0:00
Well now, unfortunately, it's gone so long that
0:03
we're in gun smoke territory.
0:05
Adam Curry, John C.
0:07
DeVora.
0:07
It's Sunday, October 26, 2025, this year award
0:10
-winning Gilmore Nation media assassination episode 1811.
0:14
This is no agenda.
0:17
Turns out she's a dude, as we broadcast
0:20
live from the heart of the Texas Hill
0:22
Country, here in FEMA Region Number 6.
0:24
In the morning, everybody.
0:26
I'm Adam Curry.
0:26
And I'm from Northern Silicon Valley, where I've
0:29
determined that if you wear jeans when you're
0:31
over 50, you look like a homeless person.
0:33
I'm John C.
0:34
DeVora.
0:34
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
0:36
In the morning.
0:39
I don't know if that's true.
0:40
I wear jeans.
0:41
I don't look like a homeless person.
0:43
I'm over 50.
0:45
I don't agree.
0:46
I go to the Monterey Foods, where all
0:48
these old farts go.
0:50
Well, you mean the baggy saggy?
0:52
Berkeley, and they're all, these old men are
0:54
wearing jeans, and they all look like they're
0:56
homeless.
0:57
There's no reason for, wear slacks.
0:59
You're old.
1:00
You're not a kid anymore.
1:01
You're not like, you're not running around in
1:04
the park.
1:05
What do you wear?
1:06
Corduroys?
1:10
Dockers?
1:10
What do you wear?
1:11
What do you wear?
1:12
Yeah, dockers would be similar.
1:14
Yeah, just some sort of slack.
1:16
Oh, okay.
1:17
Hey, everybody.
1:19
Today is our 18th anniversary.
1:22
Congratulations to all the producers of the No
1:25
Agenda Show who have been with us.
1:27
Yes, join us.
1:29
Thank you to the Scream Wizardry, Avoid Zero,
1:32
Bemros, Cotton Gin, the trolls in the troll
1:35
room.
1:35
All of you are just fantastic.
1:37
And congratulations to you, to you, my partner,
1:41
for 18 years.
1:46
Stop, stop.
1:48
Hey, it won't stop.
1:49
Why won't it stop?
1:50
Oh, there.
1:51
Stop, stop, stop.
1:53
I can't make it stop.
1:54
What is this?
1:55
Make it stop.
1:57
It's not stopping.
1:59
I think my button's broken.
2:01
I have the real one around here somewhere.
2:04
Oh, it looks like this controller is busted.
2:06
Oh, that's interesting.
2:08
18 years.
2:09
Here's the real one.
2:11
Oh, wait.
2:11
There's something very wrong here.
2:14
Oh, no.
2:14
What is happening?
2:15
Oh, no.
2:16
It's out of control.
2:17
Hold on.
2:18
Well, I gotta reboot a whole system here.
2:21
This is bad.
2:22
That's weird.
2:24
Why?
2:26
Buttons go bad?
2:27
Well, I don't think it was the button.
2:29
I think it might be my entire MIDI
2:31
controller finally gave up the ghost.
2:34
Let me see.
2:35
Let me see if it's okay.
2:36
It should run forever.
2:38
Well, it's mechanical.
2:40
Oh, it's mechanical.
2:41
What?
2:42
Yeah.
2:42
I mean...
2:43
The sound comes in, there's a little midget
2:44
in there going, hey, beep, beep, beep, beep,
2:45
beep, beep.
2:46
No.
2:47
What do you mean mechanical?
2:48
The MIDI controller controls the play out system.
2:55
And the MIDI controller controls the...
2:57
I have one, two, three, four, five, six.
3:00
I have eight players because, you know, we
3:01
do a lot of clips on this show
3:03
in case you hadn't noticed.
3:04
No.
3:06
If we do a lot of clips on
3:07
this show.
3:08
And so, you know, from time to time,
3:10
I got to load up a whole bunch
3:12
of clips, particularly if either of us has
3:14
a series.
3:14
Are they carts?
3:15
Are they mechanical?
3:16
You say it's mechanical.
3:18
Did you move them all to eight track
3:20
or...? So, you know, not far from it.
3:22
It is, in fact, a digital cart rack.
3:26
Yes, that's correct.
3:27
But you used the term digital.
3:29
That, to me, doesn't mean mechanical.
3:31
No, but the controller has faders and physical
3:35
buttons for me to...
3:36
Oh, you have actual pots.
3:38
Yes.
3:39
Well, I call them faders.
3:40
You know, you still probably consider I have
3:44
round, huge knobs on my board.
3:47
That's what you want.
3:48
Have you ever played with those old systems
3:51
with the giant round knobs?
3:53
I hate those systems.
3:54
They're the worst.
3:55
You've got a big...
3:56
You can fine-tune it.
3:58
I wish I could...
3:59
Those old, big, giant round knobs and a
4:01
big VU meter that's the size of a
4:03
house.
4:06
And then when you wanted to...
4:09
This is too funny.
4:10
And then when you were ready to cue
4:15
up a record, you turned the pot all
4:20
the way to the left and there was
4:21
a little switch, a little click, and then
4:23
it would be in audition mode.
4:26
You remember that?
4:27
Oh, yeah.
4:28
I forgot about that.
4:29
But I do recall it now.
4:30
That was important.
4:32
Yeah, that's right.
4:34
In audition mode.
4:35
So you could hear it as you cued
4:36
it up without it going over the air.
4:39
Yes, exactly.
4:41
Correct.
4:42
Correct.
4:42
That's the kind of gear that we should
4:44
have today.
4:45
You know, if I could get a board
4:47
that was still good, I'd probably have it
4:50
here.
4:51
I don't know if I'd actually use it,
4:52
but I'd probably have it.
4:54
That would be fun.
4:55
That'd be fun.
4:56
So let's take a little trip back, shall
4:59
we?
4:59
Just for a moment.
5:01
For a moment.
5:02
Let us go back to...
5:05
Well, what was it?
5:06
So it was October 26.
5:11
Friday, October 26, 2007.
5:15
Let's go back in time.
5:17
And this is for you children who don't
5:19
know what 78 Records sounds like.
5:22
This is what the No Agenda show sounded
5:24
like 18 years ago.
5:28
Welcome, everybody, to a brand new program on
5:31
the Podshow Network, which could be titled a
5:34
number of things.
5:34
We chose No Agenda, but it could be
5:37
the show with no imaging, no content yet.
5:43
The only thing it is, is...
5:45
Some things don't change.
5:46
...guys with an idea of putting together a...
5:49
What should we call it, John?
5:51
A...
5:52
Agenda-less show.
5:53
Agenda-less show, exactly.
5:56
So your window still makes a lot of
5:59
noise.
5:59
We didn't have the noise gate back then.
6:01
I think that's your sound, is all that
6:03
noise, that white noise in the background.
6:06
John C.
6:06
Dvorak in California, Adam Curry here in London.
6:10
Something we cooked up.
6:11
What was it?
6:12
Like a four-minute phone call.
6:13
Hey, we should do a show together.
6:14
Okay.
6:15
Let's call it No Agenda.
6:17
Okay, and here we are.
6:19
Well, of course, the basis for a show
6:20
like this, and I think everybody out there
6:22
who has conversations with friends, they occasionally, especially
6:28
when the conversations go on and on, say,
6:30
that would have been an interesting thing for
6:32
other people to listen to.
6:33
This is when you still pretended to be
6:35
my friend.
6:39
Yeah, well, you know.
6:42
That was the era when Comic Strip Blogger
6:45
had his Yo!
6:47
Agenda show, and he kept claiming that as
6:49
soon as one of us quit or something
6:52
happened to the podcast network or whatever, pod
6:55
show network...
6:56
Pod show network, yes.
6:57
The show would dissolve because we hated each
7:01
other.
7:01
No, because you were a jerk, according to
7:03
him.
7:04
Some things never change.
7:06
Exactly, exactly right.
7:07
He still feels the same way, but, you
7:09
know, because you won't pick his art.
7:11
Hey, well, we picked his art just two
7:12
shows ago.
7:13
I know we did, yeah, but that was
7:14
me.
7:16
Okay.
7:18
Hey, breaking news, breaking news.
7:21
Unbelievable.
7:23
French President Emmanuel Macron's wife, Brigitte Macron, discovered
7:28
that her tax account on France's official government
7:31
website listed her as male under the name
7:34
Jean-Michel.
7:37
Breaking news.
7:39
Is this actually a news story or a
7:41
hoax?
7:41
This is, no, this is, this is all
7:42
over the French media.
7:44
Not France 24 yet, trust me.
7:46
I've been looking for it.
7:50
Yeah, it's great.
7:52
That, that either, well, it's possible.
7:56
Well, I mean, they have the...
7:58
Élysée, Élysée.
7:59
Dans le bureau de la première dame.
8:01
Élysée, that's BFM TV, whatever that is.
8:06
Milk Bar TV.
8:07
That sounds reputable.
8:08
Oh yeah, Milk Bar.
8:09
I always go to them, it's my go
8:11
-to.
8:11
Milk Bar is the best.
8:16
Oh man.
8:18
Anyway, 18 years, John.
8:20
It's the longest gig I've ever had.
8:22
How about you?
8:22
Well, now, unfortunately, it's gone so long that
8:26
we're in gun smoke territory.
8:31
Hey, horse.
8:32
And there's like maybe one or two other
8:36
podcasts that have lasted this long.
8:39
And so now it's historic.
8:42
People are actually listening to what will eventually
8:45
be considered an historic podcast.
8:49
You know what?
8:50
I heard someone the other day on a
8:53
podcast saying that we are creating the future
8:57
library of Alexandria in real time.
9:01
Because the future, of course, will only be
9:04
AI search results.
9:06
We don't even, we don't know if even
9:08
if Google's going to be around in the
9:09
future because they're killing their own business model.
9:11
But, and there will be spread throughout the
9:16
digital universe, but luckily also the physical universe,
9:20
because we have so many people who made
9:22
CDs of the show, thanks to Ramsey, you
9:28
know, that people will pick it up and
9:30
go like, hey, what's this?
9:33
Or what is this thing I'm listening to?
9:35
Yeah, the artifacts.
