:17
All right. If you why wouldn't
you buy? Why? Why wouldn't you
10:19
just buy gab parlor true social
rumble Mastodon Diaz? Why
10:24
wouldn't you do that?
10:25
Because this is the price okay,
why wouldn't you migrate Dane
10:30
just took a dump the size of a
Tyrannosaurus Rex. Why wouldn't
10:32
you buy that there's more value
in that than any of the firm's
10:34
you just mentioned here. Okay,
root social getter. And what's
10:38
the other one gab, gab, but it's
dawn rumble rumble? They love
10:44
they love this whole big First
Amendment free speech thing. And
10:47
because they want to they want
to blow paper over the fact that
10:50
more people they're not very
good business. More people are
10:52
downloading kirtans.com app,
then there then there. There's
10:57
no meeting on these platforms.
They don't work.
10:59
Yeah. They are on Twitter. So
this is the one this is the one
11:03
that someone wants to own.
11:05
Oh, this says it all. Wow.
11:09
I mean, I'm, I'm not doing it.
But I was going to me I could
11:13
easily give you a clip of the
day for No, no,
11:15
we can't. I won't accept it. I
won't accept it for a hate clip.
11:19
I cannot in good conscience
except today. Now for a hatless
11:24
Hey relishing those clips. So
couple things here first of all,
11:29
was the first amendment free
speech blather What is he wants
11:33
to do? Kill a puppy on Twitter
spaces?
11:37
Is Twitter space is still a
thing apparently. I know I guess
11:41
so.
11:42
Yeah, I'm sure it is. I'm sure
people use it. But then Kara
11:47
Swisher technology. Opinions
just for the New York Times.
11:52
Talks about Mastodon as if it's
for sale, idiot. No, you can't
11:57
buy Mastodon and then they both
agree that these platforms don't
12:02
work. This this this free speech
First Amendment blather. No one
12:06
wants it. It's less popular than
the curtains.com. App. And so
12:11
this this will Yes.
12:13
First of all, if that's the way
you feel, then what's the what's
12:18
the bitch?
12:19
Yeah. Well, I think he's
probably a shareholder of
12:24
Twitter. So he's annoyed. He
doesn't like
12:28
to make 10 bucks a share out of
the blue and he's annoyed.
12:30
What's wrong with these people?
12:32
But the thing that they're
missing is that when you take
12:35
all those names, and you put
them together, that's where the
12:39
power is. That is the power of
the decentralized world we're
12:42
moving towards. That's what
we're a part of. That's what no
12:44
agenda social.com is a part of.
Yeah. Are they are they? Are
12:48
they worth billions of dollars?
No, not at all. Are they worth
12:52
billions of dollars to us to the
no agenda? Gitmo nation? Yeah,
12:56
of course. It's our lifeline. It
works. It works really well. We
13:00
communicate with other groups.
We get pissed off, we do
13:03
whatever we want. And these guys
are still in the oh, let's keep
13:06
all that free speech blather out
of the way. They're gonna lose
13:10
so hard. It's gonna be so bad.
Anyway, yeah. I'm glad Elon is
13:17
ruining Twitter. That's a good
that's a good thing. All right.
13:20
Now, let's do your Elan in the
women online if that's where you
13:23
want to go now?
13:24
Well, I might as well because
you have Elan is used as the
13:27
hook is very creative. They have
this woman come on who just did
13:31
a book about women being you
know, being excoriated online.
13:36
And I got way too many clips to
this. But it's so interesting to
13:39
at least to me, you can kill
this this whole bit if you if
13:42
you think is not good. But I'll
tell you this. I like the way
13:46
they use isla. They use Elon as
a hook at the beginning and then
13:49
they use them as a hook. At the
end. It's got nothing to
13:52
do with Elon, so they use Elon
as bookends is what you're
13:55
saying?
13:56
Pretty much. Yeah. And so, Elon
sandwich. Women online NPR
14:05
tech titan, Elon Musk has
launched a hostile bid to take
14:08
over Twitter, the social media
platform favored by many
14:11
politicians, celebrities and
journalists. That's because he
14:14
says he's a free speech
absolutist. And he says the
14:18
platform now has too many rules
about what people can say. But
14:21
our next guest says there's a
group of people who are
14:23
essentially censored on social
media right now. women,
14:27
especially women of color, oh,
women.
14:30
Women of color have the loudest
voice in all media right now.
14:34
Are you kidding me? You don't
even have to know what a form
14:36
990 is. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. You're
14:40
lying. You're lying to make it
sound like the these two women
14:44
they're going to be yakking away
here are full of crap.
14:46
No, I'm sorry, r&d.
14:49
Because of the vicious, sexist
and racist abuse they're
14:52
subjected to online. Nina Janka,
which is known for her research
14:56
on online disinformation and its
effect on democracy her latest
14:59
book It's called How to be a
woman online.
15:02
scribes. Well, asked Mark
Bogner, he knows how you should
15:07
be online
15:08
during detail the vastly
disproportionate attacks that
15:10
women face compared to men when
they try to have an online
15:14
presence. And she's with us now
to tell us more. Nina Jenkins,
15:16
welcome. Thank you so much for
joining us. Thanks for having
15:19
me.
15:19
Oh, yeah, no, she didn't do it.
Right. Yeah, she's i Hi, Imogen,
15:28
do we know where she's from?
What so she's a real she's one
15:30
of the researchers
15:31
know, she's like a book writer.
And so Elon Musk is
15:35
is basically the prototype a
whole who? Bugs women online.
15:41
That's the kind of the
association I think they just
15:44
made what you just heard, which
I think was to get what's the
15:48
word? I should leave a chicken,
chicken? Chicken. It's very
15:52
chicken shit. So here we go. Was
that now? Now I started getting
15:56
broken. I'll break this up into
segments because there's an
16:00
ending with some dumb thing.
Although I'm being obviously a
16:04
misogynist, but even suggesting
such a thing. But let's go with
16:07
part two.
16:08
All right, give it to me
straight. How bad is it? Give us
16:11
some parameters about how to
think about this?
16:15
Well, you know, it's hard to put
a number on things because it's
16:18
hard to detect this harassment a
lot. The harassers online are
16:21
quite creative in the ways that
they harass women. But when my
16:25
team at the Wilson Center sought
to document some of the
16:28
harassment during the 2020
presidential campaign, over a
16:31
period of two months on six
social media platforms, we found
16:35
over 336,000 pieces of gendered
or sexualized abuse and
16:40
disinformation directed at just
10 us candidates. And most of
16:46
that was directed at then vice
presidential candidate Kamala
16:49
Harris, 78% of it, in fact, so
that's just a short period of
16:53
time, just a few platforms. And
when you compare what women
16:57
receive, as some of my
colleagues have done in other
17:00
organizations with what their
male counterparts receive, it's
17:03
just far in a way much, much
worse, especially if you're a
17:06
woman of color or a woman of an
intersectional. Identity,
17:10
abuse and disinformation a new
category.
17:15
Let's see. intersectional ting I
wonder, does that even mean?
17:19
I don't know. But I want to hear
examples.
17:22
Any harassment online ever? And
de
17:25
F every single day? Every day?
Someone says something ugly to
17:30
me.
17:31
Yes and disagree feelings
deeply?
17:34
Usually not? No, then you're
just
17:37
a hard, hard hearted bastard.
Sometimes
17:39
someone will say something that
really Yeah, of course, that
17:43
sometimes people can be very
mean and say something very
17:45
hurtful. And yeah, bugs me. But
you know, it's like, I know how
17:49
this works. I'm an adult.
17:51
Well, these women don't seem to
get that part of it. But let's
17:54
go with it. But and by the way,
I want everyone to consider the
17:57
premise. Why are you online in
the first place? You come
18:02
online, you make some opinions,
or look what I think. And then
18:06
you then you get grief. And then
you you know, you get hounded
18:10
off to off the system. You don't
have to be online, also all
18:14
also, there is no reason to be
online.
18:16
If you're a candidate running
for president, it's open season
18:20
on you. And you know, once
you're a politician, certainly
18:23
in the House of Representatives,
the Senate of the White House,
18:26
you can say whatever you want
about anybody. And people are
18:30
gonna say a lot about you. So
it's almost a trial by fire that
18:33
is very necessary. If you want
to be the chief executive of the
18:37
United States. You have to you
have to have some some skin, you
18:40
gotta have some some thick skin.
Part three,
18:43
and what kinds of things are we
talking about? And this is where
18:47
I'm going to offer a language
advisory for people who are
18:51
listening, I need to say that
this is I'm guessing that what
18:53
you are about to say might be
disturbing. And you don't want
18:56
to do that. Because you know, we
don't get language advisories
18:58
when people are directing this
garbage at us. But in the
19:02
interest of people who don't
live this or have this
19:04
experience, what kinds of things
are we talking about?
19:07
The whole spectrum of abuse some
of it is a little bit more
19:10
anodyne. You know, men referring
to you as girly. dear princess,
19:14
sweetie, honey, I get the bimbo.
slur a lot. B word C word often
19:21
come up. Men will comment on my
hair, my breast size, the
19:25
symmetry of my face. There's a
lot of assertions, especially
19:28
among women who are public
facing, voicing their opinions
19:32
online, that these women must be
transgender, because otherwise
19:37
they wouldn't be so assertive.
They look for evidence of an
19:41
Adam's apple or a five o'clock
shadow. Sometimes we hear men
19:45
sexualizing or diminishing
women's roles in society saying
19:49
oh, you know, she's just arguing
with you online because she
19:52
wants to sleep with you. Or I've
had someone say to me, she's
19:56
angry at you because no one
would hit it and stick with it.
20:00
I've had my say, you birth
babies, we build bridges. And
20:03
then often I got from the far
right.
20:06
Oh, wow, I don't know where to
start with that one.
20:10
But wait, everything she said,
if you listen to that little
20:15
ditty at the end, and then she
says and then Michigan
20:20
and then the Republicans this
was just the Democrats doing
20:22
that. That's that was exactly I
was gonna make the joke but
20:25
that's in fact kind of what
she's admitting to you know,
20:28
that's that kind of what she
said that is what she said. Have
20:32
you released it? Just play the
very end she goes a litany of of
20:36
Adam's apple jokes and
everything. No play the little
20:39
bit of play the Adam's apple
jokes.
20:42
Almost second, here we go.
20:44
o'clock shadow. Sometimes we
hear men sexualizing, or
20:48
diminishing women's roles in
society saying, oh, you know,
20:52
she's just arguing if you online
because she wants to sleep with
20:55
you. Or I've had someone say to
me, she's angry at you because
20:59
no one would hit it and stick
with it. I've had men say you
21:03
birth babies, we build bridges.
And then often I got from the
21:07
far right.
21:11
It's true. It's true.
21:13
The left is the one and I
believe it is true. I believe
21:16
the left is much more brutal
than I think the right wingers
21:20
are just can be as bad. But I
think they're a little more
21:23
gentle. Because many of them are
more religious. For starters,
21:26
yes. All the all the left
wingers are all atheists. And so
21:31
that so that calms it down a
little bit, but I did hold it
21:34
near that you heard about Adam's
apples. I don't know if I would
21:38
watch out. But as I'm a little
bit lower.
21:42
It's never been a six o'clock
shadow step in California. Hey,
21:47
Ben. So a couple of things. One,
one. So first of all, that,
21:52
yeah, if all of that were true,
yeah, that sucks. But you know,
21:56
have a little bike ride past
Instagram and tell me that women
22:01
aren't trying to look super good
with the filters. They use.
22:04
Every single one of them every
single one of them uses some
22:10
type of filter for their photos
for their videos. I'm just gonna
22:18
say something else about this.
That was really incredible. And
22:22
that's, I want to hear more of
this. Do you have more?
22:26
Yeah. Oh, believe me. Let's go.
22:29
Oh, no, I remember I remember
what I want to say. I have
22:32
noticed a rise of women saying
to women and to men, certainly
22:38
in a retail environment, or
restaurant environment. Hon.
22:44
What can I get for you, hon.
22:47
Well, you have. I don't I don't
know that there's a rise in
22:50
that. That is I think very
common and it goes on all the
22:53
time. And you're right hon. It's
just as insulting if you think
22:56
about it as baby or whatever.
She's moaning and groaning about
23:00
I've seen I've noticed an
increase. So that's just my
23:04
personal environment.
23:06
A lot more a lot more than I do.
And you would notice the more
23:09
Huns.
23:10
Yeah. puns, which of course is
also slang for Hitler. German
23:14
Nazi ah, Heinz
23:15
is not the hunt the Huns? Do
horrible people. Yes, the Huns
23:19
are no good. DeHaan so she's
calling you a hun s right. Not
23:24
as in Honey, but as in hon.
23:26
And then often, I get from the
far right memes of empty egg
23:30
cartons which are sent to women
to say that our fertility is
23:33
declining, we should get back to
our home making activities and
23:37
then there's the more violent
stuff I've had people say,
23:40
you'll be dealt with in the
streets. You know, if a civil
23:44
war comes, you're going to be
first. Some you know, things
23:47
like oh my
23:48
goodness, this is us, John. And
I wish he had said that she
23:51
should have said and some some
old white male podcasters are
23:57
threatening to shave heads. And,
and marches down Main Street
24:03
naked for collaborating,
24:06
dealt with in the streets. You
know, if a civil war comes,
24:10
you're going to be first. Some
people say things like I'd fixed
24:13
her. And then email I've gotten
emails directly to my work
24:17
account, including dressed after
January 6, when it was quite
24:20
tense here in Washington, saying
things like, you sound like a
24:25
hysterical bleeping snowflake.
lesbo bleep.
24:29
This is a worldwide phenomenon.
This is not just a US
24:32
phenomenon. I mean, they're just
you have example after example,
24:35
in your book, where these tools
are sort of activated across
24:40
national lines. Just you know,
some somebody gets into a
24:45
disagreement, a legitimate
disagreement over policy are
24:48
over opinion. And then the
trolls get activated like all
24:52
over the world to attack and
swarm this person. So there are
24:56
people who think well, this is
just air quotes here words it's
24:59
just me In words, you make the
argument that this is not just
25:03
words that this has violence,
personal security implications,
25:06
but this really does cause women
to censor themselves and to
25:11
avoid engagement in the public
sphere. Why do you say that?
25:15
Okay, first of all, I have a
whole room full of trolls who
25:19
are awake and listening to this
they're being blamed.
25:23
They're looking for they're
looking for good lists they can
25:25
use
25:26
looking for trolls. Wow You
know, it may be maybe everyone
25:35
should expect when you when you
have an opinion that people will
25:40
spout back as shit and maybe
maybe we will realize that we
25:46
still have tail bones and this
type of open communication on
25:49
mass globally is not something
we're prepared for and Boo hoo.
25:53
Then go somewhere else set up a
set up a mastodon to get off.
25:58
Yeah, get misogynist. You said
Get off.
26:03
I did. Alright, you want to hear
more?
26:05
Yeah, this is good stuff. I like
it.
26:07
You say this is in fact a form
sorry.
26:09
You set up
26:10
ideas does just good stuff. I
mean, it's it's it's kind of it
26:16
shows you the same thing. Her
point Yeah. was sick. Yeah,
26:20
we're Yeah. But it's i It's
amusing. Gone. Oh, it's
26:24
very amusing. And it's in your
it's totally in the context of
26:28
Twitter and a free speech.
blather, First Amendment
26:33
blather. This is this is the
real divide. That's, that's
26:38
happening because of the power.
Who has the power. And for the
26:44
past? Well, really seven years,
especially black women in
26:49
America have had the voice and a
lot of power. A lot of power. So
26:55
this so I reject the notion but
also with a lot of power. And a
26:59
lot of voice comms. People who
are not gonna like you. Now that
27:05
they killed Martin Luther King,
you know, people don't like the
27:08
messages, and he wasn't even a
woman.
27:10
You say this is in fact, a form
of censorship?
27:13
Yeah, in my own life is a form
of censorship. Every time I am
27:17
online thinking about okay, am I
going to tweet am I going to
27:19
pitch this article today? I
think about you know, do I have
27:22
the emotional capacity right now
to deal with what might come? If
27:26
that's going to be out there in
the real world? Now carry a
27:29
personal safety alarm?
27:31
Hold on a second. What articles
is she pitching? And why is she
27:35
pitching articles on Twitter?
Does she not have a job?
27:41
This part, I don't understand,
Liz, you're not what
27:44
what she's doing. She's trying
to get traction. She's trying to
27:47
she's trying to use Twitter for
marketing, marketing. Her
27:50
article is that of course we do
that get our show. And some
27:52
people will say that's a shitty
article. Some people say I don't
27:56
like you, oh, my goodness. But
oh, no, it's censorship. And
27:59
this is, you know what? I think
we should amend the First
28:03
Amendment, that there are
special rules for black women.
28:08
And special rules that don't
apply to white men.
28:11
If that's going to be out there
in the real world, I now carry a
28:15
personal safety alarm around
with me because I am worried
28:19
about if one of these people who
has threatened me online shows
28:23
up in real life, particularly
women of color have had offline
28:27
threats that originated from
online threats. And you know,
28:31
I've spoken to many women, many
of whom are prominent in their
28:34
field who say, when I know I'm
going to be getting a lot of
28:37
attention, let's say for
congressional testimony, or if
28:40
I'm going on TV, they locked
down their accounts which is
28:43
closing themselves off to
opportunity and that's women who
28:46
are careers when I spoke to
young women about this women who
28:51
are high school and college aged
who are very much digital
28:54
natives they said to me, you
know, I don't want a lifestyle
28:58
that public anymore I'm gonna
lock down my account I don't
29:00
really voiced my opinions online
except to my friends. And that
29:03
just breaks my heart we need
their voices
29:06
No, no, let them be private, let
them do their voices elsewhere
29:11
whatever. We need their voices.
It's about power
29:16
that she goes on with this high
school thing and then she also
29:19
has the word in their
opportunity. So they cut that
29:22
they closed her account and then
they miss opportunity. What is
29:25
that high school girl missing an
opportunity to her opportunity
29:29
that she's missing out on
because she shut down her
29:32
Twitter confirmation
29:33
that her makeup is jamman now
more likes more views more
29:39
acceptance from other filtered
peerage people
29:43
Yeah, yeah tool or tool white
guys what do we know
29:46
and and often pointed out online
Shut up, old man Shut up old
29:52
white guy. I get that all the
time.
29:54
Course. Yeah, because I am gonna
retire, retire, retire.
29:59
Is that what They give to you
retire oh that's
30:02
to retire that guy he doesn't
know anything he retire him
30:05
retire retire retire All right
well this is
30:09
this is this is this is this is
by the way stop Happy Easter
30:14
brother John
30:15
Happy Easter to you and Happy
Easter all yes Happy Easter to
30:18
everyone out there and then in
between yes Happy Easter
30:22
everybody who are celebrating an
Easter it's Easter yes i On to
30:28
number six we're
30:29
celebrating in our own way
30:31
so you know you can't help but
notice that many of the Free
30:33
Speech absolutist are often
30:36
Are we free speech absolutists
30:40
and what does that mean? That
means everything goes okay yeah,
30:45
I think I think we I think most
people most people are free
30:48
speech absolute and others the
First Amendment that you can say
30:52
what you want when you want and
how you want anytime you want is
30:57
absolute is the right yeah.
31:02
So you know you can't help but
notice that many of the Free
31:04
Speech absolutist are often
online trolls themselves and or
31:09
they are wealthy white men who
have ample time for the well
31:12
tech to their personal safety.
They have personal assistants.
31:19
What she just said, is
ridiculous. Yes, I liked it a
31:23
lot. The white man who can go
and say what he wants online,
31:27
they got money. They got money
and they have
31:30
guards. First last systems. We
got personal assistants.
31:34
No, she also said guards guard.
31:37
We didn't even get that far. We
were only the personal
31:40
assistants, we got limo drivers
31:42
security, they can afford
security so they can beat
31:44
somebody up who comes up to him
in the street, because there's
31:47
some tweet,
31:48
tweet, online trolls themselves.
And or they are wealthy white
31:53
men who presumably have ample
means to protect their personal
31:56
safety. They have personal
assistants, they have security
31:59
guards, they have, you know,
people who can provide, you
32:04
know, a zone of personal safety
for them. argument that it is
32:10
just words. What do you say?
Okay,
32:12
wow, that's not I mean, if how
many how many white rich men are
32:17
there was was security and
assistance and get those guys
32:22
off? Get those guys off Twitter.
32:25
It's not just words, our trolls
were walking on the street. And
32:29
a crowd of hundreds of people
were shouting the insults that
32:32
we spoke about me police would
intervene, bystanders would
32:35
intervene, it would not be
acceptable. And yet it is
32:39
happening to millions of women
around the world and worse every
32:42
day.
32:44
Mm hmm. Okay, so now she's
conflating two things the
32:48
offline world with the online
world. And in general, that is
32:52
the problem with the online
world is that there's no
32:54
consequence to decorum. There's
no consequence. In general, most
33:00
societies are polite, most of
them are and also, you know, you
33:03
do something like that to
someone's face, they might, you
33:05
know, hit you in the nose or do
something else. So it's
33:07
typically people tend to shy
away from that. Don't they
33:11
understand why this is
happening?
33:14
No. Racism is white racism. Is
33:19
ritual white racism. Rich? Yeah.
Well, well, you know, but you
33:23
know what? Here we go. You said
it right. The beginning. First,
33:28
the second clip? Yes. It's rich,
white Democrats. It is. Well,
33:35
that's that's where the rich
white people are. Isn't the
33:38
Democratic Party.
33:39
Yeah, perfect. Well, now there's
the last clip, which is long,
33:45
but it's this you can play it if
you can kill it. But it's just
33:50
it just it builds to a
crescendo. They blame Musk
33:53
again, I can summarize it, but
you've already heard most of
33:56
what you want to hear. You can
play this if you want.
33:58
And I think you make a really
good point, Michelle, you know,
34:01
for for people.
34:03
Did you edit that? Or do
34:04
they edit that? No, I did no
editing something there.
