0:00
This is a stunner.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
DeVora.
0:03
It's Sunday, June 29th, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Get My Nation
0:07
Media assassination episode 1777.
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This is no agenda.
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Now with less than one-third adult content
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and broadcasting live from the heart of the
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Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region Number
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6 in the morning, everybody.
0:21
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we all
0:25
wonder whatever happened to Trini Lopez.
0:28
I'm John C.
0:29
DeVora.
0:30
It's a click-bombing buzzkill in the morning.
0:33
First of all, I'm almost positive you have
0:37
used that as an opening on the show
0:39
before.
0:40
I hope not.
0:41
I may have to look it up.
0:45
Second of all, if I had a hammer,
0:48
I'd hammer in the morning.
0:51
Wasn't that Trini Lopez?
0:52
It was one of his songs, yeah.
0:54
It was, of course, I think it was
0:55
a Bob Seger song.
0:57
Not Bob Seger, but Bob Seger.
1:00
Bob Seger.
1:01
No, the other Seger.
1:02
Pete Seger.
1:04
The folklore communist.
1:07
And it just came to mind because I
1:09
was watching the American Masters story about Bob
1:13
Dylan.
1:15
American Masters story?
1:17
Is that different from the movie currently out?
1:20
No, American Masters is a PBS thing.
1:23
It's on every week.
1:25
They had one on Little Richard and Bob
1:27
Dylan.
1:31
Bob Dylan was quite the character.
1:32
Wait, wait, wait.
1:34
Boomer Talk on the 8th.
1:36
That's right, everybody.
1:38
Hey, it was on TV just the other
1:40
day.
1:40
Just the fact that you're watching TV is
1:43
now Boomer Talk.
1:45
I gotta tell you.
1:46
I'm trying not to be irritated by it
1:49
because obviously I don't feel like I'm a
1:50
boomer, but because everyone knows it irritates me,
1:53
it only exacerbates the problem.
1:55
So they just think it's funny and they
1:57
just keep doing it over and over.
1:58
My kid, hey dad, boomer.
2:00
Like, uh.
2:03
I mean, you're used to it because, well,
2:06
golly, you actually are a boomer.
2:08
I'm a real boomer.
2:11
There it is.
2:12
I'm a real boomer.
2:13
Not a bogus cusp boomer.
2:18
Cusp boomer.
2:19
Boomer adjacent, as we say.
2:21
Well, you're technically a boomer.
2:23
Well, if you listen to, if you read
2:27
the, I'm sure you don't get any of
2:29
this because even your ex-handle is, you
2:33
know, it's not just John C.
2:35
Dvorak.
2:36
It's the real Dvorak, whatever it is.
2:39
No one can remember it.
2:41
Your emails.
2:42
It's so difficult.
2:43
Yeah, Dvorak is tough for the non-boomers,
2:46
trust me.
2:49
You know, you don't get the email.
2:51
I mean, I'm literally getting emails.
2:54
Oh, enjoy sucking Trump off.
2:56
I mean, that's literally the stuff I deal
2:58
with every single day.
3:00
Every single day.
3:02
It's unbelievable.
3:04
Well, this is new.
3:06
No, it's not new.
3:08
By the way, it's thanks to you.
3:11
Thanks to you saying, you know, you brought
3:14
up the Jew hate on the last show
3:17
and then everyone blames me.
3:19
It's unbelievable.
3:20
Well, you know.
3:22
Yeah, you know what.
3:24
You know what.
3:26
AdamEdCurry.com is a lot easier to spell.
3:29
Well, of course.
3:30
This is my thesis.
3:31
And this is the kind of dimwits that
3:33
would write in that, you know, I don't
3:35
know how to spell Curry's.
3:37
I think I can spell that because I
3:39
had it for dinner.
3:40
So listen to this.
3:43
Here, I'll just give you a couple of
3:45
examples.
3:47
We're starting to show off with the band.
3:50
I thought I was listening to the Mark
3:52
Levin show there for a minute.
3:55
With the ridiculous Dvorak's, they're all just Jew
3:59
haters line.
4:00
This entire show was like Fox Boomer slop.
4:04
Kind of like that one.
4:07
It was good.
4:07
Why would you straw man concerns of Zionism
4:11
with Jew hatred?
4:12
I'm not sure what that means, actually.
4:14
I don't either.
4:16
They spent the first hour calling anyone who
4:18
doesn't want to send Israel their billions and
4:20
billions per year anti-Semites and clarifying that
4:24
Zionism is impossible.
4:26
And then cried the donations are slowing down
4:29
because the low IQ boomers that eat this
4:31
shit up are dying off.
4:34
Who ever said that he was dying off?
4:37
Nor did we say I think that saying
4:42
Zionism is impossible.
4:43
I don't think we ever said that.
4:45
How's multipolar world order means that China is
4:49
suddenly going to run the world and the
4:51
US has to do things at the best
4:53
of China.
4:54
If the US can't compete without being a
4:57
gangster then the US deserves it.
5:00
That's a good one.
5:03
Adam Curry Why are you acting like the
5:06
government of Israel isn't controlling us?
5:08
Can't there be people within our government slash
5:11
billionaires working for the benefit of Israel sometimes
5:13
their interests overlap with the military industrial complex?
5:17
Seriously.
5:18
They lost me big time on this one.
5:20
I haven't listened a ton but I always
5:22
thought they were coming from a more conspiracy
5:24
minded think outside the box angle.
5:26
Seems like they took a sharp turn towards
5:28
Boomer Con Inc.
5:31
What?
5:32
I know.
5:34
Boomer Con?
5:35
Boomer Con Inc.
5:37
I don't know.
5:38
I don't know.
5:39
Like Neocon Boomer Con I guess.
5:41
Boomer Con, Neocon or maybe like Comic Con.
5:45
Yeah in a way Boomer Con Comic Con.
5:46
Yeah sure.
5:47
So we're having a big meet up.
5:50
Can you imagine the Boomer Con meet up?
5:53
Oh my goodness.
5:53
That'd be great.
5:56
Where's the door?
5:58
And here's my favorite.
6:01
Ridiculous!
6:02
You guys are taking money from Israel it's
6:04
obvious.
6:05
Your analysis is too absurd.
6:07
Where is this money?
6:08
Your analysis is too absurd and biased to
6:10
be believed as sincere.
6:12
Just admit it and interview your daddy BB.
6:18
Wow.
6:20
Somebody actually wrote that.
6:22
You're starting to write your own.
6:24
No I'm not making that up.
6:26
You're sleep writing.
6:27
You can go right on my ex account
6:28
and see it.
6:31
It's all public.
6:33
So the thing that baffles me though.
6:36
The thing that baffles me is that maybe
6:42
people have been listening for a long time.
6:44
But we have always just given our opinion
6:47
no matter how harsh the blowback.
6:52
No matter how harsh.
6:54
And we've taken the blowback time and time
6:58
again.
6:59
And then years later people go you were
7:01
kind of right about that.
7:03
Mostly.
7:04
Was there anything that we really took a
7:06
stand on that we were so incredibly wrong
7:08
on?
7:09
Never.
7:10
Is this the one?
7:12
Finally this is the one.
7:14
No.
7:16
It's the aircraft carrier that's all there is
7:18
to it.
7:19
It's just that simple.
7:20
What did it take a genius to figure
7:21
it out?
7:22
Well this is a very polarizing moment in
7:29
America.
7:32
And I think I was reflecting on this.
7:37
Because you and I are indeed baffled.
7:39
We're baffled by the it's so obvious, history
7:42
shows exactly what we have done to the
7:47
state of Israel.
7:49
This was cooked up in 1974.
7:52
I know it's a long time ago.
7:54
And admittedly even as a young boomer adjacent
7:58
I wasn't quite politically aware at the time.
8:01
But the history books do show that the
8:04
US uses Israel for many things.
8:08
And many many bad things.
8:10
But also Yeah well you have to do,
8:13
sometimes you have to crack an egg to
8:15
make an omelet.
8:16
So there's no doubt about that.
8:19
But what has crept into the narrative and
8:24
this started several years ago with it's not
8:29
new, but it started several years ago with
8:31
No Agenda Social.
8:32
If you recall.
8:34
The whole reason that I said hey we
8:36
got to disassociate from this.
8:37
Well it even began before that with No
8:39
Agenda Forums.
8:40
Yeah but that wasn't about Israel.
8:43
No Agenda Forums.
8:44
Yeah you're right.
8:44
No Agenda Social became a bunch of yeah.
8:48
It was the most blocked instance on the
8:53
Fediverse because people were just going insane with
8:56
their, literally Jew hate memes.
8:59
That's what it was.
9:00
But it always goes from Israel to oh
9:03
there's another meme with a crook nose.
9:05
Okay very funny.
9:07
But the more I look at this, the
9:09
more I think about it, the more I
9:10
see what's happening.
9:11
Which is really, it's really interesting how you
9:15
have I'd say non-political people on the
9:18
right.
9:20
Which is, I think that's pretty much, if
9:21
you look at the old No Agenda, the
9:23
no authority crowd, they're not really political.
9:27
They just think that Israel's running the show
9:29
and of course they are blackmailing everybody in
9:35
Congress and they run our policy and we're
9:38
all doing everything at the behest of Israel.
9:41
Yeah we have to stop right there and
9:43
assume that the reason for this thought is
9:49
an op.
9:49
Thank you and I actually, now I've been
9:52
thinking, it's been on my heart, it really
9:54
has been.
9:54
It's like hey I'm a sensitive guy, these
9:58
things affect me.
10:00
They couldn't imprison President Trump, they couldn't kill
10:03
him.
10:04
I think this is the new attack vector
10:06
to literally rip apart support for President Trump.
10:12
And this issue of Israel is dividing people
10:16
who are not left but they're actually bringing
10:21
them over to the you know, the protesters
10:24
at Columbia's side.
10:26
It's really, really interesting.
10:30
So how do these two opposite sides of
10:32
the spectrum unite?
10:34
Now personally, I'm sensitive to this issue because
10:37
I grew up in the Netherlands.
10:39
I played with kids and their grandmother would
10:42
be there, she had numbers tattooed on her
10:44
arm.
10:45
And so I got a very different education
10:48
in how Jew hate and how that got
10:53
out of control.
10:54
And when you think about it, when you
10:55
think about Kanye West and Nick Fuentes and
11:00
all these people who are blaming every problem
11:02
in America, every problem with our policy is
11:04
Israel.
11:05
It wouldn't take much for a different president
11:09
or leader could even be a Republican to
11:12
say, you know, Israel really is the problem.
11:15
And it wouldn't take much to get people
11:17
riled up because we are in accelerated idiocracy.
11:21
That's my new version of AI.
11:23
It's obvious that we are becoming stupid.
11:26
But I'm pretty sure the people who do
11:28
real psyops is the military industrial complex.
11:32
It's all about them.
11:33
It always has been.
11:35
When did Eisenhower do his speech?
11:38
Was that before I was born?
11:40
Was that 1965?
11:41
What year were you born?
11:43
I forgot.
11:44
Almost 1965.
11:45
Oh, no.
11:47
He was still in office.
11:48
He left office in 60.
11:50
Right.
11:51
One of his last speeches was around 59,
11:54
I believe.
11:55
Right.
11:55
So before I was born, just listen to
11:57
this.
11:57
It's worth replaying this bit because there's some
12:00
things in here that you need to pay
12:02
attention to.
12:03
This is history.
12:05
American makers of plowshares could, with time and
12:09
as required, make swords as well.
12:12
But we can no longer risk emergency improvisation
12:16
of national defense.
12:18
We have been compelled to create a permanent
12:21
armaments industry of vast proportions.
12:24
Added to this, three and a half million
12:27
men and women are directly engaged in the
12:30
defense establishment.
12:32
Three and a half million back before 1960.
12:36
Just imagine how many people now work directly
12:40
or indirectly in the military industrial complex.
12:43
It must be at least tenfold.
12:45
We annually spend on military security alone more
12:50
than the net income of all United States
12:52
corporations.
12:55
Now this conjunction of an immense military establishment
12:58
and a large arms industry is new in
13:02
the American experience.
13:03
It's new!
13:05
The total influence economic, political, even spiritual, is
13:11
felt in every city, every state house, every
13:14
office of the federal government.
13:16
We recognize the imperative need for this development.
13:20
Yet we must not fail to comprehend its
13:23
grave implications.
13:24
Our toil, resources, and livelihood are all involved.
13:30
So is the very structure of our society.
13:33
In the councils of government, we must guard
13:37
against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought
13:41
or unsought, by the military industrial complex.
13:45
Note he's not saying Israel.
13:47
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced
13:50
power exists and will persist.
13:54
We must never let the weight of this
13:56
combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes.
14:00
We should take nothing for granted.
14:03
Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel
14:07
the proper meshing of the huge industrial and
14:10
military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods
14:14
and goals, so that security and liberty may
14:18
prosper together.
14:19
So really, and I got to talk about
14:22
the military industrial complex for a second here,
14:24
and how I believe that it may even
14:26
be the DIA, and it's very easy to
14:29
sigh up on, and they do this all
14:30
the time.
14:31
They're proud of it.
14:32
They're proud of what they do on social
14:33
media.
14:34
They're proud of the people they get on
14:36
big podcast microphones.
14:37
They love it.
14:38
And they do this all the time.
14:41
And if anything, they hide behind Israel with
14:45
AIPAC because the money comes from the military
14:47
industrial complex.
14:49
A reminder, here's Massey, no friend of the
14:55
Israel lobby, no friend even of President Trump,
14:58
spelling it out very clearly where the money
15:00
comes from.
15:01
And the money that goes to Israel does
15:03
not go into Israel's coffers.
15:05
There's no big giant Great Britain lobby.
15:07
There's no Australian lobby.
15:09
There's no German lobby.
15:10
Oh, the other countries don't have them.
15:12
No, no, not like this.
15:13
This is singular.
15:14
This is unique.
15:17
I mean, if you're an ally, why wouldn't
15:18
we work with you?
15:20
Why do you have to convince us that
15:22
you're our ally?
15:23
Why do you have to basically go into
15:25
every congressional office and convince them?
15:28
And it's because they want to keep the
15:29
money flowing.
15:31
And they've got a good return on their
15:34
investment.
15:35
I mean, we send more foreign aid to
15:37
Israel than to any other country.
15:41
Like 10 million people or something.
15:43
Yeah, I think Tennessee.
15:45
I don't know this population in Tennessee, but
15:47
it's probably about, you know, on that order.
15:49
Yeah, I think this year they said we
15:50
spent like 12 billion dollars, but that's not
15:52
actual dollars.
15:53
It's in military aid, right?
15:55
Yeah, it's, well, it's dollars that comes out
15:58
of the treasury.
15:59
Yeah, but it's not like we give them,
16:02
it's a gift certificate that's redeemable at Lockheed
16:05
Martin and your local Raytheon, you know.
16:08
Okay, got it.
16:09
That's the point.
16:10
And the military has always shaped our culture
16:13
in Hollywood.
16:14
They have the biggest budgets for the movies
16:16
you see.
16:18
Top Gun.
16:19
Rocky.
16:20
Remember the shake with wrestling?
16:22
Come on.
16:24
It's not, it's not the Jews making up
16:26
this idea.
16:27
This, the military industrial complex has made.
16:30
The iron shake.
16:31
Thank you, the iron shake.
16:32
I have his autograph on a photo.
16:34
I sit right by this desk.
16:36
I'm sure you do.
16:37
So, what have we heard recently?
16:39
Oh, the grid's going down.
16:41
Chinese military-age men.
16:43
Russia's going to take over all of Europe.
16:44
China is buying up all the land.
16:46
None of it, none of it comes to
16:48
fruition.
16:49
My own military industrial complex handlers tried this
16:53
on me since this Iran thing rose.
16:57
Israel.
16:58
Because I know it.
16:59
I know who they are.
17:00
I know what they're sending me.
17:02
And I just ignore it and they stop
17:05
eventually because like, nah, Curry, he's no good.
17:08
I bet you every single podcast.
17:09
He's no good.
17:10
This guy's no good.
17:11
But we're also...
17:12
Send a new handler at him.
17:14
We're irrelevant.
17:15
We're just two boomers.
17:16
Two boomers yapping on a podcast.
17:19
We have about a million people and they're
17:21
all, what would you call them, fringe?
17:24
Yeah.
17:25
They think for themselves anyway, so with or
17:28
without us they'd probably have their own opinions.
17:31
However, if you and I weren't who we
17:33
were, who we are right now, first of
17:35
all, you'd have a vinegar book and I
17:38
would probably have Ryan Seacrest career, but that's
17:40
not who we are.
17:41
I don't know why, but we're just like,
17:42
no, I'm not interested in going along to
17:46
get along.
17:47
I've never done any of that.
17:49
And I think that many people, podcasters, ironically,
17:56
podcasters, they have audience capture and they see
18:00
these...
18:00
They get these messages.
18:01
Oh, crap.
18:02
Well, let me look into this.
18:03
Well, yeah, what are we sending to Israel?
18:06
And they don't have the age and the
18:10
knowledge of history or maybe even have cracked
18:13
a book from time to time or gone
18:15
back and looked at something.
18:17
Where did this really come from?
18:21
And this op, I think, is meant to
18:23
undermine Trump and Trump is making a big
18:26
mistake.
18:26
He should be honest with the American people
18:29
and tell everybody really what's going on because
18:32
now we have...
18:34
Gone.
18:35
Gone is the talk of immigration, inflation, even
18:40
Russia, Ukraine is on the back burner, tariffs.
18:43
None of this is important.
18:45
And I think this op is broad.
18:49
It's been thought about.
18:51
Someone smart is doing this.
18:53
Fox News, it all clicked into place for
18:56
me all of a sudden.
18:57
Of course, Fox is run by the Democrats.
19:00
Democrats run Fox News.
19:02
So what do they do?
19:03
They put that moron Levin on primetime, hype
19:07
him up.
19:08
He's got all the promos and all he's
19:10
talking about is, well, Israel, Israel, that pisses
19:13
everybody off.
19:14
It's a divisionary tactic.
19:17
The same for the five.
19:18
I don't watch Greg Gutfeld.
19:23
I'm sure he just does dumb jokes at
19:24
night.
19:25
And when did this really start?
19:28
This started with Elon.
19:30
And I think Elon is just weak.
19:32
Whatever they did, Elon, look at this.
19:35
See what we're doing.
19:36
We're getting everyone to burn your cars.
19:37
How much more can you stand, Elon?
19:39
You better denounce Trump.
19:41
One of the Doge guys, he's now moving
19:43
over to Colorado, came to visit me before
19:46
they left.
19:49
And I said, well, this is about China.
19:52
And he said, no, no, AIPAC, AIPAC, it's
19:55
Israel.
19:55
They run the whole government.
19:56
They got the goods in everybody, which to
19:58
me means that's what Doge was thinking.
20:01
That's what Elon was thinking.
20:04
So all of this is working very, very
20:07
well because you've got Marjorie Taylor Green going
20:10
on Tucker saying, oh, I'm sick and tired
20:13
of Israel.
20:14
And Trump is, you know, what happened to
20:15
him?
20:16
And it's all over.
20:18
It is, it is, he, President Trump needs
20:21
to come out and just say it.
20:23
This was about China.
20:25
And thank you to the Israelis.
20:28
Not Israel, not Bibi Netanyahu.
20:30
Thank you to the Mossad.
20:31
You should say it.
20:32
Thank you to the Mossad because they helped
20:34
us send the message loud and clear.
20:37
And luckily I can find some compatriots in
20:39
this.
20:40
Mike Baker has a podcast and he had
20:43
Steven Yates on.
20:45
I have a Mike Baker podcast clip today.
20:48
Oh, wow.
20:48
Okay.
20:49
Well, I'll play mine.
20:51
Well, mine is about, is a look when
20:55
you're done with this little thing you're doing.
20:58
Yes.
20:58
Your little thing.
20:59
My little thing I'm doing here.
21:03
I'm going to talk about the spooks on
21:07
the podcast and the deconstruction of that phony
21:12
baloney DIA memo.
21:15
Oh, excellent.
21:16
Which to me was also complete DIA propaganda.
21:20
Hey, we need to have more bombs.
21:22
You got to have more stuff.
21:23
Got to be worried.
21:24
Oh, sleeper cells, sleeper cells everywhere.
21:27
Bull, bull crap.
21:29
And by the way, Iranians really warm up
21:31
to American culture.
21:33
Very much so.
21:35
Anybody say, I'm reminded of an old Saturday
21:37
Night Bit where these sleeper cells, this is
21:40
from years ago, during, I forgot what period
21:43
of terrorism it was.
21:46
But the Saturday Night Bit was these sleeper
21:50
cells were sitting, they were in Armonk, New
21:53
York, or someplace.
21:55
Armonk.
21:56
It is in a suburb and they got
21:59
a call.
22:01
Okay, it's time to take action.
22:03
So I got my wife and kids, I
22:04
got to go to a Little League game
22:05
this afternoon.
22:06
What are you doing here with me?
22:08
Oh, dude, remember when, was it just before
22:11
Christmas?
22:12
They were worried about a dirty bomb exploding
22:15
and the guy was filming me for some
22:17
Bitcoin documentary and he was calling up his
22:20
kids and like, oh, I got to get
22:22
him out of New York.
22:23
I got to get him into the center
22:24
of the country because of the dirty bomb.
22:26
I don't remember what hoax that was.
22:29
And by the way, when you go after
22:31
the Jews and Israel slash the Jews, you
22:35
automatically go after the Christians.
22:39
You see, because that's exactly what happened between
22:42
Tucker and Ted Cruz, who was ill-prepared.
22:47
No kidding.
22:48
And the American church is weak.
22:51
It's weak.
22:51
They won't stand up and say, no, that's
22:53
bull crap.
22:54
It's weak.
22:57
I would agree with that.
22:58
Yes, it's very weak.
22:59
There's people trying to...
23:00
In fact, this recent Supreme Court justice showed
23:04
how weak the American church is.
23:06
It was a Muslim that pulled the plug
23:10
on all the porn in grammar school.
23:12
I know.
23:14
It was the Muslims that had the nerve
23:15
to do it.
23:16
The Christians didn't do anything about it.
23:19
They're very confused and they've been beaten down
23:22
by, you know, stuff like the separation clause,
23:26
non-existent separation clause.
23:28
So there's all kinds...
23:29
We have a spiritual problem in America.
23:31
There's not a political problem.
23:33
So now I want to play, thank God,
23:35
we have Mike Baker and Stephen Yates to
23:38
talk some sense into everybody about what really
23:40
took place, which was China got a wake
23:43
-up call from President Trump.
23:44
In the immediate aftermath, we've heard very little
23:47
from China.
23:49
What do you make of the Chinese reaction
23:52
and mindset towards what's happened regarding Iran?
23:56
Well, my first assumption is that they, like
23:58
most of the world, including a lot of
24:00
Americans, did not realize this was actually going
24:04
to happen.
24:05
And I think that they were probably thrown
24:08
a bit when they saw the B-2s
24:10
going to Guam.
24:11
That is getting close to the area they
24:14
like to operate in.
24:16
And then all of a sudden, before they
24:18
really get any other news, some things go
24:20
boom, boom in Iran from another area.
24:23
So a little bit of a head fake
24:25
probably made them spin a bit.
24:27
But they also were a little high on
24:29
their own supply in giving Pakistan some weapons,
24:33
and they thought that the recent skirmish between
24:35
India and Pakistan saw Pakistan maybe besting some
24:39
technology the Indians had.
24:42
And all of a sudden, the world sees
24:44
that American stealth technology actually works, that we
24:47
can actually have an operation without leaks.
24:50
And I think that probably put a pin
24:53
in one of the balloons of China's on
24:57
the rise, inevitably, the next boss on the
24:59
block, America's on the decline, and you better
25:02
make a deal with the new boss.
25:04
So I bet they had a big, deep
25:07
breath to contemplate what just happened.
25:09
And I mentioned, I think, four or five
25:11
shows ago, be on the lookout for the
25:13
term multi-polar world, because that's what this
25:16
is about.
25:17
And I will, I remain as an American,
25:19
I'm glad because I don't want the Chinese
25:22
running the show.
25:23
Call me a douchebag, call me an imperialist,
25:25
whatever.
25:26
Best price is not my culture.
25:28
So what is the relationship between Iran and
25:30
China?
25:31
Talk to me if you could about the
25:33
extent, the nature of the relationship between Iran
25:36
and China, and then also in context with
25:40
China's response in the aftermath of the attacks.
25:44
Are you surprised at their reaction, which, I
25:48
mean, to me or to anybody who's not
25:50
an expert on China, we look at it
25:51
and go, that's pretty hands-off from their
25:53
perspective.
25:54
Well, yeah, because they have been giving a
25:57
political narrative out to the world that together
25:59
with Moscow and Tehran and maybe Pyongyang and
26:02
a few others, they were trying to create
26:04
this alternative universe that was going to be
26:07
multi-polar and balance against the bad Americans
26:10
and they were going to have their own
26:14
currency be a reserve currency, all this pie
26:17
-in-the-sky stuff about what they were
26:18
going to do in the world.
26:20
And so if you believe that narrative, and
26:22
there's some truth to their trying to at
26:25
least stoke those ideas, then this does look
26:29
like conspicuous pulling back from someone who's supposed
26:32
to be an ally getting walloped and you're
26:34
like, whoa, you're on your own, I don't
26:37
really know who you are.
26:39
But Iran's response by threatening to shut off
26:42
the Straits of Hormuz, that was definite no
26:45
-go zone for China because they are still
26:47
very dependent on a lot of energy from
26:50
the Gulf, not just buying a lot of
26:52
Iranian oil, which they have done, but from
26:55
other sources too.
26:56
And so my guess is they were conveying
26:59
that privately to Tehran and I think that
27:03
they did have a national interest in there
27:05
not being a wider conflict because it would
27:07
have a material impact on their economic forecast.
27:11
They can't be the manufacturing supply platform for
27:14
the world without that dose of natural gas
27:18
and oil from the Gulf.
27:19
And so when President Trump comes out and
27:22
says, hey, thanks to the IDF and the
27:25
Mossad and Bibi and whatever, yeah, he's right.
27:29
It's always seemed that the Chinese regime has
27:32
been giddy anytime the U.S. gets mired
27:35
in some sort of overseas conflict.
27:38
Again, if you go with the theory that
27:41
the regime, the Chinese regime, always acts in
27:43
its own best interests, they looked at it
27:45
and said, well, it's not in our best
27:46
interests if this thing escalates.
27:49
Well, and I think they'll still play some
27:51
politics, but basically they are a chaser, not
27:55
a maker in this.
27:58
So they see a situation...
28:00
What do you mean by that?
28:01
So they're not driving events, they're chasing events.
28:05
And so when this breaks out, number one,
28:08
Israel proves capable to do nearly miraculous things
28:12
to the Iranians.
28:14
That has to freak the Chinese out because
28:16
Israel is not a major power.
28:19
Israel's not one of these poles in this
28:22
balancing act that they thought they were going
28:24
to try to come out on top with
28:27
this multipolar world.
28:30
And, you know, of course, Israel has advanced
28:32
technology, they have been fighting, they know how
28:34
to fight.
28:35
They also know how to do real intelligence,
28:38
I think stunningly effective intelligence in the way
28:42
these things played out.
28:43
And all of that, I think, has to
28:46
freak China out because if you look at
28:48
what the Ukrainians were able to do with
28:50
drones deep into Russia, and then you look
28:52
at what the Israelis were able to do
28:53
deep into Iran, not just with drones, but
28:57
human intelligence, placing people in vital positions.
29:01
They had basically Tehran's complete playbook, and they
29:05
were striking with unbelievable precision where there's just
29:09
a burnt black hole in one flat, in
29:12
one building, killing one top military advisor.
29:16
That's the kind of stuff that creeps the
29:19
Chinese out that someone could do to them
29:21
at some point.
29:22
Exactly.
29:23
And I wish President Trump would just do
29:25
a Ross Perot, come out, draw with your
29:27
sharpie, say, look, people, here's what the world
29:32
is like right now.
29:33
Here are the options.
29:35
This is what we're doing.
29:37
Instead, and yes, you either have the military
29:41
force, or you don't.
29:43
And all that...
29:44
Your reference to Ross Perot is lost on
29:46
half the audience, but you're absolutely correct about
29:48
how you should explain it.
29:50
Explain what Ross Perot used to do.