9:36
Yeah, and I'm sure not everything will be
9:38
preserved, but there's so much, there's, I mean,
9:40
that's the beauty of the internet, particularly with
9:42
podcasts, MP3s, they're just everywhere.
9:45
And they're decentralized, downloaded onto millions of phones.
9:49
Yeah, they're archived by all kinds of people.
9:51
Yeah, and all kinds of devices and everywhere.
9:54
And people go like, oh, that's interesting.
9:57
So these guys knew 50 years ago that
10:01
we never landed on the moon.
10:02
Wow, those guys were good.
10:05
How can we not have guys like that
10:06
anymore?
10:07
Yeah, that's what it's going to be.
10:09
So one of the early staples, I'm not
10:11
going to do a retrospective show, but this
10:13
just came to mind.
10:13
Why not?
10:14
Because I didn't prepare one.
10:16
Oh, okay.
10:17
Well, that's the reason, not because you don't
10:19
want to.
10:19
No.
10:20
I do have some historical clips myself, but
10:22
it has to do with measles.
10:23
Oh, no, we'll do that.
10:25
And we kind of should do that in
10:26
just a minute.
10:27
So one of the early things that we
10:29
were discussing, because we started just at the
10:31
end of 2007, 2008, you know, we saw
10:35
Obama coming.
10:38
And I think one of the early memes
10:41
of the show was mac and cheese.
10:43
Everyone's going to be eating mac and cheese.
10:46
And we've gone through...
10:48
Well, actually, this is one of our oldest
10:50
jingles.
10:52
You slaves can get used to mac and
10:54
cheese, mac and cheese.
10:56
Macaroni and cheddar melted together.
10:59
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and
11:01
cheese.
11:02
Mac and cheese.
11:04
Hey, everybody.
11:06
And we went through an interesting history with
11:09
mac and cheese where it became an actual
11:11
luxury item.
11:12
I think people were lined up for $18
11:17
mac and cheese.
11:19
Of course, we had the grilled cheese sandwiches
11:20
that people stood in line for.
11:23
Before we continue, across from MeVeo pod show
11:27
operation, across the street from the studio or
11:34
whatever offices, there was a grilled cheese sandwich
11:39
shop.
11:41
Yes.
11:41
And all they sold was grilled cheese sandwiches.
11:44
And for $15.
11:46
Yeah, or something.
11:47
It was outrageous.
11:49
And we've come full circle.
11:50
Last but not least, one trend and true
11:52
brand is making a big comeback as consumers
11:55
tighten their wallets.
11:57
And here it is, Hamburger Helper.
11:59
The mix of mac and cheese and ground
12:00
beef is seeing a surge in sales.
12:03
Harris, I grew up on the cheeseburger Hamburger
12:05
Helper and it was very good with the
12:07
extra cheese sprinkled on top.
12:09
Yum, Hamburger Helper mac and cheese.
12:11
Kaylee McEnany.
12:12
Yeah.
12:13
You know, we went to the Fredericksburg Food
12:15
and Wine Festival Friday.
12:18
Oh, there was a festival.
12:19
Yes, it happens every year.
12:21
And we were invited to attend this year.
12:24
You can't get in unless you're invited?
12:26
What kind of a festival is that?
12:28
It costs $250 for this dinner.
12:30
That's why we've never been.
12:31
Oh, it's a dinner.
12:32
Yeah, it's on Marchplatz.
12:34
And it's outside under the big tent.
12:36
And what's interesting, I'm not quite sure who...
12:39
There's a big tent in Fredericksburg?
12:42
Oh, yeah.
12:42
We have the Marchplatz in the center.
12:45
We are an important little town.
12:48
People come here for...
12:49
No, it's a famous town.
12:51
I don't know how important it is.
12:52
It was very important.
12:53
We have Oktoberfest.
12:55
Of course, you have a big Christmas market.
12:58
And we're very famous for our Christmas tree
13:01
and our displays and all kinds of important...
13:06
We're an important town.
13:08
And now that we are pretty much overshadowing
13:12
Napa Valley...
13:17
Yeah, that'll be the day.
13:19
A lot of Napa guys at this food
13:20
and wine festival.
13:21
Oh, I'll bet they're flocking there.
13:24
They are.
13:25
They are.
13:25
They're all opening up wineries because they know
13:27
that they'll get rich.
13:28
They know they can get cheaper land and
13:30
maybe grow something.
13:32
Oh, no, they're not interested in growing anything.
13:34
No, they just want to make drinking barns
13:37
like everybody else.
13:38
They bring in their grapes from California and
13:41
they do a little dance and...
13:44
Oh, look at this.
13:45
It's Texas wine.
13:46
No.
13:51
And what was interesting is that...
13:53
Now, I had a whole train of thought.
13:55
You've taken me...
13:56
We did the weave and I lost the
13:58
thread.
13:59
There was something...
14:00
You did the weave.
14:01
It was something about...
14:04
Oh, I can't remember now.
14:06
Well, it was about the $250 ticket.
14:09
You got invited to have dinner at the
14:12
thing for the first time and you learned
14:14
something.
14:15
Yeah, I can't remember what I...
14:17
Low tea!
14:18
I can't remember what I learned.
14:20
It'll come back to me.
14:23
It wasn't about the dinner per se.
14:26
Anyway.
14:28
Well, it was a wine and food festival
14:30
in Fredericksburg.
14:32
Yeah, I know you're desperately trying to help
14:33
me.
14:33
And I was mocking it.
14:35
You're desperately trying to help me, Brad.
14:36
I am trying to help you by trying...
14:38
By the way, you do this to trigger
14:40
the other person to think, and, oh, yeah,
14:42
that's what I was thinking about.
14:44
But unfortunately, I can't.
14:46
Well, it was about mac and cheese.
14:47
I'm not being successful.
14:48
I feel...
14:49
You're failing me, bro.
14:50
I feel low tea.
14:52
It was something about mac and cheese.
14:55
It was related to mac and cheese.
14:56
I can't remember.
14:56
The cheese sandwich.
14:59
Oh, no, it's a disappointing payoff now that
15:01
I think about it.
15:02
So the point was that we were invited,
15:05
and it was pretty much every...
15:06
We were invited by the international arms dealer
15:09
because when he's not selling C-130s to
15:13
Africa, which, by the way, is a dynamite
15:16
business, because they keep...
15:18
Those Africans, they learn how to fly on
15:21
YouTube.
15:22
So they keep crashing them into hangars and
15:24
into each other.
15:25
So the guy has a steady supply of
15:26
C-130s.
15:28
He also does real estate deals for these
15:31
wineries, and he's busy.
15:32
He had another guy there from Napa Valley,
15:36
family, fifth generation.
15:38
They want to buy cheap land here.
15:41
But it was odd.
15:42
I'm not quite sure who the wine and
15:43
food festival is for other than taking your
15:46
buddies and showing them off.
15:48
That was probably it.
15:49
Oh, look, my friends are celebrities.
15:53
Yeah, now I think about it.
15:55
It's exactly what it was.
15:56
I was just a piece of meat.
15:58
You were just being used.
15:59
I was being used.
16:00
Well, they did have wild boar on the
16:02
menu.
16:02
So they have all the...
16:03
Well, I'd go for that too.
16:05
Yeah.
16:06
A little wild boar.
16:07
But it was all of the entrepreneurs who
16:11
have businesses who were there.
16:12
And everyone sponsoring the event.
16:14
And, you know, we had Salvation Spirits, who's
16:18
our bootlegger guy, Trey.
16:19
He was also a lobbyist in Austin.
16:22
And we had the Augusta Vin and the
16:25
Wine Heiress.
16:26
And I'm like, who is this really for?
16:29
And everybody had the same story.
16:32
The attendance in our town is up by
16:36
25, 30 percent.
16:38
Revenue down by 20 percent.
16:42
Because we're in mac and cheese times.
16:44
People do not...
16:45
They are not spending money.
16:47
They're coming here.
16:48
They're just looking around.
16:50
Here, let me look at your winery.
16:51
I don't think I want anything to drink.
16:53
You got any water?
16:54
Some peanuts?
16:56
Water.
16:57
So that is a bad indicator, I would
17:00
say.
17:01
Yeah, I think things are a little down.
17:04
Well, 20 percent is a lot down.
17:06
Everybody's like, yeah, you know, the traffic is
17:08
there.
17:08
But people are...
17:10
JLs, you know, just looking.
17:11
Hey, I'm just looking.
17:14
JLs.
17:14
JLs, yeah, just looking.
17:16
So anyway.
17:20
Ah, there was a number...
17:22
The Sunday morning shows were...
17:25
Scott Besant is everywhere now.
17:27
And I'm not quite sure why.
17:29
I think maybe it's because of the TikTok
17:31
deal.
17:33
That may be part of it.
17:34
I don't think so.
17:36
Lady G.
17:37
New agent.
17:39
Lady G was out.
17:42
Is there a new war we're starting?
17:44
Or is it because of some land bombing?
17:47
No, you nailed it.
17:48
You nailed it.
17:49
No, you nailed it.
17:51
Whenever there's killing going on, Lindsey Graham was
17:54
like, yeah, we're killing people.
17:57
I love it so much.
17:59
Oh, yeah, this is great.
18:02
Who are we killing?
18:04
Drug dealers, of course.
18:05
Good morning.
18:06
On Friday, Defense Secretary Higgs has ordered the
18:09
deployment of the Navy's most advanced aircraft carrier,
18:12
Gerald Ford, to Latin America.
18:15
President Trump was asked if he planned to
18:18
ask Congress for a declaration of war.
18:20
Take a listen.
18:21
I don't think we're going to necessarily ask
18:23
for a declaration of war.
18:25
I think we're just going to kill people
18:27
that are bringing drugs into our country.
18:29
I love this.
18:29
Okay, we're going to kill them.
18:31
You know, they're going to be like dead.
18:33
This is why Lindsey Graham's like, oh, Donald,
18:36
oh, Donald, oh, Donald, you're talking about killing
18:39
again.
18:39
Oh, I got to go on the shows.
18:42
You don't need an aircraft carrier to hit
18:44
drug boats.
18:45
Yeah, you do.
18:46
Of course you do.
18:47
You need to fly all your jets around.
18:51
Of course you need that.
18:53
Our land strikes plant.