34:07
And I think you make a really
good point, Michelle, you know,
34:10
for for people of means for
people who are in the majority,
34:16
it's a little bit easier to deal
with. The onus always falls on
34:19
the target of the abuse. The
platform's aren't doing very
34:22
much right now. And I shudder to
think about if free speech
34:25
absolutist, were taking over
more platforms, what that would
34:29
look like for the marginalized
communities all around the
34:32
world, which are already
shouldering so much of this
34:35
abuse disproportionate amounts
of this abuse and re
34:38
traumatizing themselves as they
try to protect themselves. So
34:41
no, you know, reporting,
blocking, etc. We need the
34:44
platforms to do more and we
frankly need law enforcement and
34:48
our legislatures to do more as
well. And
34:50
yes, if you say something
horrible online, a drone should
34:53
come by and zap you. There are
34:55
countries that are looking at
this, you know, the UK has an
34:57
online safety bill that's being
considered right now. I'm trying
35:01
to make illegal there's
currently quote, awful, but
35:04
lawful content that exists
online where people are being
35:08
harassed.
35:09
Your book offers very practical
advice to individuals about how
35:13
to address these matters in
their own if if they have to, or
35:17
feel that they have to engage
with these platforms. But from a
35:20
broader policy standpoint, what
should happen is, and part of
35:24
the reason, you know, well,
first of all, your book is quite
35:26
timely. I mean, it was due to
come out now. But it's
35:29
interesting that it comes out at
this moment where Elon Musk, as
35:32
we said, has engaged in what he
says is this campaign to take
35:35
over Twitter because he wants it
to be sort of an absolutist free
35:38
speech environment where there
are no rules. You know,
35:41
I think you could, you could
crawl through Elon Musk's
35:45
Twitter, and not find a single
thing hateful towards any woman
35:50
of any color. Because he's
asexual as far as I'm concerned.
35:54
I don't know if he cares about
women at all. But I doubt
35:59
there's anything in there yet.
He's being used as the as the
36:02
poster child for this. I think
there's point Yeah,
36:05
I think you're right. I think if
you went through his tweets, I
36:07
don't notice that he's ever even
attacked anybody really? No,
36:13
he's
36:13
just been trolling but nothing.
No, no attacks? Certainly not.
36:17
If he had attacked, attacked,
violently attacked a black woman
36:21
or a woman
36:22
of color he'd be he'd be toast.
Yeah.
36:25
This is not your mask, as we
said, has engaged in what he
36:28
says is this campaign to take
over Twitter because he wants it
36:31
to be sort of an absolutist free
speech environment where there
36:33
are no rules.
36:35
But we got it. I've just wrote
this down. absolutist free, no
36:38
free speech absolutist. Yeah,
this is the term this is it.
36:43
Yeah. So discuss in the show,
or,
36:46
from a policy standpoint, what
do you think should should
36:49
happen? Well, I
36:50
think what we've actually been
seeing Twitter do in the past
36:53
couple of months to a year has
been pretty progressive. On the
36:57
side of platforms, we've seen
them introduce what they call
37:00
human centered reporting, which
looks rather than at their terms
37:05
of service hierarchy, it asks
people what happened in their
37:08
own words,
37:09
Oh, yeah. Meanwhile, while I
have 15, imposters, i can't i
37:13
They refuse to believe that
this, these people are
37:16
imposters, imposters of my
account, and are trying to scam
37:19
people into crypto things
through DM. Now I have to
37:22
crowdsource everyone to report
it, otherwise, they don't solve
37:27
anything. Guys are full of crap.
37:30
And to report it that way. I
think that's in the right
37:32
direction. What I would love to
see is more incident reporting
37:36
on platforms. So rather than
just reporting one off pieces of
37:39
content, or accounts that are
abusive, being able to report
37:43
the whole picture to a content
moderator, because usually these
37:46
campaigns are started by one
follower individual or several
37:50
of them. And they come in waves.
And if you see, you know, one
37:54
tweet, and you're a content
moderator, and you have 20 to 40
37:57
seconds, or even less time to
evaluate that tweet or piece of
38:01
content,
38:01
it might Yeah, she could let me
listen to what she left that
38:05
time.
38:05
If and if you see, you know, one
tweet, and you're a content
38:09
moderator, and you have 20 to 40
seconds or even less time to
38:12
evaluate that piece of content,
it might not look that bad. But
38:16
when you see hundreds or even
1000s of tweets coming from
38:19
people all around the world,
that are generally quite
38:23
vitriolic or disgusting in some
way, the combined effect of that
38:27
on one human being, I think,
would be taken much differently.
38:31
So that's something that I've
advocated for in the past. But
38:34
really, any enforcement of
consequences against abusers
38:38
would make such a big difference
because part of the reason this
38:41
happens right now, is that
hardly anything ever happens to
38:45
the people who are loving the
abuse.
38:46
What do you mean people are
thrown off Twitter every single
38:50
minute,
38:51
and I never never
38:52
to return? I heard that Elon
started to do due diligence, due
38:57
diligence. And then he saw that
half of Twitter is bots. And
39:00
that's why I pulled out and I
think it's probably true.
39:05
Twitter is a bots, bots Central.
39:08
It was a lot of fake accounts.
In fact, there's a there used to
39:11
be a program it may still exist.
And it was how and they used to
39:17
which makes you wonder why
Twitter can't do this by the
39:20
way. You put in a name of
somebody and the thing will go
39:23
through all their followers and
then identify the fake ones that
39:27
are getting a percentage of real
followers. Yeah, you
39:30
have pretty high
39:33
almost every I have pretty high
what
39:35
I think you have 30 I did this
30 30% I think of your followers
39:38
are bots I have similar
according to that, that's the
39:42
thing you can Yes.
39:44
You know, I have a pretty high
normal following. Actually. 30%
39:48
bots is low. Most people have 50
That's what I'm saying. Yeah,
39:51
yeah. Okay, well, here's the
interesting thing. Why do I have
39:55
such a low of a low following of
bots is because With me, you as
40:01
a more conservative type
Twitter, Tweeter, they go after
40:06
you and they pulled numbers out
of you. There's all this, these
40:10
are biases, get rid of them. And
they start so your watch your
40:13
your followers go down from I
already once I had 105 Once,
40:17
yeah. And then it went down to
98. And that's
40:20
because you have a checkmark.
40:23
Well, I don't know if Yeah,
well, yeah,
40:25
you get penalized. You check
mark, your blue, your blue check
40:29
per person. Are we dealing with
this? Illuminati?
40:33
Yes. So that was his last clip,
right? Yes. Yes, that was the
40:38
end of the clip. Okay, this will
play the very end again. So I
40:41
can see we can go off from that.
40:43
Well, the very end was that we
need to hurt these people,
40:46
any enforcement of consequences
against mostly did another last.
40:52
The combined effect of that on
one human being, I think would
40:55
be taken much differently. So
that's something that I've
40:58
advocated for in the past. But
really, any enforcement of
41:02
consequences against abusers
would make such a big difference
41:06
because part of the reason this
happens right now, is that
41:09
hardly anything ever happens to
the people who are loving the
41:12
abuse. Okay, so
41:13
she ends with a light. Okay.
Well, well, that was a little
41:18
walk down the mentality of the
typical complainer who thinks
41:23
that we shouldn't have free
speech at all, in fact,
41:25
yes, so we've heard we've heard
quite a spectrum and it's very
41:29
depressing Happy Easter. Let's
let's I want to dive right into
41:35
some COVID stuff since that
seems to be what what people are
41:38
missing from some of our
coverage we'd left it till the
41:40
very end on the last episode
don't have a lot but I do have
41:42
some some things of note. And
there's been a ratcheting up in
41:47
Shanghai
41:51
three weeks into lockdown some
here in Shanghai are angry in
41:55
broad daylight a confrontation.
The police up against the
41:59
people. Scenes like this have
become increasingly unusual
42:04
here. But then so is locking
down almost 25 million people
42:09
head to toe in protective suits.
In an eastern district of the
42:13
city. offices were forcing
people out of their rented
42:16
apartments, so they could turn
them into temporary quarantine
42:20
facilities, or in the name of a
war against a resurgent COVID.
42:27
Summit was just too much. Their
homes sequestered that
42:31
desperation, easy for all to
hear. few miles away, there was
42:37
an organized protest a bold
stand as the lockdown takes
42:41
hold.
42:42
I'm just listening to this. I'm
thinking, wow, these women,
42:45
these women are bitching on NPR
about being attacked on Twitter
42:50
and listen to these mothers
screaming crying because these
42:53
white hazmat suit goons are
throwing them out of their
42:57
apartments. The NPR needs to
spend 20 minutes on
43:04
abuse PTSD.
43:07
In a country where you can be
arrested for picking quarrels,
43:10
that angry about a local school
being turned into another
43:14
quarantine facility. Police with
riot shields forced them off the
43:18
streets in the end. This was on
a small scale. But it's a sign
43:24
of anger and frustration. As
this lockdown goes on. larger
43:28
scale social unrest is what the
ruling Communist Party fears the
43:32
most and would likely tolerate
the least.
43:36
So yeah, now we're seeing
Changhai residents going taking
43:41
to the streets they're still all
lined up on each side of the
43:43
street on the sidewalk neatly
with their fists raised and of
43:46
course they're wearing masks but
they're protesting. And the
43:50
theory that I'm going on is this
is Mandate of Heaven. And we
43:53
cannot we cannot be seen as
losing to some natural disaster
43:57
and that's why they're they're
clearly going nuts. And what's
44:02
interesting if you watch Have
you seen any of these videos
44:04
with the white hazmat suits,
that a couple that really has
44:09
not really hazmat suits but
44:10
just a white? Well the heck is
police uniform?
44:14
Well not just like a police
uniform. They're very distinct.
44:19
I've never seen these before
with blue stripes and it has
44:23
Chinese lettering on it but also
big large words police but that
44:30
was rather interesting. To have
these sitting in Shanghai they
44:34
have these suits and it says
police and from what we
44:37
understand from our boots on the
ground professor in Shanghai,
44:40
most of these people are like
your neighbors who are given a
44:43
suit to then you know, boss you
around, which is of course why
44:46
this is working so well. You
want to get you want to get
44:51
people to boss people around,
give your neighbor a suit and
44:54
tell him he's in charge of you.
44:55
Well, that brings us to the
book, Life and Death In
45:00
Shanghai, one of the most famous
books ever written in China,
45:04
it's been kind of banned in
China. But it's, it's available.
45:08
And it describes exactly what
you said, because this is what
45:11
happened in the 30s, I believe,
when the Chinese used the, the
45:16
ability to turn neighbor against
neighbor and turned in, you
45:19
know, like your next door
neighbor into your boss in the
45:23
similar manner without the
costume. And it's a horrendous
45:27
tale. If you read this book, you
are you're just, it's really
45:32
frightening what they what the
Chinese are, can do. How its how
45:38
the Chinese themselves turn into
these little Eichmann kind of
45:43
characters, and at the drop of a
hat against each other. It's
45:47
this volatile.
45:48
Yes, life and death in Shanghai.
Nene Chang is very famous book.
45:53
Yeah. Which I have not read.
45:55
So it's readable as read. It's
very well written. It's a very
45:59
easy to read book. And it's a
little long, by today's
46:03
standards, seven unless you're a
Stephen King reader. And yeah,
46:07
it's a good book.
46:11
So that's the story in Shanghai,
in Australia, South Australia
46:18
has a new premier. He made an
Oopsie.
46:22
We haven't transitioned out of a
too long, two year long
46:26
Emergency Management decoration
era before we even transition
46:30
out of a global pandemic in the
modern world with a modern
46:33
economy.
46:34
He said pandemic, pandemic, yes,
sir.
46:38
Out of a global pandemic modern
economy.
46:43
I'd vote for that guy. Very
good. Now, there are some
46:48
issues, some issues going on in
Australia. With looks like we
46:56
have some vaccine issues,
vaccine related heart attacks.
47:03
The Australian Health Minister
is queried about this, because
47:08
they're seeing a rise of 40% in
what they call code ones. And a
47:13
code one is cardiac arrest. So
that's what the that's when you
47:18
send out an ambulance and and
they just can't figure it out.
47:21
Yeah, I don't think anyone can
explain why we saw a 40% jump in
47:25
code once and I've, I've seen
that as I've traveled around the
47:28
state. Sometimes I'll walk into
an ambulance service and they'll
47:31
say we had a 30% increase in
code one. JSA. Can't tell you
47:34
why. We just had a lot of heart
attacks and chest pain, Why
47:38
trouble breathing respiratory
issues? Sometimes you can't
47:42
explain why those things happen.
But unfortunately, do you have
47:47
any idea as to what could have
been that? No, we don't have
47:51
that information yet. But you
know, what I do know, and I'm
47:56
hearing some interjections on
the side is that vaccines
47:59
actually help people stay out of
the hospital, not put them in
48:01
hospital?
48:06
theory I love the press go hey,
could this be related to
48:08
vaccines? No, no, no, no. And
these
48:13
questions is going on all over
the world. Is it us? You know,
48:16
there's all kinds of things with
kids and livers are getting
48:20
blown, blown out getting all
kinds of diseases and they will
48:25
never even suggest that
coincidence. That's a
48:29
coincidence.
48:30
So an Australian soccer player
had to be taken off field and he
48:34
was diagnosed with myocarditis,
all the wines.
48:38
All the wines remains in
hospital tonight with a worrying
48:41
heart issue. Live to Mitch Clary
with the latest Mitch wines was
48:45
subbed out of last night's game
against Melbourne
48:47
with Tim to power and Medicare's
tonight exploring inflammation
48:50
around wines as hot known as
myocarditis free presented with
48:55
an irregular heartbeat last
night it's expected he will miss
48:58
matches but the full timeline
won't be known for several days
49:01
as they conduct further
investigations.
49:04
This was Sky News in Australia
and they have a the Sky Sports
49:08
weekly show they have a panel
and they discussed this very
49:13
incident and went a little
farther than they should have I
49:16
believe
49:17
only wants to just to watch this
space at this stage nothing
49:20
coming out of the product like
team this morning came over he's
49:23
subbing out of the game on
Thursday night for nauseous
49:26
slash heart reasons he spent
time in hospital and yeah it's
49:30
just a it's a big unknown as to
as to when he will play again it
49:33
may be as soon as this week but
nothing coming out of the club
49:35
and a lot of this going on in
world sport at the moment in the
49:37
world. World Sports Yeah, I
think what I'm athletes have got
49:41
these issues. Are you brownie
referring to the booster shots
49:44
and the booster COVID The word
going around? Look it's been
49:49
discussed I haven't been able to
get an official line on that
49:51
from anyone attached to all the
wines at this stage but they're
49:54
the question has been asked and
put to me and others and cool
49:57
yourself by a lot of people a
bit of it but It's not it's not
50:00
just the heart issues. I mean,
like, without delving into your
50:03
private affairs, you know,
you've got Bell's palsy at the
50:06
moment, which hopefully you're
50:07
on. There's literally a guy in
the panel with a droopy mouth,
50:10
he's got Bell falls,
50:13
or whatever going on here.
50:15
It's not it's not just the heart
issues. I mean, like without
50:18
delving into your private
affairs, you've got Bell's palsy
50:21
at the moment, which hopefully
you're on the back end of that.
50:23
But there's a bit of that going
around as well.
50:25
Exactly. It's gone to heart
issues and Bell's Palsy has gone
50:28
through the roof since the
boosters and COVID issues. So we
50:33
had Michelangelo Ruchi on aw on
Friday night, and he said that
50:37
wine is it's a filled, there's a
ward filled with people with
50:40
similar symptoms in Adelaide to
only wine. So nausea, heart
50:44
issues. So there's has to be
something more to it.
50:47
Yeah. And just we're not
50:48
anti vaxxers. We've all done our
due diligence with our booster
50:51
shots and all that sort of
stuff. But there is going to
50:53
have to be some study done on
this not just in a sporting
50:57
sphere yet. You know, local
communities. And you're right
51:00
there because we don't want to
get into the space. We're not
51:02
experts in at all.
51:04
Hey, well. Wow. Yeah, I don't
know if that show is still on
51:08
the air or sky even exists.
51:10
Like, it's like Pfizer's only
got so even if they can't step
51:15
on every little, you know, they
can't stomp on every little
51:18
gopher that comes up in this now
Australia is out of control.
51:21
They got to do something about
those guys.
51:23
Well, they're doubling down,
doubling down. Scientists
51:29
Discover world's first cure for
heart attacks using the same
51:33
mRNA technology just COVID
vaccines. Wow, that's beautiful.
51:41
Well, as long as it doesn't
create the spike protein,
51:44
anyway, the disease might these
athletes, we have to always we
51:50
have to back up a few steps and
remember that athletes are the
51:54
ones with the good hearts. You
think be well, you'd does always
51:59
been that way. It's never you
did when I would have never
52:03
heard of anything like this is
going on with athletes,
52:06
especially soccer players where
you have to run and run and run.
52:08
I mean, I'm surprised the
basketball would only have your
52:11
own theory about that. One more
basketball players haven't
52:14
dropped. But
52:15
yeah, I don't I don't think they
took it at all. This is just
52:19
phony baloney. These are these
are they think they took it? Oh,
52:24
yes. Yeah, there you go. There
you go. Yes, the team owners
52:27
would never allow it. Yes, that
was the theory, because the
52:30
investment in these players is
just too large to risk it to
52:33
risk anything. Yeah, they don't
even let them on social media.
52:36
Most of the time,
52:37
no players to just do some
perspective. Some basketball
52:42
players is the guys who play 82
games a year and they don't even
52:45
play that many anymore. Somebody
wants to point is pointed out
52:47
more recently, they play about
60 of the game. So they play
52:50
about 60 basketball games a
year, and many of them make $40
52:56
million a year plus Yeah,
52:58
you're not going to shoot that
thing up with just anything.
53:02
Because of the way that and also
basketball contracts aren't like
53:05
football contracts, which are
bogus, you know, you get a
53:08
stubbed toe and the contract
gets pulled, you don't get
53:12
anything. Basketball players get
paid no matter what. And, yeah,
53:17
I think your theory might be
correct.
53:20
Back home, the Department of
Human Health and Services had a
53:26
seminar titled convening equity
in the age of COVID. Because,
53:32
you know, if it's not rich white
men with assistance and security
53:35
guards attacking women online,
well, it's obviously COVID. Is
53:41
is is also racist, or is it
COVID? I don't know. This is our
53:47
newly appointed Secretary of
human health services does
53:50
obviate Beshara.
53:51
Secondly, by having better data,
we can do a couple of things.
53:55
Vaccines a year ago today, by
the way, we know that vaccines
54:00
are killing people of color,
blacks, Latinos, indigenous
54:05
people at about two times the
rate of white Americans.
54:08
Okay, is this a Gabbard?
54:10
Is this a gaffe? It's got to be
a gaff. It's got to be a get he
54:15
meant virus, you meant the virus
where he meant COVID He meant
54:18
COVID Is Killing which is true.
COVID is killing X number of
54:22
people twice as fast because,
you know, the various reasons
54:25
for that. So, but he said
vaccines play it again.
54:31
We know that vaccines are
killing people of color, blacks,
54:35
Latinos, indigenous people, and
about two times the rate of
54:38
white Americans
54:39
now that we're playing this,
there's two old white men
54:41
without assistance. Mind you, Is
that racist because he's brown
54:44
that were laughing at his gaffe?
54:47
He laughed at everybody's gaffe.
Okay, we laugh mostly at the
54:50
White old man Biden's gaffes. We
do. We do. He's number one.
54:57
Okay, I'm I'm plowing through
this We do have truth
55:01
that needs to come out in that
clip is probably he's probably
55:06
right.
55:07
Yeah. No, no, it's probably. I'm
quite sure it's right. But who
55:11
am I? Good news out of
California. I guess
55:15
this morning, the state of
California is delaying plans
55:18
that would require students to
get vaccinated against COVID.
55:22
Last year, California became the
first state to announce a
55:25
vaccine mandate for all school
children. But the FDA has not
55:29
yet fully approved the shot for
anyone under 16. So California
55:33
Governor Gavin Newsom announced
late Thursday that the new
55:36
deadline will be no sooner than
July 2023.
55:41
All right. It's interesting to
put a put a date way out in the
55:44
future, I guess they're
expecting to have issued
55:48
virtue signaling and without
doing it about maybe things get
55:51
cancelled him knows.
55:53
Pfizer, of course not sitting
still,
55:55
you got some news on vaccine and
kids coming in? Hey, you got
55:58
some news on vaccine and kids.
You got some news on vaccine and
56:01
kids,
56:02
just off embargo clinical trial
data from Pfizer on the third
56:06
dose for children ages five
through 11. Here's what we know
56:10
at this point they had data
showed a very strong immune
56:13
response after that third shot.
This is the same pediatric dose
56:18
as tested and authorized in this
age group. This third shot given
56:22
six months after the second
dose, they found protective or
56:25
we call neutralizing antibodies
against both the Omicron variant
56:29
and wild type strains.
56:31
So why did they why did why did
this term maybe I've missed it
56:34
previously, what we call
neutralizing antibodies. This is
56:38
the sounds rather new to me. Is
there reason do you think never
56:41
heard it? neutralizing
antibodies that different know
56:44
what that means? What's a
neutralizing antibodies, an
56:47
antibody.
56:48
That's what I thought this third
56:49
shot given six months, I wanted
to say that this third shot
56:53
given six months after the
second dose, they found
56:55
protective or we call
neutralizing antibodies against
56:58
both the Omicron variant and
wild type strains, well
57:02
tolerated by the pediatric
participants of the trial in
57:06
terms of side effects, no
serious safety signals. And we
57:09
expect the drugmaker Pfizer to
submit the data to the FDA
57:12
within 75 years for the booster
in the next couple of days. And
57:16
this is as we are still awaiting
the clinical trial data on the
57:20
third dose from Pfizer in
children under the age of five.
57:23
So still a lot happening in the
vaccine world.
57:25
This is going the direction we
thought it would eventually
57:27
we're going to get the okay for
boosters for kids
57:28
authorized for boosters looks
likely but we won't know until
57:32
we know that.