29:55
I'm still amazed that no one else has
29:58
ever done this.
29:59
Yeah, he used to buy half an hour
30:01
of airtime on the networks when he was
30:04
running as an independent, and he'd come out,
30:07
and he'd say, all right, people, here's the
30:10
money, here's what we got, here's what we
30:11
owe, and he'd do it like a budget
30:13
at home.
30:14
But he'd also have these little drawings, and
30:18
he'd draw these little very good drawings that
30:21
were obviously, you know, somebody else did, and
30:23
he just reproduced them.
30:25
He could have become President of the United
30:28
States as a President, except until somebody showed
30:32
him a picture.
30:34
Yeah, well, they threatened his family, I think,
30:37
is what they did.
30:38
When they kill your family, you don't get
30:40
out of the way, because he was really
30:42
disrupting that election.
30:46
It was.
30:47
I think, and by the way, I don't
30:49
think President Trump is capable of doing something
30:52
like that.
30:53
He can't talk, which is a problem, and
30:56
I don't know where J.D. Vance is,
30:58
but J.D. Vance used to be the
30:59
Trump whisperer and could explain it and translate,
31:02
at least during the campaign.
31:05
What you get is you get conversations with
31:09
Marjorie Taylor Greene and Tucker that go like
31:13
this.
31:13
Since I've become a member of Congress since
31:16
2021, we have voted on 22 resolutions for
31:21
Israel, 22 of them.
31:23
All kinds of resolutions, denouncing anti-Semitism, supporting
31:28
Israel.
31:28
We voted on 22 of those.
31:31
We never vote on resolutions proclaiming great things
31:34
about America.
31:36
By the way, a resolution is meaningless.
31:39
We do resolutions about a hundred things that
31:42
are stupid.
31:43
It's a resolution.
31:45
Yeah, we all agree on this.
31:46
Yeah, we agree.
31:47
Okay, we agree on it.
31:48
It's just military-industrial complex nonsense and cover
31:51
-up.
31:52
When will people see this?
31:54
Never.
31:56
I have hopes for America.
31:59
Americans in general.
32:01
We have voted on 22 resolutions in the
32:04
House defending Israel.
32:06
How many of you voted yes on?
32:08
I don't know my exact record.
32:11
The last one, I voted no on.
32:15
The one before that, I voted present because
32:17
I just started getting sick of it.
32:18
That's kind of it.
32:20
I've always noticed this, certainly in the last...
32:23
I don't know how many years.
32:24
It's been a while where Republicans in the
32:27
Congress are always talking about Israel.
32:29
I'm not against Israel.
32:30
I've always liked Israel.
32:31
I haven't really noticed it.
32:33
Okay, fine.
32:33
Love Israel.
32:35
Love any country.
32:36
Whatever.
32:37
It feels like something has changed.
32:41
Clearly, it has for you.
32:42
What is that thing?
32:45
Here's the situation.
32:46
It's coming to a point where it's so
32:49
obvious all the time in everyone's language, the
32:52
social media posts they put out, the statements
32:54
that they make.
32:55
They have to proclaim Israel.
32:57
They have to proclaim their faith and loyalty
33:00
in Israel.
33:02
Israel is our greatest ally.
33:04
It's a statement that has to be made
33:05
over and over and over again to the
33:07
point it's becoming like, wait a minute.
33:10
What about our own country?
33:11
What about our own people?
33:13
That is the talking point.
33:14
She is doing exactly what they want her
33:17
to do.
33:19
It's spot on.
33:20
Well, who's they?
33:20
The military, the defense base.
33:24
The defense industrial base.
33:27
What are they getting out of that?
33:29
I agree with you, by the way.
33:31
I think this whole thing is like a
33:33
giant, very well-structured op.
33:36
I think there was an element of keeping
33:38
the Jews in their place.
33:40
Of course.
33:40
They're abusing the Jews themselves.
33:43
You guys just shut up for a minute.
33:45
You're a bunch of intellectual bookish types.
33:48
Shut up, y'all.
33:49
Shut up.
33:49
They were using you.
33:52
You shut up.
33:53
We're going to do this and that.
33:54
You're going to hate on Israel for a
33:55
while because it draws attention.
33:59
For my taste, it's a little too complicated.
34:03
I think you might feel the same way
34:04
by asking Trump to explain it when he's
34:06
never going to explain it.
34:08
It's not his thing.
34:09
The thing is, when she says, well, hold
34:11
on.
34:11
What about us?
34:12
Again, immigration.
34:14
The president won the election on immigration.
34:17
Inflation.
34:19
Down.
34:20
What do eggs cost?
34:23
Tariffs.
34:24
He is doing everything he said for America,
34:28
including scurrying off the Chinese out of the
34:32
Middle East.
34:33
And Africa.
34:35
And Africa.
34:36
The Africa thing is the most interesting part
34:38
of this.
34:39
I have that clip here.
34:44
Sorry?
34:45
I was going to say, by the way,
34:46
we don't have any clips on this, but
34:48
all hell is breaking loose in Kenya.
34:51
The Gen Z kids in Kenya, of all
34:55
places, Kenya, it just is out of control.
34:59
Pride stuff?
35:00
Is it pride stuff?
35:01
No, no, it's not pride stuff.
35:03
It's about taxes.
35:04
Gen Z.
35:06
It's wild.
35:07
So this is Manga, Africa News.
35:11
But they actually, exactly, and we talked about
35:14
this before anyone was talking about this truce.
35:16
The agreement signed Friday between Congo and Rwanda
35:19
has been touted by many as a major
35:21
step towards ending years of war in Congo's
35:24
east, but this analyst says mineral wealth is
35:27
just one of the many drivers of conflict
35:29
in the region and not the only one.
35:31
I find also western parties like the U
35:35
.S. have owned mines before in the eastern
35:38
DRC.
35:39
Of course, during the Obama administration they sold
35:42
some of these mines to China.
35:45
What?
35:45
What?
35:46
What?
35:46
Obama sold some of those mines to China?
35:49
In the eastern DRC, of course, during the
35:51
Obama administration they sold some of these mines
35:54
to China, which owns a lot of mines
35:59
in the eastern DRC.
36:01
And parties to the conflict to this day
36:03
are still very focused on their interest in
36:06
these mineral resources.
36:08
While the agreement principally concerns the states of
36:11
Congo and Rwanda, there are dozens of armed
36:13
groups and proxy forces in the picture, which
36:16
could complicate any chances of a lasting peaceful
36:19
solution.
36:20
There's a disconnect between the high-level peace
36:23
building, the ones we see on TV, the
36:26
Qatar process, the EU-led Rwanda-Angola process.
36:32
These peace processes have not led to any
36:35
tangible agreement for over 30 years that this
36:38
conflict has gone on and we are seeing
36:40
that there's a gap that these two high
36:44
-level peace building and the grassroots peace building
36:47
are not connecting.
36:48
One of those groups is Rwanda-backed M23,
36:51
with which Congo is holding separate talks, mediated
36:54
by Qatar.
36:55
So, it's not over.
36:57
I mean, yeah, we've got the high-level
36:58
peace and we're going to send military down
37:00
there to keep the peace.
37:03
You know, the thing that we do that
37:04
the Chinese don't do down there, the Chinese
37:06
have used all kinds of techniques, mostly in
37:09
the form of bribery, by, we're going to
37:10
build roads, we're going to build a dam,
37:12
we're going to do this, we're going to
37:13
do that.
37:13
They put a bunch of Chinese laborers in
37:15
there, of course, and so they can actually
37:18
get the job done.
37:19
But we've been in Africa, AFRICOM, and bombing,
37:26
more bombing going on down there over the
37:28
years, the last few decades we've been bombing
37:31
and we've got people there, it's just never
37:34
reported, nobody discusses it.
37:36
Well, back to my original premise.
37:39
Donald Trump don't trust China!
37:40
China is asshole!
37:42
That is what is going on here.
37:44
And I'm just sad, I really am, that
37:47
our own people, that they cannot get past
37:51
the Israel thing, and they just, they are
37:54
so convinced, because the op has been going
37:57
on for years, it is, maybe he never
38:00
even stopped after World War II as far
38:03
as I'm concerned.
38:04
But it has always been about military.
38:08
Yeah, there's a lot of people who love
38:10
killing people, a lot of people in our
38:13
elite circles, a lot, there's definitely people in
38:15
Congress who like killing people, they're sick.
38:18
But I truly think President Trump knows what
38:21
he's doing in this particular case.
38:24
He also listens poorly, you know, I would
38:28
feel a lot better if he said, you
38:29
know, that vaccine sucked!
38:33
You know?
38:33
But instead his ego gets in the way
38:36
and he goes Operation Warp Speed, I saved
38:38
millions of lives, bleh.
38:39
He hasn't brought Warp Speed up for a
38:41
long time.
38:42
Well, yeah.
38:44
But he, mea culpa, from time to time
38:46
he knows what happens when you start talking
38:49
about vaccines.
38:51
Kennedy's his front man for this, Kennedy's doing
38:53
what he can and every time he turns
38:55
around he's slammed by people in Congress and
38:59
everybody else for gonna kill us all if
39:02
we don't have more vaccines.
39:03
Yeah, I got some stuff on that later.
39:05
But also the Panama Canal, you know, it's
39:10
like that was for our benefit.
39:13
Everyone gets their nose out of joint, pun
39:16
intended.
39:17
You know, what's he doing now?
39:19
He's doing it for America.
39:21
And I think indirectly for the world, you
39:24
know what?
39:24
The EU, they're gonna jump right into bed
39:26
with bricks.
39:27
They are weak.
39:29
Queen Ursula is already talking about a new
39:31
WTO, you know, we gotta avoid the mistakes
39:35
of the past, blah, blah, blah, blah.
39:38
They're going to be completely owned and run
39:40
by Chinese culture.
39:43
Culture of surveillance.
39:45
You know, I think we're still kind of
39:47
fighting it here, kind of.
39:50
Maybe lost.
39:51
Well, I don't take such a dim view
39:52
of that.
39:54
Of the EU?
39:54
The latest BRICS conference, Putin and Xi, neither
39:58
one of them showed up.
39:59
Well, of course not.
39:59
Left the rest of them hanging.
40:00
When was the conference?
40:02
It was just like a couple days ago.
40:03
Yeah, gee, is that a coincidence?
40:06
Well, it's not coincidence at all, but the
40:07
point is that we put a little pressure
40:09
on the situation by being ourselves, and the
40:13
next thing you know, these guys are bailing
40:15
out of their own operation.
40:16
Right.
40:17
So I don't see the Europeans are, yeah,
40:21
I agree they're weak, but they're not going
40:23
with this crap.
40:24
I hope not.
40:27
But they're pretty far down the road as
40:29
far as I'm concerned.
40:31
Well, they are with the surveillance state.
40:33
That's gotta stop.
40:35
It's too far.
40:37
I mean, the Brits are completely out of
40:39
control.
40:40
Yeah, so and it's all funny and we
40:43
can all do memes, but people in the
40:46
UK are they're beside themselves.
40:50
What has happened?
40:51
What has happened to our country?
40:54
Well, Ireland's another example.
40:57
And it all just kind of gets swept
40:59
under the rug, and so this president has
41:02
done amazing things.
41:04
Please, try and not get so hung up
41:07
on this Israel meme.
41:09
Yeah, Israel sucks.
41:12
What they're doing in Palestine to the Palestinians.
41:15
There's no country Palestine.
41:17
I even fall for it myself.
41:19
But why won't any other country in the
41:21
Middle East take the Palestinians?
41:26
So it's, use your use your noggin from
41:30
time to time.
41:31
You can yell at me all you want.
41:34
And I advise it.
41:39
And by the way, I'd say to the
41:41
American church, you've got to get out there.
41:43
You've got to calm people down.
41:46
You've got to bring people to Jesus.
41:48
Otherwise, we're lost.
41:50
Nothing else can save us.
41:51
All right, go into your DIA stuff.
41:54
I think you're taking a dim view.
41:58
So the DIA leak was interesting because it
42:01
brought me to these guys that do, that
42:04
are ex-spooks, including Mike Baker, who are
42:08
doing these analysis, they're doing these analysis podcasts,
42:11
which I think are, generally speaking, not as
42:14
good as they could be.
42:16
But I did discover the Right report.
42:18
And I think this guy, who's very happy
42:21
with his voice, he really thinks he should
42:23
be a broadcaster.
42:24
Oh, does he puke a lot?
42:26
Well, that's pretty close to it.
42:29
And Baker and him kind of have competing
42:31
podcasts.
42:32
And Baker actually has the President's Daily Briefing.
42:35
The other guy started his podcast and called
42:38
it the President's Daily Briefing and quickly changed
42:41
it to the Right report because of these
42:43
things do happen.
42:44
No way, but the clip I got from
42:46
him was from the Presidential Daily Briefing.
42:50
Yes, because Baker has that.
42:52
It's the other guy who had the President's
42:54
Daily Briefing after Baker already established it.
42:57
But he didn't know about Baker's or something.
43:00
I don't know how that happened.
43:01
Podcast wars!
43:02
Podcast wars!
43:03
Yeah, little podcast wars going on.
43:05
So he changed it from the President's Daily
43:07
Briefing to the Right report.
43:09
But they both discussed, and I thought it
43:12
was interesting because I think Right is a
43:15
little spookier than Baker.
43:18
Baker's more of a...
43:20
I mean, Baker's he comes on Gutfeld quite
43:23
a bit and he plays the CIA spook
43:25
on the show.
43:26
And they defer to him a lot for
43:28
that.
43:28
He doesn't really bring much spy craft to
43:33
the show.
43:34
And he doesn't do it even to his
43:36
own show.
43:36
He does some good interviews like the one
43:38
you played.
43:39
But he doesn't give us any inside or
43:41
any feelings.
43:42
You don't get the impression that he's currently
43:45
really that...
43:46
He's not ready.
43:47
Yeah, you get this sense that he's just
43:49
doing the news.
43:51
And so his Daily Briefing is not I
43:53
don't think is that valuable of a piece
43:56
of podcasting.
43:57
But let's listen to what Mike Baker talks
44:00
about when he talks about it.
44:02
I've got a little clip here on it.
44:03
His...
44:04
He went on for 15 minutes about the
44:07
DIA leak, but it was mostly, and this
44:10
we're talking about the leaked memo, which they're
44:13
trying to track down who leaked it.
44:16
I think it's a congressman.
44:20
They...
44:20
And Jesse Waters says he thinks he knows
44:22
who it is exactly.
44:24
Someone in the Intelligence Committee.
44:27
And Baker goes on forever about it.
44:30
And he never...
44:31
This is pretty much what he says over
44:33
and over again.
44:34
This is his take on it.
44:36
This is DIA leak by Mike Baker?
44:39
Yes.
44:39
Okay.
44:40
The assessment was labeled quote low confidence.
44:43
And in intelligence speak, that's an important descriptor.
44:48
A low confidence assessment means analysts don't have
44:51
enough verified high quality information to reach a
44:54
solid conclusion.
44:55
He's trying to do Casey Kasem?
44:58
He sounds almost like AI.
45:01
Yes, he does sound like AI, but this
45:04
is his...
45:05
That's his read.
45:07
He...
45:09
I can't explain what he's trying to do,
45:12
but he's trying to sound like a professional.
45:14
But now we have a long distance dedication.
45:17
The problem I have with the modern some
45:20
of these guys, they're using techniques, radio announcer
45:24
techniques from the 50s.
45:26
Yes.
45:27
And they're trying to sound like an old
45:29
radio announcer.
45:30
And it just doesn't work anymore.
45:31
The natural voice is like the ones I
45:35
employ where I stutter and stammer and I
45:37
can't pronounce things correctly and I can't type
45:40
right.
45:41
It's an amateur hour sound that really has
45:45
the current modern appeal.
45:46
And now we go to Mike Baker talking
45:49
about the DIA leak on the right report.
45:53
No, he's not on the right report.
45:55
Whatever.
45:58
Analysts don't have enough verified high quality information
46:02
to reach a solid conclusion.
46:04
It's essentially educated guesswork.
46:06
The evidence may be thin, contradictory or based
46:09
on sources that aren't fully vetted.
46:12
It doesn't mean that the report is necessarily
46:13
wrong, but it does mean that it's speculative.
46:17
Analysts are essentially saying, look, this is one
46:19
possible interpretation but we're not betting all the
46:22
marbles on it.
46:24
So when a report like that gets leaked
46:25
while still being categorized as low confidence, well,
46:29
it's a major red flag.
46:30
It's not supposed to be treated as fact.
46:32
It's supposed to be kept in-house while
46:35
the full picture develops.
46:37
Second point, the timing and framing of this
46:39
leak raises serious questions about motive.
46:42
This wasn't a full review.
46:43
It was a preliminary snapshot, likely updated daily
46:46
as new intelligence comes in.
46:48
Yet someone chose to leak it just days
46:50
after the strikes, and they did so in
46:53
a way that cast doubt on the mission's
46:55
success.
46:56
That suggests someone wanted to get ahead of
46:58
the official narrative, maybe to discredit the administration,
47:02
maybe to apply political pressure, or maybe, for
47:05
whatever reason, to create confusion.
47:07
And for whatever that reason may be, selectively
47:10
leaking a speculative early stage report is a
47:14
classic move in the world of information warfare.
47:16
The ultimate truth on this matter is that
47:18
we won't know the full extent of the
47:20
damage or the status of Iran's nuclear program
47:23
for weeks, maybe even months, until inspectors can
47:26
get back on the ground.
47:27
And frankly, that's always provided a limited view
47:30
anyway.
47:31
And until more intelligence is gathered from credible
47:33
human sources with access, well, everything else is
47:36
just guesswork.
47:37
So here's what bugs me about this.
47:40
Besides the fact that he's reading it?
47:42
Yeah.
47:42
It doesn't matter.
47:45
The mission was send a message to China.
47:48
Don't go there.
47:50
This is not what we're talking about.
47:51
I understand.
47:53
Yeah, but you can...
47:53
No, you can bring that up after I
47:54
bring up the other stuff.
47:55
And the second thing, I think it was
47:58
a big mistake to have Hegseth, who's lost
48:02
his marbles...
48:04
Hegseth is really...
48:06
This is the most disappointing guy because he's
48:08
a professional broadcaster.
48:10
Why don't you bring out some dude with
48:13
a lot of fruit salad, you know, he's
48:16
like, well, you know, we are a...
48:20
When Cain came out...
48:22
Yeah, but they pushed him aside.
48:24
Hegseth mugged the stage.
48:27
Hegseth is the problem.
48:28
He's the lightning rod.
48:30
No, they should have brought Carrillo out.
48:32
Anybody but Hegseth.
48:34
It was a mistake.
48:36
That's a nice aside.
48:38
But let's go back to the point here.
48:40
Alright.
48:41
We got these two spooks doing podcasts.
48:45
Hey, what about us?
48:48
Aren't we two spooks doing a podcast?
48:50
We're not spooks.
48:51
That's the problem.
48:52
That's the problem.
48:53
We're just independents.
48:55
It's not a problem, believe me.
48:59
So we have...
48:59
Wright has...
49:02
He's better.
49:03
And I think he's read in and I
49:06
think he's actually still on the payroll because
49:09
in the second clip, I got two clips
49:11
from him discussing this DIA thing.
49:14
On the second clip, you tell me he's
49:16
not working for somebody when he comes up
49:18
with what he says.
49:19
But let's listen to his intro.
49:20
Now, you're going to...
49:21
If you didn't like Mike Baker's presentation, you're
49:24
going to hate this guy because he's over
49:26
the top with his phony baloney announcer voice
49:29
and his ridiculous modulation over the...
49:34
You know, just crazy modulation.
49:37
But his analysis of the DIA leak is
49:41
far superior.
49:42
Axios News and the Washington Free Beacon report
49:45
that the intel assessment from the Defense Intelligence
49:47
Agency that, of course, suggested that the strikes
49:50
on Iran fell short.
49:52
Well, that assessment was actually based on bad
49:54
intel and bad judgment.
49:56
Here's what we know.
49:57
Apparently, DIA analysts...
49:59
Here's what we know.
50:00
Let's go to the video tape.
50:01
...used some early satellite images for part of
50:04
their assessment, but mostly something called signals intelligence
50:07
or SIGINT.
50:09
In this case, they used captured phone calls
50:11
from Iranian nuclear and military personnel who were
50:14
calling back into headquarters elements to provide situation
50:17
reports or SITREPS.
50:18
Well, that was a problem for a couple
50:20
reasons.
50:20
First, these Iranians knew or suspected that their
50:24
phones were being tapped, so they were feeding
50:27
false information into their phone calls, hoping that
50:30
the West would pick it up and think
50:31
it was real.
50:32
And allegedly, that is what happened.
50:34
Second, other personnel in Iran were relaying good
50:38
news only back to their regime headquarters because
50:40
they didn't want to be candid about how
50:42
bad things were really out there in the
50:44
field back to their senior leaders.
50:46
And that is the other stream of intel
50:48
used by the DIA analysts, just inaccurate.
50:51
So when the subsequent DIA report was leaked,
50:55
Israeli officials were working on their own assessment
50:57
and they saw it and they were totally
50:59
befuddled.
51:00
Their sources on the ground in Iran knew
51:03
that Operation Midnight Hammer was a great success.
51:06
Plus, the folks at Mossad knew that some
51:08
Iranian military personnel were trying to feed disinformation
51:11
using their phones.
51:12
In fact, they had been for some time.
51:15
So Mossad was very careful about not consuming
51:17
the bad intel or mixing it in with
51:19
the good.
51:20
Oh brother, spy versus spy story here.
51:24
Yeah, but this makes me think this guy's
51:26
a little more in tune than Baker, who
51:29
I think is just a newsreader.
51:31
So now to convince you, or at least
51:34
to convince me that this guy is definitely
51:37
CIA is what he comes up with his
51:41
solution to the problem of correcting this disastrous
51:48
report in part two.
51:51
Unfortunately, the analysts at the Defense Intel Agency
51:54
were not so careful nor professional.
51:57
They wrote it up all as true, slapped
51:59
on a low confidence assessment, and off it
52:01
went, uncoordinated with other U.S. intel partners
52:04
who might have been a little bit more
52:06
professional, and that's when it leaked.
52:08
While the Israelis continue to believe that last
52:10
weekend's strikes have profoundly degraded Iran's nuclear program,
52:14
they're still collecting intel and have yet to
52:17
create their own battle damage assessment, like the
52:19
DIA's that was leaked, and that is because
52:22
as one Israeli official explained to Axios News,
52:25
quote, a professional battle damage assessment takes time,
52:29
end quote.
52:29
Well, that is true and that is apparently
52:31
something lost on the Iran analysts at the
52:33
DIA.
52:35
Pivoting to quick analysis and opinion, here is
52:37
what I would advise President Trump to do.
52:39
First, the head of the DIA, he's got
52:42
to go, he's got to be fired.
52:43
It's a Lieutenant General Jeffrey Cruz.
52:45
He might be a wonderful man, but look,
52:47
the buck stops with him.
52:49
Second, the heads of the analytical components involved
52:52
in this report should be fired effective immediately.
52:55
Third, every single person who wrote, edited, or
52:58
coordinated on this DIA product has got to
53:00
be placed on unpaid leave effective immediately.
53:04
The point all in is that we have
53:05
got to freeze the DIA's Iran shop, at
53:08
least so that they don't do further damage
53:10
to the intel community or, more importantly, our
53:13
national security.
53:14
So all that is true, but I got
53:15
to tell you there's something else.
53:16
Based on my time in the intel community,
53:18
there is something very rotten going on inside
53:22
of the DIA.
53:23
This trash report did not get drafted, edited,
53:26
and released by otherwise good people who were
53:28
just trying to do the good thing.
53:29
No.
53:31
This report violated basic analytical tradecraft.
53:35
It's the stuff that you would learn on
53:36
day one as an analyst.
53:38
They did the opposite.
53:39
They just threw that stuff out.
53:41
So that means that this report was not
53:43
just some accident.
53:44
It was so bad, it was willful.
53:48
Hmm.
53:50
Yeah.
53:52
I liked it.
53:54
Yeah, we got too many intelligence agencies.
53:56
Are you kidding?
53:57
No.
53:57
Too much of that nonsense.
54:00
17 agencies are all fighting with each other
54:02
and they all want the money, all the
54:04
money.
54:04
Yeah.
54:05
Yeah, you saw that in that thing.
54:06
You fire that guy.
54:07
I looked that guy up and he looks
54:09
like a bonehead.
54:10
He's a Biden appointee.
54:12
Of course.
54:12
In fact, he's one of the few people
54:13
I've seen where you look him up in
54:15
the wiki page and it actually says under
54:17
the picture of him, you know they have
54:19
the little rundown.
54:20
Yeah.
54:20
It says under the picture of him, I've
54:23
never seen this on anybody, any generals or
54:25
anything else, it says under the picture it
54:27
says affiliation?
54:29
Yeah.
54:29
Joe Biden.
54:31
What is that supposed to mean?
54:33
It's a Wikipedia thing, man.
54:35
I don't know.
54:38
Yeah.
54:39
Well, it's all a mess.
54:41
And I hate to say it, I always
54:43
thought DIA was better.
54:44
But they suck just as bad.
54:47
This is so much...
54:49
They are responsible for so much bullcrap.
54:52
I think we both thought DIA was better,
54:56
but it's obvious they're not.
54:57
No.
54:59
No.
54:59
And I think Navy intelligence still stays away
55:02
from them.
55:04
Yeah, well that's Bannon though.
55:05
There's your Navy intelligence.
55:07
Yeah, well there's that.
55:09
But there's also the Woodward Navy intelligence.
55:12
Yeah.
55:13
By the way, I got a note from
55:15
Sir Jake.
55:17
He says that the word is that Trump
55:20
has forbid Hegseth from drinking while he's Secretary
55:24
of Defense.
55:25
And that means that everybody's grumpy because there's
55:28
no booze at all at any of the
55:30
events.
55:30
Oh, that's interesting.
55:31
That could be why he's on edge.
55:33
He's probably a guy who likes to take
55:35
the edge off with a couple of belts
55:37
at night.
55:38
A little bourbon there.
55:40
I can see him with a bourbon on
55:44
the rocks would be what it would be
55:45
on a tumbler.
55:47
In the tumbler.
55:48
Now he can't drink because he'll follow orders.
55:52
He won't drink.
55:53
And now he's grumpy.
55:54
So that's what that counts on.
55:55
Going after poor Jennifer.
55:59
My favorite analyst on Fox, Jennifer.
56:02
Now we have to always take into account
56:05
that from the Iranians slash Persians who we
56:10
know, the boots on the ground we get,
56:12
that there is always a lot of conviction
56:16
in Iran that Iran and America work together
56:20
and create nice theater for different reasons under
56:23
different presidents.
56:25
And Iran is not like one big Muslim
56:28
country.
56:29
They're an amalgam of all kinds of people.
56:34
There's a number of ethnic groups within the
56:36
country.
56:37
For sure.
56:38
Here's Hegseth.
56:40
Doubling down as now the Khamenei has come
56:43
out and said, you know, something.
56:46
How destructive were the U.S. airstrikes on
56:49
Iran?
56:49
Did they completely destroy the facilities and obliterate
56:52
Iran's nuclear capabilities as the Trump administration continues
56:56
to claim, or did they only set it
56:58
back a few months as a leaked report
57:00
from the intelligence arm of the Pentagon asserts.
57:04
When asked about whether any of the nuclear
57:06
material was moved before the strikes, the U
57:08
.S. Secretary of Defense lashed out.
57:11
There's been a lot of discussion about what
57:12
happened and what didn't happen.
57:13
Shut back for a second.
57:15
Because of decisive military action, President Trump created
57:17
the conditions to end the war, decimating, choose
57:22
your word, whoops, decimating, whoops, whoops, obliterating, destroying
57:27
Iran's nuclear capabilities.
57:30
Adding to the confusion, the director of the
57:32
CIA, John Ratcliffe, now says the strikes did
57:36
destroy key sites, but stopped short of declaring
57:38
that Iran's nuclear program was wiped out.
57:41
Meanwhile, the Financial Times is reporting that preliminary
57:44
intelligence assessments provided to European government indicate that
57:49
Iran's stockpile of uranium was not concentrated at
57:53
Fordow at the time of last week's attack,
57:55
but had already been moved to other locations.