18:55
Yeah, I think that's a real possibility.
18:57
I think President Trump's made a decision that
18:59
Maduro, the leader of Venezuela, is an indicted
19:02
drug trafficker, that it's time for him to
19:05
go.
19:05
Indicted by who?
19:06
That Venezuela and Colombia have been safe havens
19:10
for narco terrorists for too long.
19:13
And President Trump told me yesterday that he
19:16
plans to brief members of Congress when he
19:20
gets back from Asia about future potential military
19:23
operations against Venezuela and Colombia.
19:27
So there will be a congressional briefing about
19:30
a potential expanding from the sea to the
19:33
land.
19:33
I support that idea, but I think he
19:35
has all the authority he needs.
19:37
Senator Gallego on another network accused President Trump
19:41
and our military of committing murder by attacking
19:44
these drug boats.
19:45
I don't care who's killing who, but I'm
19:47
there.
19:47
If there's murder, I'm there.
19:48
I'm Lindsey.
19:49
To our men and women in uniform, you're
19:51
not murdering anybody.
19:53
You're making America safer by going after a
19:55
narco terrorist.
19:56
You're following lawful orders.
19:59
When President Bush 41 took Ortega out in
20:03
Panama.
20:04
I mean, really?
20:06
This is what blew my mind.
20:08
Like the whole Panamanian fiasco.
20:13
He's like, well, no, come on.
20:15
President Bush took out.
20:17
Do whatever we want.
20:19
He killed people here.
20:21
How come?
20:23
I'm going to ask you this, and I'm
20:24
sure your clips will explain it.
20:25
Not.
20:27
How come nobody, including Graham here, they talk
20:31
about Bush.
20:34
Talk about how Obama used to have a
20:37
kill list and would, on every Tuesday, pick
20:39
a bunch of targets and on sovereign soil
20:43
elsewhere in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere.
20:48
We would have these guys blowed up, blew
20:51
up a wedding.
20:52
Apparently, according to some reports, double the entire
20:55
wedding.
20:56
And then they came with a double tap
20:58
and killed the Red Cross people.
21:00
How come that's not mentioned?
21:03
He's black.
21:05
He took Ortega out in Panama.
21:08
Reagan went into Grenada to deal with the
21:10
Cuban influence from Grenada in our backyard.
21:13
He has all the authority in the world.
21:14
This is not murder.
21:16
This is protecting America from being poisoned by
21:19
narco terrorists coming from Venezuela and Colombia.
21:22
This is so awesome.
21:25
You can set your watch by it.
21:28
If there's actual, if people are using terms
21:30
murder and killing and death, Lindsey Graham shows
21:34
up.
21:36
I mean, really, wherever.
21:38
Hey, yeah, we're going to kill the Russians
21:39
in you.
21:40
Yeah, Ukraine.
21:41
We're going to kill them.
21:42
We're going to kill the Russians.
21:43
Kill, kill, kill this guy.
21:45
And I think there's many people.
21:47
In fact, I think in general, there's a
21:50
large swath of the population who get turned
21:54
on by killing.
21:56
Don't you think?
21:59
Well, it's something I don't like to think
22:01
about.
22:02
Well, we asked the hard questions here on
22:06
the no agenda show.
22:07
The examples you're citing also involved ground troops.
22:11
Ground troops.
22:13
Like ground beef.
22:16
Ground troops.
22:18
Is that a prompter misread or what is
22:20
that?
22:21
Yes, it's a total prompter misread.
22:23
Ground troops like ground beef.
22:25
Like ground beef.
22:26
Exactly.
22:27
That's crazy.
22:28
The examples you're citing also involved ground troops.
22:31
You said time for Maduro to go.
22:34
That sounds a lot like regime change.
22:36
By the way, stop.
22:38
This is the complaints that we have about
22:41
ridiculing the way we do.
22:45
There'll be somebody out there that listened to
22:46
us ridicule, laugh at this woman for not
22:49
being able to read a prompter correctly and
22:51
saying ground troops and saying you guys stink.
22:59
But I don't know.
23:00
You have to find humor in things.
23:02
And that was humorous.
23:04
Ground troops.
23:05
How many troops would you like ground?
23:08
We have troop helper on sale.
23:09
You want a coarse grind or a fine?
23:13
This is bad.
23:15
Sausages?
23:16
I'll let the president speak to that.
23:17
I'm talking about a briefing that would expand
23:20
military operations potentially from the sea to the
23:23
land.
23:24
It is time.
23:25
Notice this is interesting.
23:27
And I'm not quite sure why this is
23:31
yet.
23:31
But we had from the river to the
23:34
sea.
23:35
Palestine shall be free.
23:37
And now we have from the sea to
23:39
the land.
23:39
This is something.
23:41
There's some mnemonics going on here that either
23:43
have not unfolded yet or Lindsey Graham is
23:46
psychic.
23:47
I don't know.
23:48
There's something happening here.
23:49
Expand military operations potentially from the sea to
23:52
the land.
23:53
It is time for Maduro to go.
23:55
It was time for Ortega to go.
23:56
You know, the Monroe Doctrine has been robustly
23:59
applied by President Trump.
24:01
So these military assets are moving forward to
24:04
deal with a country that's got blood on
24:06
its hands when it comes to Americans by
24:09
flooding our country with drugs from Venezuela and
24:13
Colombia.
24:14
So I hope Maduro would leave peacefully, but
24:17
I don't think he's going to stay around
24:20
much longer.
24:21
I think President Trump is tired of Venezuela
24:23
being used as a staging platform to pause
24:27
in America.
24:27
Do you think that President Trump does a
24:29
booty call at night on Lindsey Graham?
24:32
I'm like, you know, the phone rings at
24:33
1130.
24:35
Oh, Donald.
24:37
Hey, I can't do Trump.
24:39
Lindsey, I need you to go on the
24:41
show tomorrow.
24:42
I need you to talk about death and
24:44
killing.
24:44
Oh, all right, Donald.
24:46
Well, there's a lot.
24:47
I don't think they even talk.
24:49
This is just his normal mode.
24:51
He just, or does the CBS know?
24:54
It's like, hey, guys, we got some killing.
25:00
What sicko can we get to really accentuate
25:04
how horrible the Trump administration is?
25:07
Eh, get Lindsey, he'll do it.
25:09
Hey, Lindsey, get off that kid.
25:11
There's a lot there, sir, but you cited
25:13
- I'm sorry, that was bad.
25:15
That was bad.
25:15
That was bad.
25:16
Can we, can I retract that before I
25:17
get sued?
25:20
You didn't just say anything that's really-
25:24
The way I see it.
25:25
It wasn't good.
25:26
Well, there's a lot- It just was
25:28
a snide comment that was unnecessary.
25:30
Unnecessary roughness on the play.
25:32
Out there, sir, but you cited a Democratic
25:34
senator's criticism.
25:36
He's not the only one.
25:38
Some of your Republican colleagues have been uncomfortable
25:41
with what little information has been shared with
25:43
Congress.
25:44
Take a listen.
25:45
If they want all out war where we
25:47
kill anybody and everybody that is in the
25:50
country of Venezuela or coming out, that has
25:52
to have a declaration of war.
25:54
It's something that is not pretty, very expensive,
25:58
and I'm not in favor of declaring war
26:00
on Venezuela, but the Congress should vote.
26:02
The president shouldn't do this by himself.
26:04
If this was happening with this level of
26:05
insight under the Biden administration, I'd be apoplectic.
26:10
Okay, well, first of all, going back to
26:12
your earlier comment that CBS has their little
26:15
list of people to bring in.
26:17
By bringing in Rand Paul, that just proves
26:21
your point.
26:21
Yeah, of course.
26:24
So the big question is, is this about
26:26
drugs or could it be about something else?
26:29
What exactly is the end game?
26:31
Because you're talking about regime change in Venezuela.
26:34
The president says this is about drug boats.
26:39
Yeah, well, I think the end game is
26:40
- Is he getting information on what to
26:44
say next?
26:46
Yeah, yeah.
26:47
No, he's thinking about what to say next.
26:49
I don't think he's being fed anything.
26:51
I don't know about that.
26:52
About regime change in Venezuela.
26:54
The president says this is about drug boats.
26:57
Yeah, yeah, it's about drugs, isn't it, Lindsey?
26:59
Yeah, well, I think the end game is
27:01
to make sure that Venezuela and Colombia cannot
27:04
be used to poison America, that the narco
27:07
-terrorist dictator Maduro- Maduro, Maduro.
27:10
Will no longer be able to threaten our
27:12
country and to send in drugs to kill
27:15
Americans.
27:17
As to Rand Paul, I just disagree fundamentally
27:21
with his approach.
27:22
We didn't have a declaration to go into
27:25
Panama.
27:26
Bush 41 went into Panama to replace the
27:30
leadership there because the Panama leadership, Panamanian leadership
27:34
were working with drug cartels to threaten our
27:37
country.
27:38
Oh, yeah, that was it.
27:40
I mean, wow, wow.
27:44
Lindsey, back off on that.
27:45
Reagan didn't have a declaration of war, congressional
27:48
authorization to deal with Cuban influence.
27:52
So this idea of Rand Paul, I just
27:55
fundamentally disagree with.
27:56
To the other senators, you deserve more information
27:59
and you're going to get more information.
28:01
But there is no requirement for Congress to
28:04
declare war before the commander in chief can
28:07
use force.
28:08
Panama and Grenada are two examples in our
28:11
backyard for Republican presidents chose to go after
28:15
countries and leaders that were threatening our people.
28:19
So, well, and there's a couple more clips
28:23
here, but what do you think is really
28:24
going on here?
28:26
Is this about regime change or is this
28:30
about drugs?
28:32
It's about oil.
28:33
Yeah, yeah.
28:36
It is about regime change because we got
28:38
to get that oil.
28:39
Did you know that Lady G was a
28:42
jag?
28:44
I did not know that.
28:46
But there seem to be a number of
28:48
issues wound up in here.
28:50
I know you personally used to serve as
28:53
a judge advocate in the Air Force.
28:56
Yeah, we looked at the judge's manual.
28:59
Preventative self-defense employed to counter non-imminent
29:02
threats is illegal under international law.
29:06
So if we are not at- International
29:07
law?