57:33
Yeah, yeah. So they're waiting
on some trials, we're still
57:38
waiting for official trial
information to be made public
57:41
and discuss that Pfizer tried to
hide along with the FDA when
57:45
Okay, now we have our test to
treat because this is not going
57:51
away. Whether it's COVID, or
bird flu or whatever, whatever's
57:55
coming next, they're going to
use it again, they collectively
57:59
all connected to the World
Economic Forum, but really the
58:01
World Health Organization is
drawing up this treaty that all
58:05
countries are going to sign on
to and there'll be Command
58:09
Central and they throw out the
bad signal everybody shuts down
58:13
or whatever we're supposed to
do. And and the testing will
58:17
continue and there's new
technological breakthroughs in
58:21
testing,
58:22
the FDA has now issued an
emergency use authorization for
58:25
the first device able to detect
COVID In Breath samples
58:29
above the same amount of breath
that it takes to inflate a small
58:32
balloon. The breathalyzer
58:34
is about the size of a carry on
luggage. It can be used only at
58:37
doctors offices, hospitals, and
mobile testing sites. And
58:41
results are ready in about three
minutes. Now, the breath test
58:45
will likely not replace the more
intrusive nasal tests. The FDA
58:49
says a positive breathalyzer
should be followed with a PCR
58:53
test.
58:55
Why? Why answer me this Batman?
Or whoever does that bit? Why
59:03
does it have to be at a doctor's
office?
59:06
Well, I know it it doesn't
necessarily have to be the
59:08
doctor's office but I believe
the machinery is the machinery
59:11
is is expensive. And
59:14
if you do they made it clear
that it has can't You can't just
59:17
have it in the field. Like I
can't have that.
59:20
I don't know I don't Lhasa you
would have you would have
59:22
expected them to tell me. They
didn't tell you anything. Well,
59:26
let's listen to the to the ad
for inspect IRM and we can glean
59:30
something from there. Oh,
another one of those great
59:34
little video so I'm put together
with some cool music.
59:38
Right now. The world faces
challenges. They demand
59:41
innovation, accountability, and
most importantly, accurate
59:45
results. Inspect IR systems is a
research development and device
59:50
company that's developed
proprietary methods and machines
59:53
to deliver accurate results in
real time as a deadly virus
59:58
circles the globe and crip All
schools, churches and
1:00:01
businesses, inspect IR systems
has created an elegant screening
1:00:06
solution, the unparalleled PN y
1000 mobile COVID-19 screening
1:00:12
device with a patented
breathalyzer technology to
1:00:16
collect samples. The pm y 1000
is completely painless and non
1:00:21
invasive. The algorithmic
software analyzes a subjects
1:00:25
breath to look for specific
chemistry associated with the
1:00:28
act of viral infection of
COVID-19.
1:00:31
Sounds like an Elizabeth Holmes
deal to me.
1:00:34
Oh, it sounds like it Demetrio.
By the way. Why should the PMI
1:00:37
1000 They make 99? Before they
really that's what
1:00:41
I'm saying? Fairness also had
like the Theranos 1000.
1:00:45
Was it at 1000? Why did the PMI
one?
1:00:48
They do have an emergency use
authorization for some reason?
1:00:51
So I guess the FDA thinks it
works and and they can use that
1:00:55
and they've got the same
1:00:56
think it works. Why don't they
just give it authorization? John
1:01:03
Doe here and here's the way I
see it, it works so well because
1:01:06
it gives you the illusion of
some high tech device with
1:01:09
accurate results. But there
really were this. No, it's gonna
1:01:12
give you the results that the
operator desires.
1:01:16
It's gonna be one of those. Hey,
guys, we
1:01:18
oversold the tickets for
tonight. All right, ratchet it
1:01:20
up. 10% positive, get them out
of here. It could be anything. I
1:01:25
don't believe this at all. I
want to see how this works. I
1:01:28
want to see less trouble
1:01:29
getting breathalyzer test. I
mean, they can do alcohol
1:01:33
because it is literally on your
breath they want
1:01:36
they want to do this because
it's within three minutes, we
1:01:40
can start separating people
right away. And that guy looks
1:01:44
white. He looks old. He probably
has an assistant positive
1:01:48
and he'd be security guards will
beat the up though.
1:01:53
So now we have the World Health
Organization connecting with the
1:02:00
World Economic Forum for a and
what we've been waiting for this
1:02:06
week I've been waiting for this
for the papers please app. It's
1:02:13
known as TDK a TK, TD. Now NT ha
ktd I
1:02:23
ain't gonna go over
1:02:24
these guys are bankers they
don't know how to market. It's
1:02:27
the known traveler digital
identity program. And they
1:02:31
already have some to two main
players two main countries all
1:02:36
in on it. This is their promo
video I cut it down to 155
1:02:44
with a number of international
arrivals expected to grow 50% by
1:02:49
2030. Travelers need seamless
ways to cross borders that also
1:02:53
protect national security while
protecting their personal data.
1:02:58
The known traveler digital
identity, or KT di is a public
1:03:03
private collaboration that
enhances security efforts while
1:03:07
enabling a connected journey for
today's international traveler.
1:03:11
The KT di is the only global
travel initiative of its kind.
1:03:16
Travelers can share
documentation and information
1:03:19
from one verified identity with
partners including government
1:03:23
authorities, airlines, and
hotels. The KT di allows
1:03:28
travelers to play an active role
in travel security efforts. By
1:03:32
sharing that information
proactively. Travelers always
1:03:36
retain control over what, when
and with whom they share that
1:03:40
information. Each data element
shared by the traveler is
1:03:44
verified, accurate and
consistent every time. This is
1:03:49
made possible by the
technologies of distributed
1:03:51
ledger, cryptography, and
biometric. As more data and
1:03:56
information is added, travelers
build more enriched profiles
1:04:00
that build trust with each
partner interaction throughout
1:04:03
the journey. Good known traveler
digital identity creates one
1:04:07
connected process to build
trust, encourage travel, and
1:04:11
allow precious security
resources to focus on the areas
1:04:15
of greatest need. Components of
the known traveler digital
1:04:19
identity will be championed by
the governments of Canada and
1:04:22
the Netherlands, which include
Air Canada KLM Royal Dutch
1:04:27
Airlines, Toronto Pearson
International Airport, Montreal
1:04:31
Trudeau International Airport,
and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol
1:04:35
in collaboration with the World
Economic Forum and Accenture.
1:04:39
The known traveler digital
identity will be piloted this
1:04:42
year. unlocking the power to
change how we travel.
1:04:47
Yeah, you really this it's in
the show notes. The whole video
1:04:49
is worth watching.
1:04:51
Well, guess what you met What do
you all bought into the list
1:04:56
goes or what was the name of
that system and you You took it
1:05:00
a couple of times you went to
Europe yesterday I can for the
1:05:02
global income back. It's like a
phony baloney key on the
1:05:06
Global Entry System, which is
not simply says it's been
1:05:09
abolished.
1:05:11
Yeah. That's how far they get
they get abolished. I don't know
1:05:15
why it gets abolished.
1:05:16
Oh, it gets work. No, it's it
was abolished because they sold
1:05:21
all that off to clear and other
private parties. Yeah. And you
1:05:25
and I won't do clear because
they require your biometrics.
1:05:29
And we're going to do that and
give you my eye. And it's just
1:05:34
creepy in general. But this app,
I love the positioning. The
1:05:38
positioning is you view
determine what you give and to
1:05:44
whom you give it. But that's not
how these things work. It works
1:05:47
like this. Show me your. And
then if you say no, I don't want
1:05:52
to give it to you. No entry for
you. Bet. Come on. This is
1:05:56
reverse. Yeah, it's gonna be so
safe. It's encrypted. I heard
1:06:01
blockchain in there. Oh, it's
great. distributed ledger.
1:06:04
Blockchain crypto. Can't wait.
Yeah. And you can't even use the
1:06:10
excuse of don't have a
smartphone because countries
1:06:13
just give him now to people.
Especially if you come in
1:06:16
illegally.
1:06:18
Everyone's got the Obama phone.
So
1:06:21
for me by the phone.
1:06:25
I'm good. Everybody got
1:06:30
Adam curry.
1:06:32
That pay that I'm it's a true
representation of that lady. She
1:06:37
was very excited about her Obama
phone. So here's the thing with
1:06:43
all of these adverse event or
vaccine adverse event reactions,
1:06:49
reports, with all the things
we're hearing about, you'd think
1:06:53
someone would be headline news,
like, Hey, we got to
1:06:55
investigate. We got to
investigate what's going on.
1:06:57
They may. It may not be. It may
just be coincidence. But we may
1:07:01
have to look at these vaccines.
In some cases, it seems to hurt
1:07:04
people. No, no, no, that's not
what we do in America with our
1:07:08
federal Food and Drug
Administration. No, we do this.
1:07:11
The FDA
1:07:12
is investigating as to why
hundreds of people reported
1:07:15
getting sick after eating Lucky
Charms. More than 400 people
1:07:19
have complained about the cereal
on a website that tracks
1:07:22
foodborne illnesses. General
Mills, which makes this cereal
1:07:25
says it is also investigating
those complaints, but it does
1:07:28
not believe lucky charms are
responsible.
1:07:31
So there's lots of websites
where people are reporting about
1:07:35
a vaccine injuries. But the FDA
is not interested in that no
1:07:39
Lucky Charms, cardboard with
high fructose corn syrup. state
1:07:48
of the world data the world
speech lists the state of the
1:07:52
world baby. Yeah, that's okay.
It's Easter. Some warm wanted to
1:08:01
war.
1:08:02
Well, before we do that master
Do they just want this little 17
1:08:05
second clip because he talked
about China for a bit there and
1:08:08
I want to get my traffic to
Taiwan. Okay.
1:08:14
In the past two years, more and
more countries have sent high
1:08:17
level officials to Taiwan.
That's including the US and a
1:08:21
number of European countries
like France, Lithuania, the
1:08:24
Czech Republic, Estonia and
Latvia. A delegation of European
1:08:28
Parliament members also visited
the island.
1:08:32
Yeah, Chinese are unhappy with
that. No. Usually I get to
1:08:37
merchandise clips. Here, the
China and Russia space wars.
1:08:42
The Defense Intelligence Agency
published the report, it
1:08:45
describes how China and Russia
will try to counter the
1:08:48
advantage the US has in space.
Defense Intelligence Officer
1:08:52
explains why Russia
1:08:54
and China our primary strategic
competitors are taking steps to
1:08:57
undercut the United States and
our allies in the space domain.
1:09:02
Both nations view space as a
requirement for winning modern
1:09:05
wars, especially against Western
nations and look to prove
1:09:09
themselves as world leaders.
1:09:11
A Defense Intelligence Analyst
also points to the two countries
1:09:15
combined assets in space. He
said they've grown about 70% and
1:09:19
only two years. He outlines
their ambitions.
1:09:22
Both nations seek to broaden
their space exploration
1:09:25
initiatives together and
individually. With plans to
1:09:30
explore the moon and Mars during
the next 30 years. And if
1:09:35
successful, these efforts will
likely lead to attempts by
1:09:39
Beijing and Moscow to exploit
the moon's natural resources.
1:09:44
What's more, he said that Moscow
is now developing a missile that
1:09:47
is able to destroy satellites
and space vehicles.
1:09:52
Of course, with their dead
ruble. Yeah, that's meant that's
1:09:59
me. Ain't Yeah, space wars.
Well, I've been saying that's
1:10:02
been going on for a
1:10:03
database worse since the
beginning. Yeah,
1:10:05
they you know, Noah was a
conspiracy theorist until it
1:10:10
rained. Just saying
1:10:12
who? You stole that I did? Of
course, of course, your material
1:10:18
from stolen material that
1:10:20
wasn't stolen. It's credited in
the show notes with a link to
1:10:23
the original. It's correct.
1:10:25
It is I take a take a one liner
and you make a point at
1:10:29
crediting it this summer. Yes.
1:10:30
You know why? You know why?
Because you outed me douche. I
1:10:34
could You could have said, Wow,
you're really smart, Adam. No,
1:10:37
no, no, no, that's not how it
goes. Well, it's almost as bad
1:10:41
as me saying that.
1:10:42
I had nothing. You anticipated.
It was funny.
1:10:46
It's almost as bad as me saying
I had nothing better to do than
1:10:49
to have dinner with the
Horowitz's. Ah, there
1:10:52
it is. He called me. Oh, okay.
We had to stop showing this. And
1:10:58
he had not heard the last
episode. You gotta listen to the
1:11:02
last episode because I shouldn't
be talking to you at all. I've
1:11:05
denounced you. But you know what
he called? He said, hey, it's
1:11:10
good Friday. Just want to say
hi, Happy Easter. Jewish. Yes.
1:11:15
Milk. Yes. No. Well, Passover,
Passover, Passover. And I said,
1:11:20
Oh, man, you got me real good.
Even got the Hauraki not. And he
1:11:24
was laughing. I think I think I
think he was trying to like say,
1:11:29
Yeah, but I think you're right,
he might have been a little
1:11:32
hurt, maybe in down deep.
1:11:35
It was a combination. It was an
obvious combination. It's one of
1:11:37
those because he because Andrew
is not really a performer. And
1:11:43
so when he you know, he's not
like an like an actor like
1:11:46
nananana when he tries to so he,
when he tries to do something
1:11:51
designed to be partly acting in
a truthful, he it's obvious to
1:11:57
me. Yeah. And he was overdoing
it. And so that's what made me
1:12:01
bring it up on the show. And
that's what he wanted me to do.
1:12:06
I was just following orders in
some odd way. Needs to be
1:12:09
rushed.
1:12:12
And I tell you, a you cook a
smoothie I want to come on over
1:12:15
so you cook it now not really in
the list this whole thing. I got
1:12:18
two turkeys in the in the
smoker. I got five brisket. And
1:12:22
I said, you know, I really wish
I could be there with you if I
1:12:26
didn't have something better.
That was the I love Andrew and
1:12:33
Joe.
1:12:34
You know that you mentioned it.
Instead of him taking you to the
1:12:38
Commodore collaborative The hell
it was.
1:12:40
It was the yacht club book for
you. No, no, no, listen. He has
1:12:45
nothing better eager. No, he had
he had nothing better to do. So
1:12:48
he just took us to the Yacht
Club. You're not gonna cook for
1:12:51
me anymore ever again. I went
through this other China clip
1:12:57
you have?
1:12:59
Yeah, might as well this is to
me. This is like a good news.
1:13:02
Bad news clip. This is maybe
good news for us and bad news
1:13:05
for China. But it's hard to say.
At the moment,
1:13:08
countries around the world are
working to diversify their
1:13:11
supply chains and reduce your
dependence on China. World Bank
1:13:15
President David Malpass
commented on Tuesday saying this
1:13:19
is probably good for everyone.
1:13:21
I think the world is working to
reduce the dependency on supply
1:13:26
chains from China. And that
diversification is probably good
1:13:30
for for everyone. We're we're
1:13:31
headed the China also needs to
be part of a value system shared
1:13:35
by other countries.
1:13:37
The world needs China to be a
good producer and a consumer and
1:13:42
a part of the value system that
that was described. I don't know
1:13:48
that that will happen.
1:13:50
China is the world's second
largest economy after the US
1:13:54
Malpass said he expects China to
become the world's biggest
1:13:57
economy. Although China suffered
some major setbacks in various
1:14:01
areas. Either way, the country
plays a major role as both a
1:14:05
consumer and producer of goods.
China is a shareholder of the
1:14:10
World Bank, but also a borrower.
The World Bank plans to aid
1:14:14
China through 2025. Among those
plans are low interest loans to
1:14:18
China, totaling one to $1.5
billion every year. The US
1:14:24
objected when the World Bank
first adopted the plan in 2019,
1:14:28
citing Beijing's human rights
violations, according to the
1:14:32
World Bank, China is still a
developing country, meaning it
1:14:36
can get benefits earmarked for
developing countries, both in
1:14:39
trade and other areas. On the
other hand, the US excluded
1:14:43
China from its own list of
developing countries in 2020
1:14:47
under the Trump administration
Yep.
1:14:52
You're gonna be number one
economy in the world, but yet in
1:14:55
the developing country.
1:14:57
Well, that was the whole And
that was the whole deal with the
1:15:01
World Trade Organization,
organization, let them in, give
1:15:03
them give them special status.
Well, things are not going well,
1:15:07
what's coming out of China. So
they may be a producer and a
1:15:10
consumer, but I don't think the
producers getting to where it
1:15:14
needs to get. Certainly when it
comes to grain products, which
1:15:18
they're hoarding and, and
fertilizer, it got another hit
1:15:21
today. And if you saw this, too
already, majority of fertilizer
1:15:25
comes out of China. There is a
certain there's definitely a
1:15:29
chunk that comes from Russia,
which will likely be less
1:15:33
available. But now in the United
States. And this is right up
1:15:37
your phone morass alley. The
major fertilizer companies are
1:15:43
saying that Union Pacific is
putting limits on rail traffic,
1:15:48
to clear up delays from
shipments that farmers need for
1:15:53
the spring planting season CF
industries saying that the
1:15:58
railroad has ordered it to cut
its shipments by nearly 20%. And
1:16:05
that's I think that's for all
private cars. Which kind of
1:16:09
takes me back to that weird for
private cars on the Zephyr you
1:16:13
saw on Thursday. I wonder if
that was related to this. Maybe
1:16:17
they're trying to get the
private cars to a destination
1:16:20
before this went into place.
1:16:23
I don't know what they mean by
this. The private credit we did
1:16:26
last Thursday was not to was not
for private cars. It was to new
1:16:30
inches new Alcoa engines, which
there if you go to no agenda,
1:16:36
social, somebody's found them
and they posted it. The engines
1:16:40
are the new version a bit more
horsepower, less, more fuel
1:16:44
efficient. So now the private
number of private cars I see on
1:16:49
trains if they're talking about
that, but they make you're
1:16:51
talking about private box cars.
I mean, the people own these,
1:16:54
those are private cars to in
some sense. Yes. But the private
1:17:00
passenger cars are few and far
between nowadays.
1:17:06
See, the world's largest
fertilizer companies. The Union
1:17:10
Pacific had hit it with railroad
mandated shipping reductions
1:17:13
that would impact nitrogen
fertilizers such as urea pig
1:17:16
PIs, and ammonium nitrate
shipments to Iowa, Illinois,
1:17:20
Kansas, Nebraska, Texas and
California union, Pacific's and
1:17:23
CF industries are told CF
industries without advance
1:17:26
notice to reduce the volume of
private cars on his railroad
1:17:29
immediately. Not only will
fertilizer be delayed by the
1:17:34
shipments, but additional
fertilizer needed to complete
1:17:36
spring applications may be
unable to reach farmers at all.
1:17:40
And he's you know, someone's
night
1:17:42
bed you have to read. Yeah, I
have to look. Well, this it
1:17:45
is it's like it's like the the
messaging is Associated Press
1:17:49
and it's you know, so it
1:17:50
sounds fishy. or poorly reported
or something somebody that's
1:17:55
somebody just I don't know,
lousy written press releases
1:17:58
regurgitated poorly. Yes. Can
anyone I'm guessing Yeah.
1:18:06
Maybe this will lead us into the
war. You know, Russia still
1:18:09
needs to make a $650 million
payment on its debt, which has
1:18:13
now been thwarted because they
have no way to pay in dollars
1:18:18
only in rubles. And this has
been a very slow, slow fall
1:18:24
towards them defaulting on their
debt, which would be a very
1:18:29
interesting default. Because
it's not a financial default.
1:18:33
It's a political default. And I
just wonder how that's going to
1:18:38
play out. If it will even matter
I don't know if it even matters
1:18:42
but what so if Russia defaults
on their on their bonds?
1:18:47
I'm curious. I have no idea.
1:18:50
I don't it may not even make a
difference at all. Really?
1:18:52
I you know, who would know that?
It would be your responsibility.
1:18:55
No, I can't ask Horowitz about
this.
1:18:59
No, not the banker.
1:19:02
Oh, yes. Okay, good one.
1:19:05
I don't think Horowitz would
have a clue but I know you're
1:19:07
right.
1:19:07
The banker I got to call the
banker about it. Well, the
1:19:09
banker I got to call him anyway.
Because you remember and he was
1:19:13
like No one No one's buying up
homes to rent them out that's
1:19:16
not so that's not I know he
1:19:17
was all you have to do is watch
television in the Bay Area's
1:19:22
John buys Bay Area homes. The
brothers by Bay Area homes you
1:19:27
have a home you want to sell
just don't worry about just sell
1:19:29
it to us immediately when you
get on it and to fix it up. Just
1:19:32
sell it. I mean, they just guys
and I think there's a lot of
1:19:35
parts of the country. And so
you're gonna buy a house, you're
1:19:39
gonna be you're gonna pay a lot
and you're going to be lucky to
1:19:42
get one
1:19:44
and you're not going to be able
to afford it. Austin where the
1:19:46
prices went up. Oh my god. I do
thank God for this. We we played
1:19:52
it so well. selling our home in
Austin and getting out.
1:19:55
I've told you this before us.
Don't ever expect this to happen
1:19:59
again. You know, in your
lifetime, you nailed it.
1:20:02
Yeah. Well, what's happening now
in Austin, everybody just got
1:20:07
their, their property tax bill.
Every home was revalued at an
1:20:15
average of 56% over last year
higher that that's going to push
1:20:24
people out of homes.
1:20:26
Well, that's why California is
in good shape because of prop
1:20:29
13. They keep trying to kill it.
But back back in the day, this
1:20:32
is like 20 3040 years ago when
they passed it. If you move into
1:20:37
a house, you say, in the day,
you buy a house or $100,000, and
1:20:43
you get paying property tax on
it, and that house gets jacked
1:20:47
up to a value of a million
dollars. And you stay you stay
1:20:53
there. You're still paying
$200,000 taxes. Oh, oh, that's
1:20:58
nice. Prop 13 was all about
because they this is before it
1:21:02
even started really cranking up.
1:21:05
And that what let me guess.
1970s Yeah. Also 1970s rent to
1:21:13
own homes. Homes are back. Not
that they ever really went away.