57:58
This comes as Tehran acknowledged its facilities sustained
58:02
significant damage.
58:03
However, in his first remarks since Iran's ceasefire
58:06
with Israel, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei asserted that the
58:10
United States had gained nothing.
58:12
They attacked our nuclear facilities, which would, of
58:15
course, merit criminal prosecution in international courts, but
58:19
they didn't achieve anything significant.
58:20
The US president exaggerated events in an unusual
58:24
way, and it turned out he needed this
58:27
exaggeration.
58:28
Everyone who heard these words understood there's another
58:30
truth behind it.
58:32
They could not achieve the objective they set
58:34
for themselves.
58:35
The only way to know for sure is
58:37
with on-site inspection, but Tehran has just
58:39
passed a law ending cooperation with the International
58:42
Atomic Energy Agency.
58:44
The global nuclear watchdog says it's yet to
58:47
receive any official notification on the matter.
58:52
By the way, Rob, the constitutional lawyer, did
58:56
what I asked him to do.
58:58
He gave us a 353 word report summary
59:02
on if President Trump committed a war crime,
59:05
and also added to that a short rundown
59:08
on the authorized use of military force.
59:12
And you have to know Rob was a
59:13
jag, so he comes from the business.
59:18
And no, of course not.
59:21
Of course it was not a war crime.
59:22
Under the Geneva Convention.
59:24
But that's in the show notes under Iran
59:26
if you want to go take a look
59:27
at that.
59:27
Even 353 words will be too long to
59:30
read on the show.
59:31
I like the fact that Khomeini has become
59:33
slightly a Baghdad Bob.
59:35
Yeah.
59:37
Yeah, a little bit.
59:39
But yeah.
59:40
What's always jarring to me is he has
59:42
that picture of himself in the background.
59:43
No, that's the original guy in the background.
59:47
Oh, that's the OG guy.
59:48
I'm like, wow, he looked a lot better
59:49
in the picture.
59:51
That's the Omani.
59:54
Oh, that's the OG guy.
59:55
Okay.
59:58
I'd say we can go back to business
1:00:00
and we can go back.
1:00:01
And what are we fighting with Canada now?
1:00:02
I think we're fighting with Canada.
1:00:06
Yes.
1:00:07
Well, I don't know what that's about.
1:00:08
That's some sort of strange distraction.
1:00:11
Yeah, plague.
1:00:12
Because there's no explanation for it.
1:00:14
Carney never came out and said why he's
1:00:16
doing it.
1:00:17
Oh, no, I have him.
1:00:18
Oh, yeah.
1:00:19
Oh, yeah.
1:00:20
You'll be surprised.
1:00:22
Canada's digital services tax on foreign tech giants
1:00:26
has sparked a fierce U.S. backlash, with
1:00:29
Donald Trump deciding to halt all trade talks
1:00:31
with Ottawa.
1:00:33
In a post on Truth Social, the U
1:00:35
.S. president called Canada's decision a direct and
1:00:38
blatant attack on the U.S., accusing it
1:00:41
of copying the European country's actions and warning
1:00:44
of a new tariff response.
1:00:46
Based on this egregious tax, we are hereby
1:00:49
terminating all discussions on trade with Canada, effective
1:00:53
immediately.
1:00:55
We will let Canada know the tariff that
1:00:57
they will be paying to do business with
1:01:00
the United States of America within the next
1:01:03
seven-day period.
1:01:04
I'm always so disappointed they don't read the
1:01:06
thank you for your attention to this matter
1:01:08
line of the tweet, but okay.
1:01:09
Canada's digital services tax, which is set to
1:01:13
take effect on Monday, is a new levy
1:01:15
expected to cost the largest American tech giants
1:01:18
billions of dollars.
1:01:20
Companies like Amazon, Google, Uber, and Airbnb offering
1:01:24
digital services and earning over $20 million in
1:01:28
revenue from Canadian sources will be taxed 3
1:01:31
% on the money they make from Canadian
1:01:33
users and customers.
1:01:35
The decision comes as Canada and the U
1:01:38
.S. were deep in negotiation to ease Trump's
1:01:40
25% tariffs on Canadian goods, which within
1:01:44
months had resulted in major economic dislocations, job
1:01:48
losses, and a drop in southbound exports.
1:01:52
But the two leaders who met at the
1:01:53
G7 in Alberta last week agreed to solve
1:01:57
the trade dispute within 30 days.
1:01:59
The Canadian Prime Minister spoke to reporters assuring
1:02:02
that despite Trump's recent decision, Canada would not
1:02:05
back down.
1:02:11
It's negotiation.
1:02:13
That's all that it is.
1:02:14
Carney thinks he can play the Trump game.
1:02:16
Okay.
1:02:18
That'll be fun to watch.
1:02:19
Okay, that's exactly what it is.
1:02:21
I could do that.
1:02:23
If he pulls this stunt, I'll do the
1:02:24
same thing.
1:02:25
I could negotiate.
1:02:26
So at least he's trying.
1:02:28
I'll give him that.
1:02:29
It's like, oh yeah, we're negotiating.
1:02:32
This is what you do in negotiation.
1:02:34
Queen Ursula, now, she's way, way outside of
1:02:39
her lane.
1:02:40
I briefed leaders on the current state of
1:02:42
play in our trade talks with the United
1:02:44
States.
1:02:45
President Trump and I had a good discussion
1:02:47
at the G7 Summit in Canada.
1:02:50
Back then, we agreed to speed up the
1:02:52
work with a clear goal, an agreement before
1:02:55
the 9th of July.
1:02:57
Today, we received the latest U.S. document
1:03:01
for further negotiations.
1:03:04
We are assessing it as we speak right
1:03:07
now.
1:03:08
So our message today is clear.
1:03:10
We are ready for a deal.
1:03:13
At the same time, we are preparing for
1:03:16
the possibility that no satisfactory agreement is reached.
1:03:20
This is why we consulted on a rebalancing
1:03:23
list.
1:03:24
And we will defend the European interest as
1:03:27
needed.
1:03:27
In short, all options remain on the table.
1:03:31
She is a technocrat.
1:03:32
This is not going to work.
1:03:36
All options remain on the table.
1:03:38
No, you've got to do something like Carney
1:03:39
did.
1:03:40
You know, be a douche.
1:03:44
That's not how it's going to work.
1:03:46
She's no good.
1:03:46
No, she's no good.
1:03:49
Meanwhile, it's like the Supreme Court of the
1:03:51
United States just woke up and went, oh,
1:03:54
you know, we should probably look at some
1:03:58
of that stuff.
1:03:59
Yeah, maybe nationwide injunctions aren't really something that
1:04:05
should happen.
1:04:08
I think this is amazing.
1:04:10
Republicans and Democrats have both complained about this
1:04:13
in the past, but they would have continued
1:04:16
to do this had they not overdone it.
1:04:20
Yes.
1:04:20
Yes, exactly.
1:04:22
Well, here's the report.
1:04:24
This is such a big day.
1:04:25
The Supreme Court ruled federal district courts issuing
1:04:28
nationwide injunctions likely exceeded the authority granted to
1:04:33
them by Congress.
1:04:34
The issue was brought to the court in
1:04:36
the case over President Trump's executive order ending
1:04:39
birthright citizenship and challenged the ability of one
1:04:42
court to put a country wide hold on
1:04:45
an executive order.
1:04:47
It gives power back to people that should
1:04:50
have it, including Congress, including the presidency.
1:04:53
94 districts and 35 out of the 40
1:04:57
opinions with nationwide injunctions came from five liberal
1:05:01
districts in this country.
1:05:04
No longer.
1:05:05
California is one of those five districts referenced.
1:05:09
And during the Trump administration news conference, California
1:05:12
Attorney General Rob Bonta joined attorneys general from
1:05:16
other states to call for a nationwide injunction.
1:05:19
I'm hopeful that the court will see that
1:05:21
a patchwork of state injunctions where birthright citizenship
1:05:24
stands for some states but not others would
1:05:26
inevitably create administrative chaos, sparking widespread confusion and
1:05:31
spurring questions we don't have the answers to.
1:05:34
California Governor Gavin Newsom issued this statement saying
1:05:37
in part, while the executive order is still
1:05:39
temporarily blocked from going into effect, the decision
1:05:42
is deeply disappointing.
1:05:44
Loyola law professor Jessica Levinson predicts how this
1:05:47
plays out in the short term.
1:05:49
The Trump administration is going to go back
1:05:51
to federal district judges that issued these nationwide
1:05:54
injunctions and say you don't have the power
1:05:57
to do this.
1:05:58
You need to provide more limited relief.
1:06:01
I think at the same time those who
1:06:04
have challenged the president's executive orders will very
1:06:07
quickly try to refashion their suits so that
1:06:12
they are asking instead for something like relief
1:06:15
under a class action status instead.
1:06:18
More lawfare.
1:06:20
Class actions.
1:06:22
Probably they're going to use that as the
1:06:24
next thing but those are harder to do.
1:06:26
I have John Yu.
1:06:27
Good old John Yu.
1:06:30
Who summarizes better than anybody else for good
1:06:34
reason.
1:06:36
He's on Fox talking about the Supreme Court
1:06:40
action today.
1:06:41
I have two clips.
1:06:42
Let's start with nationwide injunctions by these district
1:06:45
judges.
1:06:45
Where are we on that after this ruling?
1:06:48
They're dead.
1:06:48
100% dead.
1:06:51
The Supreme Court has said now definitively district
1:06:55
judges of which there are about 700 around
1:06:57
the country in every major city.
1:06:59
They can decide the cases before them.
1:07:02
They can give remedies like injunctions to the
1:07:05
parties in the courtroom.
1:07:07
But what they can't do is impose it
1:07:09
against the government throughout the entire country at
1:07:12
once.
1:07:13
Really that's the Supreme Court's job.
1:07:15
What the court has said is yes it's
1:07:18
going to be possible now for the birth
1:07:20
rights citizenship order to be struck down in
1:07:22
Boston but still upheld in Texas.
1:07:25
That it might still be possible for people
1:07:27
to get passports in Boston who might not
1:07:29
get them in Texas.
1:07:30
But that's the job of the Supreme Court
1:07:33
to resolve that conflict.
1:07:34
It's not the job of any individual district
1:07:37
trial judge to do.
1:07:39
This is a really big win for the
1:07:40
presidency.
1:07:41
Not just Donald Trump but the presidency.
1:07:43
Because what the court has also respected here
1:07:46
is that the president is elected by the
1:07:49
American people to carry out an agenda and
1:07:52
it's important and right for him to be
1:07:54
able to pursue that throughout the country at
1:07:56
once.
1:07:57
And you're so right that this has been
1:08:00
presidents from both parties have always complained about
1:08:03
this.
1:08:04
And President Trump finally did something about it.
1:08:07
I think that's pretty cool.
1:08:08
For murder.
1:08:10
Well they had to because they were abusing
1:08:11
it with him.
1:08:12
And that's what brought it to a head.
1:08:14
This could have gone on forever if these
1:08:16
guys hadn't gotten carried away.
1:08:17
We had a good thing going guys.
1:08:19
What did you do?
1:08:19
They had a good thing going until they
1:08:21
abused it.
1:08:22
Now the thing about this is they also
1:08:25
went after Judge Jackson.
1:08:27
Oh everyone hates her now.
1:08:29
She's dumb.
1:08:30
She's dumb.
1:08:31
And they're really going after her in every
1:08:34
way.
1:08:35
I didn't clip it because it's five minutes
1:08:37
long but it's five minutes of her saying
1:08:39
I don't understand.
1:08:40
Yeah we all saw the supercut.
1:08:42
Every case for the last one year.
1:08:45
I don't understand this.
1:08:47
She makes it sound stupid.
1:08:50
But she is called out on this by
1:08:53
you?
1:08:54
No not by you but you was presented
1:08:57
with one of the comments that she made
1:09:00
and these two guys this robbers on Fox.
1:09:06
They laugh about it.
1:09:07
It's a pretty funny little bit.
1:09:08
I think that the fact that the court
1:09:12
in the decision called out Jackson and then
1:09:16
everyone signed off on it.
1:09:17
This was a rebuke.
1:09:19
And people have to realize that's what it
1:09:20
was.
1:09:21
She was not following the principles of the
1:09:24
way the court's supposed to act.
1:09:26
And she was freelancing and I got a
1:09:29
letter from somebody you guys are mean about
1:09:31
this.
1:09:31
You got one of those?
1:09:34
I can't believe someone spelled your name right.
1:09:36
That's amazing.
1:09:38
It's like she went off the rails and
1:09:41
started talking about it.
1:09:43
I looked at her opinion which was separate.
1:09:48
And she was you know talking about this
1:09:52
and that.
1:09:53
She was being philosophical to an extreme and
1:09:57
it wasn't really following the way they want
1:10:00
things done.
1:10:01
And so they rebuked her and I thought
1:10:03
this was a funny clip.
1:10:04
Amy Coney Barrett wrote the majority opinion and
1:10:07
I thought that this clause from it was
1:10:09
really interesting.
1:10:10
She wrote, quote, We will not dwell on
1:10:12
Justice Jackson's argument which is at odds with
1:10:15
more than two centuries worth of precedent not
1:10:18
to mention the Constitution itself.
1:10:20
We observe only this.
1:10:22
Justice Jackson decries an imperial executive while embracing
1:10:26
an imperial judiciary.
1:10:29
Smack!
1:10:32
Oh boy.
1:10:32
I'm glad I'm not there right now.
1:10:36
I'm sure they're going to be great friends
1:10:37
afterwards.
1:10:38
Especially when they need each other for the
1:10:40
fifth vote on one of their cases.
1:10:42
But Justice Jackson's dissent, I have to say,
1:10:44
I thought was a little over the top.
1:10:46
She's basically saying this is the collapse of
1:10:48
the rule of law.
1:10:49
You're going to have irresponsible presidents defying the
1:10:53
rule of law, doing what they want.
1:10:55
And the courts, no one's going to stop
1:10:56
them.
1:10:57
I don't think that's quite right.
1:10:58
This is, in the long run, as a
1:11:00
legal issue, not that important.
1:11:02
It's important as a political issue for the
1:11:04
effect it has on the government, its ability
1:11:07
to pursue law.
1:11:07
But this is actually the judiciary restraining itself,
1:11:11
saying we're only going to apply our powers
1:11:13
to the cases before us.
1:11:15
We're not here as the judiciary to run
1:11:17
the whole government.
1:11:19
And so who benefits from that?
1:11:20
Presidents do.
1:11:21
But presidents are democratically accountable and electable.
1:11:24
The American people who are watching this show,
1:11:26
listening to you, John, they should not think
1:11:28
that the rule of law is collapsing all
1:11:30
around them.
1:11:31
It's not happening.
1:11:31
Basically, things are going to function normally.
1:11:34
This is just really a narrow legal issue
1:11:36
about the power of individual trial judges.
1:11:38
The Supreme Court's always there, and they're going
1:11:41
to decide these questions in the end.
1:11:45
I thought that was a good summation.
1:11:47
Yeah, it was good.
1:11:48
But here's a little update from the troll
1:11:51
room, just to give you an idea of
1:11:52
what I get.
1:11:53
Ready?
1:11:55
Always.
1:11:56
Do you want a voice?
1:11:58
Or should I just read it straight?
1:12:00
It's never that funny when I read it
1:12:02
straight.
1:12:03
Yeah, you might as well do the voice.
1:12:04
Smokin' Cheese is my name.
1:12:06
Smokin' Cheese.
1:12:08
Adam's love of Trump is going to backfire
1:12:12
on him.
1:12:13
I love how they think I love Trump.
1:12:14
I love Trump.
1:12:16
Trump is waging war for the Zios while
1:12:19
cutting taxes for the billionaire class, and then
1:12:23
printing money to pay for it, and then
1:12:25
taxing everyone else by inserting tariffs and stealing
1:12:28
from Social Security and Medicare, while creating legal
1:12:31
mechanisms to jail and deport U.S. citizens.
1:12:35
Wow.
1:12:37
Dude, no U.S. citizen's been jailed or
1:12:39
deported.
1:12:40
He's in the wrong troll room, man.
1:12:42
Go over to Blue Sky, dude.
1:12:44
That probably is the dude from Blue Sky.
1:12:48
I have one...
1:12:50
I go to Blue Sky once a month.
1:12:52
Something that he said, that guy, is that
1:12:55
I think Mamdavi, this New York guy, I
1:13:00
think it's possible the more I've been looking
1:13:04
at this character, he has a bunch of
1:13:06
interesting opinions that I think people are misjudging
1:13:10
him.
1:13:11
They keep calling him a socialist, a socialist.
1:13:13
He calls himself a democrat socialist, and he's
1:13:16
got socialist, communist ideas.
1:13:18
But he's not a socialist.
1:13:20
He is a populist.
1:13:22
He is the democrat version of Trump.
1:13:26
This is what they wanted.
1:13:27
This is what's so beautiful about him.
1:13:30
Yes.
1:13:30
Now, this is what they wanted.
1:13:32
I agree with that, for sure, because that's
1:13:34
what they keep talking about.
1:13:35
So they've got this guy.
1:13:37
I think he will get in, because I
1:13:40
know what they're going to do with Eric
1:13:42
Adams.
1:13:42
They're going to say, he's cooperating with ICE.
1:13:46
He's cooperating with Trump.
1:13:47
He hates Trump.
1:13:48
They hate Trump in New York, so this
1:13:50
guy can get in.
1:13:52
If he doesn't completely screw the pooch in
1:13:56
New York, in other words, he manages to
1:14:00
do a balancing act and become a reasonably
1:14:03
not a disaster mayor, that approach of his
1:14:09
could become super popular.
1:14:12
So this is all over the top, but
1:14:14
he may actually be much more moderate, and
1:14:17
maybe the buses will be free.
1:14:20
And the buses might be free, and he
1:14:23
has got this one thing in his craw
1:14:25
that only comes up once in a while,
1:14:26
but if you read into it enough, he
1:14:29
doesn't think any billionaire should exist in the
1:14:32
country.
1:14:33
That is an extremely populist idea.
1:14:36
If I was one of those rich Democrats,
1:14:41
most billionaires are Democrats, people.
1:14:43
I'd be like, yeah, great.
1:14:46
You better start finding ways to hide your
1:14:49
money.
1:14:51
It's just so beautiful.
1:14:54
That's a very good point.
1:14:56
That's a very good point.
1:14:57
That could be the Democrat Party's version of
1:15:00
a populist who then dials it way back.
1:15:04
But I don't know.
1:15:06
To me, this is everything that the Democrat
1:15:09
Party, every talking point is this guy.
1:15:13
Every talking point.
1:15:14
And then they got this guy, and then
1:15:16
Tina and I were at some Mexican place
1:15:18
having lunch yesterday.
1:15:20
I love the Mexican restaurants.
1:15:23
I've got a million TV screens all on
1:15:25
Fox.
1:15:26
The TV screens, none of them are at
1:15:27
the same height.
1:15:29
There's something about Mexican culture, I notice it
1:15:31
all the time.
1:15:32
Straight, there's nothing as straight.
1:15:35
There's always a little crooked.
1:15:37
Have you noticed that?
1:15:38
Well, that's an interesting observation.
1:15:40
When you go to Mexico, which I used
1:15:43
to do a lot when I was younger,
1:15:46
they'd have all these, I always noticed these
1:15:49
half-built houses all the way down to
1:15:51
Ensenada, all the way to the tip.
1:15:53
There's just these half-built houses and I
1:15:54
asked somebody, some Mexican guy, oh, yeah.
1:15:57
He says, yeah, you want it that way.
1:15:58
You want your half-built house because they
1:16:00
don't start taxing it until it's done.
1:16:03
So everything is like, you know, got a
1:16:05
kind of a funny quality.
1:16:07
And you're right.
1:16:08
Yes, I notice they're not into like the
1:16:11
long, straight line.
1:16:13
No, it's not their culture, which is fine.
1:16:16
But I just love seeing three TV screens,
1:16:19
big screens on the wall and none of
1:16:21
them at the same height.
1:16:22
I'm like, I don't get it.
1:16:25
Anyway, and you saw the Democrats going, oh,
1:16:27
what are we going to do?
1:16:28
And the rich Democrats of New York, oh,
1:16:30
what are we going to do?
1:16:31
There's the guy who owns the supermarkets.
1:16:34
He's on Fox Business.
1:16:35
I'm closing down my supermarkets.
1:16:37
I'm not going to let the government run
1:16:39
my supermarkets.
1:16:40
Okay, bro.
1:16:40
Sure.
1:16:41
So it's just a fun fight.
1:16:43
Then, you know, Fredericksburg.
1:16:45
Oh, I'm never going to New York again.
1:16:49
New York is lost.
1:16:51
It's lost.
1:16:52
I'm like, New York's been lost forever.
1:16:56
Although my neighbors, Claudia, she's a hospitalist.
1:17:00
You know, she takes care of, she's really
1:17:02
in charge of the patients.
1:17:03
She's kind of the patient advocate.
1:17:05
And she was out walking her two little
1:17:07
dogs.
1:17:08
These things are like barking little things.
1:17:11
And she's from Dominican Republic and she's with
1:17:13
her boyfriend.
1:17:14
He's ex-military and her brother and a
1:17:17
million kids.
1:17:18
They're all walking the dogs on the streets
1:17:19
like, we're in New York.
1:17:20
And then all of a sudden we saw
1:17:22
the bombs dropping and we're like, what are
1:17:25
we going to do?
1:17:25
And they went into the hotel room and
1:17:27
just stayed there.
1:17:28
And like, we're so worried about everything.
1:17:29
I'm like, yeah, that's exactly what happens to
1:17:31
people.
1:17:32
They get so freaked out because they're just
1:17:33
watching Fox News or MSNBC.
1:17:37
It doesn't really matter what you're watching.
1:17:39
I'm glad we got back to Texas.
1:17:41
Call it TV.
1:17:43
Yes, call it TV.
1:17:44
Exactly.
1:17:45
So then, the Supreme Court made a very
1:17:47
interesting ruling which I, in principle, I agree
1:17:52
with the ruling.
1:17:53
I don't think it curtails the free speech
1:17:55
of adults.
1:17:57
But, more importantly, I think it moves closer
1:18:00
towards what I have always said is going
1:18:02
to happen.
1:18:03
And that will be the end of anonymity
1:18:06
on the Internet.
1:18:07
The other big news here today, the United
1:18:09
States Supreme Court has upheld a Texas law
1:18:11
that requires pornographic websites to conduct age verification
1:18:15
of its users.
1:18:16
This ruling is one of the final decisions
1:18:18
of the term handed down by the nation's
1:18:20
highest court earlier today.
1:18:21
With that, let's bring an eye on politics
1:18:23
reporter Jack Fink.
1:18:24
Talk about it a little bit, especially about
1:18:26
the impact of this decision today and what
1:18:28
else does this legislation do?
1:18:30
Well, Doug, this two-year-old Texas law
1:18:32
has been held up in the courts, but
1:18:34
now because the U.S. Supreme Court has
1:18:36
backed the state of Texas, it can go
1:18:38
into effect.
1:18:39
As you said, pornographic websites will now have
1:18:41
to have some form of age verification for
1:18:44
its users or customers.
1:18:45
To be considered pornographic, the sites have to
1:18:48
have more than a third of their content
1:18:50
as sexual in nature.
1:18:52
The law allows the Texas Attorney General's office
1:18:55
to enforce this ruling, investigate any potential violations
1:18:59
and complaints, and assess fines as well.
1:19:02
The author of this bill that became law,
1:19:04
Republican State Representative Matt Shaheen of Prosper, called
1:19:07
it a triumph.
1:19:09
This was a clear victory for Texas children.
1:19:12
It was pornographic websites against our Texas families
1:19:15
and the Supreme Court sided with our Texas
1:19:17
families, so it's a great day for Texas
1:19:19
in protecting our children from this smut.
1:19:22
In a statement opposing the ruling, Alison Bowden,
1:19:25
Executive Director of the Free Speech Coalition, said
1:19:28
the government should not have the right to
1:19:31
demand that we sacrifice our privacy and security
1:19:34
to use the internet.
1:19:35
This law has failed to keep minors away
1:19:37
from sexual content, yet continues to have a
1:19:40
massive chilling effect on adults.
1:19:42
This, of course, is completely ridiculous that, you
1:19:45
know, somehow people won't be able to get
1:19:48
around a Texas block or whatever with a
1:19:51
VPN, like kids are stupid.
1:19:54
But it's really about identification for your, it'll
1:19:58
be about you want to get on the
1:19:59
internet?
1:20:00
You're going to have to ID yourself everywhere
1:20:02
you go.
1:20:03
And I find the one-third rule to
1:20:07
be very interesting.
1:20:09
No, that's so stupid.
1:20:11
I mean, the first thing you do, say
1:20:13
I want to run a porn site, so
1:20:16
I want to have I have to beat
1:20:18
this one-third rule.
1:20:20
So I have a porn site, I load
1:20:21
it up with terabytes full of PDF files
1:20:24
that are just random about oceanography.
1:20:28
And then if you click on this one
1:20:30
link, you get my 120% of the
1:20:33
rest of it is porn.
1:20:35
And the oceanography stuff, 80%, it's not going
1:20:39
to be using bandwidth or anything because nobody's
1:20:41
going to go to that stuff.
1:20:43
So the point, this is dumb.
1:20:46
But it's not about that.
1:20:47
And by the way, you have this thesis,
1:20:50
I have to say you have kept this
1:20:53
thesis alive in your self forever.
1:20:56
It's going to happen.
1:20:59
It might, but it's not happening anytime soon.
1:21:02
Oh, ye of little faith.
1:21:05
It's not happening anytime soon.
1:21:07
I will say, and this is not the
1:21:08
fix for it, but porn addiction is a
1:21:11
real thing.
1:21:13
There are so many young men and women
1:21:17
completely, completely addicted to porn.
1:21:21
Yeah, we've talked about this before.
1:21:23
And it's a real problem.
1:21:26
And it ruins everything.
1:21:28
Ruins relationships.
1:21:29
People get addicted to gambling, they get addicted
1:21:30
to porn, addicted to smoking.
1:21:32
Yes, absolutely.
1:21:35
Yeah, people have a problem.
1:21:38
I could only get 29 second report of
1:21:41
this.
1:21:42
It just kind of flew by.
1:21:43
I couldn't even get the first Washington on
1:21:45
there.
1:21:46
Post journalist is facing some serious charges tonight.
1:21:49
48 year old Thomas Legros was arrested at
1:21:51
his DC home Thursday.
1:21:53
He's accused of possessing child pornography.
1:21:56
FBI agents say they found explicit videos on
1:21:58
his laptop and what looked like a broken
1:22:01
hard drive in his basement.
1:22:03
Legros name also came up in an investigation
1:22:05
involving online payments for illegal content.
1:22:09
He is now on leave from the post
1:22:10
where he oversaw video content.
1:22:13
His detention hearing is set for Monday.
1:22:15
Yeah, they kind of missed the fact that
1:22:17
he won a Pulitzer Prize.
1:22:21
That's great.
1:22:22
I would like to hear more about that.
1:22:24
But before we leave this topic about what
1:22:26
would happen with the Supreme Court.
1:22:27
There's more from the Supreme Court.
1:22:30
We have to visit Brooks and Capehart.
1:22:33
Can I do one more Supreme Court ruling
1:22:34
before we go to Brooks?
1:22:35
Because the Brooks and Capehart will top it
1:22:37
all.
1:22:37
Oh yeah, I'm sure.
1:22:38
Well, this is just factual and it's so
1:22:44
interesting that of course all the ads like
1:22:47
oh, the Republicans the big beautiful bill which
1:22:51
has some stuff on too.
1:22:52
We can do it later.
1:22:53
They're going to cut Medicare, Medicaid.
1:22:55
You're going to die.
1:22:57
Well, this is one of the ways they're
1:22:59
cutting.
1:23:00
Tessa, the state first pulled Medicaid funding from
1:23:03
Planned Parenthood in 2018 because it provided abortions.
1:23:07
With this new ruling, states can now cut
1:23:09
off Medicaid dollars to the provider even for
1:23:12
health care unrelated to ending a pregnancy.
1:23:15
Justice Jackson in her dissent.
1:23:18
This is the lady from Planned Parenthood.
1:23:20
If individuals don't have rights to sue to
1:23:26
protect their own rights then civil rights means
1:23:30
nothing.