29:08
When did this come about?
29:10
These suspected criminals pose no threat of imminent
29:14
violence.
29:15
Isn't this potentially a war crime to be
29:18
killing the people on these boats and then
29:20
to be taking out a leader?
29:23
Go ahead, Lady Jag.
29:24
You know what to say.
29:25
No, not at all.
29:26
I don't know what manual you're referring to,
29:28
but I know what President Bush 41 did.
29:31
He took down Ortega, the leader of Panama,
29:34
because he was involved in drug trafficking, threatening
29:37
our country.
29:38
Venezuela is now partnering with Hezbollah.
29:41
Hezbollah is running out of money because Iran
29:44
is weak.
29:44
That's not new.
29:45
Partnering with drug cartels in Venezuela.
29:48
No, it should have stopped.
29:49
Here's what's new.
29:51
You got a commander-in-chief that's not
29:53
going to put up with this crap.
29:55
We're not going to sit on the sidelines
29:56
and watch boats full of drugs come to
29:59
our country.
30:00
We're going to blow them up and kill
30:01
the people that want to poison America.
30:04
And we're now going to expand operations, I
30:06
think, to the land.
30:07
So please be clear about what I'm saying
30:10
today.
30:11
President Donald Trump sees Venezuela and Colombia as
30:14
direct threats to our country because they house
30:17
narco-terrorist organizations.
30:21
The leader of Venezuela is an indicted drug
30:24
dealer in American courts.
30:26
So yeah, the game is changing when it
30:29
comes to drug traffickers and drug cartels.
30:32
We're going to use military force, like we
30:35
have in the past, to protect our country.
30:38
That's the new game we're playing.
30:40
I'm glad we're playing that game.
30:42
And if I were Maduro, I'd find a
30:44
way to leave before he goes down.
30:46
See, I still have to look at this
30:48
through the lens of the North Sea nexus.
30:50
I don't think we're going to do any
30:52
land operations.
30:53
I think this is really about destroying the
30:56
drug trade and cutting off the city of
30:59
London's main financial income.
31:02
Because that's, I mean, this is a lot
31:04
of money that's blowing up in the sea.
31:06
I don't know much about drugs, but it
31:08
looks like that's a big haul every single
31:10
time.
31:14
Uh, maybe.
31:16
Anyway, let's get back to killing.
31:19
Again, I bring back, they talk about the
31:22
woman, the reporter goes on about international war
31:25
crimes.
31:26
And that's the opportunity right there to throw
31:29
in the Obama material.
31:31
But I don't know why Lindsey's not doing
31:33
that.
31:36
He's obviously been briefed not to do that
31:38
for some reason.
31:39
I don't know what it is.
31:42
Something's up with Obama.
31:44
He doesn't have an analog to Obama's drone
31:47
kill list and drugs.
31:49
Although, because, you know, the poppies over there,
31:52
that was us.
31:54
But they weren't blowing up, they were just
31:56
blowing them up just arbitrarily.
31:59
No, I know.
31:59
But so this is- Which makes it
32:01
worse.
32:02
I mean, at least there's a rationale on
32:04
this end of the deal.
32:05
How about this?
32:06
Lindsey Graham's an idiot.
32:07
How about that?
32:08
Just as an idea.
32:10
I don't believe that for a minute.
32:13
Let's get back to killing.
32:15
Is trafficking cocaine an armed attack on the
32:18
United States?
32:19
That's what you're equating it to?
32:22
I am saying that there's plenty of law
32:26
under Article Two powers of the president are
32:31
designed to protect our countries from threats, foreign
32:34
and domestic.
32:36
Was it illegal for Bush to take out
32:38
in Panama?
32:39
Was it illegal for- Back to Bush,
32:41
Bush, Bush, Bush.
32:42
Reagan to go into Grenada and stop Cuban
32:44
influence building this big long runway?
32:46
There's plenty of precedent here to do what
32:49
he's doing.
32:50
But the game has changed.
32:52
The game has changed when it comes to
32:54
narco-trafficking drug organizations.
32:57
We're going to take you out.
32:59
We're going to kill you.
33:00
Yes, we're back to killing.
33:01
And guess what?
33:02
He's going to deal with you drug users,
33:04
too.
33:05
You referenced something earlier.
33:06
Hold on a second.
33:08
Is this Margaret?
33:09
Yes, Margaret.
33:11
Yeah.
33:12
Why?
33:12
So she, when she brings up this armed,
33:17
when she brought up the armed threat thing,
33:20
he should have retorted with, does killing Americans
33:25
have to be with a bullet?
33:27
That's the only thing that counts?
33:30
You know, I'm giving- I'm giving you
33:32
the IFP.
33:32
You can talk to Lindsey.
33:34
I think that you're much better at it.
33:36
I'm just saying- Lindsey, I'm passing it
33:38
on to John.
33:39
He's going to give you some tips.
33:41
Talk about Obama, you idiot.
33:43
You referenced something earlier, sir, I want to
33:45
come back to.
33:46
You said to the men and women of
33:48
the military that they are carrying out lawful
33:51
orders.
33:52
Secretary Pegg said removed the top uniformed lawyers
33:56
in the Air Force.
33:57
You know this, the Navy and the Army,
33:59
because he called them roadblocks to orders that
34:02
are given by a commander in chief.
34:04
There have been other departures as well.
34:06
Come on, you're a jag.
34:07
This raises concern that commanders are not being
34:11
given adequate legal counsel.
34:14
That is why- Go ahead.
34:16
You just said that sentence to assure them.
34:18
Give her some law.
34:19
That's garbage.
34:21
That's absolute garbage.
34:23
Which, Pegg said that?
34:25
Trump doesn't have the- Go for the
34:26
law.
34:27
No, no.
34:27
I'm saying that the theory that President Trump's
34:30
doing something here illegally, dealing with a country
34:33
that's run by an indicted drug dealer, it's
34:37
the same as Panama.
34:38
There's a better case to go into Venezuela
34:40
than there was Panama.
34:42
I mean, okay, we have to analyze why
34:46
he keeps bringing him back to Panama.
34:49
Let's just review Panama.
34:54
Well, I don't know how much we can
34:55
review, but Noriega was put in place as
34:58
a puppet to the United States and he
35:00
didn't perform right.
35:01
Exactly.
35:02
And so we took him out.
35:04
We said, no, this is not what you're
35:06
supposed to be doing, becoming a drug lord.
35:08
You're out of here.
35:09
Yes, exactly.
35:11
So that's what's going on.
35:13
I mean, it can't be any more obvious
35:15
that Maduro is not doing his job the
35:19
way we explained it to him.
35:21
Yeah, but see, that's the problem.
35:23
We never explained.
35:24
He got in through Chavez, who was running
35:28
the show, and he was a joker, kind
35:31
of a clownish.
35:32
Who says the CIA wasn't involved in his
35:35
installation?
35:36
They love drugs.
35:38
I can't say.
35:38
I'm not going to argue against the possibility.
35:41
Okay, let's continue.
35:42
It's possible that maybe, yeah, you're right.
35:44
He's a CIA asset.
35:46
Yeah, that seems obvious to me.
35:49
I mean, you keep going back to Bush,
35:51
Bush.
35:52
Most of the people are.
35:53
Actually, by that thesis, because he keeps doing
35:58
that, that might be it.
36:01
Yeah, the guys.
36:02
Okay, continue to play.
36:04
Venezuela, then there was Panama.
36:06
There's a better case to deal with Colombia
36:08
than there was Grenada.
36:10
Yeah, I've been doing this all of my.
36:12
What was Grenada?
36:13
What was Grenada?
36:14
Same deal?
36:16
No, Grenada was turning into a Marxist out
36:22
of the blue.
36:23
They decided to have a kind of a
36:25
Marxist regime.
36:26
Began it with.
36:27
I forgot who got into power, and they
36:30
just decided to become a Marxist country, and
36:34
we weren't going to have it.
36:35
That's all.
36:36
It was very simple.
36:37
Okay, Colombia, then there was Grenada.
36:40
Yeah, I've been doing this all of my
36:41
adult life.
36:42
I have.
36:43
What were you doing as a kid?
36:45
All the confidence in the world that President
36:48
Trump has the legal authority.
36:50
What?
36:50
Wow, what a statement.
36:52
I've been doing this all my adult life.
36:53
What, planning murder?
36:55
Killing people?
36:57
Was he around during Bush 41?
37:00
When he says, I've been doing this, unless
37:03
she clarify, ask him, what do you mean
37:05
by this?
37:06
We won't know.
37:07
Yeah, he's just blathering now.
37:10
There's a better case to deal with Colombia
37:12
than there was Grenada.
37:14
Yeah, I've been doing this all of my
37:16
adult life.
37:17
Colombia?
37:18
What's Colombia got to do with the price
37:20
of bread?
37:21
He's been doing coke all his adult life.
37:23
I have all the confidence in the world
37:25
that President Trump has the legal authority.
37:27
But more importantly, fist bump means something different
37:30
to him.
37:30
He's doing the right thing.
37:32
More Americans have died from cocaine and fentanyl
37:35
poisoning than any terrorist group in the world.
37:37
I am very pleased that we now have
37:40
a president who's going to use the full
37:42
force of the American people, the might of
37:45
America to protect us from narco terrorist states
37:48
and drug organizations.
37:50
Keep it up, Mr. President.
37:52
We're not committing murder.
37:53
We're protecting our nation from people who want
37:56
to poison us.
37:57
Well, there's obviously buyers on the other end
38:00
of it, which is why the cartels are
38:01
selling, right?
38:02
But yeah, we'll do a vote.
38:06
Yeah, Lindsey's gonna come and kill you too.
38:09
That's what I'm hearing.
38:11
Yeah, we'll deal with both.
38:12
Yeah, all right, let's wrap it up.
38:15
When we talk about lawful orders here, I
38:17
myself spoke to a former senior commander who
38:20
said he'd want that in writing.
38:22
Because of concern that this is going to
38:27
be down the line questionable.
38:29
You've already heard the orders to carry out
38:31
operations.
38:32
You've already heard Democratic lawmakers, including on this
38:35
program, say that they have concerns about future
38:38
prosecutions of officers.
38:39
Well, act on your concerns.