1:21:17
But the was the lease option to
buy or I guess rent to own. That
1:21:22
was popular in the 60s and 70s
as well, I believe.
1:21:27
I don't remember it. But maybe.
But let's play a couple of clips
1:21:31
here. I want to get I want to
get to I get this mirror stupid
1:21:35
thing I want to go I
1:21:36
was gonna do 270s things and
then hand it back to you. Oh,
1:21:39
you got 70 There's always
something in 70s. Of course,
1:21:43
taxes. If you have a refund
coming. It may take a while
1:21:47
blame it on budget cuts and
staffing levels, which are the
1:21:49
lowest since 1974. Still, as of
April 8, more than 70 million
1:21:55
refunds have been issued. And
the average refund is up almost
1:21:59
10% from last year. It's now
close to $3,200. But no refund
1:22:05
for the President and First
Lady. They report
1:22:08
chairs. So that was your 70s
Yes, very much like the 70s. But
1:22:11
the one I want to play. And
we've done this many times. But
1:22:16
of course this this comes right
back to where we are today. 1977
1:22:23
ABC Evening News pay attention
people who weren't born yet.
1:22:27
warm periods like ours last only
10,000 years, but ours is
1:22:32
already lasted 12,000. So if the
rhythm is right, we are over
1:22:36
ready for a return of the ice.
Experts like Reed Bryson, the
1:22:40
head of the biggest
Meteorological Department in the
1:22:43
world in Wisconsin, believe that
since 1945, that has been in
1:22:48
progress but returning to an ice
age, they base this on ever
1:22:52
cooler temperature readings in
the Great Plains on land and the
1:22:56
North Atlantic at sea. And on
the headlong retreat of the heat
1:22:59
loving Armadillo from Nebraska,
to the southwest, and to Mexico.
1:23:04
And on many more sophisticated
sides. The argument that we face
1:23:08
some long cold years is pretty
convincing. Don't pack your
1:23:12
things and investigate real
estate prices in the tropics
1:23:15
yet. But there's a theory
advanced by climatologists that
1:23:19
the last two years of battering
by winter means that an ice age
1:23:23
is returning to the earth
glaciers down to the Mason Dixon
1:23:27
Line, and freezing temperatures
south of that non expert that I
1:23:31
am I tend to lean towards the
ice ages for the evidence that
1:23:35
used by Professor Reed Bryson of
the University of Wisconsin are
1:23:39
a leading scholar. Among other
items, he cites the rhythm of
1:23:43
100,000 years of Ice Age,
interrupted briefly by a mere
1:23:48
10,000 years of warmth. And our
10,000 years of warmth has now
1:23:53
passed.
1:23:54
So you forgive us if we're
skeptical sometimes since in our
1:23:58
lifetime, we've heard that we're
going to die of frostbite and
1:24:01
die of heat exhaustion. But this
is really and this does show
1:24:05
what they did wrong because they
were trying to scare everybody
1:24:07
the same thing. And and it's not
nice. I don't want to live in an
1:24:12
ice age with the glacier to the
Mason Dixon Line. But listen to
1:24:16
this clip I realized what they
did wrong. What Why is very
1:24:20
simple. Why did the global
cooling the Ice Age not catch
1:24:24
catch fire and people were all
freaked out about it versus
1:24:28
global warming?
1:24:30
Do you know why? I'm waiting?
They chose the
1:24:33
armadillo versus the polar bear.
Come on people.
1:24:38
Armadillos nothing like a polar
bear. No, no. Actually are kind
1:24:42
of cute, but they're not. No,
it's mammal. Well, that's the
1:24:45
armadillos a mammal too. I don't
know. No,
1:24:47
it's not it's not gonna it's not
gonna work. You need something
1:24:50
fluffy even though the polar
bear will rip you to shreds and
1:24:54
eat you and you put the way you
put the polar bear on an ice on
1:24:59
a pizza. Ice and float him with
a sad eyes. You take an
1:25:02
armadillo, what can you do with
an armadillo to make him look
1:25:05
sad and cute and adorable and
you want to save his has no it's
1:25:08
nothing. Sorry, armadillos you
got nothing.
1:25:11
Now, interesting those factoid
this overlooked in this is that
1:25:16
the all the scientists that were
all in on the global cooling,
1:25:20
about 70% of a moved over to
global warming. Same right? The
1:25:26
unknown factor. Is that a good
percentage, maybe 10 or 20% of
1:25:31
the original cooling types?
They're still on that trip.
1:25:36
They're still saying cooling
there. Who do we have any names?
1:25:40
No, I had to had that. This was
a couple of years ago, I saw the
1:25:43
list. And uh, yeah, there's but
there are a couple guys I could
1:25:46
dig him up that are still this
they said, no, no, no, never
1:25:49
this bullcrap this warming
things nonsense, we're going to
1:25:52
freeze to death. So so this is
at least a couple of Morrison's
1:25:55
See, I would
1:25:56
say I'm more in that camp long
term than anything else.
1:25:59
No, it's more deadly. That's for
sure.
1:26:02
I'm gonna get you in. I'm gonna
get you into Ukraine right now.
1:26:05
I'm going to do this in a unique
way. For that one of the
1:26:09
complaints we have about of all
the bills, we've analyzed all
1:26:12
the big money that's been spent
throughout the decade and a
1:26:15
half, the National Defense
Authorization Act that
1:26:18
overturned the Smith Mundt Act
was the one that was most
1:26:23
disturbing. Smith mon AK from I
believe, originally the 70s, I
1:26:28
think may have been may have
been early 80s. The Smith Mundt
1:26:33
Act was put in place to ensure
that the United States
1:26:36
government could not
propagandize its own citizens.
1:26:44
And we have an entire division,
the broadcast Board of Governors
1:26:48
used to include Tucker Carlson's
dad, by the way, then they
1:26:52
created Voice of America and
voice of Europe and Radio Free
1:26:55
Russia. And it's all it's all
American propaganda. That was
1:26:58
typically broadcast via
shortwave long wave medium wave
1:27:02
into these countries. And with
the introduction of the
1:27:05
internet, the theory was, well,
look, we can't be trolling
1:27:09
people on Twitter, and you know,
with all kinds of
1:27:11
disinformation, and you know,
Americans might see it, we don't
1:27:14
want to violate the law. So
instead of us not doing that,
1:27:19
we're going to change the law
and do away with it.
1:27:22
Can't act. I'm sorry. 1948.
1:27:26
Holy crap, what happened?
Something happened with the
1:27:28
Smith Mundt act in the 70s. I
thought
1:27:31
maybe it was first passed by
Smith and my dad he was called
1:27:36
the nickname was United States
Information and educational
1:27:39
exchange act of 1948.
1:27:42
Well, here's where we are.
Today,
1:27:44
we're in Ukraine is providing
the US military valuable insight
1:27:48
on how to handle future
conflicts with major adversaries
1:27:52
like Russia or China. Army
Secretary Christine Warmoth says
1:27:56
one major lesson already learned
is the use of the Internet. The
1:28:01
army is currently doing scenario
exercises. At Fort Irwin in
1:28:05
California troops are learning
how to respond to specific
1:28:09
Russian tactics used in the
evade invasion of Ukraine,
1:28:14
including electronic warfare,
insurgency, and propaganda.
1:28:21
So do you think that the
Department of Defense goes to
1:28:25
Twitter and says, Okay, here's a
list of 10,000 accounts you I'll
1:28:29
leave these alone, because these
are us. These are the good guys.
1:28:32
We're here to propagandize. You
can't touch us. I guarantee you
1:28:36
that exact list exists.
1:28:38
I wouldn't be a bit surprised. I
can't hear ya. Now, I have a
1:28:43
bunch of things to talk about on
the Ukraine side of things.
1:28:47
Starting but I think, don't you
think maybe we should take a
1:28:50
break right now?
1:28:51
I think it's a very good idea.
And with that, I'd like to thank
1:28:53
you for your courage and say in
the morning to you the man who
1:28:56
put the see I don't have
anything
1:29:02
making too much noise.
1:29:04
He put the see and I don't have
anything in big lists you used.
1:29:08
I wasn't I wasn't prepared for
you. Ladies and gentlemen,
1:29:13
please say hello to my compadre
my colleague, my companion Mr.
1:29:18
John C. Dvorak.
1:29:23
curiosa in the morning all ships
as he boots on the ground feet
1:29:26
in the air subs in the water,
and all the names and nights out
1:29:29
there in the morning
1:29:30
to the trolls who who showed up
in the troll room but troll
1:29:34
room.io Thank you very much for
for being here. And let me get
1:29:41
everything set up. Let's let's
see how many trolls we have.
1:29:44
Hold on a second now. Put your
hands up. I'm not expecting a
1:29:47
lot today. Second, where's my
Oh, not bad. 2198 so close to
1:29:54
2200 Oh, how can you guys
celebrating Easter
1:30:00
Yeah, it's amazing. There's
anybody it is. Well,
1:30:02
it's not it's not nothing short
of a miracle. John, we're very
1:30:06
pleased to have the trolls here.
A lot of talk about you today.
1:30:09
So, you know, this is just no,
the troll room is a safe space.
1:30:15
If you're a troll, if you if
you're a troll, if you're a
1:30:18
troll, it's a nice place. So
that's troll room.io. You can
1:30:24
join us there for the Thursday
and Sunday shows. It's, we
1:30:29
broadcast live no agenda
stream.com It's all kind of the
1:30:32
same thing you get in the chat
room in the troll room, along
1:30:35
with the live stream, and that's
24/7 you can listen to people
1:30:38
all the time and troll them
because of live but also, it's
1:30:42
just cool to troll other people
too. If you want a little more
1:30:48
than the trolling, if you know
what if you want to be a part of
1:30:51
a failed platform that is less
interesting, then was it
1:30:56
kirtans.com Then go to no agenda
social.com Follow John C. Dvorak
1:31:01
at no agenda. social.com Adam at
no agenda social.com You can
1:31:05
follow us from any Mastodon you
know, the thing that Kara
1:31:07
Swisher wants Elon to buy, you
can follow us from any any
1:31:11
Mastodon account, and, and be
assured that you are not going
1:31:16
to get kicked off now by us. And
we are our own little community.
1:31:20
You're welcome to come in troll
around it. There's no algo so it
1:31:24
scrolls off, it goes away and we
don't care. But it's fun. It's a
1:31:27
good place. That's where the
community lives. No agenda
1:31:29
social.com. Now we need to thank
the artists for episode 1442.
1:31:34
The one we did on Thursday. The
title of that was slime mold.
1:31:41
And the artwork was networks,
which is a very, very nice
1:31:46
piece. The so called graffiti
piece, although I still think
1:31:51
it's called use pronounce it as
graffiti but
1:31:57
it is pronounced as graffiti.
1:31:59
You can but I've been we've been
through this. I say tomato
1:32:04
tomahto tomato tomahto networks.
I don't think Netflix had to had
1:32:10
a win in the past few months.
1:32:12
He's had a couple actually gets
a newsletter when every so often
1:32:17
do
1:32:17
now He's a pro. That's why
1:32:20
this piece of it has it has she
in the back. And the back in the
1:32:29
green innovate that whole thing
is just a very well done piece.
1:32:32
He thought he was gonna he
mentioned a new agenda social
1:32:35
that he thinks he was thought he
was going to win.
1:32:37
Now there was one thing in
particular that was a pre mirror
1:32:41
in his art that you caught.
1:32:43
The last time he went for sure
was the Valentine's Day show.
1:32:48
He's the first artist as far as
we know to sign his work.
1:32:54
Yes, right. I'm glad your
thoughts. Remember that. Yes, he
1:32:58
actually tagged was kind of a
graffiti tag. In the corner,
1:33:04
bottom right hand corner.
1:33:06
But that's not a tag you taught
me that's not a tag. It's kind
1:33:10
of a tag. A tag is just
initials.
1:33:13
Yeah, generally, but you can you
can tag your whole name if you
1:33:16
want. It's a little more
elaborate than a tag would be
1:33:20
with the tag would be just kind
of just in black. And it would
1:33:23
be just a messy looking thing.
But it's still kind of I was
1:33:26
calling if I was gonna call it
something. Personally, I would
1:33:30
call it a tag. But he did it in
the corner. And I don't know if
1:33:35
that's going to open up to the
Gates of Hell. And so far as
1:33:39
these artists are concerned good
V. I think he got away or that
1:33:43
because of the nature of the
piece. I don't know that
1:33:45
everybody can No no,
1:33:46
it's fit with the piece because
it was a name. Yeah. spray
1:33:50
painted. Yeah, it was a nice
piece. It was a nice piece.
1:33:53
There were other things that we
looked at now. The groomers were
1:33:57
the Epstein Island temple now we
liked the certain that Ned take
1:34:04
a bus on the Pan Am logo but we
decided that pretty much nobody
1:34:08
remembers the pan and logo.
1:34:10
Excellent piece. It really made
a point yeah and I and then Adam
1:34:14
brought it up that it this you
know this is a great nice nice
1:34:18
piece very usable. I think the
other piece is still better but
1:34:21
very usable piece but who the
hell is gonna, besides us
1:34:25
remembers the Pan Am logo.
1:34:28
I remember Pan Am's so well.
1:34:32
I used to fly him all the time.
Nice to hang out. Yeah,
1:34:34
they had the little they had the
little Swizzle sticks with the
1:34:37
round and that had the Pan Am
logo on it just like that just
1:34:40
like that logo. And then my
sisters wore dresses with white
1:34:45
gloves and I wore suit. When we
were flying back in the day in
1:34:48
the little little boy suit when
I was in the 70s early 70s Saw
1:34:52
you must look so cute with that
long hair. Yeah,
1:34:55
right. And what else do we have
a lot of Twitter stuff none of
1:34:59
which was really compelling we
had to buy luxury mansions BLM
1:35:04
but that's an old joke that
circulated the Biden ghost guns
1:35:09
didn't really talk about obscure
barking Jen we thought was kind
1:35:13
of cute. No agenda goat slime
from Darren also also nice. I
1:35:21
did like
1:35:21
like didn't go to Shanghai card
from it a monopoly game from
1:35:26
Doug opoli by capitalist agenda.
Wait,
1:35:29
that was a good Wait, we but we
we use that on the on the
1:35:33
previous episodes. I don't know
why you're looking that far
1:35:35
back.
1:35:36
Now we're gonna use that in the
previous episode. Pretty sure we
1:35:40
did. No, no, I'm guaranteeing we
didn't use what go to Shanghai
1:35:45
that card. No monopoly card?
Yeah.
1:35:49
Let's see. 1441 No. Was it 1440?
I'm so sure when you use this.
1:35:58
Oh, no, no, I remember. I used
it as the pre art. Yeah, for the
1:36:05
free screen. Right. All right.
And we and we did discuss Well,
1:36:08
should we to reuse it again.
That will be two times in a row
1:36:12
that we had pre art and the
album art. That was the that was
1:36:16
the conversation. I remember it.
1:36:17
Yeah, that's right. Exactly. And
we then we back looked over
1:36:22
everything again. And that's
what the Kappas agenda thinking
1:36:25
oh and I'm sorry that network
thing came forward?
1:36:27
Yes. And Dame Kenny been valiant
effort with the with the child
1:36:31
shoe. But there was some
technical issues with your
1:36:34
piece. Mainly to
1:36:36
the flowers mess for one two.
Okay, couple of things. The
1:36:39
child shoe was like a tube it
wasn't scuffed up didn't look
1:36:42
like a real shoe at the blood
1:36:43
and it needs to be if I met the
shoe cannot be on its side. It
1:36:48
needs to be flat on the ground.
This doesn't bring the same
1:36:52
emotion of the child.
1:36:54
Flowers that she had in the
background look like a rope. Two
1:36:57
cameras. Yeah, yeah, we're like
it was a mess as
1:37:02
well there's there's your
there's your criticism. It was a
1:37:07
mess. We congratulate networks
for the outstanding work on on
1:37:12
this piece. And thank you very
much value for value in its
1:37:15
truest form. From our artists.
We'd like time, talent and
1:37:19
treasure, whatever you can do to
support the show and people do
1:37:22
so much the troll room is not
owned or operated by us nor I
1:37:26
mean, we have servers we have no
agenda meetups, we had to
1:37:30
mastodons, no agenda social.com.
All of that is time, talent and
1:37:33
treasure from the producers. And
the same goes for Dred Scott,
1:37:39
who will take many of these
pieces of artwork and display
1:37:41
them proudly in our podcasting
2.0 chapters, you really should
1:37:46
drop the legacy app and be using
a modern podcast app, not only
1:37:50
for all these extra features,
but also for the no D
1:37:56
platforming. You know, we could
get kicked off of apple at any
1:37:59
moment. I don't think we're on
most other platforms. We
1:38:01
shouldn't be. But some people
even we got used to listening to
1:38:05
us on YouTube. And now the
producer who was uploading it to
1:38:10
YouTube, which he asked if that
was okay. So I don't care. He
1:38:14
said, Well, I got to stop
uploading it to YouTube because
1:38:16
I keep getting strikes against
my channel. I'm gonna get kicked
1:38:19
off YouTube. Yeah, that's why we
don't upload it to YouTube. So
1:38:23
if you were watching there, and
you missed it, get a new podcast
1:38:26
app new podcast. apps.com. Now
let's thank our executive and
1:38:29
Associate Executive Producers
part of the treasure parts of
1:38:32
the three T's for Episode 1443,
kicking it off with James
1:38:38
Schneeberger from North
Carolina, Cary, North Carolina,
1:38:43
and big baller today 1428 And
let's see what his note is oh,
1:38:50
this makes sense Gospel of Mark
reference to He is risen 1428 In
1:38:55
addition to this donation, allow
me to promote but in addition,
1:39:01
now in addition this donation
may promote me to that jewel of
1:39:05
my smokin hot sh M.
1:39:12
Yeah, keep reading read the
whole thing and I'll straight
1:39:15
out because I wrote him a note
saying What are you talking all
1:39:17
right.
1:39:18
In addition, this donation may
promote me to that jewel of my
1:39:21
sh M Baronet Marianne
Schneeberger damsel of disaster
1:39:25
please let me know and keep up
the great work. Okay, luckily,
1:39:29
you emailed him and said, What
are you talking about?
1:39:34
Okay, so I sent him a note
saying What are you talking
1:39:36
about and what is this a sh M.
First of all, he tells me that
1:39:43
sh M he mo s h w yes smokin
1:39:47
hot. Wife wife. Why do you say
em what what was the which is
1:39:53
the type of Freudian slip is
what I think Milt nailed it.
1:40:01
I'm currently the Baron of
Schatzi. Land. So he's already
1:40:07
and he called themselves JimBob
way is this JimBob Oh, okay, got
1:40:11
it in memory of our friend and
companion. Schatzi. Anyway, I
1:40:16
don't know what level today's
donation will bring me to like I
1:40:19
said, Let's do it next time
warmly. Jim Bob.
1:40:22
Okay, it's Jim Bob. But do we
want does he want the credit?
1:40:24
JimBob way as well? Probably
right.
1:40:27
Yeah, probably.
1:40:29
That's a good one. I like that.
He's JimBob JimBob. Right. Thank
1:40:33
you very much. I guess he's
there.
1:40:35
And he's bear may it barren Jim
Bob. He's a parent parent. You
1:40:38
got brother? Not a slouch? Nope.
Uh, go on with Aaron more in
1:40:44
Niceville, Florida, with $1,115.
And I shouldn't mention that we
1:40:48
had very poor showing for
donations until I sent out a
1:40:51
secondary note.
1:40:53
Well, not just that you said
people weren't reading the
1:40:54
newsletter that's more
disturbing to me.
1:40:58
Well, what's even more
interesting is that, despite
1:41:02
sending out the secondary note,
which included some feedback,
1:41:06
saying I never got the I don't
know, isn't spam and everything
1:41:09
happens before, I still can only
get their open rate to 35% of
1:41:14
the newsletter itself after
sending out the secondary note.
1:41:17
So we had a lot of possible
reasons for it. But at least
1:41:21
they responded to the secondary
note. Aaron more comes in from
1:41:25
Niceville 11115. And I have no
note from him. And I didn't find
1:41:30
I do not have a note from him
either. So I can look like
1:41:32
you're doing Do you want to read
the next few? And then I'll see
1:41:35
if I
1:41:35
Sure. Our next Associate
Executive Producers Ernest
1:41:39
Parton from West Chester, Ohio
533 dot 33. So that's more than
1:41:45
your typical executive producer
donation of 33333. And he says
1:41:49
in the morning and happy Easter
John Adam and producers please
1:41:52
do me you spend deed do so
pleased to do so. My husband.
1:41:58
I'll do that. You're mostly
Jewish now you do. And a jobs
1:42:02
karma for all jobs,
1:42:04
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.
1:42:12
Definitely nothing from Aaron so
we'll just let that go. And I'll
1:42:15
read Marian raw Roman in New
York. 500. And she writes, you
1:42:23
guys are the best. Thank you for
your commitment to reporting the
1:42:27
truth. Marian in the whole hell
that was once New York City.
1:42:32
Your hellhole even did that what
I say? You said hell hell which
1:42:36
is cool a hell is a hell hole.
You're right.
1:42:41
Luke Cumberland is in Oxford,
Missouri. 420 dot 69. I hear you
1:42:47
brother. Got it coming up. Drop
a hundo in the penny jar. He
1:42:51
says. That's $100 Penny. Right
there.
1:42:55
Oh, Alex in Baldwin, Maryland.
33333 Dear John and Adam. I had
1:43:02
some time I had some time so I
wrote you a short note? No,
1:43:06
Jesus, no karma. from Maryland.
1:43:10
He gets it. Thank you. Sir. NBS
is in Chicago Illinois. 333 Dots
1:43:14
33 Happy Easter gentlemen he
writes shorting bonds has been a
1:43:18
layup trade so far this year.