1:23:31
And we would agree with that.
1:23:33
In response to the Supreme Court decision, Governor
1:23:36
Henry McMaster sharing a statement on X saying
1:23:39
quote, seven years ago we took a stand
1:23:41
to protect the sanctity of life and defend
1:23:44
South Carolina's authority and values.
1:23:47
And today we are finally victorious.
1:23:49
End quote.
1:23:50
Vicki Ringer with Planned Parenthood South Atlantic says
1:23:53
only 3.5% of South Carolina patients
1:23:56
are on Medicaid and the ruling won't impact
1:23:59
services.
1:24:00
The good news for patients in South Carolina
1:24:03
is that nothing will change for them.
1:24:06
We will continue to treat South Carolina patients
1:24:10
who use Medicaid as their insurance plan.
1:24:12
We just won't bill them for it or
1:24:15
bill Medicaid.
1:24:16
They can continue to get their care for
1:24:20
as long as we can cover it without
1:24:24
charge.
1:24:26
This one ruling and this one political decision
1:24:29
from the governor or the legislature will not
1:24:32
force us to close our doors.
1:24:34
To clear up misconceptions, Ringer clarifies that according
1:24:38
to federal law, Medicaid can only pay for
1:24:40
an abortion in the case of rape, incest,
1:24:43
or to preserve the mother's life.
1:24:45
You know, the thing I don't What is
1:24:48
she bitching about?
1:24:49
They're going to cover it.
1:24:52
Well, under those cases.
1:24:54
Well, fine.
1:24:55
This is about time some charity showed up
1:24:58
in the formula here and said everything coming
1:25:01
out of the taxpayer's pocket.
1:25:03
When I was growing up, when I was
1:25:05
a kid, you know, it was like, don't
1:25:08
be daft, don't be silly, put a snakeskin
1:25:11
on your willy.
1:25:13
When did we lose the idea of being
1:25:16
careful?
1:25:18
Well, the funny thing is Planned Parenthood started.
1:25:21
Yes.
1:25:23
Well, they started as a eugenicist group.
1:25:26
No, they didn't.
1:25:27
Yes, they did.
1:25:28
That evolved, that evolved.
1:25:29
I've looked into this.
1:25:30
I've looked into it too.
1:25:31
I disagree with you.
1:25:32
She started off as a promoter of condoms
1:25:35
because nobody, they were illegal for all practical
1:25:38
purposes.
1:25:38
You're telling me Margaret Sanger started as a
1:25:40
condom advocate?
1:25:41
No.
1:25:42
Yeah.
1:25:43
That was 1930.
1:25:46
Well, we can disagree on that, and I
1:25:48
will, but I'm not agreeing to disagree.
1:25:51
Don't agree to disagree.
1:25:53
There were over a million abortions in the
1:25:55
U.S. in 2024.
1:25:56
A million.
1:25:57
There's too many.
1:25:59
There's too many abortions.
1:26:01
It's like, that was the number one thing.
1:26:04
You know, when you were 15 your dad
1:26:06
would say, here, here kid, here's a rubber.
1:26:10
It's like, okay.
1:26:11
You know, what happened?
1:26:13
What happened there?
1:26:15
Well, you don't need it when you have
1:26:16
an abortion like the same thing in Russia.
1:26:19
It's cheaper.
1:26:21
Especially if somebody else is paying for it.
1:26:23
John C.
1:26:23
DeVore, the great defender of Margaret Sanger.
1:26:25
I will not defend Margaret Sanger.
1:26:28
I disagree with that.
1:26:31
So let's play Brooks and Capehart.
1:26:35
And I have three clips.
1:26:37
I have the opener on PBS because they
1:26:39
talk about the Supreme Court stuff a little
1:26:41
bit and then I have Brooks going on
1:26:44
about porn in schools.
1:26:45
Ah, yes.
1:26:47
And then I have Brooks the last one
1:26:50
is Brooks on any topic.
1:26:53
Okay.
1:26:54
Opener?
1:26:55
Let's turn now to the analysis of Brooks
1:26:57
and Capehart.
1:26:58
That is New York Times columnist David Brooks
1:27:00
and Jonathan Capehart, associate editor for the Washington
1:27:03
Post.
1:27:04
And we should say that you are both
1:27:05
joining us tonight from the Aspen Ideas Festival
1:27:07
in Colorado.
1:27:09
Your beautiful backgrounds make me wish I was
1:27:11
there with you guys.
1:27:12
It's great to see you.
1:27:12
Let's jump right in to those Supreme Court
1:27:15
decisions today.
1:27:16
Big wins for the president.
1:27:17
One on allowing religious parents to opt their
1:27:20
kids out of LGBTQ learning and storybooks in
1:27:23
school.
1:27:24
The other severely limiting lower courts ability to
1:27:27
issue nationwide injunctions.
1:27:29
We heard President Trump very happily thank the
1:27:30
justices who ruled in his favor earlier today.
1:27:33
Take a listen.
1:27:33
I want to thank Justice Barrett who wrote
1:27:36
the opinion brilliantly as well as Chief Justice
1:27:38
Roberts and Justices Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Thomas.
1:27:44
Great people.
1:27:45
They are now.
1:27:46
Jonathan, kick us off here.
1:27:47
What's your reaction to those rulings?
1:27:49
What do you take away from that?
1:27:51
Well, on the injunction ruling you know, I
1:27:54
reached out to a former senior official in
1:27:57
a Democratic administration just to get their take
1:27:59
on it.
1:28:00
And the response back was mixed bag.
1:28:03
And it's mixed bag because on the one
1:28:05
hand Democratic presidents and Republican presidents never liked
1:28:09
it when a lower court judge reached in
1:28:11
and stopped them from doing something with a
1:28:14
nationwide injunction.
1:28:15
I'm thinking particularly of President Biden and say
1:28:18
student loan debt forgiveness.
1:28:22
Hold on.
1:28:23
What?
1:28:24
It was the Supreme Court that put the
1:28:26
kibosh on Biden who told him to pound
1:28:29
sand.
1:28:30
So okay, we got that wrong.
1:28:32
Yeah.
1:28:34
You hate these guys so much.
1:28:37
You have your hate listens.
1:28:39
Yeah, I do.
1:28:40
I do.
1:28:41
So I have now we're going to listen
1:28:45
to K part on the porn in schools.
1:28:48
When it comes to the LGBT school ruling,
1:28:51
you know, for that to come out that
1:28:53
day after the 10th anniversary of the Obergefell
1:28:55
ruling, which legalized same sex marriage, made it
1:28:58
a constitutional right is really, you know, it's
1:29:02
painful.
1:29:03
It's also speak.
1:29:04
It speaks to the court's willingness to, you
1:29:06
know, be a party to erasing a whole
1:29:10
community.
1:29:11
Oh goodness.
1:29:12
Let me just give you in short because
1:29:13
we have this going on here in Fredericksburg,
1:29:16
this with the public school here and it's
1:29:22
become every single school board meeting.
1:29:24
And by the way, I'm always saying, why
1:29:27
are you wasting your time?
1:29:29
Run for school board.
1:29:30
Get on the school board.
1:29:32
You know what?
1:29:33
If I lived in Fredericksburg, we live in
1:29:35
unincorporated Fredericksburg, five minutes from Main Street for
1:29:38
some reason, I would run for school board.
1:29:40
No problem.
1:29:41
The problem is every single one of those
1:29:44
people in the school board has been threatened
1:29:46
by the ACLU that they will be sued
1:29:48
personally.
1:29:49
That's what this is about.
1:29:50
It's the ACLU.
1:29:52
They're the problem.
1:29:54
Those books, they're stupid.
1:29:55
They really are lame.
1:29:57
They defend the books by saying you're erasing
1:29:59
a community.
1:30:00
It's bull crap.
1:30:01
It's bull crap.
1:30:03
It's total bull crap.
1:30:04
And now I have a kind of a
1:30:08
universal clip I can play anytime.
1:30:10
This turns out to be the answer.
1:30:13
This is Brooks on anything.
1:30:22
I know.
1:30:22
Why don't you tell us what the format
1:30:24
of the show was supposed to be, Jon?
1:30:27
Well, typical of these shows, you're supposed to
1:30:30
get perspective from two opposing viewpoints.
1:30:35
That's the idea.
1:30:36
That's what helps the audience take two opposing
1:30:40
viewpoints on the same topic.
1:30:42
And one of them says this, and one
1:30:43
of them says that.
1:30:44
And you, as the viewer, say, well, I
1:30:47
can see what he means.
1:30:48
I can see this.
1:30:49
I can see that.
1:30:49
So you can understand it, as opposed to
1:30:52
two guys that vehemently, vehemently agree with each
1:30:56
other.
1:30:56
All the time!
1:30:59
Who was supposed to be the Republican?
1:31:02
Brooks was supposed to be the Republican, but
1:31:04
he's never been a Republican.
1:31:06
He's always been a...
1:31:08
not a lefty, kind of a middle-of
1:31:10
-the-road Democrat.
1:31:11
And Kay Parsh is a gay liberal.
1:31:17
All right.
1:31:18
Let's go to the big, beautiful...
1:31:19
By the way, you're so right.
1:31:20
I'm looking at the quad screen right now,
1:31:22
and it said, Eric Adams worked with ICE!
1:31:25
They were so right.
1:31:26
Nailed it.
1:31:27
There it is.
1:31:27
Eric Adams worked with ICE.
1:31:29
He's no good.
1:31:31
We go to the big, beautiful bill, which
1:31:35
coincidentally Elon Musk came out against again today,
1:31:39
that it would set us back, be horrible.
1:31:43
I think Trump is putting everything on this
1:31:47
because he wants those tax cuts, and I'm
1:31:50
sure there's tons of nonsense in there.
1:31:52
Oh, there must be a ton.
1:31:54
Tons of nonsense.
1:31:55
Well, it's on the Senate floor.
1:31:57
A rare Saturday session in the Senate.
1:31:59
We have before us today a once-in
1:32:02
-a-generation opportunity to deliver legislation to create
1:32:04
a safer, stronger, and more prosperous America.
1:32:08
Senate Republicans are trying to pull a fast
1:32:11
one on the American people.
1:32:13
Lawmakers work through their holiday recess, racing to
1:32:16
meet a July 4th deadline to advance President
1:32:19
Trump's so-called big, beautiful bill.
1:32:21
The president stayed in town, too, golfing with
1:32:24
senators, urging them to tee it up.
1:32:26
We'd like to get it done.
1:32:29
Overnight, Senate Republicans released the 900-plus page
1:32:33
bill, which includes more funding for the president's
1:32:36
top priorities, including border security, defense, and an
1:32:39
extension of his 2017 tax cuts.
1:32:42
But it comes with deep spending cuts to
1:32:44
food assistance and Medicaid, including a projected $930
1:32:49
billion reduction, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
1:32:54
She doesn't mention that's over 10 years, but
1:32:57
that's kind of interesting how they just throw
1:33:00
that in there.
1:33:01
According to the Congressional Budget Office.
1:33:03
What they're trying to do is to cut
1:33:05
back on these health care programs and health
1:33:07
insurance for 16 million Americans to pay for
1:33:10
tax breaks for wealthy people.
1:33:11
Even some Republicans have threatened to oppose the
1:33:14
package, citing concerns about the potential impact to
1:33:17
rural hospitals.
1:33:18
But others say it's time to act.
1:33:21
Are we ready to put our pens down
1:33:23
and move forward?
1:33:25
The Medicare cuts are the ones that get
1:33:27
me.
1:33:28
I mean, I've not read all 900 pages
1:33:32
yet.
1:33:32
I typically read whatever's passed, when it's really
1:33:35
passed, when we have one big, beautiful, solid
1:33:38
bill.
1:33:39
And then we'll go through it and we'll
1:33:40
find all the funding for UFO projects and
1:33:43
everything else.
1:33:44
There's always some cool stuff hidden in there.
1:33:46
I enjoy it.
1:33:48
But these cuts are really for people who
1:33:51
are just sucking off the system.
1:33:54
You know?
1:33:55
It's like, no.
1:33:56
And then illegals who are here and getting
1:34:00
health care.
1:34:01
No, no.
1:34:02
This is exactly what the president ran on.
1:34:05
It sucks.
1:34:06
We're a nice people in America.
1:34:08
We don't really want to hurt anybody.
1:34:11
Well, you do.
1:34:12
You have to.
1:34:13
There's your eggs analogy.
1:34:15
But I may not have to read it,
1:34:17
because I guess Chuck Schumer's going to read
1:34:18
it for me.
1:34:19
To address some of those GOP concerns, the
1:34:22
bill now includes a $25 billion rural hospital
1:34:26
fund.
1:34:26
It also rolls back clean energy tax credits
1:34:29
from the Biden era, angering Democrats.
1:34:31
In fact, they hope to slow this vote
1:34:33
down by demanding that the entire bill be
1:34:36
read on the Senate floor, which could take
1:34:38
up to 15 hours.
1:34:41
Lovely.
1:34:41
I love that.
1:34:44
Especially if you get those one.
1:34:46
Replace paragraph 5 U.S. law 17-329
1:34:51
with any time instead of all time.
1:34:55
Yeah.
1:34:56
There's lots of that.
1:34:57
I'm looking forward to reading it.
1:34:59
It'll be fun.
1:35:00
I'm sure there's all kinds of good stuff
1:35:01
in there.
1:35:02
Of course, the no tax on tips was
1:35:05
a big promise from the president.
1:35:08
Even my stepdaughter in New York, she's like,
1:35:11
oh, I like this Trump, because she works
1:35:14
at a bar.
1:35:16
And, you know, typically people in service industry
1:35:19
get paid very low wages.
1:35:21
It was like $3 an hour.
1:35:25
I don't know.
1:35:26
Yeah, I think in New York it's between
1:35:27
$2 and $4 an hour.
1:35:29
And tips is where they make their money.
1:35:32
Here's Lawrence O'Donnell explaining what it's really about.
1:35:36
Donald Trump told a story today about how
1:35:40
he came up with the idea that he's
1:35:42
very proud of no tax on tips.
1:35:46
Remember, most American workers do not receive tips,
1:35:51
so this is not a tax break for
1:35:53
them.
1:35:54
It is a tax break for people who
1:35:56
Donald Trump likes better than the people who
1:35:59
don't receive tips.
1:36:01
How does that work?
1:36:04
The logic is this.
1:36:05
I don't understand the logic.
1:36:06
It gets better.
1:36:07
Donald Trump said it happened in Las Vegas
1:36:09
when someone he called a, quote, young beautiful
1:36:13
waitress told him that she didn't want to
1:36:17
pay taxes on her tips.
1:36:19
She looked at me, she said, sir, there
1:36:21
should be no tax on tips.
1:36:23
I said, say it again.
1:36:26
There should be no tax on tips.
1:36:28
I said, that's the coolest thing I've ever
1:36:30
heard.
1:36:31
I walked outside.
1:36:32
The press was there, as always, waiting for
1:36:33
something bad to happen.
1:36:35
Hundreds of them.
1:36:36
I said, ladies and gentlemen, please announce tonight
1:36:39
there will be no tax on tips.
1:36:43
There are many reasons why no Secretary of
1:36:45
the Treasury has ever advised a president to
1:36:49
have no tax on tips.
1:36:53
You just heard the stupidest story ever told
1:36:57
by a president about tax policy.
1:37:00
So Donald Trump thinks some income should be
1:37:03
protected from taxation and some shouldn't.
1:37:06
So a Las Vegas lap dancers income should
1:37:09
be tax free, but a Las Vegas public
1:37:12
school teacher must pay full taxes on all
1:37:16
income.
1:37:19
Straight from Reseda, here she is, Raven, give
1:37:23
it up.
1:37:26
I love how he did that.
1:37:28
That was good.
1:37:28
That was good, Larry.
1:37:30
Wow, that guy.
1:37:31
How did you...
1:37:33
Does that guy still have a job?
1:37:35
Yes, and I'm sure he makes more than
1:37:36
we do.
1:37:37
Oh yeah, absolutely.
1:37:39
Tons more.
1:37:40
Tons more.
1:37:42
All right.
1:37:43
I have a little side clip, a little
1:37:45
clip just to say it was entertaining.
1:37:47
Yeah, sure.
1:37:49
Your buddy...
1:37:50
Oh, here we go.
1:37:51
Is that Scott Galloway?
1:37:54
No, you know, I have trouble clipping that
1:37:56
guy.
1:37:57
He's so slow talking and...
1:38:01
Well, he talks with his mouth like this.
1:38:03
And he kind of talks with his teeth.
1:38:05
Through a slit.
1:38:06
And he is...
1:38:09
It's hard to watch him.
1:38:11
He always likes to be on video and
1:38:12
he's just so smug.
1:38:15
Someone convinced them that they should do a
1:38:19
video.
1:38:20
And I was like, oh, without video, it's
1:38:21
really nothing.
1:38:22
You really have to have video.
1:38:24
Your podcast is no good without video.
1:38:26
Let me see how many people watch that
1:38:27
stupid podcast on YouTube.
1:38:30
Although, stupid, I love the podcast, I have
1:38:32
to say.
1:38:34
Yes.
1:38:35
Yeah, you love Hate It.
1:38:37
It's a great podcast.
1:38:39
So Kennedy...
1:38:40
Oh, that's my buddy.
1:38:41
She almost killed you.
1:38:42
She broke my butt.
1:38:46
Should I tell the story?
1:38:47
I should probably tell the story.
1:38:48
Yeah, you might as well reframe the story
1:38:50
because we have not heard it for probably
1:38:52
five years.
1:38:54
MTV Beach House.
1:38:55
First year.
1:38:56
Great idea.
1:38:57
We all go out to Quag.
1:39:01
Which is, you got the Hamptons and then
1:39:04
you got all the poor people.
1:39:05
They live in Quag.
1:39:06
It's beyond the Hamptons.
1:39:07
Big house on the beach.
1:39:09
It was an experiment.
1:39:10
Worked out really well.
1:39:12
It later became a reality show when everybody
1:39:14
realized that all that happened in MTV Beach
1:39:16
House was just a lot of drinking and
1:39:18
screwing around.
1:39:20
So all the VJs would be out there
1:39:21
for the summers.
1:39:22
Real pain in the butt.
1:39:24
You'd drive three and a half hours from
1:39:25
the city to get there.
1:39:27
And, you know, so we did all the
1:39:29
typical beach house things and then we're on
1:39:31
wave runners.
1:39:33
These days known as jet skis, which they're
1:39:35
not.
1:39:35
They're wave runners.
1:39:36
So I'm doing my segment.
1:39:39
But I'm, you know, but I'm sitting on
1:39:40
the wave runner and the camera guy's on
1:39:42
the other wave runner and he's, you know,
1:39:44
I'm doing my segment and all of a
1:39:45
sudden Kennedy rams into me with her wave
1:39:49
runner thinking she was funny and so I
1:39:52
go flying off the wave runner and hit
1:39:55
my left buttock right on the edge of
1:39:58
the wave runner and to this day there's
1:40:01
still a crease in my butt.
1:40:03
And it was black and blue for months.
1:40:07
And she never really said sorry, which I've
1:40:09
always wanted to talk to her about.
1:40:11
And I almost got on her podcast but
1:40:13
then they canceled on me.
1:40:15
Oh, that's too bad.
1:40:17
Yeah.
1:40:17
Well, her podcast isn't that good.
1:40:19
No offense to her.
1:40:20
I, of course, have forgiven her since then
1:40:21
but it'd be fun to talk about it.
1:40:25
Well, she's quite lively on Gutfeld and I
1:40:29
got butt slammed.
1:40:31
That's right, trolls.
1:40:32
I literally got butt slammed by Kennedy.
1:40:34
There you go.
1:40:35
So she was on Stelter or said Stelter
1:40:37
on her podcast?
1:40:38
No, no.
1:40:39
She has an anecdote that I thought was
1:40:41
amusing.
1:40:42
It's more of a real news story.
1:40:44
You get to clip up real quick because
1:40:46
this is a real news story.
1:40:48
It's a little gossip.
1:40:49
And now, back to Reunions.
1:40:53
And I hate to give Brian Stelter any
1:40:55
credit for anything because he really is a
1:40:58
giant human potato who's obsessed with Emily Campagno.
1:41:02
It was really, really creepy.
1:41:04
Really?
1:41:05
I did not know that.
1:41:06
I did say spill the tea.
1:41:08
Like in front of his wife, he's like,
1:41:09
Emily, I'm your biggest fan.
1:41:11
And I was like, get away from her.
1:41:13
You are literally two inches and half a
1:41:18
glass of Chardonnay away from pumping her leg.
1:41:21
You never get to hear these stories on
1:41:24
your shows, Kilmeade.
1:41:26
Oh, brother.
1:41:29
Wow.
1:41:29
My story was better than that.
1:41:32
Yeah, but I, you know, it was better,
1:41:35
actually, but it was kind of lascivious.
1:41:38
I like the lasciviousness of Stelter fawning all
1:41:41
over this woman, Emily Campagno, who she's referring
1:41:44
to as the X-Raider head cheerleader turned
1:41:49
lawyer turned enthusiastic host.
1:41:53
You know, she's on various Fox shows.
1:41:55
Really cute.
1:41:57
And she turned beet red kind of even
1:42:01
though she was right there when the story
1:42:03
was pointing at her and she said, yeah,
1:42:07
I guess this is a true story because
1:42:09
she didn't deny it.
1:42:11
Emily Campagno.
1:42:14
Wikipedia doesn't even have a picture of her.
1:42:17
What's wrong with you, Wikipedia?
1:42:18
Just look at images.
1:42:20
There's a thousand pictures of Emily Campagno.
1:42:22
If you can find the ones when she
1:42:24
was the head cheerleader at the Raiders, she
1:42:27
was blonde.
1:42:28
Huh.
1:42:30
Let me see.
1:42:32
Cheerleader for the Raiders.
1:42:35
Yeah, head cheerleader.
1:42:37
She's one of those women.
1:42:40
She's one of those women that has to
1:42:43
be a nightmare.
1:42:46
No, because she's so high energy.
1:42:48
It's like, come on, let's go horse riding.
1:42:49
Let's go dancing.
1:42:51
Get out of the house.
1:42:52
Sit up.
1:42:52
What are you doing sitting?
1:42:55
Grab a hula hoop.
1:42:57
Do something.
1:43:01
Be horrible.
1:43:02
I wouldn't mind hearing about, you seem to
1:43:04
have a series on pride flags, which the
1:43:07
fact that you put a series together means
1:43:09
something in here is good and I don't
1:43:11
want it to wait until after we take
1:43:12
a break because, you know.
1:43:14
All right, I can do it.
1:43:15
This is PBS has been doing.
1:43:19
It's still Pride Month.
1:43:21
It's the 29th, so it's still Pride Month.
1:43:23
So there's this big controversy.
1:43:25
They're trying to push pride flags all over
1:43:27
the place, which is really skeptical.
1:43:30
I don't have mixed feelings about it.
1:43:33
I just don't think it's a good idea
1:43:36
to have your state flag, your American flag,
1:43:40
and then a pride flag.
1:43:41
It's a sexual thing.
1:43:43
So what are you putting that up there
1:43:45
for?
1:43:47
But okay, so PBS is all behind it
1:43:50
too.
1:43:50
Oh God, yes.
1:43:50
Let's do a promotion.
1:43:52
They're basically promoting using the pride flag.
1:43:55
Now, most of these clips are fairly short,
1:43:57
but they're a little long, but they all
1:43:58
have kind of a punchline, so it makes
1:44:00
it worthwhile.
1:44:01
Let's start with one.
1:44:03
This year marks a decade since same-sex
1:44:05
marriage was legalized nationwide, but in several Republican
1:44:08
-led states, efforts are underway to ban pride
1:44:11
flags from public schools and government buildings, sparking
1:44:14
a wave of local resistance.
1:44:16
Dima Zayn has the story.
1:44:18
Welcome!
1:44:20
In Salt Lake City, a historic flag raising.
1:44:24
You are welcome here because in Salt Lake
1:44:27
City, you belong.
1:44:29
The city adopted a new official flag called
1:44:31
the Sago Belonging Flag, featuring LGBTQ colors underneath
1:44:35
the city's Sago flower.
1:44:37
What we're doing today is about the dignity
1:44:39
and the worth of every single person in
1:44:42
this community.
1:44:43
No matter who they are, no matter who
1:44:46
they love.
1:44:47
The move coming just hours before a new
1:44:50
law took effect in Utah, banning public schools
1:44:53
and government buildings in the state from displaying
1:44:55
any flags that aren't officially approved.
1:44:58
Utah was the first state in the nation
1:45:00
to ban pride flags from public buildings, but
1:45:02
not the last.
1:45:04
Idaho and Montana have adopted similar bans in
1:45:06
recent weeks, and at least eight other states
1:45:08
with Republican-controlled legislatures are considering the idea.
1:45:13
Orion Rumler covers LGBTQ issues in politics for
1:45:16
the 19th News.
1:45:18
Hey, how come we can't get a gig
1:45:20
like that?
1:45:21
Cover LGBTQ issues for the news?
1:45:25
This is a great gig!
1:45:28
It's a permanent gig for sure.
1:45:30
In politics for the 19th News.
1:45:33
Republican lawmakers have framed these bans as a
1:45:37
necessary way to make state houses and government
1:45:41
buildings and schools, depending on the length of
1:45:44
the ban, neutral places.
1:45:47
But some cities are pushing back.
1:45:50
Like in Boise, Idaho, where a pride flag
1:45:52
has flown for several years outside City Hall.
1:45:55
Yeah.
1:45:57
I agree.
1:45:58
Does a pride flag outside of City Hall
1:46:00
in Boise mean that the City Hall is
1:46:03
gay?
1:46:04
The pride flag is about gay, right?
1:46:07
Well, no, it's multiple things.
1:46:09
It's LGBTQ+, disability pride.
1:46:13
Well, it's basically, yes, it's mostly gay.
1:46:16
There's transgender in it.
1:46:17
I'd say mostly trans at this point is
1:46:19
what it represents more than anything.
1:46:20
Well, now it's mostly trans.
1:46:21
What happened to the pink triangle?
1:46:25
That was kind of cool.
1:46:27
Well, I don't know, but these guys seem
1:46:28
to be they seem to be all jacked
1:46:31
up about having the pride flag.
1:46:33
You know, some workers flags or a communist
1:46:36
flag or what is the point?
1:46:39
It just bothers me.
1:46:40
But I'm just being a boomer here.
1:46:42
So I can get away with it.
1:46:45
Don't worry.
1:46:46
You can get away with it.
1:46:47
I'll get blamed for it.
1:46:48
Yeah, you should be blamed for it.
1:46:50
In fact, you invited it.
1:46:55
We have a motion and a second.
1:46:56
Last month, the City Council voted 5-1
1:46:59
to designate it as an official city flag,
1:47:01
which they say will allow them to continue
1:47:03
to fly it and not violate the new
1:47:05
state law.
1:47:07
After years of flying it proudly it would
1:47:10
not be a neutral act.
1:47:11
Boise Mayor Lauren McLean arguing We know.
1:47:14
But that's not just a flag.
1:47:16
We know it says who we are.
1:47:21
You know, it says who we are.
1:47:23
That's what I just said.
1:47:24
Boise is gay.
1:47:27
That's what she said.
1:47:29
I want a Tourette's flag.
1:47:30
What would the Tourette's flag look like?
1:47:32
It would be kind of jiggly.
1:47:33
It has its own flagpole that just jitters
1:47:36
the whole time.
1:47:37
Now it gets screwy.
1:47:39
Oh, I see.
1:47:40
I have two threes.
1:47:43
I think the first three is the one
1:47:46
we want.
1:47:47
Just two blocks away sits the Idaho State
1:47:50
Capitol, where the legislature voted overwhelmingly to pass
1:47:54
HB 96, a bill that bans quote governmental
1:47:57
entities from displaying any flags other than the
1:47:59
U.S. flag, state and local flags, the
1:48:02
POW flag, or those from military branches and
1:48:05
native tribes.
1:48:06
Schools may also display their own banners.
1:48:09
Idaho's Republican Attorney General warns Boise's mayor to
1:48:12
take down the flag or face penalties when
1:48:15
the state legislature comes back in session.
1:48:17
It's going to cost the community and the
1:48:20
city money for violating the law, and she
1:48:23
doesn't pay it out of her pocket.
1:48:25
It's going to cost the citizens of Boise,
1:48:27
and I think that's shameful.