38:42
Okay, if you got concerns, here's what we
38:45
can do as members of Congress.
38:47
We can cut off funding for military operations
38:50
we don't like.
38:50
So if you're concerned as a Democrat or
38:53
Republican, why don't you introduce legislation to cut
38:56
off all funding to the military when it
38:59
comes to attacking drug votes and going after
39:02
narco terrorist states through the military?
39:04
You can do that.
39:06
Go ahead and do it.
39:07
I'll vote no.
39:08
I think it's all the authority in the
39:09
world in Article 2 and international law to
39:12
make sure that countries like Venezuela can't be
39:15
staging areas to infiltrate drugs into our country.
39:20
I think it's all the legal authority in
39:23
the world.
39:23
I'm just really glad he's doing this.
39:25
And Mr. President, keep it up.
39:27
Well, we look forward to hearing those justifications
39:30
when they are shared with Congress.
39:32
You made some news there, Senator.
39:34
Thank you for your time today.
39:35
What news did he make?
39:38
What news did he make there, Senator?
39:40
I don't know what kind of news he
39:41
made.
39:44
So Graham's everywhere.
39:46
I'm glad you're watching the morning.
39:48
Actually, I didn't watch him this way.
39:49
I watch him probably every few weeks.
39:54
I don't watch him every Sunday.
39:56
This is the work of Steve Jones.
40:01
This is he if he's watching and sending
40:04
you this.
40:05
Yeah.
40:05
If he's going to do it, he'll let
40:07
me know early on.
40:09
I'm up and running.
40:10
I'm recording.
40:11
And then I know I can count on
40:12
it so I don't have to look at
40:14
it myself.
40:14
And I can do other things.
40:16
So let's give credit where credit is due.
40:19
And then Scott, Scott Besant, he's everywhere.
40:23
It's like all the gay guys are out
40:24
today.
40:25
The military has now launched 10 attacks, killing
40:27
more than 40 people against these suspected drug
40:32
smuggling boats, as you just referenced.
40:35
Is the United States at war with Venezuela,
40:38
Mr. Secretary?
40:43
Wait, what is Scott Besant secretary of?
40:48
Treasury.
40:49
I thought it is the Treasury or no,
40:52
he's no, he's Treasury.
40:54
He's the money guy.
40:55
He's the money.
40:56
He's the bank.
40:56
So what's what's he got to do with
40:58
the military?
40:59
Well, another what I'm asking here is why
41:02
is this pointed question being asked of the
41:06
secretary of the Treasury who is responsible for
41:09
printing $100 bills?
41:11
Well, because they just want to get to
41:13
the bottom of this.
41:14
These are journalists, John.
41:16
This is Manhans Welker.
41:17
She wants to get to the bottom of
41:19
it.
41:20
Is the United States at war with Venezuela,
41:22
Mr. Secretary?
41:23
Oh, don't answer that.
41:26
Chris and I have a big portfolio.
41:30
Defense is not one of them.
41:32
I think you'd have to ask our great
41:35
secretary of war, Pete Hegseth or Secretary of
41:38
State Marco Rubio on that.
41:40
But what I can tell you is the
41:43
president's committed to protecting U.S. citizens from
41:46
the ravages of these drugs.
41:49
And also, you were asking earlier about the
41:52
China trade deal.
41:54
And part of that is going to include
41:57
substantial, very substantial cooperation to stop the precursor
42:01
drugs on fentanyl, which make their way to
42:03
Mexico, to Canada and kill hundreds of thousands
42:07
of Americans a year and ruin families.
42:10
Well, and it's worth noting that the vast
42:12
majority of fentanyl comes to the U.S.
42:14
from Mexico.
42:16
That's what he just said.
42:18
That's just what he says.
42:20
She's not even listening to what he says.
42:23
So, but first, you know, I've noticed, by
42:24
the way, I have noticed this about her
42:26
and I've noticed this about a lot of
42:28
these other guys.
42:29
They have their little script in front of
42:30
them.
42:31
And the guy will say something that they,
42:34
I don't know if they don't listen at
42:35
all.
42:36
And they'll ask that, like, almost ask the
42:39
same question twice because the guy will answer
42:41
the question and, you know, here's the answer
42:45
to the question you're about to ask.
42:46
If they happen to do that by accident,
42:48
they'll still ask the question.
42:50
It's very, very amateurish.
42:53
Because that's what they're told to do.
42:54
We're on a tight.
42:55
Listen, we got to get the pharma ads
42:57
in.
42:57
Could you just ask the question?
42:59
And then and so Besson was everywhere this
43:01
morning.
43:02
Here he is with Margaret.
43:03
And what what is the pressing question we
43:06
need to ask here?
43:06
The Paris prosecutor's office announced today that French
43:10
police have made arrests, although we don't know
43:13
how many, in last Sunday's robbery at the
43:15
Louvre.
43:16
One suspect was detained at the Charles de
43:19
Gaulle airport as he tried to flee the
43:21
country.
43:22
Thieves stole an estimated $100 million worth of
43:25
jewels and gems during a brazen daytime robbery
43:28
that took less than eight minutes.
43:31
So that was the intro getting to Scott
43:33
Besson and then straight into questions about well,
43:37
I guess this is his wheelhouse about Russia
43:41
and sanctions.
43:45
And I don't do we want to go
43:46
there?
43:46
I don't know if we want to go
43:46
there yet.
43:50
Well, I don't know why you brought it
43:53
in.
43:53
But well, because it was Scott Besson.
43:55
You know, I don't know.
43:56
Yeah.
43:56
OK, well, Scott Besson was all over the
43:58
place for some unknown reason.
44:00
Well, it's about Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia,
44:03
Russia and the sanctions.
44:05
Mr. Secretary, before I let you go, I
44:07
want to ask you, the US sanctioned Russia's
44:11
top oil and gas companies this past week.
44:14
But Vladimir Putin's envoy, who is here in
44:16
the United States, Carol Dimitriev, I know you
44:19
know him.
44:21
Yeah, I'm sorry.
44:22
It was actually I played him out of
44:23
order.
44:24
She had Besson on about China and Russia,
44:29
China and Russia.
44:30
But basically, let's do that later.
44:32
It's boring.
44:32
China and Russia.
44:33
It's boring.
44:35
Let's let's do that.
44:37
This was this was the real question, the
44:38
TikTok deal.
44:39
That's what really matters.
44:41
This this is what Margaret was doing all
44:43
morning.
44:44
I saw that you mentioned TikTok was discussed.
44:46
Are the details of the president's executive order
44:49
released in September?
44:51
Are those finalized?
44:52
Has China agreed to give up control of
44:55
the algorithm that determines what users see?
44:58
Well, you're going to hear some really strange
45:03
stuff here, particularly when we get to Moulinard,
45:08
the Democrat, I think.
45:12
They're all they're so hung up on this
45:14
algo like, oh, you know, it's like censoring
45:18
what people see.
45:19
And that's that's exactly what algorithms do.
45:22
You can call it censoring.
45:23
You can call it recommendations.
45:25
But everyone's so hyper focused on the algo.
45:29
And all the algo does on TikTok is
45:31
give you what you want.
45:33
Do you want to see more cooking videos?
45:36
You got cooking videos, though.
45:38
You're John C.
45:38
Dvorak.
45:39
You want to see some lunatics with blue
45:41
hair?
45:41
Here you go.
45:42
The algo is not that impressive.
45:45
Margaret, we reached a final deal on TikTok.
45:49
We reached one in Madrid.
45:51
And I believe that as of today, all
45:54
the details are ironed out.
45:57
And that will be for the two leaders
45:59
to consummate that transaction on Thursday in Korea.
46:05
Can you tell us any details of that
46:06
transaction?
46:08
Margaret, I'm not part of the commercial side
46:12
of the transaction.
46:13
My remit was to get the Chinese to
46:16
agree to approve the transaction.
46:20
And I believe we successfully accomplished that over
46:24
the past two days.
46:25
Did he say it was my remit?
46:27
Yeah, I caught that, too.
46:28
I'm going to use that with Tina.
46:30
It was my remit.
46:32
Let's look it up.
46:34
OK, let's look it up.
46:36
Remit.
46:36
Do you want to use the robot?
46:40
Yeah, ask the robot for the definition.
46:42
OK.
46:43
Error.
46:44
Give me the definition of remit.
46:50
Remit means to send money, forgive a debt
46:52
or reduce a penalty.
46:54
It can also refer to a task or
46:56
area of responsibility, like someone's remit in a
46:58
job.
47:00
Interesting.
47:00
Could have been his responsibility.
47:02
It was my race.
47:02
Instead of saying it was my responsibility.
47:05
Yeah.
47:05
He said it was my remit.
47:07
That's how they talk at the club.
47:10
So nobody, by the way.
47:12
So let's stop right here for one second
47:13
for everybody out there.
47:16
Nobody ever uses the term remit.
47:19
To remain responsibility in my lifetime.
47:23
I've never heard this before.
47:25
Well.
47:27
So it's got to be code.
47:29
Well, it can also mean money.
47:32
So it could be milieu.
47:34
Milieu.
47:34
Well, there's a lot of milieu going on,
47:36
that's for sure.
47:38
There's a lot of milieu.
47:39
It was my remit.
47:41
Well, let's keep an eye out for it
47:44
being used again.
47:45
Remit is on the radar.
47:48
So let's talk about this TikTok deal with
47:50
a guy who hates it.
47:51
On the committee work that you've been doing.
47:53
I'm sure this is a representative of John
47:55
Molinar.
47:55
You heard from Treasury Secretary Besson at the
47:57
top of the program that he says China
48:00
has agreed to the TikTok deal.
48:02
170 million Americans use this social media app.
48:06
Congress had passed a law to force.
48:09
Why is she laugh telling?
48:13
Congress had passed.
48:15
She's like a goat.
48:17
What is that?
48:17
Congress had passed a law.
48:20
Yeah, now she mentioned goat.
48:23
That is.
48:23
It's not like a goat.
48:24
That is.
48:25
That is very strange.
48:27
I don't know why she did that.
48:28
Listen to that again.
48:30
Congress had passed a law.
48:33
To force the sale and cited it as
48:36
a national security threat if it continued to
48:38
operate the way it has.