Here's no agendas cut don't
1:43:22
forget the tax deadline is
tomorrow let this be a reminder
1:43:25
that the IRS is asshole no
jingles all goat karma Thank you
1:43:29
very much. Yes thank you. You've
got karma
1:43:38
Bruce Bruce trauma in Harrisburg
Pennsylvania. Three, three 3.33
1:43:45
No message for me. Just a bunch
of love it is a great notes no
1:43:50
message from me just a bunch of
love. And I'm gonna let you read
1:43:54
it on furlough because I'm gonna
see what the dogs whining about
1:43:56
why you continue
1:43:57
no problem. We have anonymous
from Island Lake Illinois 333 33
1:44:03
This is not my first donation
however I do require reduced you
1:44:07
can always do that you spend
deed do stuff there very few
1:44:10
prominent three three threes in
my life plus this Easter Show
1:44:13
ending in 43, which is a family
karma number. I knew it was time
1:44:18
to make my executive producer
donation. I am a nurse who has
1:44:20
been a nursing administer
administrator throughout the
1:44:24
pandemic and have found sanity
in the logic that is discussed
1:44:27
on this show. I'm gonna read
that again because I'm proud of
1:44:29
this. I am a nurse who has been
a nursing administrator
1:44:33
throughout the pandemic and have
found sanity in the logic that
1:44:36
is discussed on this show. Thank
you. It's a huge compliment. I
1:44:40
have been able to not accept the
vaccine into my life thankfully,
1:44:43
but I've also found ways to
advance career. In other ways
1:44:48
since I have lost my passion for
nursing, understandably. Also, I
1:44:52
was recently at Adam's neck of
the woods near Austin where my
1:44:55
mom has a wagyu ranch and my
sister just closed on some
1:44:58
property we hope to be be there
soon and feel all the karma
1:45:01
given out by this show has been
helping love all you do. Please
1:45:06
for jingles get vaccinated uh ya
know and uh jobs karma for all
1:45:10
facts
1:45:11
yah yah yah yah yah yah yah yah
yah. Yah yah yah yah yah, yah,
1:45:15
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no no no no no, no no
1:45:19
no no
1:45:20
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's
vote for jobs. Karma
1:45:32
Jim Parker in Palmer, Alaska
333 33. By the way, we got a
1:45:38
number of notes from people that
confirmed that this is inventory
1:45:42
dumping going on
1:45:43
in Ukraine Yes, in you're just
wanting to inventory dumping.
1:45:48
And I think it's clear this note
also makes it clear. The whole
1:45:51
idea is you have perfectly good
munitions, but the military
1:45:56
industrial complex needs to
continue churning. So what a
1:45:58
great opportunity. Well, let's
give that stuff away to the $800
1:46:02
million is is that's not really
the stuff that's gone away. It's
1:46:06
new money, new money they can
use
1:46:09
Google Shodo had one commentary
about and then I got another
1:46:13
note, which is not here, not
this one at distance. An
1:46:15
interesting note to from a
Marine who's noticed that all
1:46:19
the stuff we're sending them as
marine surplus. He says all and
1:46:24
it's all junk because he says
the Marines are moving away from
1:46:27
artillery so getting rid of
these howitzers is actually a
1:46:29
good thing. They're all
1:46:30
doing cyber they do an online
propaganda. You don't need to my
1:46:34
comment was my comment was
exactly why would we scrap
1:46:39
perfectly good weapons when they
can be used by somebody to kill
1:46:42
someone guy in Africa or some
anywhere just as long as they
1:46:46
kill someone? Okay, let's go
with this. Our note here in the
1:46:50
morning, today's donation of
three, three 3.33 pushes me into
1:46:53
knighthood. I wish to be named
Sir weasel keeper, keeper of the
1:46:57
Pioneer peak. Last shows
discussion of the rotation of
1:47:02
military weapons similar to
groceries with an expiration
1:47:05
date was correct. Don't like a
good proxy war to test out
1:47:09
weapons and get rid of old
stock. It reminded me of a story
1:47:12
that may be too long to share on
the show, but it's interesting
1:47:15
nonetheless. I think it's
interesting so read it. I was a
1:47:18
backseater in both the f4 G Wild
Weasel and also the F 15 e
1:47:23
strike eagle with over 120
combat missions the Air Force in
1:47:26
order to test missiles in their
inventory will task air crews
1:47:30
such as myself to shoot down a
full scale drone aircraft with a
1:47:36
missile randomly chosen from the
Indian inventory with some kind
1:47:40
of quality control to do with
the hard disks by the ACCC.
1:47:43
Andy sent a picture he's
basically Goossen Top Gun. Yeah,
1:47:48
I mean, it's the same plane
everything like oh crap, and
1:47:51
he's got his name on the side.
1:47:53
Yeah, yeah. The program provides
realistic training and also
1:47:57
verifies the inventory almost as
well as a good skirmish would. I
1:48:02
was in the strike eagle and I
was selected to shoot down the
1:48:05
drone. I tracked the drone with
the targeting pod and we shut it
1:48:09
down with an EMRAM the drone in
this case was a retired f4 God
1:48:15
converted to be flown remotely
like into it like into a
1:48:19
building.
1:48:21
John Hay
1:48:23
as fate would have it the F four
shot the F four I shot down that
1:48:27
day actually had my name printed
on the side from an early from
1:48:31
earlier in my Desert Storm days.
So what are the this was
1:48:34
completely random occurrence as
there are over 5000 F bores
1:48:39
produced and only one had my
name on it. The pictures are
1:48:42
attached. After leaving the Air
Force and his stint with a
1:48:46
soloist defense contractor. I
now own and run my own ranch
1:48:52
nine raising pheasant geese,
ducks and bird dogs. I also have
1:48:57
a campground with cabins. The
property is amazing as it is the
1:49:00
base of pioneer peak along the
was the creek river connected
1:49:06
Nick to Kinnickinnic River and
Alaska producers who enter ITM
1:49:11
as a coupon code code unconnect
river ranch.com will receive a
1:49:16
20% discount with when reserving
a cabin for the roundtable. I
1:49:21
request Jeremiah weed whiskey
This is reasonable. And Alaskan
1:49:27
king crab. I also request goat
karma and pigs in human clothing
1:49:32
for jingles. Jim Parker, Butte,
Alaska,
1:49:35
so I went to connect river
ranch.com good hole man, this is
1:49:42
something to keep her and I
would consider it sporty. It's
1:49:45
it's outdoorsy and sporty.
That's for sure. Bob man is so
1:49:50
beautiful and you can you can
ride horses on the frozen kunik
1:49:54
river. You should look at look
at that website. I should put it
1:49:58
in the show notes. It's
1:50:00
is dying Alaska is the only
state I've never been to.
1:50:03
I've only been to Anchorage for
I can 24 hour. Tap accounts. A
1:50:08
Toe Tap Yeah. Oh toe tap. Thank
you very much, Jim Parker, thank
1:50:12
you for your courage thank you
for your service
1:50:24
this world next executive
producer is JD Salazar. Mr
1:50:42
Porter's many times in the past
Rio Rancho New Mexico 333 33 Oh
1:50:48
what is this for the jingle take
the phrase 19 seconds no sorry
1:50:53
this cold reads we get these the
spreadsheet in the morning. The
1:50:57
jingles are jingles that we that
we that are established sorry
1:51:01
that don't have the time to do
that and didn't see it. Hello
1:51:04
crackpot and Buzzkill? I've been
a douchebag since 2008. Oh
1:51:08
please the douche me I thought
he had donated before. Ben de
1:51:12
douche makes no sense. Thank you
for keeping me sane for the last
1:51:15
few years. One what happened to
the ones before that? My friend
1:51:20
Eric hit me in the mouth all
those years ago and he never
1:51:23
called me out. Well, you've
you've washed yourself of your
1:51:27
sins. Please keep up the good
work. You were doing humanity a
1:51:31
true service. JD Salazar, Rio
Rancho New Mexico. Thank you,
1:51:34
sir.
1:51:37
Anonymous from Evansville,
Indiana. 33333. Dear gentlemen,
1:51:42
I'm appreciative of your
dedication to truth and sanity.
1:51:45
Additional Comments reserved for
knighthood. Please attribute
1:51:50
this donation to your friend in
the sacrificial Joe zone of the
1:51:55
lower taper Dean so we just do
Dean now you want to speak you
1:52:02
can put now just the Dean out
Dean just anonymous. He says
1:52:08
we're told name ABC then he
1:52:09
should I'm sorry. I thought that
was that was the attribute this
1:52:13
donation to your friend in the
sacrificial zone of lower taper.
1:52:17
Carbs. I mean, I don't know but
it says it that's a switcheroo.
1:52:21
Well, maybe no. Oh, well. Yeah.
Then you have to put Dean you're
1:52:24
right you're right. You're
right. I'm wrong. Yes, some guy
1:52:28
named Dean. All right, Sir John.
anymore. Okay. Vi County.
1:52:37
Murfreesboro, va a 333 30 threes
in Murfreesboro. Why the fuck
1:52:44
not? Okay, happy Easter from the
Vikon of Murfreesboro. I had say
1:52:51
that's a nice Oh, that's easy.
Rude. But nice note.
1:52:54
Well, we like that. Well. The
next one is not rude but short
1:52:57
for Elia Johnson in Whitman,
Arizona. 333 33 in the morning
1:53:01
dog karma please. Karma
1:53:13
Robert wooden, we're how you
pronounce Azle azil. As you
1:53:18
know, I've
1:53:19
never heard of this.
1:53:20
I never heard of it either. 333
az le is how it's spelled. They
1:53:25
Happy Easter. I'm a veteran,
small dollar producer since John
1:53:29
correctly forecasted Obama
versus McCain. As Adam nailed
1:53:33
the Pope and discussions of Kema
underwear.
1:53:38
Now you're taking us back and we
need to bring the HEMA underwear
1:53:42
back.
1:53:43
Yes. Adam plus Tina check out
Bible project for artistic quick
1:53:49
and positive Bible explanations.
No jingles? No karma. Okay.
1:53:53
Yeah, we've been talking about
that. Actually. It was reading
1:53:56
Evidence That Demands a Verdict
which is pretty cool book.
1:54:00
Pierre. Sorry. No, I
1:54:02
said Yeah. Okay.
1:54:04
Pierre. Pierre. Pierre. Hey,
it's Pierre. Everybody. Pierre
1:54:07
from Perry Freiherr Pierre,
except disappears from
1:54:11
Farmington, Connecticut. 333
Hello Pierre. Bonjour. appear
1:54:16
for jingles dealer's choice from
the Hot Pocket era. Okay, all
1:54:22
right. Well, that's it that
makes that makes it easy. Thank
1:54:25
you. Pocket. Also I need to be
deduced. You've been deep Ando
1:54:34
like karma but since I'm
Catholic, change it to Carmel.
1:54:38
All right, you guys rock I can't
even begin to list all your
1:54:41
amazing skills. Pierre from
Farmington, Connecticut. So
1:54:44
throwback cheeseburger.
1:54:46
This is buffalo chicken and
we're brothers wealty scrape
1:54:52
more than pocket side shots
three delicious flavors stuffed
1:54:57
into soft big
1:54:59
pockets.
1:55:01
You go bro. Yikes. And anyone
wait you got to do the Carmel?
1:55:08
Carmel
1:55:10
Arthur Sue Sure. in Starkville,
Mississippi, three three and he
1:55:19
just has a bunch of lines says
nothing but he's has it's either
1:55:23
gonna be knighted or something's
going on with this guy I
1:55:26
have a I have a full cell here.
1:55:29
I have nothing
1:55:31
that's what she said this is my
third payment of 333 dot 33
1:55:35
Hoping Adam can chip in a penny.
Of course we could chip
1:55:38
independent and make me a
knight. Not sure what
1:55:42
verification you need for
payments so let me know I think
1:55:45
you've been verified the honor
system been listening for over
1:55:48
10 years so this should average
out to about 100 per year and
1:55:51
well worth it. This is a
douchebag call out to all those
1:55:55
holding back the MSM has so
fried your brains that you don't
1:56:00
want to hear the truth no one
covers the truth better than
1:56:02
Adam and John non bias mostly
non bias mostly but always
1:56:08
telling it like it is for you to
digest you can night me sir
1:56:11
Nathan of the attic after my son
who tragically passed away. He
1:56:15
turned me on to you all those
years ago. Biden full load. We
1:56:21
have a Biden full load its whole
load juice. And what was the
1:56:27
last one goat scream? We got
that for you. I'm gonna give you
1:56:30
the whole load today. Oh my
gosh. Can you see that juice?
1:56:35
You've got karma and he's on the
list for the 19 today
1:56:44
okay, we know how that thing got
blanked out like this. Richard
1:56:48
Ballard in all all MERG Vermont
333 And he writes been a while
1:56:55
since I've donated but notice my
last year's donation put me over
1:56:58
the over the level for Baronet
since this maple syrup season
1:57:04
season in Vermont I like to
change my name from Sir Richard
1:57:07
the Lionhearted to syrup get it?
Yeah of the Green Mountain State
1:57:13
maybe we could get some sugar on
on show no sugar on snow at the
1:57:20
roundtable making maple stronger
on snow. No, no, I can't say
1:57:24
that. And finally add me to the
birthday list. Okay, we got you.
1:57:28
You're on the birth it's
interesting.
1:57:29
He goes no. Do you have a real
brain block sugar on snow?
1:57:34
Yes, sugar on snow.
1:57:36
I healed you fixed. Sir Mike Sir
Mark, Mark colon is in the
1:57:42
Netherlands invaded genus 333
light in this darkness. That's
1:57:47
right. Hello, Adam. And John is
founding father of the no agenda
1:57:50
stream. Oh, that's interesting.
I hereby donate to be an
1:57:56
executive producer and to
advance from Baronet to Baron of
1:57:59
East Lake City. You are the
reason I have been unmasked
1:58:02
unvaccinated and unafraid pail
to no agenda. Nice one mark.
1:58:07
Thank you very much.
1:58:09
I'll grab this next one too is
blowed out my spreadsheet.
1:58:13
There's no to
1:58:13
Brian Maloney. M O L. O M Brian
Maloney, Spokane, Washington
1:58:17
333. In the morning, thank you
for your courage. I've been
1:58:19
listening since Adams first
Rogen to parents broke a
1:58:22
donation. And I've been meaning
to donate for quite some time
1:58:25
the value the show has provided
in my life is in need of
1:58:28
balance. So I'm finally donating
and I'm no longer a douchebag
1:58:32
please do do Shmi youth Band D
do while I'm at it call please
1:58:38
call up my friend Kyle is a
douchebag. I hit him in the
1:58:42
mouth shortly after moving from
Portland, Portland to Stan to
1:58:45
Spokane, and you help keep us
both. Same with your amygdala
1:58:49
shrinking conspiracy therapy
boots on the ground report.
1:58:52
Portland really is a shithole
sadly, I'm one of those
1:58:54
producers whose keeper didn't
appreciate his shrunken amygdala
1:58:58
no regrets on the major life
change but the moral of the
1:59:00
story is that all BIA more all
producers should immediately go
1:59:04
hit their keeper in the mouth
upon hearing this if they
1:59:06
haven't already. You've given me
great value and now have some of
1:59:11
my treasure but I want to also
add some of my talent by
1:59:13
suggesting a production notes.
Oh, all right. You know what?
1:59:17
It's fair. It's fair production
note we someone has a note
1:59:20
finally someone has a production
note. You sometimes pronounce
1:59:23
the name of the vaccine as if it
were Sherlock Sherlock Holmes
1:59:27
rival Moriarty comark Yardi me
as massive jest you pronounce it
1:59:35
so it is nearly
indistinguishable from your best
1:59:37
work impersonation of the word
community. If you practice the
1:59:41
pronunciation by referring to
those who accepted the vaccine
1:59:44
into the life as the commonality
community, then it sounds more
1:59:49
like Kuma not take human latte.
And you've nailed it. Oh man, as
1:59:55
some of your finest vocal fry
for the cherry on top. Okay, A
2:00:00
call Menara community bonus
point if you start referring to
2:00:04
all the diverse communities as
communities, you know what? No,
2:00:08
I like to appreciate the note
but no, no one knows the name of
2:00:12
the vaccine. It's Pfizer moderna
and it's also not the vaccine
2:00:16
that's there's no community of
community in America because
2:00:19
it's not on the market here
because it's a scam. Lastly,
2:00:23
Huge shout shout out to producer
Tim for his help getting me up
2:00:26
and running with a no agenda
phone what a fabulous producer
2:00:29
Ki Moon our tie is out there
time to find the meet up near me
2:00:32
I found the job up in Spokane
during prior to requesting job
2:00:35
karma so I'd like to pass my job
common requests for it for those
2:00:38
in need. I recall a new Yellin
jobs karma but if Pelosi is all
2:00:42
you can find I guess we're stuck
with her in addition, I'd like
2:00:46
to jingles resist we much we got
resist we much Trump aroused. Is
2:00:53
Biden whole load and load it up.
And look at that juice Yes, I'm
2:00:59
12 I gotcha. I'm not so sure
about the Yellin jobs karma. Did
2:01:05
we have a Yellin jobs on that I
know of Yes we did. At the two
2:01:11
versions even well let's hit it
2:01:12
but resist we much we must and
we will much about that. Be
2:01:21
committed it was
2:01:22
hard to get it aroused and it is
hard to get it aroused but we
2:01:25
got it arrest.
2:01:26
I'm gonna give you the whole
load did
2:01:28
oh my gosh.
2:01:30
Can you see that Jews you've got
jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs,
2:01:37
jobs. Karma is pretty funny
coming from her.
2:01:44
Call that one zotoh is next on
the list. 320 101 from
2:01:48
Gladstone, Missouri, is the Duke
of America's heartland and the
2:01:53
Arabian Peninsula. He says the
sad Ilan photo got to me no
2:01:59
jingles no karma
2:02:01
one oh Posca
2:02:03
now that's in the newsletter I
there was a pic there was a
2:02:05
ended a hypocrite category.
There was two clips to the scene
2:02:12
this to know how it works,
tweets, to tweets and from the
2:02:15
in this case the the insider
Business Insider. And one of
2:02:20
them says it from like 2013 1415
something. It says oh it's so
2:02:26
great that a rich guy like like
Jeff Bezos could buy the
2:02:30
Washington Post because this
makes everything better. And
2:02:33
then the next one was a recent
tweet saying Oh, it's terrible
2:02:36
that our rich guy like Elon Musk
would bite Twitter to ruining
2:02:40
the world is adorable person. So
is a classic hypocritical. Want
2:02:46
to punch
2:02:47
Thank you. Mr. Duke Matthew
McGreevy, Davenport Iowa 250 In
2:02:54
the morning boys Forgive me pod
father It's been a while since
2:02:56
my last donation can we please
hear whipping with the
2:02:58
Constitution from the Reverend
Manning oops I didn't have that
2:03:01
one set up I think it's a weapon
it's a weapon with a
2:03:05
constitutional weapon weapon
weapon Yeah, I got it I got it I
2:03:09
got it right here also please
send some travel karma to the
2:03:16
honey badger on our way back to
Iowa from California WT C seven
2:03:31
you've got karma
2:03:35
Sir Don Francis I believe is up
next from Chandler Arizona to 20
2:03:39
to 22 Thanks for doing the work
love the Ukraine analysis love
2:03:44
is lit no jingles no karma. Sir
Don Francis beautiful notes a
2:03:49
terrific love
2:03:50
them Dame Astrid Hey love
hearing from our dame. She of
2:03:53
course is the Duchess of Japan
on all the disputed islands in
2:03:56
the Japan Sea with a row of
ducks to 22 dot 22. Tokyo, Edo
2:04:00
Tokyo cunning, no Easter
celebrations here in Japan. No,
2:04:04
they're heathens. But as
expected that does not hinder
2:04:07
the wide sale of elaborate
chocolate Easter eggs. I'm
2:04:11
really loving the hypocrite of
the day said no. There you go,
2:04:14
John. A great reminder of how
people move the goalposts to fit
2:04:17
their own agendas love and let
DeMasters the Duchess of Japan
2:04:21
and all the disputed islands in
the Japan Sea. She doesn't ask
2:04:23
for it but a good karma is
appropriate. You've got karma
2:04:30
T Zark. Want teros in Bradenton,
Florida tu tu tu tu tu tu and
2:04:36
other road ducks. There John and
Adam been a cheapskate so I'm
2:04:40
stepping it up with a row of
ducks to lay you some Easter
2:04:43
eggs and had it been a good idea
for a gimmick. Keep up the good
2:04:47
work please de douche. You've
been de deuced and give me some
2:04:53
karma so I can keep up with my
new IT manager job.
2:04:59
You Got karma. Joshua McLean is
in Bryan, Texas $200 Thank you
2:05:06
very much Joshua. And he says
thank you both for the excellent
2:05:09
work you do. I cannot say enough
good things about how the show
2:05:13
has enabled me to maintain my
mental health through some very
2:05:16
trying times. A good friend of
mine and Night of the roundtable
2:05:21
dude named Ben named Ben,
Defender of the megawatts. I'm
2:05:24
talking about him in a moment
hit me in the mouth years ago.
2:05:27
I've been a listener since
around show 700 off the 700
2:05:31
Club. I have donated before
however, I know I've never been
2:05:34
to do so do you do so please do
Do you spend de doop doop, doop
2:05:39
doop Xing. Thank you for your
continued efforts to provide
2:05:42
quality analysis of mainstream
media and just some karma
2:05:45
please. 70 threes from kg five
PDU 70 threes kilo five Alpha
2:05:50
sharp me Charlie. Got it. You've
got karma.
2:05:56
And last on our list is Sir
Christopher Kessler by Count.
2:06:00
He's in Marshfield, Wisconsin at
200 bucks and he says by Count
2:06:05
no jingles no karma. Boom good.