1:48:29
In neighboring Montana sits the city of Missoula.
1:48:32
Earlier this month city leaders voted to adopt
1:48:35
the Pride flag as its only official city
1:48:37
flag, despite a new Montana state law that
1:48:40
prohibits flags on state property that quote represent
1:48:43
a political viewpoint including but not limited to
1:48:46
flags or banners regarding a political party, race,
1:48:49
sexual orientation, gender, or political ideology.
1:48:53
The Republican governor of Montana, Greg Gianforte, called
1:48:56
the move divisive, posting that Missoula City Council
1:49:00
should be ashamed for imposing a Pride flag
1:49:02
on schools and dividing their community.
1:49:04
This is more than blue dots rebuking the
1:49:08
culture war policies of their Republican controlled legislatures.
1:49:13
Choosing to fly those flags as official city
1:49:16
flags sends a message that this city wants
1:49:19
to stand apart from the rest of the
1:49:21
state as a beacon of inclusivity.
1:49:25
A challenge that for now hangs in the
1:49:27
air.
1:49:29
Yeah, I'm kind of regretting this now.
1:49:32
Well, you shouldn't because here comes number three,
1:49:35
WTF.
1:49:36
And now we are joined by Salt Lake
1:49:38
City Mayor Erin Mendenhall.
1:49:40
Thank you so much for joining us.
1:49:41
I want to jump in first and ask
1:49:43
your reaction when you heard about Utah's legislation
1:49:46
bill banning all non-official flags at schools
1:49:49
and governmental buildings.
1:49:51
Well, it didn't make a lot of sense
1:49:53
as an urgent topic for our legislature to
1:49:56
address and yet they chose to do so.
1:49:58
And we worked really hard to figure out
1:50:00
how we could both abide by that law
1:50:03
and continue to represent the values of Salt
1:50:06
Lake City.
1:50:06
You adopted three other flags amending them as
1:50:09
official city flags allowing you to fly them.
1:50:12
Can you dig in a little deeper here
1:50:14
and talk about what these flags symbolize to
1:50:17
you and to your community?
1:50:18
Oh, here we go.
1:50:19
They symbolize the values that have been here
1:50:22
in Salt Lake City for generations.
1:50:24
Diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging.
1:50:28
They do not exclude.
1:50:30
These are flags of inclusion.
1:50:32
We've raised two of them in the month
1:50:33
of June with the Juneteenth flag raising and
1:50:37
pride.
1:50:37
And we've heard from hundreds, even thousands of
1:50:41
community members who've said I see myself being
1:50:44
represented in these flags.
1:50:45
I feel seen and valued and wanted and
1:50:49
understood.
1:50:50
And that's what these flags are about.
1:50:52
Oh, man.
1:50:54
I feel valued because of the flag and
1:50:56
understood because there's a flag hanging outside the
1:51:01
city hall.
1:51:02
There's a flag that means I feel understood.
1:51:05
What is going on here?
1:51:09
What the hell is that?
1:51:11
You sound like the F-35 guy.
1:51:14
Yeah, well, here we go.
1:51:15
This gets worse.
1:51:16
Here's five.
1:51:18
Utah Governor Spencer Cox didn't sign the bill,
1:51:20
but he also did not veto it, which
1:51:22
allowed the law to go into effect.
1:51:24
He was asked about Salt Lake City's pride
1:51:27
flags and here's what he had to say.
1:51:29
I'm sure they feel great that they got
1:51:30
around this dumb law and they did it
1:51:33
with dumb flags.
1:51:35
The whole thing's dumb.
1:51:37
What do you think should be done?
1:51:38
I already said what I thought should be
1:51:40
done.
1:51:40
We should raise the American flag and let's
1:51:43
unify around that.
1:51:45
They are dumb flags and it was a
1:51:47
dumb bill.
1:51:48
What's your response to the governor?
1:51:50
It's fine if he wants to say that
1:51:52
about the decision that I made to bring
1:51:54
these flags forward for approval with our city
1:51:56
council.
1:51:57
That's my role as the mayor.
1:51:59
I take that responsibility.
1:52:01
But I don't think it's the right way
1:52:03
to address community members who feel validated, seen,
1:52:08
heard, and wanted in their community because they
1:52:12
see these flags flying.
1:52:14
Have you felt or have you had a
1:52:15
bigger sense of the state seeking more control
1:52:18
over your city's ability to function?
1:52:23
If there's no flag, you don't feel wanted
1:52:26
by the city or something.
1:52:28
What are we talking about here?
1:52:32
What in the world is this?
1:52:36
By the way, this mayor, this nutball mayor
1:52:39
from Salt Lake City.
1:52:41
It's a Mormon state, which cracks me up,
1:52:43
by the way.
1:52:43
I just find it highly amusing that this
1:52:45
is taking place in Utah.
1:52:48
Especially in Salt Lake City, of all places.
1:52:51
I don't know if you've ever been there.
1:52:52
Yes, I have.
1:52:53
I've hung out with the Mormons.
1:52:58
If you go to Salt Lake City, you're
1:52:59
going to hang out with Mormons.
1:53:00
They are the ultimate OG preppers, I'll tell
1:53:03
you that.
1:53:03
So she goes on forever.
1:53:07
I just have this last piece of what
1:53:09
she continues to yammer and yammer about inclusivity.
1:53:13
You feel wanted.
1:53:14
You have to have the flag or else.
1:53:17
I think that's a pretty consistent dynamic, especially
1:53:20
in a blue dot capital city in a
1:53:23
red state with a supermajority Republican legislature.
1:53:26
That's not a new experience for us, but
1:53:30
it's something that we're constantly navigating.
1:53:32
My administration has a pretty good relationship with
1:53:35
state leaders.
1:53:36
We talk to each other, even when we
1:53:38
disagree, and I think we're going to be
1:53:40
able to keep talking through this.
1:53:42
I don't think this is the end of
1:53:43
what we'll see from the legislature regarding the
1:53:45
flags, but neither is it the end of
1:53:47
our ability to represent our values, and we'll
1:53:50
keep finding ways to do so.
1:53:54
Well, there's a controversy brewing around the pride
1:53:56
flag in Fredericksburg that I should probably mention.
1:53:59
Are they flying it at City Hall?
1:54:02
Oh, no, no.
1:54:04
So, we have a coffee place on Main
1:54:08
Street called Java Ranch, and Java Ranch, it's
1:54:11
kind of old school.
1:54:14
It's like cowboy interior, and it's just a
1:54:18
coffee place.
1:54:19
You got the kids working there.
1:54:21
They're in their 20s.
1:54:23
I play chess there on Mondays.
1:54:25
It's a nice little hangout.
1:54:27
Wait, wait, stop.
1:54:27
Stop the presses.
1:54:30
Yes.
1:54:31
You, wait.
1:54:32
On Mondays, which I consider the no-agenda
1:54:36
day off, you go to the cowboy coffee
1:54:40
shop, the Java Hut, or whatever it's called.
1:54:44
Java Ranch.
1:54:45
Java Ranch, and play chess.
1:54:48
With Willie.
1:54:50
Yes.
1:54:51
Is it the chess where you have the
1:54:53
timer?
1:54:55
Well, we have had competitions, and it's Willie's
1:54:59
first invitational.
1:55:02
Willie kind of, we started playing chess.
1:55:05
No one was playing chess there.
1:55:05
Who's Willie?
1:55:06
Oh, Willie's a guy I met in our
1:55:09
church, and he is messed up.
1:55:14
Willie's like, that's Willie.
1:55:17
He got the arms out, pretty much like
1:55:19
Trump, like Trump's impression of that journalist.
1:55:21
That's Willie, because Willie had a head-on
1:55:24
collision when he was 19, and, you know.
1:55:27
Is he good at chess?
1:55:28
He's very good at chess.
1:55:30
Interesting.
1:55:31
Okay.
1:55:31
Yeah, because I said, hey, Willie, once I
1:55:34
heard his story, I was like, what's wrong
1:55:35
with him?
1:55:36
Is he retired?
1:55:36
What's going on with you?
1:55:38
Because I sat next to him one time,
1:55:40
and he explained to me, he showed me
1:55:44
a picture on his, he only can use
1:55:45
one hand, and he showed the picture of
1:55:47
the wreck of, I mean, the guy who
1:55:49
was next to him got killed in the
1:55:50
accident.
1:55:51
Then he had a couple of strokes, so
1:55:52
Willie's had a tough go of it.
1:55:54
And I said, yeah, we should meet for
1:55:55
coffee.
1:55:55
He had Java Ranch.
1:55:56
So we meet at Java Ranch, and he
1:55:57
has a chess set with him.
1:55:59
And the guy turns out to be, like,
1:56:00
kind of a good chess player.
1:56:02
Okay.
1:56:03
Alright, that's enough.
1:56:04
That's how chess came about.
1:56:05
So anyway, you asked.
1:56:07
Yeah, I did.
1:56:08
I'm sorry I did.
1:56:09
Yeah, oh, you should be.
1:56:10
So a new place opened up called Café
1:56:13
House.
1:56:14
K-A-F-F-E-E.
1:56:16
Café House.
1:56:18
Yeah.
1:56:18
Yeah, Café House.
1:56:19
And I immediately didn't like it.
1:56:21
Was it next to this place?
1:56:23
No, it's around the corner, and it's very
1:56:25
modern, and it's very nice, and, you know,
1:56:29
So it's not rough and tumble like the
1:56:31
Java Hut.
1:56:32
No, it's douchey.
1:56:33
It's bougie.
1:56:34
Bougie.
1:56:35
Bougie, ooh!
1:56:36
It's a café house.
1:56:38
All of a sudden, everyone goes to Café
1:56:40
House.
1:56:40
But I won't go to Café House because
1:56:42
I'm a Java Ranch guy.
1:56:44
I'm loyal.
1:56:45
Like, I still go to the same hair
1:56:46
girl in Austin for 15 years.
1:56:48
I'm loyal.
1:56:49
And so the ladies do their Bible study
1:56:53
there.
1:56:54
Half the church is there.
1:56:55
Probably another reason.
1:56:55
The coffee house.
1:56:57
Café House.
1:56:58
Now, here's the controversy.
1:57:01
Recently, some of the kids who work there,
1:57:04
young people, That coffee house.
1:57:06
That coffee house put a little Jesus on
1:57:09
the counter wrapped in a pride flag.
1:57:12
Jesus in a pride flag.
1:57:14
I would consider that sacrilegious.
1:57:16
Yes, of course.
1:57:17
And now they're all trying to figure out
1:57:19
what to do about it.
1:57:21
Oh, what to do about it.
1:57:23
Yeah, and I'm like, here's an idea.
1:57:26
Ask them to take the pride flag off.
1:57:28
Well, we did, and they said no.
1:57:30
Well, then you should no longer go there.
1:57:33
You should come back to Java Ranch.
1:57:35
They said no.
1:57:36
They said no.
1:57:37
I have an idea.
1:57:38
Take the pride flag off.
1:57:39
No.
1:57:40
Oh.
1:57:41
Why don't you just remove the Jesus and
1:57:43
the pride flag?
1:57:44
That would be fine too.
1:57:46
They can have a pride flag.
1:57:47
I don't think anyone cares if they have
1:57:48
a pride flag in there, but the pride
1:57:50
flag on the Jesus is a bit of
1:57:52
a problem.
1:57:52
It's sacrilegious, yeah.
1:57:53
Yes, and I'm like, well, why do you
1:57:56
keep going there then?
1:57:58
Don't go there.
1:58:00
Yeah, but we like coffee house.
1:58:01
Oh, okay.
1:58:02
They just don't like the rough and tumble
1:58:04
nature of the Java joint.
1:58:07
Java Ranch, man.
1:58:09
Oh, the trolls say fire bomb the house.
1:58:13
Fire bomb it.
1:58:14
Now you're talking.
1:58:16
Hey, with that, I want to thank you
1:58:17
for your courage in the morning to you,
1:58:19
the man who put the C in the
1:58:20
cheerleaders for the Raiders.
1:58:21
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:58:22
end, the one and the only, Mr. John
1:58:24
C.
1:58:25
Devorah.
1:58:29
Yeah, good morning to you, Mr. Adam Devorah,
1:58:31
ships, sea boots on the ground, feet in
1:58:32
the air, subs in the water, and all
1:58:34
the names and mates out there.
1:58:35
Hold on, trolls.
1:58:36
Hold on.
1:58:41
By the way, I'm going to suggest that.
1:58:43
Let's fire bomb the house.
1:58:45
That's a great idea.
1:58:47
Hey, 2,319 trolls checking and listening to
1:58:50
the live stream.
1:58:51
Well, that's good for a Sunday.
1:58:52
What's the number?
1:58:54
2319, so it's about 100 up.
1:58:56
100 up, baby.
1:58:57
100 low.
1:58:58
No, it's usually 22.
1:59:00
It's 22.
1:59:01
18 on Thursdays, 22.
1:59:04
Isn't it 22?
1:59:05
Yeah.
1:59:06
You have the post-it note somewhere.
1:59:09
Check it out.
1:59:11
Oh, hold on a second.
1:59:12
Oh, let's see.
1:59:13
There you go.
1:59:14
It's already there.
1:59:15
They're messing with me.
1:59:16
There we go.
1:59:17
You're back.
1:59:18
I said 23.
1:59:20
I think 22 is the norm.
1:59:21
Isn't 22 the norm?
1:59:22
No, 25 is the norm.
1:59:24
25?
1:59:24
24 lately.
1:59:26
Last week, we had 26.
1:59:29
No, we're down.
1:59:30
We're down 300.
1:59:31
Trump needs to do something about that.
1:59:34
It's Trump's fault.
1:59:36
He's got to bomb somebody, man.
1:59:38
Come on.
1:59:39
Come on, baby.
1:59:40
Yes, the trolls are listening to us at
1:59:42
trollroom.io. You might be right, by the
1:59:45
way.
1:59:46
Well, of course I'm right.
1:59:46
We had big numbers the last couple of
1:59:48
shows because of the bombing.
1:59:49
Yeah, now people like...
1:59:51
Bloodthirsty country.
1:59:52
Those boomers with their Jew money.
1:59:56
We don't get any Jew money.
1:59:58
I think we got one donation from...
2:00:01
We got one Jew thanking us.
2:00:04
One lone Jew.
2:00:05
One lone Jew said, hey, thanks for saying
2:00:08
that.
2:00:08
Then we defend them to such an extreme...
2:00:12
We are equal opportunity offenders, believe me.
2:00:15
You can also listen to this program on
2:00:17
a modern podcast app.
2:00:18
Go to podcastapps, that's plural, .com and choose
2:00:24
one.
2:00:24
Choose any of them.
2:00:25
These are independent podcast apps that will delight
2:00:27
you with the features they have that go
2:00:29
far beyond any of your legacy apps.
2:00:32
Ooh, nasty legacy apps.
2:00:34
Give them a shot.
2:00:35
I think you'll like it.
2:00:36
There's all kinds of cool things you can
2:00:37
do with them, including listen to the live
2:00:39
stream.
2:00:40
And not just listen to the live stream,
2:00:42
but within 90 seconds of us publishing the
2:00:44
show, you'll be alerted on your phone, on
2:00:46
your little pocket computer telling you, oh, there's
2:00:48
a new show.
2:00:49
That is not just for our show.
2:00:51
It's for hundreds of thousands of shows that
2:00:54
utilize the PodPing infrastructure developed by the boys
2:01:00
and girls at Podcasting 2.0. Last week,
2:01:04
we did a pretty in-depth explanation of
2:01:07
value for value.
2:01:08
I don't think we have to go over
2:01:09
that again, but the bottom line is, we
2:01:11
give you everything.
2:01:13
Unlike people who...
2:01:14
Oh, man, the ads on these podcasts.
2:01:19
Do you ever really listen to any podcasts
2:01:21
at length?
2:01:22
Yeah, I do.
2:01:22
I listen to Mike Baker.
2:01:24
I listen to the right guy, Byron Bryan.
2:01:28
Didn't they have ads?
2:01:30
Yeah.
2:01:30
Isn't that annoying?
2:01:32
Yeah.
2:01:34
The ad load, as we say in the
2:01:37
business, the ad load has just become outrageous.
2:01:41
It's like every 10 minutes.
2:01:43
It bothers me.
2:01:45
These are all...
2:01:46
I don't know what it is.
2:01:48
Maybe Leo Laporte had something to do with
2:01:50
it.
2:01:50
I'm not sure.
2:01:52
It all started off with they have to
2:01:55
be host read ads.
2:01:58
That's where the money is.
2:01:59
You get $40 CPM, i.e. $40 for
2:02:02
every 1,000 downloads.
2:02:04
I don't see it.
2:02:04
I think a professionally done ad, I've always
2:02:06
felt this way, that a professionally done ad
2:02:09
in-house by an ad agency that just
2:02:12
sells the product and does a great job
2:02:14
of it, would have been nothing but host
2:02:16
read ads.
2:02:17
That's what used to be.
2:02:18
Television discovered this.
2:02:19
In the early days of television, in the
2:02:21
50s, especially the 50s, they had all these,
2:02:24
like, What's My Line?
2:02:26
Because they still show these shows now on
2:02:28
some of these over-the-air sub-channels.
2:02:32
It's like, What's My Line?
2:02:34
Brought to you by Paul Moll.
2:02:36
Paul Moll's a great cigarette for blah, blah,
2:02:38
blah.
2:02:38
I know.
2:02:39
Jim, what do you have there?
2:02:40
I got some Paul Moll cigarettes.
2:02:42
It was all host read ads.
2:02:44
Then somebody decided, hey, these guys stink.
2:02:47
Why don't we do a real professional ad
2:02:49
and bring in a cowboy and do some
2:02:50
other stuff.
2:02:51
We can probably do a better job of
2:02:52
selling.
2:02:53
Then the host read ads on TV, even
2:02:57
early days of Johnny Carson, they used to
2:02:59
do them.
2:03:00
They all ended.
2:03:02
I'll tell you why that is.
2:03:04
Would you like to know why that is?
2:03:06
I'd like to know.
2:03:07
Because the host read ad has more value
2:03:10
because you know that the people who actually...
2:03:13
Remember, the metric in podcasts is downloads, which
2:03:17
is a scam because these apps all automatically
2:03:20
download and you're probably not listening to half
2:03:23
of the podcast in your podcast app.
2:03:25
It's a scam.
2:03:27
That's why just regular ad pre-rolls, mid
2:03:32
-rolls, and post-rolls, no one's listening.
2:03:35
You skip them.
2:03:37
The idea is that when the host reads
2:03:39
it, there's a more likelihood that people will
2:03:42
listen to that ad because it's the host
2:03:45
and the recall of these ads that are
2:03:48
host read is higher.
2:03:51
Says who?
2:03:53
Says the IAB, the Interactive Agency.
2:03:57
The IAB needs to figure it out.
2:04:00
The IAB needs to figure a lot of
2:04:01
stuff out.
2:04:02
What has happened is you've got the $40
2:04:04
CPM ad reads and then you have the
2:04:07
DAI.
2:04:09
What is a DIA?
2:04:12
Oh, DAI, Dynamic Ad Insertion, which means here
2:04:17
in Fredericksburg, if I start up a podcast
2:04:19
that is DAI, I get a Spanish ad
2:04:21
because they know me so well.
2:04:25
Okay, great.
2:04:26
I don't know what you're advertising me.
2:04:28
It just doesn't work.
2:04:31
But some people think it works because I
2:04:33
saw our spreadsheet for today and it seems
2:04:35
like some people are like, oh, I can
2:04:37
get these guys to read my ad.
2:04:40
So, we'll see about that.
2:04:46
Anyway, no, we don't do that.
2:04:48
We just thank everybody who supports us financially
2:04:51
and we do that for everybody $50 and
2:04:53
above and it seems to work out okay
2:04:55
most times.
2:04:56
It's an exciting lifestyle, but we chose it
2:04:59
and we're okay.
2:05:00
Exciting lifestyle.
2:05:02
The exciting lifestyle.
2:05:03
It's the new international lifestyle.
2:05:05
Value for value.
2:05:06
Didn't you know that's the new international lifestyle?
2:05:09
I think we're going to have to put
2:05:10
a word limit on these ads.
2:05:14
On these notes.
2:05:16
I don't care whether it's an ad or
2:05:18
not.
2:05:18
Yeah.
2:05:19
There's two on here that are just, they're
2:05:21
no good.
2:05:22
Well, what's your limit?
2:05:25
I have to, okay, well, I can make
2:05:28
the calculation.
2:05:28
I'll come up with an answer for the
2:05:30
next show.
2:05:31
I mean, it should really, because you know,
2:05:33
when you give it a limit, everybody's going
2:05:35
to fit it into that limit.
2:05:38
It's fine with me as long as the
2:05:39
limit's not like it is.
2:05:41
We're not talking a thousand words.
2:05:42
We had essays here.
2:05:46
Dostoevsky hasn't written as much as a couple
2:05:48
of these guys.
2:05:49
Another obscure reference from Curry and Dvorak, everybody.
2:05:54
Not that obscure.
2:05:57
We also accept value in the form of
2:06:02
time and talent.
2:06:03
There's a lot of that.
2:06:04
Our boots on the ground reports.
2:06:05
We have lawyers on staff, people, I'm telling
2:06:07
you.
2:06:08
We got lawyer producers doing stuff.
2:06:10
We do.
2:06:11
Who care for us.
2:06:11
Who care for the show.
2:06:12
Want to make the show better.
2:06:14
Want to help us.
2:06:15
Want to inform us.
2:06:16
And then we have artists.
2:06:17
Well, we used to have artists.
2:06:18
Now we just have AI prompt jockeys.
2:06:21
We have single, I mean, I'm just going
2:06:22
to allow AI songs for the end of
2:06:24
show mix now because you're right.
2:06:27
You're right.
2:06:27
I like the way you have to...
2:06:30
Okay, I'm not going to criticize you for
2:06:32
this.
2:06:32
You can.
2:06:34
Because that's not really a criticism.
2:06:37
You cave.
2:06:39
Maybe the word cave is not the right
2:06:42
word.
2:06:43
But you cave to the pressures that are
2:06:46
coming in from every...
2:06:47
You cave to modernity.
2:06:50
As things change and improve and progress.
2:06:53
You cave to it after resisting as much
2:06:57
as you can.
2:06:58
So that brings me to the question.
2:06:59
Why do you resist at all?
2:07:01
Resist we much.
2:07:03
And we much this be forgotten.
2:07:06
Well, I resist because I liked our artists.
2:07:10
We had Dutch masters.
2:07:12
They're all gone.
2:07:13
Every single one of them.
2:07:14
You're right.
2:07:14
The Dutch masters have all left.
2:07:16
They've all abandoned us.
2:07:17
And sadly, sadly a lot of this AI
2:07:21
art is just better.
2:07:23
It doesn't mean that I...
2:07:25
The execution is better.
2:07:28
What?
2:07:28
I think you're right.
2:07:30
Yeah, I mean...
2:07:31
But now it's just all AI art, which
2:07:34
is just too bad.
2:07:36
Once in a while someone will come in.
2:07:37
We got a long note from Riley.
2:07:41
Oh, you mean the deserter?
2:07:46
Deserter, you mean?
2:07:47
Or is the guy who eats desserts He
2:07:51
makes desserts.
2:07:52
He's got a lot of work.
2:07:55
He's an accountant, basically.
2:07:57
He's apologized.
2:07:59
He's counting his money.
2:08:01
Yes, he needs money.
2:08:02
He listens to the show and he wishes
2:08:06
he could do more.
2:08:06
But you know what?
2:08:07
The stuff that Riley does has basically been
2:08:10
jacked by AI.
2:08:11
Everybody can do Riley stuff now.
2:08:14
Think about it.
2:08:15
Not with the crude basic crude style.
2:08:19
No, that's true.
2:08:21
Alright.
2:08:22
So, Blue Acorn was the artwork that we
2:08:26
chose for the previous episode.
2:08:28
Yeah, I caved on this one pretty quickly.
2:08:30
No, you didn't.
2:08:31
Because you're like, I like the boobs.
2:08:34
This is great.
2:08:35
That's a great piece of art.
2:08:37
And I was so tired of fighting you
2:08:38
on this stuff.
2:08:39
I'm going to tell everyone how it really
2:08:42
went.
2:08:42
You speak with forked tongue.
2:08:46
I said, I like this piece.
2:08:49
I think this is a really good piece
2:08:50
of cheesecake.
2:08:51
And you said, oh, we just did cheesecake
2:08:54
two shows ago.
2:08:56
And I said, yeah.
2:08:57
That's the voice I used?
2:08:59
Yeah.
2:09:00
And so I said, yeah, we did.
2:09:03
But this piece is really, well, I like
2:09:05
the 1776 and we got to have that
2:09:08
into the art.
2:09:09
And then you had some other suggestions.
2:09:11
Okay, well, let's do something else.
2:09:12
And he said, no, no, no, we're doing
2:09:14
this.
2:09:15
And it's your fault.
2:09:16
You chose it.
2:09:18
I'm picking it.
2:09:19
You chose it.
2:09:20
It's on you.
2:09:20
It's on you.
2:09:21
It's on you.
2:09:21
You made a big fuss.
2:09:22
And here I am saying it's on you.
2:09:25
Thank you.
2:09:25
That's exactly how it went.
2:09:27
You said, I'm quitting the show if we
2:09:29
don't choose this art.
2:09:31
I never said that.
2:09:32
That's a lie.
2:09:33
That is a blatant lie.
2:09:37
Oh, man.
2:09:38
But looking back on it, I think it
2:09:40
was a good decision.
2:09:41
It was a good piece.
2:09:42
It was a good piece, yeah.
2:09:44
For 1776, it said America.
2:09:46
For a couple of reasons it was a
2:09:48
good piece.
2:09:48
Well, first of all, it just said America.
2:09:50
That's how I remember America.
2:09:52
That's right.
2:09:53
That's what it did.
2:09:54
It said America right there.
2:09:57
Right up front.
2:09:59
The...
2:10:00
Let me see.
2:10:00
Was there anything else that we discussed?
2:10:02
I don't think so.
2:10:04
But everything is AI art.
2:10:05
Everything.
2:10:07
Which means eventually it'll just be muck.
2:10:10
But I think you've complained so much about
2:10:14
the end of show mixes.
2:10:15
And not without merit.
2:10:16
Not without merit.
2:10:17
But it's hard to do.
2:10:19
And people get discouraged.
2:10:20
And then you hear some toe-tapping ditty
2:10:23
made by AI and I play it.
2:10:24
Like, that's great.
2:10:26
And arguably, it was good.
2:10:28
It was good.
2:10:30
But here's the thing with AI songs.
2:10:33
Everyone's like, this is a great song!
2:10:35
And it's just, you know, they've got some
2:10:37
Curry and Dvorak lyrics in there.
2:10:39
33.
2:10:41
Value for value.
2:10:43
And it's always three minutes long.
2:10:45
No.
2:10:45
End of show mixes.
2:10:46
Cut it down.
2:10:47
A minute.
2:10:48
Make it a minute.
2:10:49
I'll give them 110.
2:10:51
110.
2:10:53
110.
2:10:54
And it's not...
2:10:55
It has to be a good song.
2:10:57
It's not about just the lyrics.
2:10:59
Anybody can throw in some no-agenda lyrics
2:11:02
into AI and say, make me a song.
2:11:05
Like, wow, this is great!
2:11:07
No, it's not.
2:11:09
So, if you send me a true...
2:11:10
You've just done it.
2:11:11
You've got the AI song challenge, which will
2:11:14
lead right into the awards.
2:11:16
Yeah, okay.
2:11:19
You have to spit into the mic.
2:11:21
We have a Best Of coming up at
2:11:24
the end of July.
2:11:26
Just so you know.
2:11:27
You get a day off a Thursday.
2:11:30
And because I'm working on my exit strategy.
2:11:33
We've got to take some time off for
2:11:35
that.
2:11:36
The literal Best Of show, done by Circumference,
2:11:41
is our exit strategies.
2:11:43
It's a three-hour show.
2:11:48
It's a three-hour show.
2:11:50
I wonder if he has the sequined underwear.
2:11:53
I don't remember that one.
2:11:56
Yeah, the HEMA underwear.
2:11:57
You don't remember the HEMA underwear?
2:11:59
Yeah, HEMA, sure.
2:12:00
It was going to be embroidered.