48:40
I have your national security concerns about the
48:44
app and about this transaction.
48:47
Been addressed.
48:49
Well, I think it's important that we know
48:51
that it the law requires a divestment and
48:55
getting the Chinese Communist Party control away from
48:58
the app as well as the algorithm.
49:00
And it allows ownership only up to 20
49:04
% for the Chinese entity ByteDance.
49:07
And to me, it's very important that that's
49:10
carried out.
49:11
We don't know all the specifics of this,
49:14
but we know that American companies are very
49:16
interested in participating.
49:18
There's the proposal for a lease agreement.
49:22
But how you get that algorithm completely out
49:25
of the Chinese control is going to be
49:27
up to the experts.
49:29
There's 6 million pieces of code in this
49:33
algorithm.
49:34
And we need to make sure that it's
49:36
protected for the American people.
49:38
There's 6 million pieces of code to the
49:42
algorithm.
49:44
What does that even mean, bro?
49:47
Does he mean 6 million lines of code?
49:51
I mean, has someone counted them?
49:52
Did they do a line count?
49:57
WC dash L.
49:59
I mean, what exactly happened here?
50:01
This whole thing is odd.
50:04
I think whoever is buying this, mainly Ellison
50:07
and Murdoch, I think it's coming up.
50:09
They're buying a dog.
50:11
They are buying eyeballs.
50:14
Yeah, but I think it's limited.
50:16
I think the eyeballs go down.
50:18
It's a dog.
50:19
So that algorithm is the data tracking system
50:21
that's pulled from a user.
50:22
No.
50:23
And so the accusation was also that this
50:25
is basically.
50:26
The algorithm is not the data tracking system.
50:30
That's what Facebook does with their little SDK
50:32
in every single app.
50:35
Manipulating consumers.
50:36
Manipulating consumers, unlike any other algorithm out there
50:40
today from Silicon Valley.
50:42
In terms of what they were able to
50:43
see.
50:44
So will that algorithm be maintained?
50:48
And will upgrades only be conducted by, for
50:51
example, American engineers?
50:53
Upgrades.
50:57
I mean, this is really pathetic.
51:00
It is pathetic.
51:01
This is really, really bad.
51:02
That would be my recommendation.
51:04
Because ultimately, we don't want a Chinese propaganda
51:09
effort affecting 170 million Americans.
51:12
We also want to make sure that data
51:14
from Americans is kept secure.
51:18
And as long as the Chinese are involved,
51:20
I think there's reasons for distrust.
51:23
And even with the 20% stake, I'm
51:26
still concerned about it.
51:27
Quite frankly, the Chinese report to the Chinese
51:31
Communist Party.
51:32
They will leverage every advantage they get.
51:36
But the president has set a goal of
51:37
making this available to the American people.
51:40
Following the law that was passed in a
51:42
bipartisan way.
51:43
And I trust that they are doing that.
51:46
The president has not been following the letter
51:48
of the law that you voted for.
51:50
Well, I think you know that.
51:51
I think the goal has been to come
51:53
to an agreement.
51:54
To come to a deal.
51:56
And they've been working very hard to do
51:58
that.
51:58
But when you have the Chinese Communist Party.
52:02
Xi Jinping with direct leverage on this.
52:04
In terms of what they will do.
52:06
What they won't do.
52:07
It's very difficult to continue to make that
52:09
available.
52:10
But I trust the people who are negotiating
52:12
that.
52:12
Recognize we've got to get the control of
52:15
the algorithm.
52:15
Away from the Chinese Communist Party.
52:17
The app.
52:19
And make sure that the ownership is controlled
52:21
by America.
52:22
Not China.
52:23
Okay.
52:23
So first of all, apologies.
52:25
He's a Republican.
52:27
Representative from Michigan.
52:29
He's a chemist.
52:31
And that's why he serves on the House
52:33
Committee on the Chinese Communist Party.
52:36
So that's why he doesn't.
52:38
Has no idea what he's talking about.
52:40
Who is this?
52:42
Molinar.
52:44
M Moulin.
52:45
Moulinere.
52:45
I thought it was Scott Besant.
52:47
No, no, no.
52:48
We changed from Besant.
52:49
I didn't realize you'd done that.
52:51
He sounds a lot like Besant.
52:55
I think he's married.
52:57
Oh, that makes a difference.
53:00
Yeah.
53:01
He's not in the Besant club.
53:03
There's the A-gays.
53:04
Come on.
53:05
We know this is a club.
53:06
That's where you talk about remit.
53:08
Hey, was this the guy that said remit?
53:10
No, it was Besant who said remit.
53:13
Okay.
53:14
Yeah.
53:14
I remit you.
53:15
Oh, yeah, baby.
53:16
So let's talk about that ownership.
53:17
The president said the investors would include Michael
53:20
Dell.
53:21
Lachlan Murdoch, whose family owns Fox News.
53:24
And Larry Ellison, whose son owns Paramount.
53:26
What kind of deal is that?
53:29
They're a bunch of nepos.
53:31
Yes, but nepos.
53:34
But then to what end?
53:37
Are they going to make money off of
53:39
it?
53:39
How does I don't know.
53:41
They're just fronts.
53:43
This is come on.
53:44
Let's face it.
53:44
This is bull crap.
53:45
The whole thing is nonsense.
53:47
Okay.
53:47
Company of CBS News.
53:49
Do you have concerns that people who are
53:52
boosters of the president will have ownership of
53:56
social media in this way?
53:58
You know, I think powerful.
54:01
Well, there are some I'm sure investors.
54:03
Not everybody is simply a supporter of the
54:06
president.
54:06
But I believe that in this case, Congress
54:10
has a role for oversight.
54:12
And we will be meeting with the parties
54:15
of transaction.
54:16
We also will have hearings on this because
54:18
at the end, you're right.
54:20
I'm done with it, too.
54:21
So speaking of the nepos and CBS, I
54:26
came across an article that indeed shows.
54:31
I'm looking for it here now that Barry
54:34
Weiss that she is running for all intents
54:38
and purposes.
54:39
CBS 60 minutes and her big get her
54:44
big get out of the gate was the
54:47
60 minutes interview with Whitcoff and Kushner.
54:52
Which was one of the lowest rated 60
54:55
minutes in history.
54:57
Interestingly enough, it was boring.
55:00
It was super boring.
55:02
I just thought it was interesting.
55:04
Here's the way this works.
55:05
Come on.
55:07
Well, what's she going to have us do,
55:08
Bill?
55:10
Oh, she wants us to interview these two
55:12
guys.
55:13
All right.
55:13
We'll make it as boring as you can.
55:15
We got to get some low numbers on
55:17
this thing.
55:18
So just make sure they edit it.
55:20
They're long.
55:21
Don't take anything.
55:22
I'd make it boring as hell.
55:24
You can do it.
55:25
You know how to do it.
55:26
Bring in Leslie Stahl.
55:28
She'll make it super boring.
55:29
Bring in Leslie.
55:31
Bring Leslie in.
55:32
She doesn't know what she's doing.
55:33
She's old.
55:36
Wow.
55:37
Ages much?
55:38
Yeah.
55:38
Well, I'm old.
55:39
I can say that.
55:40
Here's what's interesting.
55:42
I got flack.
55:43
I got flack aflack.
55:44
I got flack from people because I pulled
55:47
a clip from the very end, which I
55:48
thought was interesting to us because it was
55:50
Whitcoff saying, oh, yeah, no, we're doing we're
55:53
cleaning up Morocco as we speak, which, of
55:55
course, related to our investigation.
56:00
Our thesis.
56:01
Yes.
56:02
Our thesis on the Gen Z discord system,
56:05
which seems to be right on track.
56:07
So we are the ones destabilizing Morocco on
56:10
discord and Gen Z with professional signs, I
56:14
might add.
56:14
And the the pushback that I got, which
56:20
is like, are you kidding me?
56:22
That's all you got from that interview.
56:25
You didn't hear about the master plan.
56:28
Like the master plan.
56:29
I mean, I watched the whole thing.
56:31
It was boring.
56:32
The master planned.
56:34
They planned this to do this to Gaza,
56:36
Gaza, the Riviera.
56:39
I'm like, OK, where did you get it
56:41
from?
56:42
So what did you watch the whole thing?
56:44
And so they send me a clip of
56:48
breaking points with Sagar and Crystal Ball.
56:54
And you were talking about these guys.
56:58
They're completely independent now.
57:00
They are completely independent.
57:06
They're no longer with.
57:07
Who are they worth?
57:08
Who are they with?
57:09
They're with the hill.
57:12
The hill.
57:12
Right.
57:13
So they broke off from the hill.
57:14
They're independent.
57:17
And I think that they are in the
57:20
same audience capture mode as many of the
57:23
other podcasters who we don't want to aim
57:25
our weapon at because we don't want to
57:27
shoot into the heaven for a bit inside
57:30
the tent, because I think they're hardly podcasters
57:33
by any means.
57:35
They are now they're considered podcasters.
57:38
Yeah, well, they had.
57:39
Yeah, they're typical people that were in the
57:42
mainstream doing mainstream stuff, mainstream work for a
57:45
mainstream publication for an M5M operation.
57:49
They were there and they had a video
57:51
segment just like everybody that's like PBS.
57:54
No difference.
57:55
And then they got they decided they could
57:58
make more money doing a podcast and then
58:01
found out that they probably couldn't.
58:03
Well, I think they're actually doing OK.
58:06
I'm sure they are.
58:06
I'm sure they're doing better now.
58:08
But at the beginning, I don't think they
58:09
were.
58:10
But I believe that they are a very
58:12
prime example of people who are afraid to.
58:16
And this is, you know, like Scott Adams
58:18
would say, one movie, two screens.
58:20
They view everything as crystal balls, specifically Israel.
58:25
They're genociding people.
58:26
They're genociding.
58:27
They're just slaughtering.
58:28
They just want to kill the guys and
58:30
kill, kill the slaughter.
58:32
They can't get out of that mode.
58:34
And so this is the clip that I
58:36
was saying.
58:36
You know, interestingly, people just caught this.
58:38
I didn't know this from the 60 Minutes
58:40
interview with Kushner and Whitcoff originally.