2:06:09
Thank you all very much. Yeah
2:06:11
wraps our group of producers
executive producers and
2:06:14
Associate Executive producers
for show 1443
2:06:18
Thank you all so much for
hearing the call and opening up
2:06:20
the newsletter or wherever it
went to spam it's highly
2:06:22
appreciated the newsletter is
the reminder to support the
2:06:25
show. So when that when that
misses then then it misses it
2:06:29
people need reminding because
there's a lot going on in
2:06:32
everybody's world. So we really
appreciate the step up we got
2:06:36
from our execs and Associate
Executive Producers today and
2:06:39
you are the accredited now
credited in the show notes
2:06:43
credit in the mp3 file and you
can use this credit anywhere
2:06:46
credits aren't well you can use
it anywhere you want. But as
2:06:48
great work credits are
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profile your resume, and if
anyone ever ever has any
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questions, we will be happy to
vouch for you with a live
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telephone call and some wine
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exec or associate exec follow
the instructions over here
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vo.org/and Thank you for your
time talent treasure for
2:07:08
producing episode 1443
2:07:11
Our formula is this we go out
for hit people in the mouth
2:07:32
Alright, I want to play a couple
up. Drake or update clips. This
2:07:37
is from NPR and this is unmarry
Hoople
2:07:40
medio for Mary. Oh,
2:07:41
poor Marin opera, and they have
flattened it, of course, as we
2:07:46
know,
2:07:46
do we know? Do we know? Do we
know for sure they flattened it.
2:07:50
I think it's pretty flattened.
But I want you to listen
2:07:54
carefully to this update, which
ran on NPR it was vetted by NPR
2:07:59
and it was a BBC report, and I
will then go off on on it with a
2:08:04
rant the screening are you up?
Sorry, Mary oppa update BBC NPR.
2:08:08
Cranial load Amir's Alinsky says
the destruction by Russian
2:08:12
troops of the defenders of MATA
Yupo will put an end to the
2:08:15
negotiation process. The Russian
Defense Ministry claims its
2:08:19
forces have the whole urban area
of Mariupol the BBC Sasha
2:08:23
Schlichter has more.
2:08:25
Referring to devastated town
outside key if Mr. Zelensky said
2:08:29
Mariupol may turn out to be as
bad as 10 Birds Yonkers adding
2:08:33
that if Russia's goal was an
early end to the war, its
2:08:36
actions and Mariupol were a big
mistake. We trade neither in
2:08:40
territory no in our people he
said in the mall but a junk
2:08:44
because there are, the more
difficult it will be. Earlier
2:08:47
Ukraine insisted its troops was
still holding out in the ruins
2:08:51
of Mariupol where the defense is
concentrated around the huge as
2:08:55
of style metal works adjoining
the port. Reuters journalists
2:08:59
have reached Maricopa's other
giant factory the elite still
2:09:03
works only to find in their
words a silent drawing of
2:09:07
twisted steel and blasted
concrete with no sign of
2:09:10
defenders present
2:09:11
the BBC Sacha Schlichter
2:09:14
okay
2:09:16
and if you caught that in there
probably not is the right bike.
2:09:20
I I sewed it under the clip BBC
a sub clip
2:09:29
referring to devastated town
outside Keith Marty Oh
2:09:33
poor a town out.
2:09:36
Okay, marry you up was the town
outside of Kyiv according to the
2:09:40
BBC, oh is Fredericksburg. Okay,
I'm going to I'm gonna give you
2:09:45
some numbers here. So Mary, you
pull is by Dre if you wanted to
2:09:50
drive there to from Kyiv it's
461 miles to Dallas. San Diego
2:09:57
is just outside of San Francisco
according to this Sky. A couple
2:10:01
of other little items here.
Dallas to Fredericksburg is 196
2:10:08
miles if you drive, so you're
buying our final right outside
2:10:12
of Dallas I am I'm
2:10:13
basically in a suburb of Dallas,
it's only five hours to drive.
2:10:17
And so it's actually closer to
Lubalin. Poland than it is to
2:10:24
Mariupol. It's, it's about the
same distance to Warsaw, as it
2:10:30
is to Mariupol. And so I can go
on and on. So why are they lying
2:10:37
to us? Why are they lying to us
that Mariupol is just outside of
2:10:42
Kyiv when it's nowhere near
Kyiv, Sacramento is closer to
2:10:46
San Francisco than this is just
about the distance to Reno. I
2:10:51
mean, how is this just outside
of cave? The question is why do
2:10:56
they say this? Why are they
blatantly lying?
2:11:00
Do you have an answer and it's
vetted?
2:11:03
Because NPR played it full
cloth. Well, I don't know why
2:11:09
the I don't know why they're
lying. But this is a blatant
2:11:12
lie. Tactic false.
2:11:15
Yes. You know, I've heard I've
heard so many of these pitfalls.
2:11:22
I've heard. And I've just heard
it a lot. And you know, but I
2:11:28
consider even live to not really
be just outside.
2:11:33
No, it's not live. It's nowhere
near Kyiv. Live is
2:11:37
probably about halfway to Mario
polling distance probably about
2:11:42
so it's probably good to the
left in the West. Yeah, but it's
2:11:46
200 miles to the to the west.
But that's always just outside
2:11:49
of Kyiv Kyiv. Sorry. Why are
they lying? Well, because
2:11:53
they're probably lying about a
lot of stuff, I guess.
2:11:56
I think this whole thing is
there's just nothing but lying.
2:11:59
Now let's listen to now I got a
clip that this is a good catch,
2:12:03
by the way. Good catch. Thank
you.
2:12:07
It just irks me. Yes, I
understand. And it irks me too.
2:12:12
So now a Bucha is still a
questionable situation. Also a
2:12:17
lie. Another lie. It looks like
a lie. But let's listen to our
2:12:21
friend the who's condemned from
all media because he's accused
2:12:26
pedophile. So Ritter, the
military intelligence guy, he
2:12:31
shows up on a I think this is a
white supremacist Podcast. I'm
2:12:35
not sure what's the podcast
called called Dawson's anti
2:12:41
neocon radio or something like
that. It's Dawsons. And he
2:12:46
showed up on there. Somebody
sent this to me. And I listened
2:12:49
to it. And I think it's a pretty
good rundown of what why Bucha
2:12:53
was was seems to be bogus. And
listen to Scott res, a three
2:12:57
parter. Scott Ritter on Bucha.
2:13:01
The reason why I bring this up
is we're talking about mindset.
2:13:03
We have one side that says we're
trying to preserve human life,
2:13:06
civilian life and civilian
infrastructure. We have the
2:13:09
other side that says, if you
collaborate with the Russians,
2:13:12
you will be killed. And it's
written down, they made videos,
2:13:15
he talked about it. So now the
Russians from Buka, who withdraw
2:13:19
or withdraw. While they were
there for several weeks, the
2:13:23
Russian military says we had
good relations with the local
2:13:26
people. It was peaceful. We
traded our dry rations for their
2:13:33
dairy products. So they had a
system of barter setup. So the
2:13:37
citizens of buco give them eggs,
milk, cheese, and the Russian
2:13:41
forgive them, the dry rations,
the flour, the salt, the sugar,
2:13:44
the meat, etc. And this was
going on. Then the Russians
2:13:49
left. Anybody who engaged in
that kind of interaction with
2:13:54
the Russians was now viewed as a
collaborator. We know this,
2:13:59
because the Ukrainian National
Police have published an
2:14:03
announcement that they are going
into Buka on April 1, to carry
2:14:09
out a cleansing operation to
liquidate the collaborators.
2:14:15
Alright, this is the exact
opposite of the Russian
2:14:17
approach, which is we treat
everybody with respect. And we
2:14:20
try not to harm civilians.
Ukraine's you're saying if you
2:14:23
cooperate with the Russians, you
will die. They have a videotape
2:14:27
of a senior political figure
announcing on social media to
2:14:32
the citizens of Buka. Stay in
your homes. The National Police
2:14:36
are carrying out a cleansing
operation, do not panic. Stay in
2:14:40
your home, she repeats it over
and over and over again. Why?
2:14:43
Because the police are in the
streets gunning people down
2:14:48
yeah, there's a Dutch journalist
who also is boots on the ground
2:14:52
and she's been writing and I
posted its ads in the in the
2:14:55
show notes. Just completely
countering the narrative. With
2:15:00
that we're seeing from the M
five M and Ryan Dawson by the
2:15:03
way. He's been around for quite
a while. I think he's an ex
2:15:09
book. Certainly since he
graduated as a historian, I
2:15:15
guess, a degree in history from
William and Mary, which is where
2:15:20
my cousin's went to school.
Hello. Oh, hello, William and
2:15:23
Mary yellow is very elitist
spook school. Or for
2:15:27
the only reason I suggest a
white supremacist thing because
2:15:29
this is a logo there that looks
very you know, it's very fishy
2:15:32
logo that well, he's
2:15:33
been kicked off of every
platform Pay Pal D platformed.
2:15:37
him he's gone everywhere. So
yeah, he's he must have
2:15:40
something interesting to say
it's the way I look at it.
2:15:42
Well, let's go to part two of
this clip.
2:15:45
Okay, hold on a second,
2:15:48
kicking in doors of people who
are collaborating and killing
2:15:51
them. And we know this is more
than just a document and a
2:15:55
videotape because there's, I
mean, in videotape of a
2:15:57
speaker's we have videotape of
them actually doing it. We have
2:16:00
videotape of Ukrainian police,
especially in as a group,
2:16:04
proudly claiming that you're
going on a safari, that's an
2:16:07
important word. Because when we
talk about propaganda, how you
2:16:10
take the language of one side,
flip it and use it against you
2:16:13
take your language, flip it and
use it against the other guys.
2:16:16
It's Ukrainians who have a
special unit, the name of the
2:16:20
Ukrainian special police unit
that went into Buka was the
2:16:23
safari unit. And they were
carrying out a safari to cleanse
2:16:27
the pro Russian collaborators.
And cleansing means kill,
2:16:32
capture, kill. And they're doing
it. And then they go around, and
2:16:37
they film the dead bodies. And
they say the Russians did it.
2:16:42
Now there's a couple of things
about the dead bodies. One, most
2:16:46
of them are wearing white
armbands, which means that they
2:16:48
were telling the Russians were
on your side. Don't shoot us.
2:16:54
Right coup. Near each body is a
green dry ration box, which they
2:17:01
were carrying when they got
killed, and it's on the ground
2:17:03
next to them. Three, when they
didn't have the armband, it's
2:17:07
because the armband have been
taken off and used to find their
2:17:09
hands. These people were
murdered, murdered, not by the
2:17:13
Russians, but by the Ukrainians.
And yet, that's not the spin
2:17:18
that we're getting right now.
The spin we're getting is just
2:17:21
the opposite. All the forensic
data that's available right now,
2:17:25
I strongly suggest that the
Ukrainians responsible for the
2:17:27
death of these people and Buka
there's no doubt about it. I
2:17:32
have
2:17:32
this video of them shooting
people in the head.
2:17:35
Yeah, our Washington, Washington
Post isn't talking about this.
2:17:40
Let's go to this, wrap it up
with the last bit. Now this
2:17:45
could be you know, counter, you
know, disinformation. We don't
2:17:48
know what is going on here. But
this little commentary has here
2:17:53
at the end about the dead bodies
being there for two weeks, I
2:17:56
think is pretty convincing.
2:17:58
The other interesting thing is
they're trying to say these
2:18:00
bodies died. I don't want to get
too graphic here. But they're
2:18:04
not that you shoot a body on
March 19. And you leave it lying
2:18:10
in the street, and 50 and 60
degree weather until April 2,
2:18:15
the body ain't looking like
they're looking on TV. bodies
2:18:19
tend to blowed up. This the
clothing tends to tear because
2:18:24
the body swells and then the
body bursts and it's very
2:18:27
disgusting. It's gross. It's
bedded. It's putrid. It's not
2:18:31
what you saw on TV, what you saw
on TV, were freshly killed human
2:18:35
beings. And we have another
piece of evidence that more
2:18:37
people need to pay attention to
a Mexican journalist gained
2:18:41
access to hookah on the same day
that the Ukrainians were playing
2:18:45
declaring this, and he filmed
the body's fresh blood. He sat
2:18:50
there and said these people are
freshly killed. This is fresh
2:18:53
blood body ain't laying there
since March 19. It has fresh
2:18:57
blood. These people were
murdered on April 1 by the
2:19:00
Ukrainian National Police. And
yet we have the president United
2:19:03
States coming out and saying
that this is a war crime
2:19:07
perpetrated by the Russians. And
Vladimir Putin needs to be
2:19:10
brought to justice in The Hague.
This is a propaganda war, unlike
2:19:14
anything we've seen in modern
times, because it's not just
2:19:17
about manufacturing the case for
war. This is about an outright
2:19:20
lie about murder, which makes us
complicit in the crime, us being
2:19:25
Americans, because that's our
president who's facilitating the
2:19:28
crime.
2:19:31
So Sonia off on the Ender is a
journalist from Rotterdam, the
2:19:38
Netherlands. She went and
reported from Donetsk and
2:19:41
Lugansk People's Republics as an
embedded reporter with the
2:19:45
Russian army. Which of course
you need to take with with any
2:19:50
grain of salt because that's how
it goes when you're embedded.
2:19:52
Which reminds me why oh, why oh,
why do we not have a single
2:19:59
journalist embedded with the
Ukrainian army. This is a thing
2:20:05
this is what many journalists
live to be embedded in that
2:20:10
interesting that there's no
embedded journalist on in this
2:20:13
horrible war where it's in there
all just in Lviv and in front of
2:20:17
the green screen of the night
shot of the square. Even if it's
2:20:20
raining, it's dry. So she dog
bark studio she says the same in
2:20:25
Buka. Many witnesses are gonna
say that Russian army left on
2:20:29
March 30. Even the Ukrainian
Ukrainian military you came in
2:20:33
on April 1 didn't report any
corpses on the streets. This
2:20:36
happened on April 3, according
to the Western media evidence
2:20:40
also shows that the bodies had
white armbands the sign of the
2:20:43
Russian army the soldiers wear
them so the soldiers are killing
2:20:46
the Russian Ukrainians. Yeah, no
way. The majority of the people
2:20:50
who I spoke with were very happy
that the Russian special
2:20:53
operation started. Of course,
nobody wants violence and war,
2:20:56
but they've been suffering for
eight years now from war,
2:20:59
carnage and destruction by
Ukrainian forces. The worst were
2:21:02
the Nazi battalions, who were
fighting along with the regular
2:21:05
army. It's all so consistent.
But, you know, the true travesty
2:21:13
of this war is the reported
millions of refugees who are now
2:21:20
in Poland, they're going to
spread out throughout the EU,
2:21:25
the state, the western states of
the EU. That's the real the real
2:21:29
destruction here. Will they be
able to go back? Well, they want
2:21:32
to go back. Now what is Europe
Boyd Europe can't handle any
2:21:36
more refugees. It's just too
much.
2:21:42
Let's here's another interesting
situation and this is more of a
2:21:45
social media problem. This is
the sinking of the Moskva. This
2:21:50
has been a great story. Yeah.
Well, let's listen to the France
2:21:53
20 fours. Kind of the rundown.
This is thinking of the Moskva
2:21:59
intro
2:21:59
and no matter which side you
believe the optics well, they're
2:22:03
bad. Russia announcing that its
flagship cruiser in the Black
2:22:08
Sea. The Moskva had been sunk
while being towed. It was after
2:22:14
a fire on board says the
Kremlin. Ukrainian made Mercury
2:22:19
type missile claims Kyiv the
Russian response quick incoming.
2:22:23
The bombing overnight of a
factory southwest of the capital
2:22:27
that makes Neptune missiles and
Moscow throwing up new
2:22:31
unconfirmed claims that
Ukraine's hitting targets across
2:22:34
the border.
2:22:37
Yeah, this ship sinking is first
I've seen this ship I looking at
2:22:42
some reports from 2015. This is
their flagship.
2:22:47
I believe me, I feel the same
not all that impressive. It's
2:22:51
dorky. Yeah, it's like a cruiser
or not even a bat. It
2:22:55
has. It has the ICBM launchers
which you could launch from
2:22:59
anything I don't this ship is
not impressive, not what I've
2:23:02
seen.
2:23:02
Yeah, I'm not gonna argue that.
But let's listen to France. 20
2:23:05
fours truth or fake a segment
which we used to play a little
2:23:10
more. But this time this woman
comes out. And she has two
2:23:12
instances of how social media is
passing around the shipping, the
2:23:17
sinking of the ship. This
granted the Russians. The ship
2:23:21
was damaged from some thing or
other they had a problem on
2:23:25
board. And they were trying to
tow it back to I guess, Crimea,
2:23:30
and it's an on the way back it's
sunk. Because it blew up or
2:23:34
something happened to got bombed
is what the what the claim is?
2:23:38
Yeah. But then again, the
bombing, it seems to be a big
2:23:41
fake listen to the sinking of
the Moskva one.
2:23:46
Social media users actually took
a screenshot of this video from
2:23:50
2019 and flipped it and added a
green filter to make it look
2:23:55
like more of a military source
video. But as this user points
2:24:00
out, it can be easily done on a
digital digital alteration apps.
2:24:05
Oh, okay. Yeah, there you go. So
what you're seeing the the
2:24:09
mainstream is reporting on
disinfo from Twitter, Photoshop
2:24:14
jobs,
2:24:15
that there's a second version of
this where they actually show
2:24:18
the ship being blowed up. But
listen to this, this is thinking
2:24:21
of the mosque of to
2:24:24
thinking of a mosque is really a
major development in the war.
2:24:27
And so that's triggered a lot of
online reaction you've been
2:24:29
looking at another claim made
after this event.
2:24:32
Indeed, we have a second example
right here of footage of an
2:24:35
exploding ship that users
claimed to be the Moskva,
2:24:38
notably this post on telegram by
the leader of the Azov
2:24:42
nationalist regiment in Ukraine.
Just a reminder to our viewers
2:24:46
that the odds of a nationalist
regiment is a controversial far
2:24:49
right militia of fighting for
the Ukrainian Armed Forces, led
2:24:53
by Andrey Beletsky, who posted
this video on a telegram so many
2:24:58
users reposted this video You're
on social media, claiming that
2:25:02
they belong to the Moscow
cruiser in the Black Sea, known
2:25:05
as the Messiah. This user says
the founder of the Azov regiment
2:25:09
published a video of the
explosion of the flagship
2:25:12
flagship of the Black Sea Fleet,
this user saying the moments
2:25:16
when cruiser Moscow was
receiving readings from
2:25:18
Ukrainian army. And here's a
video of a strike on the cruiser
2:25:22
in Moscow. But in reality, these
photos have nothing to do with
2:25:26
this incident. In reality, these
images belong to this Norwegian
2:25:31
Navy exercise from 2013 that we
also saw in the news. But just a
2:25:37
reminder that this is also a war
on misinformation from both
2:25:42
Ukraine and Russia. And in this
particular situation, a source
2:25:46
of misinformation coming from
the members of the Ukrainian
2:25:50
Armed Forces.
2:25:51
Oh, no. Oh, no, I disagree with
what she's saying there. No, no,
2:25:55
she's saying misinformation from
Ukraine or armed forces? No, no,
2:26:00
I will take you back to the
beginning of our show
2:26:02
in the evade invasion of
Ukraine, including electronic
2:26:06
warfare, insurgency, and
propaganda.
2:26:10
This is us. This is this is this
is what we do. Merker
2:26:16
doing a crappy job.
2:26:17
So if two old white guys can
figure it out, yeah. So but this
2:26:23
came, whoever, whoever date the
Ukrainian army took posted this,
2:26:29
saying it was legit. So they're
just lying. Yes. Because they
2:26:33
know it's not legit. The first
victim of war is we have to
2:26:37
tolerate. This never ends, it
seems let's go to this is the
2:26:44
war analysis is kind of
interesting. This is press 24.
2:26:48
Again, where they have this
little panel, they get together
2:26:50
and they bitch and moan about
stuff. But this is kind of
2:26:53
interesting. This is the Ukraine
F 24 War analysis.
2:26:57
The number and scale of missile
strikes on targets and cube will
2:27:00
increase in response to any
terrorist attacks or sabotage of
2:27:05
the Kyiv nationalist regime on
Russian territory.
2:27:09
That spokespersons words coupled
with defense ministry, images of
2:27:14
missiles flying into the sky,
Vivienne, Walt, this is
2:27:17
obviously really worrying,
because it's clearly a moment in
2:27:22
which everybody is gearing up
for the major major battle is
2:27:26
going to happen in the in the
East. And it's just very hard to
2:27:30
see how this war is going to
keep contained within the
2:27:34
borders of Ukraine, whether or
not cave has actually struck
2:27:40
over the border again, which
they did once into Russia. You
2:27:45
know, now you have Finland and
Sweden, fast tracked into NATO,
2:27:50
you have so many different signs
that this is going to become a
2:27:54
wider war. And it's almost like
everybody has a wider war
2:27:58
with NATO nations is what you're
saying? Well, whether
2:28:01
it's west or east, we're not
quite sure, at this point. But
2:28:06
you know, it's it could be
argued that NATO is already
2:28:09
involved. I mean, nature is
clearly arming Ukraine heavily.
2:28:15
They've done tremendous training
of Ukrainian forces and a
2:28:21
cheering on the battlefield.
2:28:24
We have several producers in
Finland, and this is a this is a
2:28:28
big thing of Finland, obviously
connected to Russia. Most people
2:28:32
don't know that either. But go
look at go look at the map. And
2:28:36
Finland is being actively
aggressively courted into NATO.
2:28:41
And it's a big controversy.
2:28:43
Now that but they do term she
uses Fast Track fast tracking.
2:28:47
Yes. It takes years to get into
NATO. Generally this is this is
2:28:52
that maniac that's running NATO.
That
2:28:54
guy is a horrible. Yes. Jens
Stoltenberg.
2:28:57
Yeah, that guy. So let's go to
part two of this clip. Because
2:28:59
it's got a little thing in here,
little item in here, I thought
2:29:02
was good. I'm not
2:29:03
I'm sorry. I'm not sure it's
going to spread in. But it will
2:29:07
be like seeing, you know, being
a fortune seeker in war times.