2:12:02
I don't remember that part.
2:12:04
It could be.
2:12:05
Anyway, Blue Acorn, thank you very much.
2:12:08
You kind of nailed it.
2:12:11
It also had the luminance.
2:12:14
It had brightness.
2:12:16
It was still a little wishy-washy.
2:12:21
When I think back to 1976, and I
2:12:25
was in America for the Centennial, the Bicentennial,
2:12:30
I'm sorry.
2:12:30
Yeah.
2:12:31
You were for the Centennial.
2:12:33
I was there for the Bicentennial.
2:12:35
And that's pretty much what it was, 1976.
2:12:38
That's exactly what America was like back then.
2:12:41
So, for me, it was somewhat nostalgic.
2:12:43
But it was you who pressed on it,
2:12:44
and I just gave in.
2:12:46
Then we'd like to thank our executive and
2:12:49
associate executive producers, some of it taking a
2:12:51
little bit to the max here.
2:12:53
We'll have to edit on the fly, because
2:12:55
everyone thinks, well, this is my turn.
2:12:59
This is me.
2:13:00
They certainly have the right.
2:13:02
No, you're stealing from everybody else.
2:13:05
You're stealing time and attention.
2:13:07
But of course...
2:13:08
Yeah, there you go.
2:13:09
Yeah, it's theft.
2:13:11
Stop it, people.
2:13:13
If you had more time, you could write
2:13:15
a shorter note.
2:13:16
That's just the fact.
2:13:17
Take your time and condense these things.
2:13:20
But you know what?
2:13:20
Take your note, put it in the chat,
2:13:22
GPT, and say, make this 200...
2:13:24
No, make this...
2:13:26
What was the old Twitter length?
2:13:30
144 characters.
2:13:31
Yeah, there you go.
2:13:32
That's it.
2:13:33
Moving spaces.
2:13:35
So, if you support...
2:13:37
And anybody can support us with any amount.
2:13:39
That's the beauty of value for value.
2:13:40
You don't have to subscribe to anything.
2:13:42
You don't have to get any program.
2:13:44
There's nothing like that.
2:13:45
Just whenever you say, you know, I think
2:13:47
I'll just help these guys out, because it
2:13:48
was valuable to me.
2:13:49
Then you send whatever that value is, whatever
2:13:51
value we delivered to your life, turn that
2:13:53
into a number, send it back.
2:13:54
That's all that it takes.
2:13:56
NoahJenTheDonations.com Just like Hollywood, though, we try
2:13:58
to spice things up a little bit, so
2:14:00
we give you an associate executive producer credit.
2:14:04
If you step up to that level, if
2:14:05
you can't, everybody can, but you know, it's
2:14:07
what it is.
2:14:09
$200 or above, and we'll read your note.
2:14:10
Then you can be an executive producer, $300
2:14:12
or above, and we'll read your note.
2:14:14
We may have to redact it here and
2:14:15
there.
2:14:16
And these are credits that are completely legit.
2:14:19
You can use them anywhere, including imdb.com.
2:14:21
That proves their legitimacy.
2:14:22
And we kick it off with another show
2:14:25
number donation.
2:14:27
So, the last show was 1776.
2:14:31
Sir Sonderager from St. Joseph, Missouri, 1776, and
2:14:38
throws in 67 cents for good measure, and
2:14:41
says, Good morning, fellas!
2:14:42
It's been minutes since my last donation.
2:14:44
Here's some treasure to make up for the
2:14:47
dry spell, and get me that Ph.D.
2:14:49
Yes, the Ph.D. in Media Deconstruction was
2:14:52
still ongoing until July 4th, so getting quick.
2:14:55
Keep up the good work.
2:14:56
No, no, no.
2:14:56
It's not being canceled on July 4th.
2:14:58
That's what you told me.
2:15:00
No, I said what's being canceled on July
2:15:01
4th is the 76th donation.
2:15:04
Oh, okay.
2:15:06
Got it.
2:15:07
No jingles!
2:15:07
We're going to cancel the Ph.D. promotion
2:15:11
at the drop of a hat.
2:15:16
Wow.
2:15:17
Threatening.
2:15:18
No jingles, but I'd like my de-douching
2:15:21
since I didn't get it on my first
2:15:22
donation.
2:15:24
You've been de-douched.
2:15:26
And that's Sir Sonderager of Bluffwoods.
2:15:32
Bluffwoods.
2:15:32
Bluffwoods.
2:15:34
Well, that takes us to Don...
2:15:37
Dan.
2:15:38
Oh, I'm already screwing it up.
2:15:41
Dan Medore?
2:15:43
Medore?
2:15:44
Yeah, Medore.
2:15:45
In Peoria, Arizona.
2:15:46
Peoria, Arizona.
2:15:49
Huh.
2:15:50
And it's a long note.
2:15:51
But it's on the spreadsheet.
2:15:53
At least it made it on.
2:15:54
This has been a long time coming.
2:15:55
I've been listening to this show since the
2:15:57
late 800s.
2:15:59
Back in the Middle Ages.
2:16:01
That's right.
2:16:02
After having been hit in the mouth by
2:16:04
my good friend Ken, please give me an
2:16:06
atomic de-douching.
2:16:08
What's an atomic de-douching?
2:16:10
Does that exist?
2:16:10
It's just louder.
2:16:12
No, you know, sometimes you gotta look if
2:16:15
there's no atomic de-douching.
2:16:17
You've been de-douched.
2:16:20
As far as long-time douchebaggery, I like
2:16:23
instant gratification, so after listening to over 900
2:16:26
shows, I decided to become an instantite with
2:16:31
my donation.
2:16:32
Please accept 333.33 as my late fee.
2:16:35
Oh, that's cute.
2:16:36
That's good.
2:16:37
I'm first and foremost a proud American.
2:16:39
I'm also a French Acadian ancestry.
2:16:43
I'd like to be known as Circadian.
2:16:46
Oh, that's cute.
2:16:47
We have not seen that one yet.
2:16:49
Not yet.
2:16:51
Circadian of the rhythm section.
2:16:54
Thank you for keeping my amygdala right-sized
2:16:57
over these recent tumultuous years.
2:17:02
Um.
2:17:04
I wonder if he's a musician.
2:17:07
Yeah.
2:17:07
I lost my wife to stomach cancer just
2:17:09
before our 33rd wedding anniversary, and I only,
2:17:12
and my own lymphoma diagnosis was discovered just
2:17:15
after her passing.
2:17:16
It is now in remission.
2:17:17
Good.
2:17:18
So, for jingles, I'd like a double F
2:17:20
cancer, and because it's always a, puts a
2:17:23
smile on my face, can you play Give
2:17:25
It Up for Raven, which we also played.
2:17:29
Making a comeback.
2:17:31
Thank you again, and although I selfishly do
2:17:34
not want you to find an exit strategy,
2:17:38
I'm hoping we have a whole bunch of
2:17:39
ideas.
2:17:40
Yeah.
2:17:40
I'm hopeful you will go at least four
2:17:43
more years.
2:17:44
Also, for the round table, I welcome the
2:17:46
mead as a libation, but would pair it
2:17:49
with mouton-infused poutine.
2:17:53
Which, in other words, you'd make poutine with
2:17:55
mouton rothschild, which seems like an abomination.
2:17:58
Seems pricey.
2:17:59
Seems pricey.
2:18:00
Uh, thanks for all you do, Don Mador.
2:18:03
Dan Mador.
2:18:04
I don't know why I keep saying Don.
2:18:06
It just looks like Don for some reason.
2:18:08
It's Dan.
2:18:09
Circadian, or soon to be, of the rhythm
2:18:11
section.
2:18:12
P.S. I've attached my PayPal receipt for
2:18:14
the Don.
2:18:14
We trust you.
2:18:16
We're good to go.
2:18:21
You've got karma.
2:18:27
Give it up for Raven!
2:18:33
You've got karma.
2:18:36
Onward to Brian L.
2:18:38
Deerfield Beach, Florida.
2:18:39
$1,000.
2:18:41
Dear Adam and John, with a heartfelt ITM
2:18:43
energy, I extend my deepest thanks for your
2:18:45
courage.
2:18:46
You guys became an integral part of my
2:18:48
routine for the better part of a decade.
2:18:49
Whoo!
2:18:50
And I can't thank you enough for your
2:18:51
work during COVID.
2:18:52
I met the love of my life this
2:18:54
day seven years ago.
2:18:55
She grew into the best family medicine doctor
2:18:57
right before my eyes.
2:18:58
Not a pill pusher.
2:19:00
No Agenda was a lifeline for us during
2:19:02
her medical residency in Washington, D.C., where
2:19:04
we and eight other doctors wrote a systematic
2:19:07
review that was blackballed by every journal in
2:19:10
May of 2020 due to the out-of
2:19:12
-patent intervention we were recommending.
2:19:15
Huh.
2:19:15
I didn't want to believe the entire medical
2:19:17
system was captured, but it became painfully clear.
2:19:20
We avoided almost everything, including the White House
2:19:23
chop zone during the summer of love, where
2:19:27
buildings were burned and bird scooters would max
2:19:29
out at three miles per hour in high
2:19:31
-crime areas.
2:19:32
The No Agenda Show was our constant companion,
2:19:34
playing everywhere we went.
2:19:35
Your sharp insights and steadfast dedication brought us
2:19:38
clarity and comfort when we needed it most.
2:19:40
I am deeply grateful for both of your
2:19:42
courage and commitment, as well as that of
2:19:44
the entire Gitmo Nation.
2:19:45
This is a long overdue donation.
2:19:47
I will proudly frame this media deconstruction credential
2:19:50
on my wall.
2:19:51
A shout-out to John G., who hit
2:19:53
me in the mouth many years ago.
2:19:55
I'm going to need a de-douche.
2:19:58
You've been de-douched.
2:19:59
But no jingles or karma.
2:20:01
I know my note is long, and John
2:20:02
is already annoyed.
2:20:04
Ah, yeah, there you go.
2:20:04
Please knight me, Sir Doc Nelson, Knight of
2:20:06
the Capital Region, and I'd like to request
2:20:08
John's favorite muscadine wine for the roundtable.
2:20:12
If it's out, I'll take the mead.
2:20:14
P.S. I missed the Zephyr report.
2:20:16
Thank you for your courage.
2:20:17
So which wine are we putting at the
2:20:19
roundtable?
2:20:19
Well, it's pronounced muscadine.
2:20:21
Well, thank you.
2:20:23
Thank you for that correction.
2:20:24
If they still have it, I would say,
2:20:27
uh, what's the name of this?
2:20:29
It's an operation in Arkansas.
2:20:31
It's the only quaffable muscadine I've ever had.
2:20:35
Well, what is it?
2:20:37
Some winery in Arkansas.
2:20:39
Arkansas.
2:20:40
I'll just ask.
2:20:42
Just say Arkansas muscadine.
2:20:44
That would do the trick.
2:20:45
Muscadine.
2:20:46
Okay.
2:20:46
Can we get some Arkansas muscadine?
2:20:49
Okay.
2:20:52
Muscadine.
2:20:52
Muscadine.
2:20:53
Muscadine.
2:20:54
Yeah, it rhymes with wine.
2:20:56
Yes, muscadine wine.
2:20:58
Got it.
2:20:58
Got it.
2:21:00
Um, it's a big giant grape.
2:21:03
Have you ever seen a muscadine grape?
2:21:05
It's like a plum.
2:21:07
It's not like in a bunch.
2:21:08
It's like a plum.
2:21:10
It's a giant, huge, horrible tasting plum.
2:21:13
The more you know.
2:21:15
Uh, let's go with Don.
2:21:19
Don.
2:21:21
Daniel.
2:21:22
Daniel Franco in Bronx.
2:21:25
The Bronx.
2:21:28
4445.
2:21:29
He sent a note.
2:21:32
I'm going to check.
2:21:33
I happen to have the note right here.
2:21:36
Um, in the morning, Currie and Dvorak.
2:21:41
The donation of 44445 is show number 4776.
2:21:47
Well, I came in late.
2:21:49
Thursday, June 26th.
2:21:50
It was referenced to the year 1774, 1775,
2:21:53
and 1776.
2:21:54
With this donation, my total is now 1
2:21:57
,000.
2:21:58
Thereby, finally making me eligible for knighthood in
2:22:02
the realm of no agenda.
2:22:04
My title will be, sir, I'm not a
2:22:06
spook.
2:22:07
Oh, no.
2:22:07
I'm a nada.
2:22:08
I'm a nada spook.
2:22:10
I'm a nada spook.
2:22:11
I'm a nada spook.
2:22:13
Because that's exactly what a spook would say.
2:22:16
I'm not a spook.
2:22:17
So, finally, spook money.
2:22:20
Well, is it really?
2:22:22
In the lands of Throgs Neck.
2:22:24
Throg.
2:22:24
Throgs Neck, New York.
2:22:26
You know where that is?
2:22:27
Yeah, sure.
2:22:30
Guildmaster.
2:22:30
He's the guildmaster of the Carpenters Guild 157
2:22:33
of the city of New York.
2:22:35
Dual class.
2:22:36
Soldier slash craftsman.
2:22:39
Well, soldier, maybe that's the spook part.
2:22:42
He's got a beautiful signature.
2:22:45
It's one of those celebrity looking things.
2:22:50
Daniel Franco.
2:22:52
Sir, I'm a nada spook.
2:22:53
I'm a nada spook.
2:22:55
So, he's on the list.
2:22:57
We go to Pete Arnold III in Becker,
2:23:00
Minnesota.
2:23:01
363.92 which may be 333.33 plus
2:23:05
fees.
2:23:06
He says, I'll keep this as brief as
2:23:09
possible.
2:23:10
Yeah.
2:23:12
Fail.
2:23:13
Very funny.
2:23:14
Adam, I'm the dude who asked you on
2:23:16
Twitter for the cutoff time for show 1776
2:23:19
and missed it anyway, despite your quick reply
2:23:21
on X.
2:23:22
Replying to me, by the way, is something
2:23:24
Elon Musk has yet to do, so that's
2:23:26
a thing you'd totally do better than him
2:23:27
in case you needed a boost.
2:23:29
Well, gee, thanks.
2:23:30
Adam's experience with door-knocking, storm-chasing roof
2:23:33
salesmen made me want to donate.
2:23:35
I am not one, though my company is
2:23:36
related, and that's the purpose for my note.
2:23:39
My company, Hire A Pro, helps homeowners GC
2:23:42
their own projects.
2:23:44
So, in the event of storm damage claim,
2:23:45
we guide the homeowner through the process and
2:23:48
keep the money that would otherwise be profit
2:23:50
for a roofing company, all while being by
2:23:53
the book and still within the rules of
2:23:54
insurance reimbursement to a degree where we actually
2:23:57
have insurance agents sending us business.
2:24:00
In the last three years, we've kept almost...
2:24:02
Well, that's interesting.
2:24:02
That's a good idea.
2:24:04
So, you do your own general contracting.
2:24:06
Yes, of course.
2:24:07
And they back you up.
2:24:08
Of course.
2:24:09
In the last three years, we've kept almost
2:24:10
half a million dollars in the hands of
2:24:12
Minnesota homeowners with $6,000 being the average.
2:24:15
That's a pretty good deal.
2:24:16
Roofing companies hate us, so I know we're
2:24:18
doing a good thing.
2:24:19
I'm praying this year I can finally cross
2:24:21
the full-time barrier so it can focus
2:24:22
on it 100%.
2:24:23
I have a lot of ideas I want
2:24:25
to implement, most of which I believe are
2:24:27
as disruptive as Uber or DoorDash has been
2:24:29
to their respective industries.
2:24:31
Working my ass off to have the capital
2:24:33
to develop and implement them.
2:24:34
That's an American right there.
2:24:36
That's an American.
2:24:37
The only jingle I wish at the end
2:24:39
of this is some Jobs Karma.
2:24:40
Thank you for all you do.
2:24:41
And Adam, if you end up needing a
2:24:42
new roof from a hail claim, hit me
2:24:43
up!
2:24:44
I can show you how the cake is
2:24:45
made.
2:24:46
And if anyone in Minnesota needs hail damage...
2:24:49
Well, you don't want hail damage, but if
2:24:51
you need hail damage repair, I guess...
2:24:52
Don't hire a roofer!
2:24:53
Hire a pro!
2:24:55
Visit us online at HireA.Pro. HireA.Pro.
2:25:00
It's so easy, even the people knocking your
2:25:02
door could do it.
2:25:03
And Jobs Karma.
2:25:04
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs!
2:25:08
Let's vote for jobs!
2:25:10
You've got karma.
2:25:14
Tanya's here.
2:25:15
Tanya Alexanian, which is an Armenian name, if
2:25:21
I'm not mistaken.
2:25:22
But she's in Dollar Des Armeaux in Quebec.
2:25:28
336.
2:25:30
Switcheroo for my boyfriend Jeffrey Sarkissian.
2:25:34
His birthday's July 6th, another Armenian.
2:25:37
Jingles, house-buying karma and health karma from
2:25:40
my girlfriend and her family.
2:25:42
This is truly the best podcast in the
2:25:45
universe.
2:25:45
You guys have kept me sane for at
2:25:49
least six years and provide a great source
2:25:51
of information and entertainment.
2:25:54
You guys are awesome!
2:25:56
Four more years.
2:25:59
You've got karma.
2:26:04
And then right up the road here in
2:26:05
Georgetown, Texas, 263.22 cents.
2:26:09
Associate Executive Producer credit goes to Thomas Anaya,
2:26:12
who has no note.
2:26:13
That means Thomas gets a double-up karma
2:26:15
today.
2:26:16
You've got double-up karma.
2:26:22
Pete Arnold III in Becker, Minnesota.
2:26:25
233.
2:26:26
Wait a minute.
2:26:27
233.70. This is Pete from Hire a
2:26:29
Pro again.
2:26:30
He's back!
2:26:31
Second donation on the same show.
2:26:33
Second note.
2:26:35
I wasn't joking when I said my ideas
2:26:36
were disruptive anyway.
2:26:38
I've got a group of good people.
2:26:40
The note wasn't long enough.
2:26:43
Anyway, I've got a group of good people
2:26:44
that deserve a boost to their station that
2:26:47
I would love to work with as we
2:26:49
grow a company together.
2:26:50
So one more jobs, karma.
2:26:52
Over here for them, Minnesota people.
2:26:55
Remember, Hire a Pro.
2:26:57
Thanks again, boys.
2:26:58
Pete.
2:26:59
That's interesting.
2:26:59
It's like a pre-roll and a post
2:27:02
-roll in one donation segment.
2:27:04
I support this idea.
2:27:06
Come back with a payoff.
2:27:08
That's a good idea.
2:27:10
I like it.
2:27:12
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:27:15
Let's vote for jobs!
2:27:17
You've got karma.
2:27:18
Well, I'll take the one after this one
2:27:21
because you apparently have a note for Chris
2:27:23
Borman in Simsbury, Connecticut.
2:27:26
Yes.
2:27:29
You do Eric.
2:27:31
Eric Stottlemyre in Princeton, Minnesota.
2:27:35
Not a Minnesota people today.
2:27:37
Yeah, interesting.
2:27:38
Eric here with Easy Construction Solutions.
2:27:43
Another one.
2:27:44
I've been donating $4 a week since June
2:27:47
of 2023, a program I feel everyone should
2:27:49
be doing if they feel like they can't
2:27:50
afford a larger donation.
2:27:52
Please deduce.
2:27:54
You've been deduced.
2:27:56
I thought I'd celebrate being halfway to knighthood
2:27:58
with my first associate executive producership.
2:28:01
I am a general contractor in the Twin
2:28:03
Cities and service all of Minnesota and Wisconsin
2:28:05
with a special passion for cabin country.
2:28:09
Cabin country.
2:28:10
With the insane weather from Bemidji, Minnesota.
2:28:13
I've been to Bemidji.
2:28:14
Bemidji, Minnesota.
2:28:16
I have.
2:28:16
Bemidji.
2:28:17
They have a very small airport.
2:28:18
Bemidji, Minnesota.
2:28:19
It's a Baldwin, Wisconsin.
2:28:21
I thought instead of paying for annoying spam
2:28:22
text to homeowners or even more annoying door
2:28:24
knockers.
2:28:25
Sounds related.
2:28:26
I donate to the best podcast in the
2:28:28
universe.
2:28:29
Seems better to just put my info out
2:28:30
into the Noah Jenner universe and let the
2:28:32
good Lord take it from there.
2:28:35
Visit EasyRoofingMN.com Are these guys working together?
2:28:40
Yeah, I don't know.
2:28:42
EasyRoofingMN.com to send me a note.
2:28:44
Definitely an attack.
2:28:46
It's the attack of the Minnesotans.
2:28:49
If I can help you with the next
2:28:50
project anywhere in Minnesota or Wisconsin, the website
2:28:52
will get better.
2:28:53
I'm a far better contractor than web developer.
2:28:55
Finally, as a pastor's son, PK, Adam's recent
2:28:59
faith journey has been so encouraging and uplifting.
2:29:01
I'll leave you with my favorite verse, Galatians
2:29:03
6 9 a do not grow weary in
2:29:06
doing good.
2:29:07
Oh, 6 9 a do not grow weary
2:29:09
in doing good, which you two seem to
2:29:11
embody.
2:29:11
Thank you for your courage.
2:29:13
Eric Stottlemyre, future Sir Eric Keeper of the
2:29:16
Cabin Country.
2:29:17
Hi, brother.
2:29:18
Thank you.
2:29:19
Christian money.
2:29:20
Yes, right.
2:29:23
Okay, we got Chris Boorman in Simsbury, Connecticut,
2:29:28
216 54.
2:29:31
After five years of listening, it's time I
2:29:35
put my money where my mouth is and
2:29:37
donate.
2:29:38
We had a number of people today that
2:29:40
have been listening for years on end.
2:29:42
And that's fine.
2:29:43
You know, it is fine, but it's just
2:29:45
it just tells anybody out there does podcast.
2:29:48
It doesn't all come in when it should.
2:29:51
Just so you know, you got to what
2:29:53
was it?
2:29:53
Do not grow weary in doing good.
2:29:56
Grow weary because you're going to be waiting
2:29:59
for a long five years for the world
2:30:02
for Chris here.
2:30:04
I put my money where my mouth is
2:30:06
and donate.
2:30:07
So please deduce me.
2:30:10
You've been deduced.
2:30:12
What finally got me moving?
2:30:14
He asks, what finally got me moving?
2:30:17
Well, when I heard you worked with Chip
2:30:20
Ingram on their podcast.
2:30:22
Oh, how about that?
2:30:23
Chip was born on the 21st of June
2:30:25
1954.
2:30:27
So I hereby dubbed this 216.54 It's
2:30:31
a put Chip on the birthday list.
2:30:34
It's a Chip Ingram donation.
2:30:36
It's a Chip Ingram donation.
2:30:39
Put him on the list.
2:30:40
Check the Chip Ingram donation.
2:30:42
It's going to be a thing.
2:30:44
It's going to be a thing, he says.
2:30:46
It's going to be a thing.
2:30:47
When was his birthday?
2:30:48
The 21st?
2:30:49
The 21st of June, yeah.
2:30:51
Chip Ingram.
2:30:53
And there's another Christian donation because he says,
2:30:56
come on fellow Christian douche bags.
2:30:59
Who's with me?
2:31:01
I'm also requesting a generous supply of Job's
2:31:05
Karma.
2:31:05
God bless you both, says Chris.
2:31:08
Oh, thank you.
2:31:09
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:31:12
Let's vote for jobs.
2:31:17
Chip Ingram donation.
2:31:20
Uh, 210.60 La Jolla Salt Corporation, La
2:31:25
Jolla, California.
2:31:26
We're stamping, aren't we?
2:31:27
Said the elephant to the mouse.
2:31:29
Yes, declared the mouse.
2:31:30
And moisturizing while we exfoliate with luxurious sea
2:31:34
salt scrubs from LaJollaSalt.com.
2:31:37
While you're smoking a palm oil, now they
2:31:40
will know us from our stomp and glow,
2:31:42
rejoiced the elephant.
2:31:44
And they all put on the same hat.
2:31:47
LaJollaSalt.com.
2:31:48
Mouse and elephant not included.
2:31:50
Thank you for your courage.
2:31:52
Creative.
2:31:53
I like it.
2:31:53
It's not bad.
2:31:54
Eli the Coffee Guy's up.
2:31:56
He's in Bensonville, Illinois.
2:31:57
He came in with 206.29. John, great
2:32:01
newsletter.
2:32:03
I thought I had cooking basmati rice down
2:32:07
until your recipe.
2:32:09
Yes, the last newsletter had the basmati rice
2:32:12
recipe, which I promised on the last show.
2:32:14
Oh, people love that.
2:32:17
Good.
2:32:18
Well, they need to learn how to cook
2:32:19
that rice.
2:32:20
It's not cooked the way they show you
2:32:22
on YouTube.
2:32:24
Okay.
2:32:25
You don't need to repeat it.
2:32:26
It's at tipoftheday.net.
2:32:28
Your recipe.
2:32:30
John's technique yields a much fluffier rice with
2:32:33
better texture.
2:32:34
I was inspired.
2:32:36
I had to spike the ball once in
2:32:37
a while with something decent.
2:32:38
Yeah.
2:32:39
I was inspired and I made some Persian
2:32:42
meatballs with ground buffalo from the farmer's market
2:32:46
in a pomegranate honey reduction.
2:32:49
Wow.
2:32:49
Wow.
2:32:50
Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:32:51
I got him.
2:32:52
I inspired him.
2:32:54
A little chef on the side.
2:32:55
I like that.
2:32:56
Served with a side of yogurt dill cucumbers.
2:32:59
Oh, nice.
2:33:00
It was marvelous.
2:33:01
Now, if you could just do me a
2:33:02
favor and recommend a good wine to pair
2:33:04
with the meal next time.
2:33:07
I have a wine tip for today's tip
2:33:08
of the day.
2:33:09
Will it pair?
2:33:11
Yes, it would pair perfectly with this.
2:33:14
Obviously, I'm a man that loves good flavor
2:33:18
and I bring that same passion to curating
2:33:21
our selection of coffees.
2:33:23
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use the code ITM20.
2:33:27
Grab a bag of something delicious today.
2:33:29
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:33:33
And our final associate executive producer.
2:33:35
There she is once again.
2:33:37
The one, the only Linda Lupatkin from Lakewood,
2:33:39
Colorado who always wants Jarbs.
2:33:41
Jarbs.
2:33:42
Jarbs.
2:33:43
Jarbs.
2:33:43
Jarbs karma.
2:33:44
Jarbs karma.
2:33:46
And Linda says for a resume that tells
2:33:49
your story highlights your wins and shows why
2:33:52
you're unique visit ImageMakersInc.com for a resume
2:33:56
that gets results.
2:33:57
That's ImageMakersInc with a K and work with
2:34:00
Linda Lu Duchess of Jarbs and writer of
2:34:03
winning resumes.
2:34:05
Jarbs.
2:34:06
Jarbs.
2:34:07
Jarbs and Jarbs.
2:34:08
Let's vote for Jarbs.
2:34:10
Karma.
2:34:12
Well, dynamite everybody.
2:34:13
Thank you so much to our executive and
2:34:15
associate executive producers.
2:34:16
Long notes but entertaining nonetheless.
2:34:19
I have to say.
2:34:22
There's content in the donations.
2:34:24
This is the part that people sometimes miss.
2:34:26
Thank all those people.
2:34:27
Yeah, there's content in there.
2:34:29
You'd be surprised.
2:34:29
Thank you all.
2:34:30
And of course we'll be thanking people who
2:34:32
donated $50 and above in our second segment
2:34:34
coming up shortly.
2:34:35
And as always you can support us with
2:34:38
your value for value, time, talent, or treasure.
2:34:40
For the treasure go to noagendadonations.com Any
2:34:43
amount, any time you want to.
2:34:45
You can tell.
2:34:46
Some people after five years, we appreciate it.
2:34:48
And of course you can set up a
2:34:49
sustaining donation any amount, any frequency.
2:34:52
noagendadonations.com.
2:34:53
Thank you again to these executive and associate
2:34:55
executive producers.
2:34:56
Our formula is this.
2:34:58
We go out, we hit people in the
2:35:00
mouth.
2:35:17
So just as a short humorous moment.
2:35:22
So I don't know if you saw the
2:35:23
long press conference that Trump gave the other
2:35:26
day.