58:43
But in that interview, and this is going
58:45
to be D-Zero, guys, Whitcoff talks.
58:48
It's going to be D-Zero, guys.
58:50
Can you imagine you telling me?
58:52
I don't even know what that means.
58:54
That's their internal code for which clip to
58:57
play, where you just say, look for the
58:59
misspelling of, you know, look for NPS.
59:03
And that will be NPS.
59:04
This is too professional.
59:05
And it's going to be D-Zero, guys.
59:29
Whitcoff talks about how they've been developing this,
59:32
quote unquote, master plan for two years.
59:35
And Jared Kushner gets a very uncomfortable look
59:37
on his face when Whitcoff uses that language.
59:40
Let's go ahead and take a look at
59:41
that.
59:42
Part of the plan is the reconstruction, the
59:45
building, rebuilding of Gaza.
59:48
And you're builders.
59:50
You've been in real estate.
59:52
As you said, it's extremely complex.
59:55
Tell us more about the plan and how
59:58
much it's going to cost.
1:00:00
Where's the money going to come from?
1:00:02
And who's going to award the contracts?
1:00:05
Three questions.
1:00:07
I think it's going to cost a lot
1:00:09
of money.
1:00:10
What's a lot of money?
1:00:11
You know, the estimates are in the 50
1:00:13
billion dollar range.
1:00:14
It might be a little bit less.
1:00:15
It might be a little bit more.
1:00:17
I happen to think that that's not a
1:00:19
lot of money in that region.
1:00:20
You have governments that are going to jump
1:00:22
on in.
1:00:23
And so the Middle East countries are going
1:00:26
to provide the money.
1:00:28
But you'll see European participation and so forth.
1:00:31
Which is thought that is actually interesting because
1:00:33
we heard Ursula, Queen Ursula, say the Middle
1:00:36
East, there are brothers and sisters.
1:00:38
We are.
1:00:39
So, yes.
1:00:39
So they already know that money's coming from
1:00:42
the EU.
1:00:43
I think the beginning of this plan is
1:00:46
how to get it going.
1:00:48
And that's what me and Jared work on
1:00:51
all the time.
1:00:52
The money raising, we think, is the easy
1:00:54
part.
1:00:54
We think that happens relatively quickly.
1:00:57
But it's the master plan.
1:00:59
And we're working with a group of people
1:01:01
who have been working on master plans for
1:01:05
the last two years.
1:01:06
So there are plans already.
1:01:08
We have plans already.
1:01:09
We have a master plan already.
1:01:10
And by the way, and Jared's been pushing
1:01:12
this and we're working together on it.
1:01:14
And I think if the world saw the
1:01:16
progress so far, they'd be pretty impressed.
1:01:19
So Witkoff says they've been working on a
1:01:21
master plan for two years now.
1:01:22
So they got really hung up on the
1:01:24
master plan.
1:01:25
And here's their deconstruction of the master plan.
1:01:28
Yeah.
1:01:28
This is the master plan.
1:01:29
And this is basically the West Bankification.
1:01:33
They still have control.
1:01:35
All of this falls apart.
1:01:36
It's really hard to take it seriously because
1:01:38
it's fake.
1:01:39
I mean, look at the comments from the
1:01:40
finance minister about Saudi Arabia.
1:01:42
Who do you think the people would be
1:01:44
responsible for, quote unquote, disarming Hamas would be?
1:01:47
It would be the UAE, Saudi Arabia, the
1:01:49
US.
1:01:50
J.D. and Trump both say no US
1:01:52
troops will ever set foot on the ground
1:01:54
in Gaza.
1:01:54
Great.
1:01:55
I mean, honestly, I support that.
1:01:56
But eventually, somebody's troops have got to set
1:01:58
foot on the ground to have political administration.
1:02:01
Their plan is like some phased rollout where
1:02:04
they'll just encroach space by space.
1:02:06
Hamas will be allowed and then they'll slowly
1:02:08
de-Hamasify it.
1:02:09
How?
1:02:10
How do you do that?
1:02:11
Like, what does that look like?
1:02:13
At a certain point, it's all just recreating
1:02:16
the same dynamic as Iraq, Afghanistan.
1:02:19
These people have no actual plan.
1:02:21
In the absence, chaos will reign.
1:02:23
Israel will continue to shoot and to kill.
1:02:25
And eventually, some sort of mass attack or
1:02:28
whatever, either Hamas will do.
1:02:30
It may be Israel will do.
1:02:31
We'll see.
1:02:32
And then we'll be right back to where
1:02:34
things were.
1:02:34
That seems like the modal outcome at this
1:02:36
point.
1:02:37
I don't really see another way that it
1:02:38
could go.
1:02:39
Now, I'm like, wow, that's all you can
1:02:43
take from that is they're going to de
1:02:46
-Hamasify.
1:02:47
They're going to get back to killing.
1:02:48
They're going to be killing because the Jews
1:02:50
like to kill people.
1:02:51
They kill, kill, kill, kill.
1:02:52
And it's so disingenuous because they actually didn't
1:02:56
play what came right after that interview.
1:03:00
As you notice, there were three questions.
1:03:03
The third question is, who's going to be
1:03:06
paying for it?
1:03:07
And it was Witkoff who brought that in.
1:03:10
And as I'm listening to it, I had
1:03:11
a different takeaway from this.
1:03:13
I think if the world saw the progress
1:03:15
so far, they'd be pretty impressed.
1:03:17
So basically, over the last couple of years,
1:03:19
there's been a lot of organizations that have
1:03:22
been trying to determine what happens after the
1:03:24
war.
1:03:25
What's clear right now is we're very much
1:03:27
focused on the humanitarian and the de-confliction
1:03:29
to make sure that the aid can get
1:03:31
to the people.
1:03:32
De-confliction, because they're still shooting over there.
1:03:35
Yes.
1:03:36
So you have to make sure that we're
1:03:37
dealing with both sides and sending messages so
1:03:39
that you don't let embers become little fires
1:03:41
that become forest fires.
1:03:43
So we're working on de-confliction, humanitarian aid.
1:03:46
Right now, you have Gazans trying to go
1:03:50
home.
1:03:50
They're trying to go back to where they
1:03:52
lived before.
1:03:54
They're going back to where the rubble is
1:03:56
and putting a tent down.
1:03:57
Correct.
1:03:58
Correct.
1:03:58
And by the way, and it's rough there
1:04:00
because it's not just rubble.
1:04:02
It's a lot of unexploded munitions all over
1:04:05
the field.
1:04:06
And as to your question, Leslie, who's going
1:04:08
to award contracts?
1:04:10
The answer is there's a board of peace
1:04:12
and we're going to be very, very focused
1:04:14
and fastidious about having the best talent there.
1:04:17
We're already talking to contractors from all of
1:04:20
the Middle Eastern countries because we think there
1:04:22
has to be support from them and they
1:04:24
know the market in the best way.
1:04:27
Will it be transparent?
1:04:29
Everything's transparent that we do.
1:04:31
Yes.
1:04:32
You can't replace a corrupt government with another
1:04:35
corrupt government.
1:04:36
Okay.
1:04:36
So they didn't play that piece and the
1:04:38
people who sent me this didn't see that
1:04:40
piece.
1:04:41
Of course not.
1:04:42
I'm glad you got all worked up about
1:04:43
some nasty note.
1:04:44
But wait for it.
1:04:45
And by the way, did you notice that
1:04:46
Leslie said Gazans instead of Palestinians?
1:04:48
Oh, yeah.
1:04:48
Oh, that's in the style guide now.
1:04:50
They've changed that.
1:04:51
They've changed it to Gazans.
1:04:53
But my point is that the European Union
1:04:59
is going to be involved.
1:05:01
Blair is the chairman of the board of
1:05:03
peace.
1:05:04
So this seems like a gigantic setup to
1:05:07
screw those guys if it goes wrong.
1:05:10
Like, well, Blair, Queen Ursula, you guys, you're
1:05:13
a big part of this.
1:05:15
But as I reflected upon, I'm very happy
1:05:17
that these people got mad at me and
1:05:19
sent me this.
1:05:19
Because the thing that I kept thinking is
1:05:21
they had this master plan two years ago.
1:05:25
So today is October 26.
1:05:27
That means that 19 days after October 7,
1:05:33
two years ago, they started on the master
1:05:36
plan.
1:05:39
That seems a little tight to me.
1:05:42
And when you just say two years, it
1:05:45
could be longer.
1:05:46
It could have been before.
1:05:49
Before October 7.
1:05:50
It could have been.
1:05:51
The whole thing could be part of a
1:05:53
giant scheme.
1:05:54
That's what I'm thinking.
1:05:55
I'm thinking the Arabs set this up with
1:05:59
probably with Israel.
1:06:02
Like, you know what?
1:06:04
That thesis about the Israelis being so cavalier
1:06:09
on that day.
1:06:10
Yes.
1:06:10
They didn't have anybody around.
1:06:12
And the fact.
1:06:13
Has never gone away.
1:06:14
And the fact that they filmed everything.
1:06:17
Because that was kind of new.
1:06:18
All the GoPros, the flying GoPros.
1:06:21
I don't think that they intended for so
1:06:24
many people to get killed.
1:06:27
Maybe they did.
1:06:28
I don't know.
1:06:28
Then maybe I think as we've heard from
1:06:31
our boots on the ground, death is a
1:06:33
very different concept in the Middle East.
1:06:36
It's not quite the same as we have
1:06:38
for some reason.
1:06:40
That whole thing sounds like a scam that
1:06:44
was set up with Israel and the Arab
1:06:47
nations to change this.
1:06:50
And the Arab nations, they're the ones that
1:06:52
are going to be putting the money in.
1:06:53
They're the ones with Indonesia who are going
1:06:55
to be protecting it.
1:06:57
Bring the Europeans in.
1:06:58
This is, you know, tag, you're it.
1:07:01
I don't think we're going to have any
1:07:02
involvement.
1:07:04
Well, let's hope so.
1:07:06
Yeah, I'm with you on that.
1:07:07
But all the, oh, another war, American boots
1:07:12
on the ground.
1:07:12
I don't think so.
1:07:14
I really don't think so.
1:07:16
We'll see.
1:07:18
So anyway, keep sending me that stuff.
1:07:21
I like it.