2:29:12
It's impossible. But But I think
it's not I don't think it's
2:29:16
going to spread. But I think
it's going to be very long. I
2:29:18
think it's going to be longer
than what we presumed. I think
2:29:20
it's going to be absolutely like
the Syria scenario we had. And I
2:29:24
think that Joe Biden is
absolutely not helping and has
2:29:28
not been helping with the
rhetoric that he's been going
2:29:31
forward with from last month in
in Poland when he said war
2:29:35
criminal to a few days ago. I
think it was on Tuesday when he
2:29:39
mentioned the word genocide. So
I think that that he's it's
2:29:45
escalating not in terms of
territorial gain, but in terms
2:29:49
of the rhetoric and the
sanctions that are being put on
2:29:51
the table.
2:29:54
The Finnish Prime Minister and
Swedish Prime Minister did a
2:29:58
joint press conference on On
Thursday addressing these very
2:30:01
items, interesting fact both the
Prime Ministers of Sweden and
2:30:06
Finland are women. They're all
in on on as far as I can glean
2:30:12
from the from the English,
Finnish press G we
2:30:17
if women become the leaders,
there are peace loving.
2:30:22
Thank you for picking that.
Well, this is all about peace,
2:30:24
you see. So they have a report.
Now this report outlines the
2:30:28
advantages and disadvantages of
Finland joining NATO and
2:30:32
consider the starting point of
an official debate about
2:30:34
Finland's possible membership.
In the military alliance. The
2:30:38
report says NATO membership
would not necess necessitate
2:30:41
Finland hosting nuclear weapons,
a permanent NATO military base
2:30:45
or even Alliance troops. Oh, it
would only cost them one to 1.5%
2:30:51
of Finland's current defense
budget. So give us your money.
2:30:55
And there was something else and
he is according to this
2:31:00
newspaper sources, Finland is
expected to apply for membership
2:31:03
in the near future, with this
application likely being sent to
2:31:07
the North Atlantic Council
sometime between April and June,
2:31:11
before the big NATO conference
in Madrid at the end of June. So
2:31:15
this is fast tracked, and that's
going to kick off the fins. The
2:31:21
fins are not your typical, these
are not Europeans, necessarily.
2:31:26
They're not Russians to kind of
the even their DNA is not at all
2:31:31
like Scandinavian DNA. They're
very separate type of people.
2:31:36
And it's going to be interesting
to see how they get to corralled
2:31:40
into this. It's not it's not a
great idea. The whole point of
2:31:44
Russia being pissed off is
because you're encroaching
2:31:47
Russia. Finland is looking at
Rushmore. Yeah. And they're
2:31:51
considering it. I don't
understand. You already D
2:31:55
platform them.
2:32:00
Very odd. Yeah. Well, let's say
get what mash really? I got it.
2:32:04
I want to play the Biden
genocide comment. That's a part
2:32:08
of the
2:32:10
big part of the narrative. Yes.
Okay. I have it here.
2:32:13
The White House is offering
further a comment on President
2:32:16
Biden's claims of genocide being
committed by Russian forces in
2:32:21
his NPR is Windsor Johnston
reports Biden had stopped short
2:32:24
of using that term. Until now.
2:32:26
President Biden on Tuesday said
Russia's war in Ukraine amounts
2:32:29
to genocide accusing President
Vladimir Putin of trying to wipe
2:32:33
out the idea of even being a
Ukrainian. White House press
2:32:37
secretary Jen Psaki says Biden's
remarks come as it becomes more
2:32:41
clear of what's happening in
Ukraine. He was
2:32:43
speaking to what he feels we see
on the ground. But regardless of
2:32:46
what you call it, what our
objective now is, as evidenced
2:32:49
by the enormous package of
military assistance is continued
2:32:53
to help and assist the
Ukrainians in this war. And one
2:32:57
where we see atrocities
happening every single day,
2:32:59
President Biden announced an
additional $800 million in
2:33:02
military assistance to Ukraine
as Russia shifts its military
2:33:06
operation to the eastern part of
the country.
2:33:10
Again, with the package,
military package. Okay, I have
2:33:15
two things to contribute to
this. Uh, first of all, it was
2:33:20
the CIA director who came, RCI
came out and said Putin could
2:33:23
get desperate he might, he might
start nuke and that's very
2:33:29
irresponsible of him to say
that.
2:33:31
I agree with this. When I first
I think I wrote this up in the
2:33:35
newsletter that does it when
they start saying this kind of
2:33:39
thing? Because it does, it
doesn't make any sense that
2:33:42
you'd use any sort of nook in
Ukraine because it just you
2:33:46
know, for one thing, it's a it's
a breadbasket area, you don't
2:33:48
want to contaminate the wheat
fields or anything and, and it
2:33:52
just doesn't make any sense
whatsoever. So it sounds more to
2:33:56
me like we're gonna blow one of
these things off. Yeah,
2:34:00
contaminate the wheat fields,
changed the commodity markets,
2:34:05
probably ruined that area for
growing wheat for, you know, 100
2:34:09
years. I just don't like this.
This sounds like a setup to me.
2:34:15
There's no clip unfortunately,
but the William Burns he's the
2:34:18
current CIA director. This was
Thursday warned the US cannot
2:34:21
take lightly the threat of
Russian President Vladimir Putin
2:34:24
using nuclear weapons quote,
given the potential desperation
2:34:28
of President Putin and the
Russian leadership, given the
2:34:30
setbacks that they face so far,
militarily, none of us can take
2:34:34
lightly the threat posed by a
potential resort to tactical
2:34:37
nuclear weapons or low yield
nuclear weapons. And he made his
2:34:41
remarks at Georgia Tech here
Conference in Atlanta. Here's
2:34:47
what Justin Trudeau has to say
just just a little shorty just
2:34:50
to remember that he's still he's
still alive.
2:34:53
So when Canadians and friends
from around the world stand for
2:34:58
Ukraine We are standing for
Ukraine. But we're also standing
2:35:03
for ourselves for these values
that have been undermined over
2:35:09
the past years with the rise of
authoritarianism, with attacks
2:35:14
on the social cohesion because
of excessive populism and over
2:35:19
nationalism, we have an
opportunity now as a world to
2:35:24
stand for what is right.
2:35:28
So funny that he should say that
but this report now, I mean, you
2:35:34
can blame a lot on Russia. Now,
right down to the the Russia,
2:35:40
the the Steel report, the
Russian hoax, Russia, Russia,
2:35:44
Russia, Russia, Russia,
everything Russia, but now now
2:35:47
they're taking it to the max.
We've got one more thing we can
2:35:51
blame on Russia. It's taken
2:35:52
years to figure out the History
Channel, the math here, but the
2:35:55
data also aligns with a Northern
Arc. Following the Northern Arc,
2:36:01
the aircraft would have passed
through northern Thailand, and
2:36:04
then Central Asia.
2:36:05
This is mh 337.
2:36:08
No, if the plane did fly along
the northern route, the final
2:36:12
ping puts it over central
Kazakhstan.
2:36:16
If mh 370 went to Kazakhstan, it
opens up a frightening
2:36:21
possibility.
2:36:27
This theory says that terrorists
hijacked the aircraft, take it
2:36:32
to cause extend or kill the
passengers. And then they could
2:36:35
have refueled and continued to
anywhere within Russia.
2:36:41
If the plane went north, it
could have landed safely. It
2:36:46
takes a lot of runway to land a
big plane like the triple seven.
2:36:49
And there aren't a lot of long
runways in the remote central
2:36:53
part of Kazakhstan. But wait,
but it turns out that there is a
2:36:57
runway not too far away. That is
a suitable runway for a triple
2:37:01
seven to land on.
2:37:02
The place is called you Blaney
runway, and it's part of the
2:37:06
former Soviet military base. The
big question is Did anyone on
2:37:12
the plane have ties
2:37:14
to Russia? In first class,
there's a Russian national named
2:37:18
Nikolai Brodsky, and he's
sitting about 15 feet from an
2:37:22
unlocked hatch, which contains
the electronic brain that
2:37:27
controls all of the flight
surfaces of the plane and all
2:37:30
the communications with the
ground. And in economy class,
2:37:34
you have two Soviet Army
veterans sitting directly under
2:37:38
the box that makes the satellite
thing it's entirely possible if
2:37:42
somebody took control the plane
killed everyone on board flew
2:37:47
off into perfect safety.
refueled when hit the plane
2:37:51
somewhere and got away scot
free. Yes, of course Putin.
2:37:58
What would be the point of this
exercise? Did they explain that?
2:38:02
Yes to make room for History
Channel to produce crap. I love
2:38:09
it. Alright, this is one that
I've been holding on to just
2:38:14
something we're just going to
talk about briefly talked about
2:38:17
sir dude named Ben protector of
megawatts who works at a
2:38:22
critical infrastructure security
company in the United States.
2:38:27
And we talk regularly he talks
with a lot of different
2:38:29
producers. He had a couple of
different podcasts. He's talked
2:38:32
with Sir Jean, I think with the
with Darren as well. He's around
2:38:36
sir Spencer, all these different
podcasts. And he pinged me a
2:38:41
week and a half ago and said,
Okay. There is an energy
2:38:45
producer in Texas who has
identified a very serious
2:38:50
malware instance in their system
2:38:54
is yes, yes. And he told me
about this offline.
2:38:59
Yeah, right after the show. I
said we didn't really get to it,
2:39:01
but it was also I wanted to wait
because he explained to me and
2:39:05
now now there is the cysa CIA,
NSA, that's the government
2:39:10
computer security agency, the
one that said the Dominion
2:39:14
voting machines were all on the
up and up those guys. And they
2:39:20
reported on this in this it is a
very, very severe piece of
2:39:25
malware because it's they're
calling it the Swiss Army knife
2:39:28
of malware. And it's is in the
SCADA systems, the supervisory
2:39:33
control and data acquisition
devices. So these are the
2:39:37
devices that that are an
interface between a computer and
2:39:43
you know, could be a valve it
could be a temperature sensor so
2:39:47
that a boiler doesn't overheat
and explode it is the the the
2:39:52
interface between the data and
the physical world of power
2:39:56
generation. So this malware is
not just in systems like a
2:40:03
Windows Vista that is sitting in
one of these plants. No, it is
2:40:07
in the Schneider Electric
programmable logic controllers.
2:40:11
That's a PLC. It is in the arm
Ron sysmac any x PLCs and the
2:40:16
open platform communications
unified architecture servers,
2:40:20
this some of this stuff could
only be put into these devices
2:40:25
at the manufacturer. And so when
I asked our dude named men
2:40:33
protector megawatts, he said,
What does it look like to you?
2:40:36
These guys look at this stuff
all day long. Is a Russian
2:40:41
because the Russians are the
ones that people really do fear
2:40:43
if you got the ghost in the
machine. These guys are good. He
2:40:46
says this looks like our guys
without making a formal
2:40:53
accusation, of course. And so I
said how about this one is
2:40:56
because I knew that his
corporation was reporting this
2:40:59
was reporting it to the
government to let's see how it
2:41:03
gets picked up. Well, have you
seen a single M five M report
2:41:08
about this? No. Anyone going? Oh
my god hair on fire? Even if you
2:41:15
said the Russians or the Chinese
or anybody? Yeah. Every fart is
2:41:21
blown up. But this one? Oh,
yeah, wired did a piece on it.
2:41:25
Of course, the you know, the
blinking computer of course,
2:41:28
there's there's there's people
who are doing reports on it, but
2:41:31
it is not the hold on to your
ass because the lights could go
2:41:35
out in in Texas or New York or
anywhere. This would be the one
2:41:40
and they're not making a big
deal out of it, which makes me
2:41:43
highly suspicious. And I've put
in the, in the shownotes. A
2:41:50
couple of documents, these are
public documents. And you'll see
2:41:53
this this is a this is a map.
They don't know how many how
2:41:57
many different devices or energy
generating companies and systems
2:42:05
have this. It's been in the in
this particular system since
2:42:09
October last year. So I'm happy
I got my generator.
2:42:18
Yeah, I'd say you should be.
2:42:21
Yeah, me my generator and my
friends with loss arise.
2:42:26
I'm going to show my mood by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
2:42:29
all the people who could do
that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fine.
2:42:39
Yes, and indeed, we do have a
few people to thank for show
2:42:42
1443 Starting with Anonymous, in
Brooklyn, New York. He's just
2:42:50
loves the show. Okay. servito in
Evergreen Colorado. 14162.
2:42:56
Christopher guia. In Dallas,
Texas. Just we're just outside
2:43:01
of where you live.
2:43:04
I'm in the suburb of Dallas.
2:43:05
You're in a suburb of Dallas.
133 dot 33. Patrick Visser in
2:43:11
Leduc? Alberta, Canada. 12345
Zach Welch in Buren, Washington.
2:43:17
101. Sugar Free Free. In Salem,
Oregon. 100. Dave bid,
2:43:24
Schlessinger in Philadelphia
100. Adda el de esta esta esta
2:43:32
Batista, esta Batista and Knapp
Utah pondered.
2:43:38
Wait, where were we? Oh, I'm
sorry. I couldn't find them.
2:43:41
Like where's Austin Batista?
There it is. I got it. I'm
2:43:44
stuck, but to STOP IT staff.
Batista. Ze is Zach Brown and pu
2:43:51
Kalani. Oh Pukalani Pukalani,
Hawaii, Hawaii. Some guy goes up
2:43:59
me says hey, how do you
pronounce it anyway, so to
2:44:01
Hawaii or Hawaii? And the guy
says Hawaii and he says well,
2:44:07
thanks. He says You're welcome.
Lucas Williams next on the list
2:44:13
and he's in Roswell, New Mexico.
Whoo. $100. Jim Coleman in
2:44:20
Haarlem, Netherlands. 100. Blood
100 says Nice.
2:44:27
Jim Coleman. Asper de douching
needs a DD wishing I gotta hear.
2:44:33
You've been D deuced. Coleman
also says, says John was whining
2:44:39
so much about donations. I
thought I'd kick in Well, if
2:44:44
that's what it takes. That's
what it takes.
2:44:46
Yeah, what happened to value for
value bra?
2:44:50
Shot? Yeah, really. Charlotte
Wurster in San Francisco $100.
2:44:56
She has a note and I'll just
read it. Also because I'm
2:45:00
grateful because her name is
like the sauce. She spells it
2:45:04
like the sauce, w o r, c e s t r
which everyone would pronounce.
2:45:11
I pronounced this woodchester
which is just wished her. So
2:45:15
it's worse to Shire sauce
everybody and finally have it.
2:45:18
And she says finally I'm
spending some money to express
2:45:20
my gratitude for your highly
engaging podcasts done not once
2:45:24
but twice a week. I've been
listening for perhaps one year
2:45:27
after listening to the Tom Woods
podcast when Adam was a guest
2:45:30
Tom Woods donation. Now it's
time to be de Dios. You've been
2:45:35
de douche. My 19 year old son
who's left for college also
2:45:40
enjoys the show and it just
helped. I can't help something
2:45:47
him through some of the COVID
madness. Now it's been good for
2:45:50
him all the best from San
Francisco. Thank you very much.
2:45:53
And then the next note concerns
a knighting I believe yes, Dame
2:46:00
Christina pearl of the clear
blue skies from Mishawaka,
2:46:05
Indiana. So I will read this
sorry about the late birthday
2:46:12
greetings and type letter but my
writing hand is injured which
2:46:15
doesn't explain the lateness
okay. 9432 Typically, we don't
2:46:18
read donations at this level,
but this donation should bring
2:46:22
Charlie to knighthood. You'd
like to be Sir Robert Charles
2:46:26
have deputy boots he would like
ribeye and bourbon at the
2:46:30
roundtable boots on the ground
reporting airlines are always
2:46:33
short staffed the last day of
the month and the first three
2:46:36
days of the month is called
overlap in my airline, and we
2:46:40
flight attendants are offered
incentive pay to pick up trips
2:46:42
but sometimes there isn't enough
incentive in the world as
2:46:45
everything is currently awful in
the airline biz. Adam might be
2:46:48
correct about the pilot hours
but his theory doesn't hold
2:46:51
water as airline chaos can
happen any time of the month.
2:46:54
But especially the last day of
the month and the well. First of
2:46:58
all, it's not my theory. Second
of all, it's exactly this theory
2:47:02
if it unless I'm
misunderstanding it. And yes,
2:47:06
it's probably ended even on the
last show we talked about flight
2:47:09
attendants being sick and tired
of it so we completely
2:47:12
understand. And Sir Robert
Charles will receive his ribeye
2:47:18
and bourbon at the roundtable
and thank you for your courage
2:47:20
thank you for your support
2:47:23
that serve survive survivor of
the virtual reality in Portland,
2:47:28
Oregon comes in with eight and
he's going to be upgraded to
2:47:32
Baron and he wants to be barren
wasteland survive the virtual
2:47:37
reality. Brandon Pat Patrick
Brandon in Bakersfield 8686 And
2:47:45
here he is. Sir Kevin
McLaughlin, Duke of Aluna and
2:47:49
lover of America lover of boobs.
And Concord North Carolina not
2:47:53
miss hon a loving and boots. No
joke.
2:47:58
Not kidding, not kidding. That
could Daryl cook also boobs 808
2:48:03
and Lebanon, Tennessee David
right now, Harrison Arkansas.
2:48:07
7777 Matthew Leanne's I'm
thinking in San Francisco. Could
2:48:15
be liens but I think it's Lance
or Lansing maybe 7777 Matt? Burn
2:48:20
yay in Manassas, Virginia. 7777.
Matthew Lionheart Buford,
2:48:26
Georgia. You shouldn't be you
for Georgia.
2:48:28
Is there a reason for the seven?
Is there a reason for the sack
2:48:31
of sevens?
2:48:32
I have no idea that wasn't
soliciting it. Next funny is to
2:48:39
maybe that's just random
numbers, their networks. Also a
2:48:42
lover of boobs and big booties
70 networks always
2:48:47
trying to do better than the
next guy. Yeah, and
2:48:49
coming in with 70 For some
reason I know that okay. Dylan
2:48:53
Mitchell funk in Toronto,
Ontario. Also 70 Juric in
2:48:58
Arlington, Washington 6969.
Serve Vegas Ray Knight of naked
2:49:04
of the Naked City and lost wages
Nevada 69690 that Oh, I'm sorry,
2:49:09
sir. Rick is 6996 Does that
Scott quarry in Fort grayish
2:49:15
brown. There's a pronunciation
for this. Great EOD. gratiae
2:49:20
Dinah Sure.
2:49:21
Oh, I know. I know. It's Gresh
Gratiot
2:49:27
Gratiot Gratiot.
2:49:28
Yep. The lashes. I was told to
remember it but I think by just
2:49:32
remembering it's grass shit.
Gratiot
2:49:34
Rashad? Okay, she's in Fort
Gratiot Brian gates in Fremont,
2:49:39
California. 6666 Chris Perry in
Silver Spring Maryland. 6666666
2:49:47
just six six. Break. Blake
Thomas in Kansas City's got a
2:49:51
birthday 6133 Sir. Started Bart
fast. Start a bar search Florida
2:49:59
Bar fast, slow slow, slow down
Florida and hope Rhode Island
2:50:04
5678 I hope he likes Rhode
Island. Caitlyn Perry in Mount
2:50:09
Vernon Washington fifth by 678
Matthew cargo five 650 and
2:50:14
gobbles, Michigan Steve busta
door in Adrian, Michigan 5555
2:50:23
Daniel Mariano 5510 and Richard
Futter in London, UK 5510 Chris
2:50:29
angler and Castor Ancaster,
Ontario 5510 Sir David Galloway
2:50:36
5510 and Flower Mound, Texas.
Scott Evers in Dallas, Texas.
2:50:42
55. Morgan Medlock in fire crest
for crest for crest Washington,
2:50:49
that the 420 Brian Richardson
and Aurora cow color. I'm sorry,
2:50:54
Brian Richardson in Aurora,
Illinois 5069. And he says Scott
2:51:01
some comment there check it out.
Brandon Thrasher in Birmingham,
2:51:05
Alabama 5033, Douglas angstrom
and Sandy Lake Pennsylvania 5033
2:51:11
Troy Peters in 5001. And
battlefield Missouri and the
2:51:15
following people and as quite a
few of them is actually 30 with
2:51:19
$50 donations and I'll read them
off name and located actually
2:51:23
you read the first because it's
going to be night in DC his read
2:51:25
it's Alona $50, from
Madisonville, Louisiana
2:51:29
I am so proud to say that my
monthly subscription has brought
2:51:32
me to the no agenda roundtable
please see the accounting below
2:51:35
I must thank Sir Chris Gray of
the Isle of Wight who hit me in
2:51:38
the mouth pre pandemic and 2019
at the cattlemen show in New
2:51:42
Orleans. I wish to be known
henceforth as sir M M. Mo, sir
2:51:46
mama, mama Masha. Ilona, there
we go. Defender of the 1x speed.
2:51:51
Yes. 1x on all podcast, please
prepare me some Buffalo Trace on
2:51:55
the rocks and some sweet fire
and jalapeno cheddar sausage
2:51:58
from the little butcher shop.
Thank you for your courage. And
2:52:02
I'll take all the karma you can
dish out so nangia Yeah, we'll
2:52:05
do a karma for you and everybody
in a moment.
2:52:07
Ella now we got the $50 donors
in addition to David, my
2:52:12
Chaloner Alexander's Stilinski
Denver, James pueblos in Reno.
2:52:20
Eric Hof in Edmonton, Alberta, a
Baron of Southern California sir
2:52:25
lineman of the net Raleigh Hawk
in Anna, Illinois. Jonathan
2:52:32
Peckham, and Bristol Rhode
Island. Martin Martin Martin
2:52:38
Benedictus, in gurning and
Groningen
2:52:42
Groningen morning.