2:35:27
But which one's not long?
2:35:29
Yeah.
2:35:30
Which is a huge contrast to everybody else
2:35:32
who's ever been in office.
2:35:33
How can you miss it?
2:35:34
The quad screen is all Trump.
2:35:36
Yeah.
2:35:37
They're going to him live now.
2:35:40
MSNBC used to reject that.
2:35:43
We're not going to go live.
2:35:45
It's too entertaining.
2:35:46
They're crazy not to.
2:35:47
Exactly.
2:35:48
So I caught this little moment in the
2:35:50
middle of one of his press conference.
2:35:52
I thought was cute.
2:35:54
Oh yeah.
2:35:58
Is there any more information on the special
2:36:00
prosecutor?
2:36:01
So many Americans still have questions about the
2:36:03
2020 election.
2:36:04
And speaking of rogue judges, would you consider
2:36:06
appointing somebody at DOJ maybe to investigate the
2:36:10
judges that allowed for the political persecution of
2:36:12
you, your family and your supporters during the
2:36:14
Biden administration?
2:36:15
I love you.
2:36:16
Who are you?
2:36:18
Tom Power from Lindell TV.
2:36:19
Well, that's a very nice question.
2:36:22
And it's not a setup.
2:36:23
I have no idea who you are, but
2:36:25
I appreciate that question.
2:36:27
All I can say is we're not here
2:36:28
for that.
2:36:29
I hope so.
2:36:30
I hope they're doing a thing because that
2:36:32
election was rigged and stolen and we can't
2:36:34
allow that to happen.
2:36:35
You know, a lot of people tell me,
2:36:37
sir, you just won the greatest election in
2:36:39
the history of our country.
2:36:40
You won in numbers that won all seven
2:36:42
swing states, won the popular vote, won everything.
2:36:47
Sir, go on with your life.
2:36:50
And many people say that, good people, friends
2:36:53
of mine.
2:36:53
Then you have people that say that same
2:36:55
thing, go on with your life, but you
2:36:56
have to find out what happened because you
2:36:59
can't let that happen again.
2:37:01
Yeah.
2:37:02
Yeah, this is the...
2:37:03
It was a black girl, wasn't it?
2:37:04
He's not letting that one go.
2:37:05
Was this the black girl?
2:37:07
No, no, this is a...
2:37:08
I think her name is Cara.
2:37:10
And she works for Lindell TV.
2:37:14
Mike Lindell.
2:37:16
Yeah, he's got his own little network.
2:37:18
He's got quite the network.
2:37:20
And he and she was wearing...
2:37:22
And he said the girl in the red
2:37:23
dress and then he picked somebody in an
2:37:25
orange.
2:37:25
I think you're going to start seeing a
2:37:27
very colorful press grouping.
2:37:30
So they can get picked.
2:37:31
Pick me!
2:37:31
This is the...
2:37:33
It reminds me of the floor of the
2:37:36
stock exchanges where guys would get dressed up
2:37:39
in clown outfits so you could be easily
2:37:41
identified.
2:37:42
And I think you're going to start seeing
2:37:43
that because he was going with...
2:37:46
Oh, the red dress.
2:37:47
Red dress.
2:37:48
Yeah.
2:37:49
Not a setup.
2:37:50
Mike Lindell.
2:37:51
Lindell, by the way, who gets no credit
2:37:53
for the lawsuit that he went through.
2:37:57
You know, they tried to sue him for
2:37:58
like Dominion-level money.
2:38:00
One of those people over there.
2:38:03
And he was successful at fending it off.
2:38:06
But they...
2:38:06
They ruined his whole business.
2:38:10
And he still keeps on trucking.
2:38:13
Yeah.
2:38:14
He's a perseverance.
2:38:16
Yeah.
2:38:16
Him and the...
2:38:18
Who's the Overstock.com guy who used to
2:38:21
be the CEO?
2:38:23
I forget his name.
2:38:24
Oh, I forgot about him.
2:38:25
Oh, yeah.
2:38:25
He's still out there.
2:38:28
Patrick.
2:38:28
Patrick.
2:38:29
Yeah.
2:38:30
Those...
2:38:31
They got the goods.
2:38:32
They know.
2:38:32
We'll see if that ever happens.
2:38:37
RFK Jr. on the move once again.
2:38:39
And this, of course, is the new committee
2:38:42
who comes in for the vaccine policy.
2:38:45
I thought I'd kick it off with France
2:38:47
Vincatra.
2:38:49
This is great to hear.
2:38:51
You know, without evidence.
2:38:53
You know, discredited claims.
2:38:55
Falsely claims.
2:38:57
False claims, yeah.
2:38:58
This girl really does it all here in
2:39:00
this quick report.
2:39:01
RFK Jr., Robert F.
2:39:03
Kennedy Jr., Donald Trump's health secretary and long
2:39:06
-standing vaccine skeptic fired 17 experts on that
2:39:10
advisory panel recently.
2:39:12
He replaced them with eight new people, mostly
2:39:15
anti-vaxxers.
2:39:17
No, no.
2:39:18
That's a lie.
2:39:20
Of course it's a lie.
2:39:22
Even France 24 is apparently captured by the
2:39:25
big pharma.
2:39:26
Mostly anti-vaxxers.
2:39:28
On Thursday, they voted to walk back vaccine
2:39:32
recommendations for the flu, for the common flu,
2:39:35
and the reason being a common false argument
2:39:37
of anti-vaxxers that the flu vaccine has
2:39:41
an ingredient.
2:39:44
You're going to make me interrupt the whole
2:39:45
thing because she's going to say stuff like
2:39:47
false argument?
2:39:48
Oh yeah, false argument.
2:39:49
It's an argument, not a false argument.
2:39:52
This doesn't even make sense.
2:39:54
It's like a non-sequitur to say something
2:39:56
like that.
2:39:56
Guess what's so good about it?
2:39:57
Vaccine recommendations for the flu, for the common
2:40:01
flu, and the reason being a common false
2:40:03
argument of anti-vaxxers that the flu vaccine
2:40:07
has an ingredient that is linked to autism.
2:40:10
That's what the New York Times reports in
2:40:12
this article.
2:40:13
The decision signaling a, quote, powerful shift, it
2:40:17
says, in the way federal officials approach vaccines,
2:40:20
but also delivering the first blows to a
2:40:24
scientific process that has delivered effective and tested
2:40:27
vaccines to Americans for decades now.
2:40:30
That ingredient I mentioned is With complete immunity,
2:40:34
she forgot to mention that, with complete immunity
2:40:36
from lawsuits in case they hurt you.
2:40:38
By the way, just before I forget, I
2:40:42
don't say it enough on the show, that's
2:40:45
the key.
2:40:47
Get rid of that bull crap.
2:40:50
Every pill that they sell you, they sell
2:40:52
you a pill or a therapy of any
2:40:55
sort, they are subject to being sued for
2:40:57
bad medicine, or, you know, if it makes
2:40:59
you sick, it makes you ill, it kills
2:41:01
you.
2:41:02
Everybody, for everything else, you can be liable.
2:41:08
But for this one product and one product
2:41:12
only, they're indemnified?
2:41:14
How does that work?
2:41:14
Why?
2:41:17
Really?
2:41:18
Is the focus of this article here in
2:41:20
the Conversation in Australian Academic Research website, which
2:41:24
explains that it's called it's actually a preservative,
2:41:30
and it's called Thimerosal.
2:41:32
It's a mercury-based preservative used in some
2:41:34
drug products because it prevents contamination by killing
2:41:38
microbes.
2:41:38
But the website says it's important to note
2:41:41
that it's hardly ever used in flu vaccines
2:41:44
today.
2:41:44
The website also explaining that the argument that
2:41:47
vaccines cause autism because of this ingredient first
2:41:51
surfaced in 1998 when a report, now discredited
2:41:56
report, was published in the medical journal The
2:41:59
Lancet, claiming that several children had developed autism
2:42:02
following the flu shot.
2:42:04
Well, good job, girl.
2:42:05
Good job, good job.
2:42:07
Okay, fine.
2:42:08
So that's the European take.
2:42:11
CBS, as you can imagine, they have other
2:42:14
things to say.
2:42:15
A CDC vaccine advisory committee with new members,
2:42:19
handpicked by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert
2:42:22
F.
2:42:22
Kennedy Jr., met for the first time today.
2:42:25
The committee makes recommendations on the use and
2:42:27
scheduling of vaccines for children and adults.
2:42:31
As Elaine Quijano reports, several members of the
2:42:34
committee share Secretary Kennedy's skepticism about vaccines.
2:42:39
I thought they were anti-vaxxers.
2:42:41
What is this?
2:42:42
Skeptics?
2:42:42
That's no good.
2:42:43
You don't want skeptics on an advisory committee.
2:42:46
That doesn't make any sense.
2:42:48
Dr. Jennifer Duchamp has treated hundreds of RSV
2:42:51
cases in children at Mount Sinai Hospital in
2:42:54
New York City.
2:42:55
How severe can RSV symptoms be?
2:42:57
RSV can be extremely severe.
2:42:59
It can...
2:43:00
Do you notice what they're doing here?
2:43:01
They're taking a report about the vaccine commission
2:43:05
advisory committee, and they're turning it into an
2:43:08
ad for the RSV vaccine.
2:43:09
These people have no shame.
2:43:11
To send children to the ICUs, it can
2:43:13
cause them to need intubation, a breathing tube,
2:43:17
mechanical ventilation, constant breathing treatments.
2:43:21
Last fall and winter, during the height of
2:43:23
RSV season, Dr. Duchamp, who specializes in pediatric
2:43:27
infectious diseases, saw a drop in RSV hospitalizations
2:43:31
compared to previous years.
2:43:33
She says that's in part because of the
2:43:35
RSV immunization that's given to babies after they're
2:43:38
born.
2:43:38
Even though fewer infants were hospitalized for RSV,
2:43:41
it was still the leading cause of hospitalization
2:43:44
for that age group.
2:43:45
Preliminary estimates by the CDC show up to
2:43:48
23,000 people died from RSV last season.
2:43:52
I love it how everything else, they always
2:43:54
bring in other factors, but were these mothers,
2:43:57
did they have the COVID vaccine?
2:43:59
Is there anything else that was going on?
2:44:01
But there was a drop because of this.
2:44:03
I mean, that doesn't even say that it's
2:44:04
effective.
2:44:05
It says, well, there was a drop in
2:44:06
RSV cases because, you know, because we have
2:44:09
this RSV vaccine.
2:44:10
This is unbelievable.
2:44:12
By the way, the CBS is going to
2:44:14
fail with this idea of having these two
2:44:16
anchors.
2:44:17
That was John Dickerson and that other guy.
2:44:19
Because you can't, the olden days when you
2:44:22
had two anchors.
2:44:23
You can't have two dudes, man.
2:44:26
You can have two dudes.
2:44:28
Huntley and Brinkley were fine as two dudes.
2:44:29
Here's the problem.
2:44:30
If you start looking at it, it looks
2:44:32
like it's a couple of, like a couple
2:44:34
or a couple of brothers or something because
2:44:36
they finish each other's sentences.
2:44:38
This is not done right.
2:44:40
You can't have one guy start the sentence
2:44:42
and the other guy finish it.
2:44:44
It's like, so they go back and forth
2:44:45
and back and forth with the read.
2:44:47
So you got your read on the prompter
2:44:49
and they have half of it said by
2:44:50
one guy.
2:44:51
The other guy kicks in and starts talking
2:44:53
and the other guy kicks in and starts
2:44:54
talking.
2:44:55
And it's one presentation.
2:44:57
You have to go to one guy for
2:44:59
the presentation and go to the other guy
2:45:00
for another presentation.
2:45:01
You can't go back and forth and back
2:45:03
and forth.
2:45:04
They're running it like local, like the local
2:45:06
news or like entertainment.
2:45:08
They're running it like those twin sisters who
2:45:11
finish each other's sentences and talk exactly at
2:45:14
the same time.
2:45:15
It's terrible.
2:45:17
Rigorous traditional approach.
2:45:18
The committee that advises the CDC on vaccines
2:45:21
announced today it plans to examine the long
2:45:24
established childhood vaccination schedule, including whether infants should
2:45:28
receive an RSV immunization before eight months.
2:45:31
Also under consideration, whether hepatitis B shots are
2:45:35
needed for all newborns before leaving the hospital
2:45:37
and the timing and formulation for the measles,
2:45:40
mumps and rubella vaccine.
2:45:42
What's your reaction to what you're hearing out
2:45:45
of Washington and this panel right now?
2:45:48
It makes me concerned that again focusing on
2:45:51
the risks as opposed to the overall benefits
2:45:54
which have been proven over time.
2:45:56
This is great.
2:45:57
They're focusing on the risks.
2:45:59
Why would you focus on the risk?
2:46:02
That makes no sense.
2:46:04
That again, focusing on the risks as opposed
2:46:07
to the overall benefits which have been proven
2:46:09
over time.
2:46:11
The panel is expected to vote tomorrow on
2:46:14
whether to recommend that RSV immunization for infants
2:46:17
that we mentioned.
2:46:18
They're also scheduled to vote on whether to
2:46:20
recommend the flu vaccine and specifically they plan
2:46:24
to discuss a preservative that is no longer
2:46:26
widely used in infusions.
2:46:28
Widely used.
2:46:29
Thimerosal, which is mercury.
2:46:32
And we've got to bring in the doc
2:46:33
now.
2:46:34
Bring in LePouc.
2:46:35
LePouc the spook.
2:46:36
Last night we told you about a meeting
2:46:37
of Health Secretary Robert F.
2:46:39
Kennedy's newly selected vaccine advisory committee which includes
2:46:43
members who share his vaccine skepticism.
2:46:47
So this is the new talking point.
2:46:50
They share his vaccine skepticism.
2:46:53
Some members share his vaccine skepticism.
2:46:56
Isn't that what the American people deserve?
2:46:59
For them to be skeptics?
2:47:02
Is this a bad thing?
2:47:05
I ask you.
2:47:05
Yeah, it's a bad thing.
2:47:06
It's going to hurt the pharmaceutical bottom line.
2:47:09
Oh, I'm sorry.
2:47:10
Which includes members who share his vaccine skepticism.
2:47:14
Today that panel endorsed flu vaccinations for the
2:47:17
fall but only for shots that do not
2:47:19
include an ingredient which has been falsely linked
2:47:22
to autism.
2:47:24
Correspondent Dr. John LePouc asked a former acting
2:47:27
director of the CDC about the significance of
2:47:30
this week's meeting.
2:47:31
Until recently I think most of the public
2:47:35
didn't even know this committee existed.
2:47:37
We do have real world evidence.
2:47:39
This committee exists to provide advice and guidance
2:47:42
to the medical community so that we can
2:47:44
give the best advice to our patients and
2:47:48
they can make the best decisions about their
2:47:50
health and the health of their children.
2:47:52
Dr. Richard Besser is a pediatrician and the
2:47:54
president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
2:47:57
You were the acting CDC director and you
2:47:59
interacted with this committee.
2:48:01
How does what's happening now differ from what
2:48:04
happened in your day?
2:48:05
In the past, if there was a question
2:48:06
that this committee wanted to address, they would
2:48:09
put together a work group and it would
2:48:11
have two members of the ACIP of the
2:48:13
committee as well as the best scientists from
2:48:15
CDC.
2:48:16
They would spend months diving into the science
2:48:19
before they would bring it to the committee.
2:48:21
This issue today didn't go through that process
2:48:24
and that's really concerning.
2:48:26
Where does that leave us?
2:48:27
Where I think it leaves us is that
2:48:29
there will be other organizations that come forward
2:48:32
and make vaccine recommendations.
2:48:33
The Academy of Pediatrics, different infectious disease societies.
2:48:37
I think it's worth mentioning that the whole
2:48:39
reason RFK Jr. became interested in this is
2:48:44
because he was suing the...
2:48:47
He was suing companies over mercury in the
2:48:50
water and he tells this story many times.
2:48:54
And that there was this group of mothers
2:48:56
who kept showing up every single time, everywhere
2:48:59
he went.
2:49:00
They kept saying, please listen to us.
2:49:01
And they gave him this huge stack of
2:49:03
papers and research, scientific research, I guess, about
2:49:08
thimerosal and how it had hurt their children.
2:49:11
And he went, because this is what he
2:49:13
does.
2:49:14
He's a lawyer.
2:49:14
He goes through this stuff.
2:49:16
And he has the whole, I guess at
2:49:18
the time, the Children's Health Defense Network.
2:49:21
And he says, you know, this is a
2:49:22
real problem.
2:49:23
Or is it?
2:49:24
Let's ask the doctor.
2:49:25
The American College of Physicians, which has more
2:49:28
than 160,000 members, called this week's meeting
2:49:31
a dangerous and reckless path that will leave
2:49:33
our patients vulnerable to preventable illnesses.
2:49:36
If I'm a parent watching this, I might
2:49:38
think, well, no big deal.
2:49:39
I'm going to still be able to get
2:49:40
flu vaccine and I'd rather it not have
2:49:42
mercury.
2:49:43
What's the problem?
2:49:44
The whole process today suggests that there's something
2:49:47
unsafe about our vaccine system and there isn't.
2:49:51
There are still decisions to be made about
2:49:52
additional vaccines.
2:49:54
The committee is weighing changes to recommendations for
2:49:56
the measles and hepatitis B vaccines.
2:49:59
There is still no decision on this fall's
2:50:02
COVID shots.
2:50:03
When you're giving a kid hepatitis B vaccine,
2:50:05
it's a sexually transmitted disease.
2:50:07
A, but B, what does the guy just
2:50:10
say?
2:50:11
Remember back in the day when the swine
2:50:14
flu vaccine came out because they were lined
2:50:16
up to get the swine flu vaccine and
2:50:18
one of the batches of the swine flu
2:50:20
vaccine was very well documented, contained live swine
2:50:24
flu virus so they could spread it faster.
2:50:28
But there's no liability.
2:50:31
Don't worry about it.
2:50:32
You got caught with their pants down with
2:50:34
that vaccine that had live swine flu viruses
2:50:39
in it.
2:50:40
It was not a good product.
2:50:42
No.
2:50:45
So there's your update.
2:50:46
What was this?
2:50:46
I think you have a clip about this.
2:50:48
The syringe attacks in France?
2:50:51
Oh, this is one of these, I'd like
2:50:53
to have these stories that nobody covers.
2:50:55
It shows up.
2:50:56
Oh, it was covered.
2:50:56
It was covered.
2:50:57
I saw it covered.
2:50:58
Was it?
2:50:58
I didn't hear it except on this report.
2:51:00
Festival goers in France were targeted in more
2:51:03
than 100 syringe attacks over the weekend.
2:51:07
145 people were jabbed with syringes at different
2:51:09
venues across the country during Fête de la
2:51:12
Musique.
2:51:12
Teenage girls were among the people who ended
2:51:15
up in hospital.
2:51:16
Most noticed a mark on their body before
2:51:18
feeling ill and seeking medical help.
2:51:21
Officials have not yet said what was in
2:51:23
the syringes.
2:51:24
12 people have now been detained in relation
2:51:26
to the attacks.
2:51:27
So with hundreds of thousands of people set
2:51:29
to attend festivals in the UK this summer,
2:51:32
how can you protect yourself?
2:51:34
Generally, the advice is to make sure you're
2:51:36
aware of your surroundings.
2:51:37
If you see something suspicious, then report it
2:51:39
to staff or the police, and don't leave
2:51:41
any possessions or drinks unattended.
2:51:44
Do we know what was in there yet?
2:51:47
No, there's never been any follow-up on
2:51:48
this story.
2:51:50
I think they suppressed the story because they
2:51:52
don't want to give people ideas.
2:51:55
I mean, if you're going to have these
2:51:56
cities, San Francisco being one of them, and
2:51:59
now New York's going to be one of
2:52:00
them, and it's very popular up in Seattle
2:52:03
and Portland, places like that, where you have
2:52:05
free syringes being given away so drug users
2:52:09
can take their drugs in their little place
2:52:11
and have a little play.
2:52:12
Oh, I'm going to take the drugs in
2:52:13
a safe place.
2:52:14
And so there's free syringes flying all over
2:52:17
the place, left in the street as they're
2:52:18
all over the place.
2:52:19
It's terrible.
2:52:20
You're going to have something like this could
2:52:22
become an epidemic.
2:52:24
Yeah, it's not good.
2:52:25
It's not good.
2:52:26
I just wonder why we haven't, they're still
2:52:29
awaiting toxology reports, toxicology reports.
2:52:32
We're never going to hear anything.
2:52:34
Yeah, you're probably right.
2:52:38
All right, what do we got here?
2:52:39
Well, just a little boots on the ground
2:52:41
from one of our producers about the passkeys
2:52:43
we were talking about.
2:52:45
Oh yes, okay.
2:52:46
He says there's one additional little thing.
2:52:50
Passwords, so the passkey is, you know, you
2:52:52
don't actually know the passkey, you have it
2:52:55
stored on your device or on your computer
2:52:58
or on your phone.
2:53:00
He says passwords are actually protected under the
2:53:03
Fifth Amendment since you can't be forced to
2:53:05
reveal what you know.
2:53:07
Passkeys work differently.
2:53:09
The user doesn't actually know the passkey.
2:53:12
It's stored in access with biometrics or a
2:53:15
device pin.
2:53:17
He says that way passkeys generally do not
2:53:20
get the same legal protection against compelled use.
2:53:23
I think that's a very astute observation.
2:53:26
Ah, dynamite.
2:53:27
Yeah, that is a very good...
2:53:31
Stay with the old passwords, people.
2:53:33
Yeah, I think that you think you should,
2:53:35
yeah, because they could say, hey, just look
2:53:37
here, and your phone unlocks with your face,
2:53:40
which I've never understood as a good idea.
2:53:42
It wasn't a bad idea.
2:53:43
I've never understood that.
2:53:45
Why would you do that?
2:53:46
Why would you do that?
2:53:47
Oh, it's easy.
2:53:48
Well, okay.
2:53:49
Sure.
2:53:49
Well, everything.
2:53:50
No password, that's easy.
2:53:52
That's the easiest.
2:53:53
Even when you're dead, you just hold the
2:53:54
phone up to the dead person's face.
2:53:56
Boom, opens.
2:53:57
Good to go.
2:53:58
Thumbprint.
2:54:02
Venezuelans in Chicago.
2:54:04
PBS again is promoting the state of affairs,
2:54:07
anything that kind of pushes back on Trump's
2:54:10
agenda because he didn't give them their 1
2:54:12
% of their money.
2:54:13
They're going to pull the funds.
2:54:15
So we're going to see a lot of
2:54:18
pro-Pride flag, pro-immigration kinds of stories.
2:54:24
They're going to still have Brooks and Capehart
2:54:27
agreeing with each other.
2:54:28
It's going to be just downhill.
2:54:30
Chuck Hernandez is chair of the Chicago Republican
2:54:33
Party.
2:54:34
There's not really an appetite to support those
2:54:37
who come here, whether it be illegally or
2:54:41
under a temporary program that was put in
2:54:43
by Biden.
2:54:44
He says the Trump administration has a right
2:54:46
to enact its immigration policies.
2:54:48
He says the arrivals from Venezuela have strained
2:54:51
Chicago's resources.
2:54:53
We're having right now in Chicago a real
2:54:56
crunch financially and then the amounts of Chicago
2:55:00
taxpayer money going towards many of these groups,
2:55:04
it's money that could be used towards citizens
2:55:07
that should not be going towards these people
2:55:09
that are here on a temporary type of
2:55:11
basis.
2:55:12
How do you respond to people who say
2:55:14
T is for temporary?
2:55:16
The issue here is not that they're dealing
2:55:18
with tanks, they're dealing with human beings.
2:55:22
And when a human being is afraid to
2:55:24
go back, and that really what the situation
2:55:27
is here that people has been told that
2:55:31
Venezuela is getting better.
2:55:34
Venezuela is not getting better.
2:55:36
Venezuela is getting worse.
2:55:38
I sympathize with them, but this was the
2:55:40
fault of the Biden administration by giving people
2:55:43
false hope that you can come here.
2:55:45
For their part, Venezuelans we spoke with said
2:55:48
they feel a sense of deja vu.
2:55:52
All over again.
2:55:54
Yes, so they're painting, this is part of
2:55:56
a long report, and they're have the cold
2:55:59
-hearted Republican saying we can't afford this, it's
2:56:03
just that simple.
2:56:04
And then you have all these sympathetic voices
2:56:06
that go on about, you know, it's just
2:56:08
people, it's people.
2:56:10
And this is hard to fight.
2:56:12
This is the strategy you use when you
2:56:16
want to slam something.
2:56:18
You use people.
2:56:19
You abuse people.
2:56:21
Sympathy, sympathy.
2:56:23
In my country, there is no legal process.
2:56:27
The United States was the first country to
2:56:29
guarantee those freedoms, and now living through this
2:56:31
situation, it feels the same as what happened
2:56:34
in Venezuela, because they are not respecting the
2:56:36
due process of the people.
2:56:41
In the meantime, many will continue to stay
2:56:43
in the shadows, afraid of what lurks outside
2:56:47
their front door.
2:56:48
For the PBS NewsHour, I'm Fred de Sam
2:56:50
Lazaro in Chicago.
2:56:52
So here's the question I have.
2:56:54
They're in Venezuela.
2:56:56
They put them into Chicago.
2:56:59
What about Mexico, or Costa Rica, or Brazil,
2:57:03
or Colombia, or Ecuador?
2:57:05
This is like the Palestinians, nobody wants to
2:57:09
take them?
2:57:10
I guess.
2:57:12
So we have to take them because nobody
2:57:14
else will take them?
2:57:17
Now you're sounding like a Republican.
2:57:19
Well, I sound like a Republican, but it's
2:57:21
like they speak Spanish.
2:57:22
They're in a continent except for Brazil, which
2:57:27
speaks Portuguese, but they're basically in a, and
2:57:29
you can make that transition, it's not that
2:57:31
difficult, but they're in an entire continent of
2:57:35
Spanish speakers all the way up through Central
2:57:38
America and Mexico, and we have to take
2:57:42
them?
2:57:42
It just doesn't make sense to me.
2:57:44
No person is illegal.
2:57:46
A person cannot be illegal.
2:57:47
What's wrong with you?
2:57:48
Do you not love people?
2:57:49
You are a horrible man.
2:57:52
Which brings you to a Tick Clock Talk.
2:57:55
Tick Clock Talk.
2:57:58
Alright, Tick Tock Clip time.
2:58:01
Stolen Land Girl.
2:58:02
I don't want to hear another white person
2:58:03
say the word illegal for the rest of
2:58:05
my goddamn life.
2:58:06
We are living on stolen land.
2:58:09
Our ancestors forcibly and violently seized this land
2:58:13
from the indigenous peoples who were living here
2:58:15
for generations before we ever showed up.
2:58:18
We do not get to call them illegal.
2:58:21
We don't own the fucking planet.
2:58:23
Nobody does.
2:58:25
We are evolved monkeys with opposable thumbs who
2:58:28
use them to write little monkey scribbles on
2:58:30
a slice of tree, and we call it
2:58:32
a birth certificate with our little monkey sounds.
2:58:34
All of it is made up.
2:58:37
None of it is real, and it doesn't
2:58:38
fucking matter, and it's certainly not a valid
2:58:41
reason to rip a terrified screaming child away
2:58:44
from his weeping mother, and I am tired
2:58:47
of being made to feel like I'm crazy
2:58:49
for being angry about this.
2:58:52
Capitalism is just narcissism as an economic system.
2:58:56
Imperialism is just narcissism as a foreign policy.
2:59:00
If the lion can't claim the safari for
2:59:02
himself and call the elephant illegal, then neither
2:59:05
the fuck can we!
2:59:07
Oh, that was interesting.
2:59:08
If the lion can't...
2:59:09
Let me just...
2:59:10
I want to hear that thing.
2:59:11
That was interesting.
2:59:13
Let me hear that again.
2:59:14
Capitalism is just narcissism as an economic system.
2:59:18
Imperialism is just narcissism as a foreign policy.
2:59:21
If the lion can't claim the safari for
2:59:24
himself and call the elephant illegal, then neither
2:59:26
the fuck can we!
2:59:29
This is...
2:59:30
Again, this makes me just very sad, because
2:59:32
she is very wound up about this.
2:59:36
And I'm sure that she is not doing
2:59:38
anything about it herself except screaming on TikTok.
2:59:42
Which doesn't...
2:59:43
Run for city council.
2:59:45
Run for government.
2:59:46
Do something, you do-nothing phony.
2:59:49
That's what I call her.
2:59:51
She's a phony.
2:59:51
I don't feel sorry for her.
2:59:53
She's a big phony.
2:59:55
Like you said, become politically active if you
2:59:58
feel so strong about this stuff.
3:00:00
Instead of yacking at TikTok.
3:00:02
She needs a hug.
3:00:04
All these people need hugs and love.
3:00:07
Give me another.
3:00:08
Give me another.
3:00:10
This one I end up cutting off because
3:00:12
she just goes on too much.
3:00:13
But this is mom on the Z.
3:00:15
This is mom Z girl op.
3:00:17
Mom?
3:00:17
What does that mean?
3:00:19
Mom Z girl op?
3:00:20
You don't even know anymore.
3:00:22
I'm going to start this video by saying
3:00:24
that this is not the usual content I
3:00:26
normally share on my page.
3:00:28
I had easily the most unsettling experience I've
3:00:30
ever had as a mother this morning and
3:00:32
I wanted to come here and share about
3:00:34
it.
3:00:34
I'm actually feeling really shaken up inside but
3:00:36
I'm doing my best not to transcribe.
3:00:38
Now you remember.
3:00:41
This is the way that it works.
3:00:44
I have found...
3:00:46
This is why I cut it off because
3:00:48
I'm going to explain what it is.
3:00:49
I have found at least 10 of these.
3:00:52
Exactly the same.
3:00:54
It's exactly the same.
3:00:56
I'm a mother and I was leaving the
3:00:58
store and somebody came up to me and
3:01:01
says, can you help me?
3:01:02
Can I hold your baby while you move
3:01:04
my car because I can't get in the
3:01:05
seat?
3:01:05
There's always a million reasons that somebody comes
3:01:08
up to me, holds the baby.
3:01:09
There's always a van involved.
3:01:11
There's a van parked here and then the
3:01:14
woman, the mother says, well, let's go inside
3:01:17
the store and we'll talk to a manager.
3:01:20
Maybe they can help you and then they
3:01:22
go inside the store and then the woman
3:01:23
disappears and gets into a van and drives
3:01:25
off because it was a scam.
3:01:27
Yeah.
3:01:28
There is at least 10 of these videos
3:01:30
out there and this is just one example
3:01:31
and I don't know.
3:01:33
That's why I have Z.
3:01:34
It's an op.
3:01:36
Okay.
3:01:36
But what kind of an op is this?
3:01:38
Well, let's listen.
3:01:39
I'm going to start this video by saying
3:01:40
that this is not the usual content I
3:01:42
normally share on my page.
3:01:44
I had easily the most unsettling experience I've
3:01:47
ever had as a mother this morning and
3:01:49
I wanted to come here and share about
3:01:51
it.
3:01:51
I'm actually feeling really shaken up inside, but
3:01:53
I'm doing my best not to translate that
3:01:55
over camera because I'm not at all narcissistic.
3:01:57
It's not at all about me and about
3:01:58
how I feel and how shaken up I
3:02:00
am that I usually don't share this on
3:02:01
my page, but please look at me while
3:02:02
I talk about me and my feelings.
3:02:04
I really don't want to spread fear to
3:02:06
anybody.
3:02:07
I just simply want to inform other mothers
3:02:09
that this happened to me today and this
3:02:12
is unfortunately happening and I saw a video
3:02:15
maybe two months ago of a mom who
3:02:18
had an almost identical experience and her sharing
3:02:21
her experience, I believe helped me know how
3:02:24
to navigate this in the best and most
3:02:25
productive way possible.
3:02:27
So, here goes.
3:02:27
I went to Kroger around 9 a.m.
3:02:29
this morning, broad daylight and I got out
3:02:31
of my car with my daughter and a
3:02:33
woman approached me.
3:02:34
She said that she had parked her car
3:02:36
too close to the car next to it
3:02:38
and was unable to get back into her
3:02:40
car to back it out.
3:02:42
She asked me if I would back her
3:02:44
car up for her and offered multiple times
3:02:46
to hold my daughter while I backed her
3:02:48
car up for her.
3:02:49
When I looked to her car, I noticed
3:02:52
her car was parked in one space and
3:02:53
with about maybe a foot space in between
3:02:56
there was an old beat-up van parked
3:02:59
on the other side of the driver seat
3:03:01
of her car.
3:03:02
I was very firm with her and said,
3:03:04
you will not be holding my child, but
3:03:06
I offered to go inside and Oh yeah,
3:03:09
okay.
3:03:09
So, it's a child rousting gig of some
3:03:13
sort but why is this video cropping up?
3:03:18
It's in slightly different forms, but it's basically
3:03:20
the same story.
3:03:21
Well, I can tell you what this is.
3:03:23
This happened to a really good friend of
3:03:25
mine's brother, grandfather, uncle, but it's true.
3:03:29
That's what this is.
3:03:30
This is just people, like, I've got, you
3:03:32
know, I usually have nothing to say on
3:03:33
my page but I came here to talk
3:03:36
about this on my page.
3:03:37
Yeah, you nailed it.
3:03:38
I nailed it!
3:03:39
That's exactly what it is.
3:03:40
You nailed it.
3:03:43
Imagine all the people who could do that.
3:03:45
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
3:03:54
Narcissism is a very, very dangerous drug.
3:03:56
A lot of people are addicted to it
3:03:58
and TikTok is the dealer!
3:04:00
And now we will thank our donor.
3:04:02
Remember, we still have end of the show
3:04:03
mixes coming up.
3:04:04
We've got John's tip of the day, apparently
3:04:05
a wine tip so this is one you
3:04:07
want to stay tuned for.
3:04:08
We have a meet-up report.
3:04:10
We've got lots of awards to hand out
3:04:13
today, PhDs, we've got nights, we've got title
3:04:16
changes, and a wedding, or a forthcoming nuptials
3:04:21
we'll celebrate.
3:04:22
But first, John's going to thank our supporters
3:04:24
for episode 1777, $50 and above.
3:04:28
Wow, I don't know anything about the wedding.
3:04:30
Yeah.
3:04:32
Dame Dani's up.
3:04:33
She's in Mount Shasta, California, beautiful area.
3:04:37
$177 and 71 cents.
3:04:40
Which is 1777.
3:04:43
1777.
3:04:44
Plus a penny for the jar.
3:04:45
We'll put it in there, thank you.
3:04:47
Heather Smith in Portland, Oregon, 10535.
3:04:51
This is for her husband, Steve Vitorali, I
3:04:56
guess, of Ozark, Kansas.
3:04:58
Please de-douche him.
3:05:01
You've been de-douched.
3:05:03
And if you can remember to give him
3:05:04
some jobs karma at the end, she'd appreciate
3:05:06
it.
3:05:07
Sure, sure.
3:05:10
Kelly Spongberg, I haven't heard from her for
3:05:12
a while.
3:05:12
I think that's a he, actually.
3:05:16
Uh-oh.
3:05:17
It could be.
3:05:18
He or she is in Rocky Mountain House,
3:05:21
Alberta.
3:05:23
It's $100.
3:05:24
Travel karma for Dame Andrea Garnier.
3:05:29
Or Andrea.
3:05:30
Andrea.
3:05:32
Andrea.
3:05:35
Uh, David You
3:05:46
know Zawislak.
3:05:49
Anyway, whoever this David is, he's in Des
3:05:52
Plaines, Illinois, 9356.
3:05:57
Which is 1776 nickels plus fees.
3:06:01
Oh, that's a good one.
3:06:02
I like that.
3:06:04
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina.
3:06:06
He's the Archduke of Loon, lover of America,
3:06:08
and lover of melon's boobs.
3:06:11
8008.
3:06:13
John Farran in Lake Placid, Florida.
3:06:18
7877.
3:06:19
And he could use a de-douching.
3:06:22
You've been de-douched.
3:06:25
General karma at the end, too.
3:06:28
7877 from Todd Webster in Fort Worth, Texas.
3:06:32
Todd and Cheryl Dorfel in Big Pine Key,
3:06:37
Florida.
3:06:39
They are the mom and dad of the
3:06:42
Dorfelverse.
3:06:45
Oh, well, thank you.
3:06:45
Thank you very much.
3:06:47
Darius Walker in Charleston, West Virginia.
3:06:51
7877.
3:06:52
Anonymous in San Rafael, California.
3:06:55
7877.
3:06:56
No need to read my name on the
3:06:58
show.
3:06:59
And we didn't.
3:07:01
Megan Klein in Santa Barbara, California.
3:07:04
76.
3:07:07
May...
3:07:08
Oh, she came in again.
3:07:10
Megan Klein, switcheroo this time.
3:07:12
Also 76, and she's doing a switcheroo for
3:07:16
her smokin' hot dude, Vitas the Destroyah.
3:07:20
Yeah.
3:07:22
Dame Rita in Sparks, Nevada.
3:07:25
76, ITM gentlemen.
3:07:27
Jorge Alvarez in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
3:07:32
7171.
3:07:34
John Alberini in Parts Unknown, 7026.
3:07:38
Garrett Hollander in Farmington, Arkansas.
3:07:42
66.66. Chad Hewitt in Folsom, California.
3:07:48
6640, which is 66 books and 40 authors.
3:07:52
There's a reference there, you knew what it
3:07:54
was, I forgot already.
3:07:55
Jeffrey Blake in York, Maine.
3:07:57
It's the Bible.
3:07:58
The Bible, right, okay.
3:08:00
You forgot already.
3:08:03
Jeffrey Blake in York, Maine, 66.
3:08:08
Craig Kohler in Evansville, Indiana.
3:08:11
6502, the chip donation.
3:08:13
The rarest of all.
3:08:14
Jamie Buell in Vista, California.
3:08:18
6006, Chris Kincaid in Tyler, Texas.
3:08:23
5809.
3:08:25
Sir Kyle in Bertram, Texas.
3:08:30
5776.
3:08:32
Sir Kyle and the Three Donkeys.
3:08:35
Call out Mindy, his amazing girlfriend.
3:08:38
She's a douchebag, he said.
3:08:40
Douchebag!
3:08:41
Douchebag!
3:08:43
Alright Mindy, there you go.
3:08:45
Hey Mindy, how you doing?
3:08:47
Kevin Adam in Clover, South Carolina.
3:08:50
5272.
3:08:51
Commodore Crummy, which is a great name.
3:08:54
El Cajon, 5272.
3:08:57
Now we go to Sergeant Postal from Miami
3:09:01
Lakes, Florida.
3:09:01
5033.
3:09:03
Eduardo Jimenez in Mission, British Columbia.
3:09:08
5033.
3:09:10
Happy birthday to his smoking-hot wife, Gina.
3:09:16
Richard Gardner.
3:09:17
The rest of these are 50s.
3:09:20
Not too many.
3:09:21
Gonna run short here.
3:09:23
Richard Gardner.
3:09:25
Steven Grab in Lansdale, Pennsylvania.
3:09:28
Aaron Weisgerber in Bend, Oregon.
3:09:34
Benjamin Ryan in Alliance, Ohio.
3:09:36
Bobby Brown in Bluegrass, Iowa.
3:09:39
Leaf Thompson in Meridian, Idaho.
3:09:42
Then there's a big black line.
3:09:44
Yeah, what is that about?
3:09:46
I have no idea.
3:09:47
I've never seen that before.
3:09:48
But that's where it ends.
3:09:50
It ends.
3:09:51
That's the end.
3:09:52
Oh, the big black line's the end.
3:09:53
Oh, it's so short.
3:09:54
I thought there was like the...
3:09:56
Oh, that's terrible.
3:09:58
Horrible thing.
3:10:00
Big black line.
3:10:01
Well, thank you very much to these donors.
3:10:03
$50 and above.
3:10:04
We do not mention under $50 for reasons
3:10:06
of anonymity.
3:10:07
We do have a note here and a
3:10:09
check from Southeastern Turf Grass Supply.
3:10:13
David Wicker, sir, by his grace.
3:10:15
And this was for episode 1776.
3:10:17
He sent us double nickels on the dime.
3:10:20
1776 is such a great accomplishment.
3:10:23
And he thanks us for our courage.
3:10:25
And he also sent along a hat.
3:10:27
A hat for Willie to wear.
3:10:28
Willie, my chess partner.
3:10:30
And I got a note from Sir Andy
3:10:31
of Terrigal Beach.
3:10:33
He said, Adam, I don't know if this
3:10:34
is allowed, but yesterday I asked Dame Kylie
3:10:37
of the Double D Cups to marry me
3:10:39
and she said yes!
3:10:42
Oh, that's it.
3:10:44
Congratulations.
3:10:45
We're very happy.
3:10:45
Of course we'll mention that.
3:10:47
Are you kidding me?
3:10:47
It is always allowed.
3:10:49
When two no-agenda people get engaged and
3:10:52
they enter into that sacred covenant, yes, you
3:10:55
better believe it.
3:10:55
It's allowed.
3:10:56
Thank you all so much.
3:10:56
And, of course, thanking our executive and associate
3:10:59
executive producers for this episode as well.
3:11:01
You can support us, and we encourage you
3:11:03
to do so by going to noagendadonations.com
3:11:07
It's your birthday, birthday on No Agenda Well,
3:11:12
first and foremost, we must say happy birthday
3:11:14
to Chip Ingram who celebrated his birthday on
3:11:16
the 21st.
3:11:17
M.
3:11:17
Andrew Jones celebrated yesterday Dirty Jersey Horns his
3:11:21
birthday today on the 29th.
3:11:23
Hey, Dirty Jersey Horns.
3:11:24
Sir J.R.E. celebrates on the 4th
3:11:27
of July.
3:11:28
Tanya Alexian wishes her boyfriend Jeffrey Sarkissian a
3:11:32
happy one on the 6th.
3:11:33
And Eduardo Jimenez happy birthday to his smoking
3:11:36
hot wife, Gina.
3:11:38
And we say happy birthday from everybody here
3:11:40
at the Best Podcast in the Universe.
3:11:42
It's your birthday, yeah Title changes Turn and
3:11:48
face the slays Title changes Don't wanna be
3:11:52
a douchebag Yeah, and this is from Sir
3:11:55
Boojahadeen who is a layaway Baron He started
3:12:00
his 3333 monthly donations back in 2020 along
3:12:03
with several larger one-time donations and he
3:12:06
has now reached the title of Baron.
3:12:08
And so he's changing his title to Sir
3:12:10
Boojahadeen Baron of the Freedom Fighters And if
3:12:14
available, he would like to take Rutherford County,
3:12:17
Tennessee as his protectorate.
3:12:19
And I believe that is possible.
3:12:20
He also says he has to bring up
3:12:22
an issue with us He's a devoted listener
3:12:24
to No Agenda as well as Dave Smith
3:12:26
and Scott Horton And he's Horton, here's a
3:12:31
who He's like Don't be so mean, please,
3:12:35
don't be so mean.
3:12:36
We're not, we're just who we are.
3:12:38
And we are who we are It's who
3:12:39
we are, can't help it We have a
3:12:41
couple of congratulations and thank you Sir Boojahadeen,
3:12:44
now Baron of the Freedom Fighters.
3:12:46
We have one, two, three PhDs who will
3:12:48
all be going to NoAgendaRings.com to receive,
3:12:52
or to let us know where to send
3:12:54
their PhD certificates A beautiful certificate, you see
3:12:56
it there It's a special little tab for
3:12:58
the PhDs Give us the name you want
3:13:01
on it An address, we'll send it off
3:13:02
to Sir Sondreger of the Bluffwoods Dan Madore
3:13:06
and Brian L.
3:13:08
Congratulations on your PhD in Media Deconstruction We
3:13:11
have Instant Knight Note, this is going back
3:13:14
to 1776 from Sir J.R.E. He's
3:13:17
going to be knighted today and he wants
3:13:21
jobs, karma as he is gainfully employed, working
3:13:24
70 hours a week as a normality Wow,
3:13:28
that's something right there.
3:13:30
He's a lonely millennial who works too much,
3:13:33
so alongside the jobs throw in some relationship
3:13:36
karma.
3:13:36
Well, we certainly hope for that for you.
3:13:38
And in fact we need to throw in
3:13:40
jobs and regular karma for everybody as well
3:13:42
Jobs, jobs, jobs Jobs and jobs, let's vote
3:13:47
for jobs!
3:13:48
Karma Also Phil Coburn, who says I hope
3:13:53
this email finds you well so this brother
3:13:56
can be knighted Money talks, so please sign
3:13:58
the donation in honor of John's birthday How
3:14:02
old is this?
3:14:06
If it pleases the Knowage and Appearance Committee,
3:14:09
I request the title befitting of a Barian
3:14:11
brother, Sir Brother Phil of the Knowage and
3:14:12
Appearance Committee.
3:14:14
And he is from Warimu, Australia.
3:14:17
How about that?
3:14:18
So we do have a couple of these
3:14:19
knights to bring up You can grab your
3:14:20
blade, then we'll get this Ooh, it's the
3:14:23
one with that cool handle, I like that
3:14:25
one Alright, Sir JRE Phil Coburn Brian L,
3:14:29
Dan Madoric Daniel J Franco, all of you
3:14:32
gentlemen please hop up here on the podium
3:14:34
As you have supported the Knowage in the
3:14:36
show in the amount of $1,000 or
3:14:38
more I'm very proud to pronounce the KD
3:14:39
as Sir JRE Sir Brother Phil of the
3:14:43
Knowage in the Roundtable Sir Doc Nelson, Knight
3:14:45
of the Capital Region Sir Cadian of the
3:14:48
Rhythm Section and I'm not a spook that
3:14:51
would be Sir to you Gentlemen, for you
3:14:53
we have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and
3:14:55
Chardonnay Mouton-Infused Poutine, Arkansas Muscadine, we got
3:15:00
Pepperoni Rolls and Pale Ales We got Gases
3:15:02
and Sake, Vodka and Vanilla Bonk Hits and
3:15:04
Bourbon, Sparkling Cider and Eskimos Ginger Ale and
3:15:06
Sherbos, Best Milk of Battle Mutton and Mead
3:15:09
always on the list and people always seem
3:15:11
to love that Go to knowagenderings.com, let
3:15:13
us know what size ring you have There
3:15:15
is a ring sizing guide on that website
3:15:17
We will send that off to you It's
3:15:19
a Cignet ring So with that comes some
3:15:21
sticks of wax that we stick into your
3:15:23
pack and you can use that to seal
3:15:24
your important correspondence and in addition to that
3:15:28
a certificate of authenticity in case anyone ever
3:15:31
questions you and thank you for supporting the
3:15:33
best podcast in the universe Meetups Yeah baby
3:15:42
the party is always on the knowagender meetup,
3:15:44
you need to go to these this is
3:15:46
where you find the first responders in an
3:15:48
emergency, the people who will really help you
3:15:50
Connection gives you protection knowagendermeetups.com and here
3:15:53
is the report from Los Angeles Leo Bravo
3:15:56
with his 64th meetup report Hi everybody, it's
3:16:00
Leo Bravo, meetup number 64 away we go
3:16:03
ITM gentlemen, Sir Mainframe of Ventura, down the
3:16:07
line proud member of the knowagender mass formation
3:16:11
Hey John and Adam, Sir Leah Kimphopop here
3:16:13
here in beautiful Wilmington at the Marina Cafe
3:16:15
where the food is good, and it's not
3:16:17
even umami Okay everybody, in the morning A
3:16:21
smaller meetup, but Leo changes venues all the
3:16:24
time, so we do appreciate what you do
3:16:26
Leo Bravo, there's a meetup taking place, oh
3:16:29
actually it took place this morning that was
3:16:30
at Fort Worth, Texas at the Fort Worth
3:16:33
Nature Preserve that was the Do Not Pet
3:16:34
the Bison Hike meetup, I hope everyone made
3:16:37
it out okay the June 20th full on
3:16:40
summer startup meetup is underway at Blind Isle
3:16:42
Brewery in Indianapolis Indiana, that's Sir Mark and
3:16:45
Dame Maria of the Greenwood the East Texas
3:16:48
meetup, that's a birthday meetup, the 33rd plus
3:16:52
16, birthday party extravaganza, that's underway in Longview,
3:16:56
Texas, where Tola's Pizzeria of course Dirty Jersey
3:16:58
Whore is hosting that on Thursday, our next
3:17:00
show day, the Northern Wake FEMA Region No.
3:17:02
4, Potluck & Whiskey there you go, 6
3:17:04
o'clock at Hoppy Endings in Raleigh, North
3:17:07
Carolina and still on the calendar for July
3:17:09
we have the Denver City Park meetup on
3:17:12
the 12th, Zurich, Switzerland on the 12th, Camp
3:17:15
Hill, Pennsylvania on the 13th, Fort Wayne, Indiana
3:17:17
on the 19th and Albany, California on the
3:17:20
19th, I guess you're going to be going
3:17:21
John the 19th, it's in your backyard yep,
3:17:24
beautiful, and remember if you send in a
3:17:27
meetup report and we do encourage that always
3:17:30
include your server to find out where you
3:17:32
can find a No Agenda meetup, we have
3:17:34
a handy website for you, thank you Sir
3:17:36
Daniel for creating and maintaining that, thank you
3:17:38
for Mimi for always sending in this list,
3:17:40
it is noagendameetups.com, if you can't find
3:17:43
one near you, start one yourself right on
3:17:45
that website Sometimes you wanna go hang out
3:17:49
with all the nights and days You wanna
3:17:54
be where you want to be, triggered or
3:17:57
You wanna be where everybody feels the same
3:18:02
You wanna be where everybody Always like a
3:18:05
party Always like a party Alright, we have
3:18:09
end of show ISOs which you always like
3:18:11
to choose as kind of audience participation because
3:18:14
people just send me stuff and I'm like,
3:18:15
I'll try to see what John thinks about
3:18:17
it People are sending you stuff?
3:18:20
Oh, that's how I get them, I never
3:18:21
look for something myself Never They send me
3:18:25
ISOs Yeah, that's why mine are so bad
3:18:29
Let's see what bad ones you got today
3:18:31
They did dumps, they call them dumps Big
3:18:34
massive dumps The biggest load that we've seen
3:18:37
It was a combo, it's too long, but
3:18:39
it was nice It's the one we designed
3:18:40
I know, but he stitched it together So
3:18:43
that's it, so yours is gonna win by
3:18:44
default I have two Oh you have two,
3:18:47
I only saw one I'm sorry, you have
3:18:49
an ISO and you have an ISP Okay
3:18:53
Do you want me to play the ISO
3:18:54
or the ISP?
3:18:55
Let's start with the ISO I love you
3:18:58
President Trump, yes Alright, now play the IPS
3:19:02
Give this podcast a Pulitzer Okay, that's done
3:19:06
That is the one, there's no doubt about
3:19:09
it And we go from that straight into
3:19:10
John's tip of the day Great advice from
3:19:15
you and me Just the tip with JCB
3:19:19
And sometimes Adam Created by Dana Brunetti Normally
3:19:25
I don't I do wine tips now on
3:19:28
occasion I don't do as many from Costco
3:19:30
because Except for those Bordeaux boxes Because there's
3:19:33
not The distribution is sketchy But once in
3:19:37
a while they have a cheap wine That
3:19:39
everybody has, I think, in most of the
3:19:41
stores And I'm recommending one Okay I was
3:19:45
actually stunned Stunned, I tell you By the
3:19:49
quality of this product It's a California wine
3:19:51
And wait, this is available at Costco?
3:19:54
Yeah, I was actually stunned Stunned and more
3:19:59
stunned Before you even tell us So, how
3:20:02
did you discover this?
3:20:04
I mean, you saw a bottle I'm at
3:20:06
Costco That looks like crap, but I'll try
3:20:09
it anyway Well, it goes like this Here's
3:20:14
my methodology For buying Rando wines Rando wines?
3:20:19
Yeah, well, I said, going by, and I'm
3:20:21
looking I say, well, that label's screwy That
3:20:24
looks like, in fact, it looks like An
3:20:26
old-fashioned Geyser Peak label It just has
3:20:28
a different look For a Kirkland wine It's
3:20:30
a Kirkland wine, I'm looking Oh, it's $9
3:20:33
.90 In the pocket, baby That's right in
3:20:40
your price range Let me look at it
3:20:42
Eh, you know, that's a cheap California Cabernet
3:20:46
I'm thinking, this can't be any good But
3:20:48
it's only $9, let me check it out
3:20:50
It's a stunner Really?
3:20:53
I mean, I was taken aback This is
3:20:55
the Kirkland Cabernet Sauvignon from Alexander Valley Which
3:21:02
is a great little Cabernet-growing area Alexander
3:21:04
Valley 2022 Oh, that's a good year for
3:21:08
Cabernet It's a good year for a lot
3:21:10
of things And Bordeaux is a really good
3:21:12
year And so this wine For $9.90
3:21:16
or whatever it was It's ridiculously It's structured
3:21:21
Beautifully Normally for that kind of money, California
3:21:24
wines Are flabby, they're not balanced Correctly, they
3:21:27
don't have the right flavors The profiles are
3:21:29
off.
3:21:30
This is a stunner I'm telling you Maybe
3:21:33
I got just a good bottle, it's possible
3:21:35
But I would recommend Give this a shot
3:21:38
Wow, well I would say maybe you should
3:21:40
try Aldi From time to time, see if
3:21:42
you can find something there I mean, you're
3:21:44
just Finding all the good stuff At all
3:21:46
the craziest places Yes Yes, he said Hey,
3:21:54
now that's a very valuable tip And there's
3:21:56
many more to be found at Tip of
3:21:58
the Day or knowagentofun.com That is John's
3:22:00
Tip of the Day Great advice for you
3:22:03
and me Just a tip with JCB And
3:22:08
sometimes Adam Created by Dana Brunetti That's right,
3:22:12
created by Dana Brunetti Where would we be
3:22:14
without Dana Brunetti We would just be Poor,
3:22:18
sappy podcasters Now we have things created By
3:22:21
a Hollywood expert And that does conclude Our
3:22:25
broadcast day here on KnowAgenda Thank you for
3:22:28
joining us Thank you for participating, thank you
3:22:30
for trolling along Thank you for supporting us
3:22:32
We encourage support of the show to keep
3:22:35
us rolling For more years Knowagendadonations.com Coming
3:22:39
up next on your modern podcast app If
3:22:41
you keep the stream running Or to trollroom
3:22:44
.io Ah, the MMO, the Millennial Media Offensive
3:22:48
Episode 175 Love those kids People like them
3:22:52
a lot They also do that show live
3:22:55
So catch them live when you can End
3:22:58
of show makes his classic From Brian Rudder
3:23:00
and brand new From Melo D We look
3:23:04
forward to that And we will be back
3:23:06
on Thursday Hoping that President Trump Does something
3:23:09
crazy, so y'all tune in And that's
3:23:12
likely Until then Yes it is Coming to
3:23:16
you from the heart of the Texas Hill
3:23:18
Country Where they wrap Jesus in flags That
3:23:21
is just sacrilegious In the morning everybody, I'm
3:23:24
Adam Curry And from Northern Silicon Valley I'm
3:23:27
John C.
3:23:28
Dvorak Please join us on Thursday And remember
3:23:31
us at Knowagendadonations.com Until then adios mofos
3:24:50
David Duke Well, I disavow Luplux plan So
3:24:57
I disavow it again It's condemned totally Doesn't
3:25:01
condemn the darn thing.
3:25:04
I disavowed again.
3:25:05
Review, done.
3:25:22
They're not gonna be fighting each other, they've
3:25:24
had it.
3:25:25
They've had a big fight, like two kids
3:25:27
in a school yard, you know, they fight
3:25:30
for about two, three minutes.
3:26:14
Through flattery and praise.
3:26:16
Isn't it a bit demeaning?
3:26:18
And doesn't it make you look weak?
3:26:24
And doesn't it make you look weak?
3:26:26
No, I don't think so.
3:26:27
I think it's a bit of a question
3:26:28
of taste.
3:26:30
But I think he's a good friend.
3:26:32
And when it comes to making more investments.
3:26:44
The best podcast in the universe.
3:26:48
Adios, mofo.
3:26:49
Dvorak.org.
3:26:51
Slash N-A.
3:26:53
Give this podcast a Pulitzer.