2:52:45
I Netherlands John camp and
antlers Oklahoma at James
2:52:49
Edmondson in South Plainfield,
New Jersey. Josh Adair in a pas
2:52:55
of bison floating around he's in
the military looks like Jessica
2:52:59
young in Yuba City, Steven Chu
Mack in Xenia, Ohio. Robert
2:53:08
Jamie Hilliard in Newman,
Georgia. Angela bowl in Kings
2:53:14
Kingsville. Texas. Gerald Zimmer
in Boulder, Colorado Philip
2:53:22
Balu. In Louisville. Dane brace
and braysen in Westport,
2:53:29
Benjamin McDonald in Houston
Chris Lewinsky circus in
2:53:33
Sherwood Park, Alberta. Jessie
Fanta in Weatherford, Texas,
2:53:39
Robert Schmidt in Oregon,
Wisconsin. Lee ora Coronel and
2:53:47
Nevada City California. Matthew
Spangler in New York,
2:53:51
Pennsylvania. Sir Andrew Gardner
in Leonard a town Marilyn, Sir
2:53:58
John hight and Folsom,
California. Jennifer fivey fivey
2:54:03
fivey five. I don't know what do
you think? No, in Calgary,
2:54:09
Alberta. FY bi FFIV. Me Maybe
five maybe a five E. We're sixy
2:54:18
David Vinton and Clarkston,
Washington. Megan Emory in
2:54:22
Austin, Texas. David Galloway in
Marietta, Georgia, Leanne
2:54:27
Shipley in Covington,
Washington. Covington. And last
2:54:31
but not least, Sir Jerry
whinging, Roth down there in
2:54:35
Saugus, California want to thank
all these people for making this
2:54:38
show even a possibility, let
alone helping support it and
2:54:42
keeping it going?
2:54:43
And reaching back to the Blake
Thomas donation 6133 and Easter
2:54:48
donation for t squared from his
sons Blake and Luke. And the
2:54:52
other one you want me to read
was Brian Richardson. Aurora
2:54:55
says I can't believe how spoiled
I am from the sound quality of
2:54:59
the show. Over the years and
tight production, you experiment
2:55:03
with setups pretty regularly. It
seems that even if you think it
2:55:06
sucks, it's still in the 99th
percentile of all podcast.
2:55:10
I agree with that.
2:55:12
Thank you very much. Well, I
mixed it for your earbuds I know
2:55:15
where we are. This is not radio
is for in your ear. Thank you
2:55:19
all very much for supporting
episode 1443. As promised,
2:55:22
here's a little goat karma for
y'all. You've got karma and
2:55:26
remember us for our Thursday
show.org/very short list today
2:55:40
but as we just stated Blake and
Luke Thomas say happy birthday
2:55:43
to their dad t squared he turns
61 today Happy Birthday. Also
2:55:47
Richard Ballard will be
celebrating and gets a nice and
2:55:50
early that'll be an April 28. So
in advance happy birthday from
2:55:54
everybody here the best podcast
in the universe you don't want
2:56:06
to be a douchebag now this is
the crazy one. We got a lot of
2:56:09
title changes today day Marianne
Schneeberger becomes barren net
2:56:13
test Maryann Schneeberger the
damsel of disaster. So Richard
2:56:17
the Lionhearted become sir up of
the Green Mountain State Sir
2:56:20
Mark Colin Baron of East Lake
City survive of the virtual
2:56:24
reality now barren wasteland
survive with a virtual reality
2:56:28
and David Chaloner becomes a
Serb man, my Chaloner defender
2:56:33
of the 1x speed and I am a big
proponent of defending the one
2:56:38
XP thank you all so very much
for your support of the no
2:56:41
agenda show. We do have a couple
of nights that I'd like to bring
2:56:46
up. You guys come up here on the
podium, please. I'm gonna get
2:56:49
three today John. So a blade
that can handle it please.
2:56:51
I got a big blade.
2:56:55
Again, she said it. Robert
Charles Jim Parker, Arthur
2:56:59
Shakur. You're already here. You
have support the no agenda show
2:57:04
in the amount of $1,000 or more
I'm very proud to pronounce the
2:57:07
cape v as Sir Robert Charles of
deputy, sir weasel keeper, the
2:57:11
pioneer peak and Sir Nathan of
the attic gentlemen, for you.
2:57:15
We've got hookers and blow rent
boys and Chardonnay. We've got
2:57:18
Jeremiah weed whiskey and
Alaskan King Crab sugar on snow
2:57:21
ribeye and bourbon and Buffalo
Trace on the rocks with some
2:57:24
sweet fire and jalapeno cheddar
sausage from the little butcher
2:57:27
shop. Oh yeah. In case you want
it. We also got some bong hits
2:57:30
and bourbon sparkling cider and
escorts ginger ale and Jerboas
2:57:34
breast milk and pablum beer and
blondes Oh yeah. And the mutton
2:57:37
and meat is right here. You know
you want the mutton you know you
2:57:40
want the meat and we need you to
go to no agenda nation.com/rings
2:57:44
to make sure that we get your
address your ring size, we can
2:57:47
send out those night rings which
are Signet rings, comes with
2:57:50
some wax that you can use to
seal your important
2:57:52
correspondence. Ah, Pabst Blue
Ribbon on Easter and of course
2:57:57
the certificate of authenticity.
Thanks again for supporting the
2:58:00
no agenda show. No one when it
rained, it poured on the last
2:58:12
show we had six meet up reports
now. exactly zero, but that's
2:58:16
okay because more will be coming
and we do want to promote this
2:58:20
coming Wednesday the 20th the
Fort Worth meetup where the
2:58:23
Western simulation begins. It'd
be six o'clock at Panther Island
2:58:26
brewing on Thursday show de
Youngsville the meetup number
2:58:30
two six o'clock Eastern Bud's
Tavern in Youngsville, North
2:58:32
Carolina and also on Thursday
Charlotte's Thursday Third
2:58:35
Thursday seven o'clock eastern
edge tavern Charlotte North
2:58:39
Carolina reminder that we have
may 16 in Charleston, South
2:58:45
Carolina The keeper and I will
be attending that's going to be
2:58:48
there's people coming from all
over it's just kind of our do
2:58:51
over for the Miss Nashville
missed Nashville Tennessee meet
2:58:56
up and there's there's a long
list for April and May in fact
2:58:59
we even have June and July
filling up. If you've never been
2:59:03
to a no agenda meetup. It's
completely producer organized.
2:59:06
You will love it. Because even
though you're all going to be
2:59:10
different different ages,
colors, races, religions,
2:59:14
backgrounds, class, you're gonna
have a community and you're
2:59:19
going to click right away and
you'll be hitting other people
2:59:22
in the mouth in the
establishment. No agenda
2:59:25
meetups.com You can find one
start one.
2:59:29
Sometimes you want to go hang
out with the nights and days.
2:59:36
You'd be triggered. You want to
be where everybody feels the
2:59:44
same
2:59:49
day you got a couple of ISOs
2:59:55
All right. Do you have any ISOs
I do I have three. Okay,
2:59:59
I'll play mine first. Babies are
being vaporized. That should
3:00:03
have been the opening of the
last show. I realized. That's
3:00:07
you in case you missed it.
3:00:08
That's a good way to use it the
opening for this show.
3:00:11
Oh, no, no. Yes.
3:00:13
That's the other. We could use
babies are being vaporized for
3:00:18
this show is a good one. I like
it. Let's go
3:00:21
with try these out. Love that.
3:00:25
No, I love that.
3:00:28
Okay, love that. Special.
3:00:33
That's what makes it special.
3:00:36
And words,
3:00:38
it's not just words.
3:00:41
Hmm, tough. I'm not sure I kind
of see No, I love that. Okay. I
3:00:54
had this.
3:00:55
Oh, no, no. Yes. It falls apart
do does.
3:01:00
Mmm hmm.
3:01:04
I think I love that is the one I
like.
3:01:06
I think it's okay. Yeah,
3:01:08
I use that one. Load that sucker
up. I'm also going to boost it a
3:01:12
little bit. Give a little more
dynamics to hit the compressor.
3:01:17
really bring it home. Let people
know the show was really over.
3:01:23
Alright, I have two things I
want to the war on guns is
3:01:28
ratcheting up in the United
States. We had this subway
3:01:32
shooting which was very odd and
obfuscated almost immediately by
3:01:40
another shooting this time in
South Carolina where the meet up
3:01:43
will be. Remember may 16.
Breaking
3:01:45
news here at home the terrifying
shooting at a crowded mall and
3:01:49
Columbia South Carolina Law
Enforcement surrounding the mall
3:01:52
confirming just as we came on
the air, at least 12 people were
3:01:55
heard 10 of them shot.
Authorities do not think the
3:01:59
shooting was random shoppers
told to shelter in place these
3:02:02
people inside the back of a
store authorities then
3:02:05
evacuating everyone leading
people out of the mall and
3:02:08
telling them to wait in their
cars until first responders can
3:02:12
make sure the area was safe.
Three people have now been
3:02:15
detained and what we're learning
about the conditions of some of
3:02:18
the victims.
3:02:19
So this is weird where the FBI
in New York immediately was
3:02:22
saying there's no terrorism no
terrorism. Now for these guys in
3:02:27
South Carolina. They're saying
was there's not random it's not
3:02:31
random. So I'm not quite sure
what not random is supposed to
3:02:34
mean. But it's it seems like
they're ratcheting something up
3:02:39
Chicago, Chicago. This is
another good one.
3:02:41
The events unfolding Tuesday
evening around nine o'clock
3:02:45
sources telling ABC seven that's
where the mayor security detail
3:02:48
was parked right outside the
Shake Shack restaurant at 14
3:02:51
South Michigan. Mayor Lightfoot
had just left the celebration
3:02:54
honoring Harold Washington and
it stopped at a restaurant on
3:02:57
the top floor of the Chicago
Athletic Association right next
3:03:00
door sorts to saying a member of
her security detail than
3:03:04
noticing something alarming
about one of two men standing in
3:03:07
line in the Shake Shack. He
immediately notified dispatch.
3:03:11
A leather coat outline of a
3:03:15
responding police arrested 21
year old trivia on Broadway and
3:03:19
another man who was not charged
both from Milwaukee. According
3:03:22
to court documents police
recovered to Glock semi
3:03:25
automatic handguns like these
from inside the suspects
3:03:28
vehicle. Both weapons had an
extended magazine as a laser
3:03:32
sight attachment. One had a live
round in the chamber, which to
3:03:36
shoot full auto Broadway's also
charged with possessing a
3:03:39
silencer and metal piercing
bullets military grade weaponry
3:03:43
according to one law enforcement
expert
3:03:46
I think that this is what it's
about this report this goes
3:03:50
right to the ghost gun in
politics in the United States.
3:03:52
Nothing is a coincidence as sad
as it sounds you're right. It
3:03:56
wasn't just random the shooting
in South Carolina these things
3:03:59
are meant to be and they're
meant to be to as quickly as
3:04:03
possible. Take away guns have
Americans give up their guns
3:04:08
voluntarily the way Australia
did it. Good luck with that
3:04:12
before the mayhem hits. I think
that they know that Oh man, it's
3:04:16
gonna be really bad. So we want
to we want to get rid of as many
3:04:20
guns as possible. And then what
are they highlighting? extended
3:04:25
magazines? What are they
highlighting? Laser Sight? Oh,
3:04:28
these are all very just military
grade stuff. There's a live
3:04:31
round in the chamber. And then
and so this was a Glock auto
3:04:36
handgun.
3:04:37
Well, you know, when you talk
about a 45 you know any, you
3:04:41
know anything other than a
revolver? They're all called
3:04:44
automatic.
3:04:44
No, you said no, no. But what he
said is with this with a switch
3:04:48
to go for auto bull crap, is it
3:04:53
I think what did it you can say
it's an automatic because that's
3:04:55
what a pistol is called when you
pull the trigger at Rikako.
3:04:59
I'm just Just listen to the
report and let's try
3:05:02
reporting these made it sound as
though you can pull back and
3:05:04
it's like now it's like a mack
tan said full phrase bullets
3:05:07
full auto. Yeah, this Southwick
did no. No, I
3:05:12
agree with you but let me
outline of
3:05:16
responding police arrested 21
year old trivia on Broadway and
3:05:20
another man who was not charged
both from Milwaukee. According
3:05:24
to court documents police
recovered to Glock semi
3:05:26
automatic handguns like these
from inside the suspects
3:05:29
vehicle. Both weapons had an
extended magazine and a laser
3:05:33
sight attachment. One had a live
round in the chamber in a switch
3:05:37
to shoot full auto.
3:05:40
I think that it may have been a
Glock 18 There are fully
3:05:44
automatic but it's not easy to
cover the case.
3:05:47
This is a poor report. He starts
off with the semi automatic
3:05:50
moniker which applies to rifles
and I mean I think it was just a
3:05:55
bad report to get into know what
he's doing.
3:05:58
Yes, he does. What he's doing is
following the messaging
3:06:01
following the narrative you can
read you can read it you're
3:06:05
right and how clueless are these
people? Are these the White
3:06:08
House? They really think that
this is going to work? Oh, you
3:06:11
know, there's so many shootings
now. Now okay.
3:06:15
Oh, they found a gun with a
bullet in the chamber in
3:06:18
Chicago. Oh my god. New in
Chicago no
3:06:24
less.
3:06:25
And why is it going to Shake
Shack in the first place? It's
3:06:27
not a sugar desert New York
chain. They should go to a one
3:06:30
of the million if you listen.
3:06:32
If you listen, she was at a
restaurant on the upper floor in
3:06:36
the building next door. They
were just parked outside the
3:06:39
Shake Shack.
3:06:39
Okay, all right. Yeah, I did
listen, but I like that shake.
3:06:45
skin crawl.
3:06:47
And just all of a sudden
everything else when Black
3:06:49
applied for Shake Shack.
3:06:53
Man you have one clip. And it's
just as well who's what what
3:06:58
name do you associate with Apple
phones? What manufacturer?
3:07:04
With Apple with Apple phones.
What manufacturer do I associate
3:07:08
with Apple phones?
3:07:09
Yeah, the iPhone. Associate
Foxconn perhaps?
3:07:13
Who make them Yeah, I used to I
don't know I don't know if I
3:07:18
still do
3:07:18
okay, well, you're on the right
track because they don't make I
3:07:21
don't know if they make them
anymore. Because there's a new
3:07:23
company but doesn't make any
difference. You're not gonna get
3:07:25
your iPhone anyway. Listen,
listen to this little clip is
3:07:28
the next iPhone primed to take a
bigger chunk out of shoppers
3:07:32
wallets. Most of the devices are
manufactured in China. But as
3:07:36
much of the country remains
weighed down by strict pandemic
3:07:39
policies. The risk of putting
all eggs in one basket might be
3:07:43
growing entities Don moss speaks
with an expert to learn more.
3:07:47
China's lockdowns could now be
affecting iPhone production.
3:07:51
Because more than three quarters
of all iPhones are manufactured
3:07:55
in China. This could be a risk
for Apple if a manufacturing
3:08:00
facility you were to shut down
Pegatron for example, on
3:08:04
Tuesday, the major Apple iPhone
suppliers said it's stopping
3:08:07
operations edits only two
factories in Shanghai and pseudo
3:08:13
Pegatron makes around a fifth to
nearly a third of all iPhones.
3:08:18
Business lecture Jeff hook at
Johns Hopkins University says
3:08:22
this could affect the output of
iPhones
3:08:25
Pegatron is one of their bigger
manufacturers slash suppliers so
3:08:30
that's going to affect the
number of phones that Apple can
3:08:34
produce. It's exactly hard to
say we don't know how long the
3:08:37
shutdown is gonna last. If the
Pegatron
3:08:40
shutdown does affect iPhone
production. The next iPhone
3:08:44
could be more expensive for you
3:08:46
money time there's a shortage of
a product and the demand doesn't
3:08:49
change being the price is gonna
go up unfortunately for
3:08:52
consumers
3:08:53
papel likely won't move its
iPhone manufacturing out of
3:08:57
China says hook
3:08:58
expenses would have to go up 15
or 20% you know if they were to
3:09:03
make the phone and in Americans
that of China
3:09:06
other than Apple already having
the infrastructure in China the
3:09:10
wages there are much lower than
the US Oh,
3:09:14
thanks didn't realize that. Oh,
yeah, well this is going to have
3:09:19
far reaching repercussions. This
is very sad. What will the
3:09:23
people in the panel at twig talk
about
3:09:27
they'll talk about that and
check out the new iPhone and
3:09:31
with a galaxy says
3:09:32
but there's no new phone there's
no phone so that'd be dead air.
3:09:36
No Galaxy Samsung. Oh keep them
busy.
3:09:39
Samsung doesn't manufacture in
China. I don't know where they
3:09:43
make in Korea for all we know.
All right, I have I have a final
3:09:47
short clip 18 seconds important
information. This is what the
3:09:50
show does. We want to warn you
in
3:09:52
thirds about the bird flu have
prompted experts to ask
3:09:54
Americans not to feed birds this
spring. So remove your bird
3:09:58
feeders is what's being
recommended in many areas spread
3:10:01
anywhere the birds are grouped
together. Bird flu cases have
3:10:05
been confirmed in 22 states this
is the worst outbreak in seven
3:10:09
years. Yeah,
3:10:10
no you know what that means?
Bull crap birds starve the birds
3:10:14
Yes, kill the birds kill the
birds kill the chickens kill the
3:10:18
turkeys follow the rules slave
coming up next on no agenda
3:10:25
stream if you happen to be
listening live a another live
3:10:28
show will kick in the lotus
podcast with Phoenix and phone
3:10:31
boy. Everybody is on the action
this podcasting thing love that.
3:10:36
Oh, you know, I forgot to talk
about my cast iron pans. I'm
3:10:40
gonna put it in the newsletter
instead.
3:10:42
There we go. And have show mixes
from Professor J. J. Tom
3:10:47
Starkweather. And delicious. We
appreciate that. And we'd like
3:10:50
everybody to have a very Happy
Easter for those of you in
3:10:54
Europe. Have a happy second day
of Easter tomorrow. I have no
3:10:57
idea what you guys get a bonus.
And please remember us for you
3:11:03
to come back on Thursday, coming
to you from the heart of the
3:11:06
Texas hill country. Here in FEMA
Region number six in the
3:11:09
morning, everybody. I am Adam
curry
3:11:11
and from Northern Silicon
Valley, where we're waiting for
3:11:15
the rain. On Jhansi Devorah.
3:11:18
We returned on Thursday right
here. No agenda, please remember
3:11:21
us at the vorak.org/na. Until
then. Adios mofos and such.
3:11:33
Everybody knows who this guy is.
Come on, man, because it gets
3:11:36
worse and worse for Joe Biden.
3:11:40
And tonight, we're at the bitter
end of yet another terrible week
3:11:43
for Joe Biden.
3:11:44
No one wants to acknowledge him
anymore. Well, now he's finished
3:11:48
a speech and had no one to shake
his head. Look,
3:11:52
he's gonna be 75 years old,
3:11:54
looked lost and confused.
3:11:57
Do you reckon it said on the
auto prompt, turn to your right,
3:12:00
and stick your hand out, and
then turn right again and look
3:12:04
for someone and then just wander
around? Help us
3:12:07
he attempted to shake hands with
someone who wasn't there.
3:12:12
I feel sorry for this bloke with
everybody knows who this guy is.
3:12:15
Come on, man, because he can't
help but it just doesn't
3:12:17
know what he's doing. And it's
actually terrible for this bloke
3:12:23
is the leader of the framework.
Is Joe Biden
3:12:27
claim that he used to be a full
professor. Come
3:12:31
out of fact, four years as a
full professor at the University
3:12:33
of Pennsylvania. Yeah,
3:12:37
yeah, that's just not true.
3:12:39
Lord, hopeless. How do we deal
with stateless actors without
3:12:43
Allah, He attempted to shake
hands with someone who wasn't
3:12:47
there.
3:12:47
To recommend sit on the auto
prompt, turn to your right and
3:12:51
stick your hand out and then
turn right again and look for
3:12:55
someone and then just wander
around
3:12:57
with everybody knows who this
guy is. Come on, man.
3:13:00
Come on. Look lost and confused
what everybody knows
3:13:03
who this guy is. Come on man.
3:13:09
We were able to shrink his world
quickly. There was nowhere left
3:13:13
for him to run.
3:13:14
It was taken into custody in
Manhattan's East Village
3:13:16
neighborhood after reportedly
calling a tip line himself.
3:13:20
He was arrested without
incident. Bystander videos show
3:13:23
police taking him into custody
and it came from a tip
3:13:27
he turned himself in
effectively. He's the one she
3:13:30
said that called police. He's
the one that gave police his
3:13:34
location and ultimately was the
one taken into custody without
3:13:38
any incident had
3:13:39
33 discharged showcasing
3:13:42
fired a Glock 17 nine millimeter
semi automatic handgun at least
3:13:46
33 times they say 33 times
because 33 discharge showcases
3:13:51
were found at the scene.
3:13:52
Accused of firing 33 rounds. We
then
3:13:55
fired that weapon at least 33
times the striking 10 P
3:14:00
for camera in that subway
station was working on like the
3:14:03
36th Street Station in Sunset
Park where the shooting occurred
3:14:07
where the cameras were not
working.
3:14:08
But they see he also left a
trail of evidence
3:14:11
found a credit card right there
on the subway platform along
3:14:14
with a number of other items
that pointed to James's identity
3:14:17
found a set of keys that will
make a to a U haul rental van
3:14:21
under Frank James's name.
3:14:23
There's a lot of technology out
there including one of the
3:14:26
things New York City is looking
at is something that essentially
3:14:30
does what the checkpoints do
when you go through at the
3:14:34
airport but without all of that
basically that can just easily
3:14:39
detect if there's some sort of
weapon Cody witnesses said he
3:14:47
was mumbling to himself I got
some do I gotta go do Boo Boo
3:14:53
Boo. Boo boo boo boo boo.
3:14:59
Yeah, How to be more faithful.
I'm not gonna be a mule I'm I
3:15:03
got some do I gotta go do Bumble
boat
3:15:12
as your foot in the door
3:15:16
Sir the number 303303033 or
30333 Do you got it for those
3:15:39
who the Himalayas, she's Ukraine
traveling with him travels
3:15:44
17,000 miles on his vice
president. I don't know that out
3:15:51
of
1,600,000,000,000 1,000,000,000,400
3:15:56
out of billions 400 million as
you make trillion $400 billion
3:16:03
it's hard to even say that so I
agree that everybody wants they
3:16:09
in fact, my time
3:16:11
Thank you Vice President
borak.org/in A bag