1:07:22
Keep sending me that stuff.
1:07:26
What's that same one guy?
1:07:28
No, no, it was a couple actually.
1:07:30
It was a couple.
1:07:34
I'll pause for a moment if you want
1:07:36
to do something here.
1:07:38
Well, since we're doing our famous anniversary show,
1:07:40
we played some measles stuff recently.
1:07:43
I ran into, because I wanted to play
1:07:45
these on the show when we talked about
1:07:46
measles and the fear mongering.
1:07:50
And so I got a couple of clips.
1:07:52
These are the clips we ran in 20,
1:07:55
this is 2015.
1:07:59
These are from the Law and Order show
1:08:02
in 2015.
1:08:04
It's 10 years ago when they were having,
1:08:07
measles does have a, I was looking up
1:08:10
at the death rates because worldwide death rates
1:08:15
hovers around, it could be as, hovers around
1:08:18
maybe 100,000 under five children a year
1:08:25
worldwide.
1:08:26
But that number is based on a computer
1:08:29
model.
1:08:30
Computer.
1:08:32
And so we don't really know what it
1:08:33
is because we make light of the disease
1:08:37
with that clip that we play from the
1:08:40
show.
1:08:41
But they decided to do counter-programming.
1:08:46
And here's two clips from Law and Order
1:08:48
on measles.
1:08:49
This is history clip number one.
1:08:51
What, did my neighbors call you?
1:08:53
Why would they do that?
1:08:54
Because they're upset at the choices I've made
1:08:56
for my family.
1:08:57
Choices?
1:08:57
Like not vaccinating your son?
1:08:59
I won't put my son at risk because
1:09:01
big pharma and their lackeys in the media
1:09:03
try and jam vaccination down our throats.
1:09:05
Even if that puts him at risk.
1:09:07
What risk?
1:09:08
He had measles two weeks ago and the
1:09:10
immune system he was born with kicked in
1:09:12
and now he's fine.
1:09:13
Well, Sierra Walker isn't fine.
1:09:15
She's dead after being infected by your son.
1:09:18
By the way, 10 years ago, when we
1:09:22
spoke about these things, said this is nonsense
1:09:24
or, you know, a tad overdone.
1:09:28
There was a lot, before COVID, there was
1:09:30
a lot more pushback about vaccines.
1:09:32
People were like, you guys are anti-vaxxers.
1:09:36
Yes, that's interesting.
1:09:37
You're right.
1:09:38
When the, yeah, during the era where you
1:09:44
had to argue about being a vaccine skeptic
1:09:46
versus an anti-vaxxer, you're right.
1:09:49
The pushback was enormous.
1:09:51
It was the COVID bull crap shot, which
1:09:54
isn't even a vaccine.
1:09:56
The mRNA shot that changed everything in terms
1:10:00
of attitudes.
1:10:03
But the drama was good.
1:10:05
This is another example from, I believe this
1:10:07
from, there's two shows they did on measles.
1:10:10
One was in 2009 and one was in
1:10:11
2015.
1:10:12
And this, I believe, is from the second
1:10:14
show.
1:10:15
Sierra Walker's death wasn't a homicide.
1:10:17
She was just dug out of a shallow
1:10:19
grave.
1:10:19
She didn't fall in there playing hopscotch.
1:10:21
Well, whoever put her in there didn't kill
1:10:23
her.
1:10:23
Encephalitis did.
1:10:24
Swelling of the brain?
1:10:26
Brought on by measles.
1:10:27
Are you sure it's measles?
1:10:29
No signs of abuse or neglect.
1:10:31
No bruises or abrasions either.
1:10:33
Her teeth weren't in great shape, but mostly
1:10:34
from a diet high in sugars, that's it.
1:10:36
But measles, how does that happen this day
1:10:39
and age?
1:10:40
She wasn't vaccinated.
1:10:41
She wasn't vaccinated.
1:10:44
Wow.
1:10:45
You know, two people came to an interesting
1:10:49
conclusion because I played clips from ER and
1:10:53
from the pit.
1:10:53
So now we've spawned the whole, you know,
1:10:56
a generation of this kind of propaganda.
1:11:01
The doctor in both of those clips in
1:11:06
the pit was Dr. Robbie.
1:11:08
In ER, it was Dr. Carter.
1:11:10
Both played by the same actor, Noah Weill.
1:11:13
Yeah, that's well known.
1:11:15
But I didn't know that.
1:11:16
The pit was a takeoff of the ER.
1:11:19
It was designed on it.
1:11:20
So did they just, is this how the
1:11:22
casting went?
1:11:23
That guy was so good with the propaganda.
1:11:25
Let's bring him in again.
1:11:27
He really brought the message home.
1:11:30
He was, I think, part of the production
1:11:33
team that brought it to light.
1:11:36
So it's a very famous show.
1:11:39
Yes.
1:11:40
I have not watched the whole episode of
1:11:42
it.
1:11:42
I don't find it interesting.
1:11:44
I wasn't a big ER fan either.
1:11:47
Oh, Clooney.
1:11:48
It's over dramatized.
1:11:49
Okay, so here we go.
1:11:50
This is 2018.
1:11:52
Now we move way up.
1:11:53
And this is what was going on in
1:11:55
Washington State.
1:11:56
In Washington State, as the number of measles
1:11:58
cases grows, worries are growing too.
1:12:01
At one hospital, security guards are staking out
1:12:04
each entrance, screening visitors for symptoms of the
1:12:06
virus, which can be deadly.
1:12:08
We're taking a lot of precautions to prevent
1:12:10
anyone from entering with any signs and symptoms
1:12:13
of measles.
1:12:14
The state now has 50 confirmed cases, 49
1:12:17
of them in Clark County, the outbreak epicenter.
1:12:20
Health officials say only one of those patients
1:12:22
had been vaccinated for measles.
1:12:24
Is the worst of it over yet?
1:12:25
I don't know if the worst of it
1:12:27
is over because we still have cases coming
1:12:29
in.
1:12:30
Beyond Washington, measles has surfaced in at least
1:12:32
eight other states this year, including New York,
1:12:34
with more than 200 cases reported.
1:12:37
The virus is highly contagious, spreads through coughing
1:12:39
and sneezing, and can linger in a room
1:12:41
for up to two hours.
1:12:43
Health officials say Clark County has one of
1:12:45
the lowest vaccination rates in the state.
1:12:47
Nearly a quarter of all public school students
1:12:49
there are not fully vaccinated.
1:12:51
We don't have to be going through this.
1:12:53
We have an incredibly safe, cheap, and effective
1:12:56
vaccine.
1:12:57
Two doses of vaccine are 97% effective.
1:13:00
Those who think they might have measles are
1:13:02
urged to call their doctor first.
1:13:04
Don't just show up unannounced.
1:13:05
Health officials worry that could expose others who
1:13:08
are in the waiting room.
1:13:10
Lester.
1:13:11
You know, now wait, wait.
1:13:13
Did you notice the meme in there has
1:13:16
changed?
1:13:18
This is the early days of Obamacare, or
1:13:22
even before it was passed, I think it
1:13:24
was 2018.
1:13:26
Obamacare, which has managed to, the Affordable Care
1:13:29
Act has managed to make things so unaffordable
1:13:31
that the Democrats are freaked out about not
1:13:33
getting some subsidies in so we can help
1:13:36
pay for it.
1:13:37
It's gotten outrageously expensive.
1:13:39
The safe and effective meme was in there,
1:13:43
but it wasn't safe and effective.
1:13:45
What was it?
1:13:47
Safe, cheap, and effective.
1:13:52
Oh my.
1:13:52
You can't say that anymore.
1:13:54
No, you can't.
1:13:54
You can't.
1:13:55
I wonder what it costs these days.
1:13:57
Well, they jacked the prices up.
1:13:59
This reminds me of prices of just general
1:14:04
drugs have gone up 10x just because they
1:14:07
can get the money because the insurance companies
1:14:09
can, you know, they're a part in the
1:14:10
business.
1:14:11
They're in the business of selling the stuff.
1:14:12
They're middlemen.
1:14:13
The whole thing is falling apart.
1:14:16
I'm looking for the price, MMR, okay.
1:14:21
Yeah, the retail price of the mRNA vaccine.
1:14:25
No, the MMR, not...
1:14:28
Oh, the MMR, yeah, okay.
1:14:29
Yeah, $97.
1:14:31
Yeah, but back then...
1:14:33
It used to be $26.
1:14:35
Yeah, what changed?
1:14:38
Insurance.
1:14:39
What changed?
1:14:40
So-called insurance.
1:14:41
Yeah, exactly.
1:14:42
Obamacare, which is the worst.
1:14:45
The health marketplace is the worst.
1:14:48
Yeah, it's anything but affordable.
1:14:51
This should be the anything but affordable healthcare
1:14:53
act.
1:14:54
I will, again, shill for our producers.
1:14:57
You can join many different programs.
1:15:00
Tina is on CrowdHealth.
1:15:04
And she pays, I think, $200 a month.
1:15:08
And then when something happens, and this is
1:15:11
from someone getting pregnant to someone with cancer,
1:15:15
then the whole system chips in and it
1:15:17
gets paid for.
1:15:18
They negotiate.
1:15:19
The price is down for you.
1:15:21
Everything's all done.
1:15:22
It's beautiful.
1:15:23
Tina at curry.com, she'll help you out.
1:15:27
She'll give you a discount code, Bongino.
1:15:30
Yeah, discount slash Tina.
1:15:33
Bongino.
1:15:37
Just while we're on Big Pharma, I got
1:15:39
a, you know, as I kind of expected,
1:15:42
wow, we got a lot of people about
1:15:44
that.
1:15:46
About what was the name of it?
1:15:49
Sublocade.
1:15:50
Remember we talked about on the last show?
1:15:51
Sublocade.
1:15:52
Yeah, I remember vaguely.
1:15:53
Wow.
1:15:54
So we have a lot of people who
1:15:55
have experience with that.
1:15:58
And I put like three or four boots
1:16:01
on the ground reports in there.
1:16:03
And it has helped many people.
1:16:06
But every single one of them says, oh,
1:16:07
dude, this is 80 to 100 times stronger
1:16:10
than morphine.
1:16:12
And in essence, it's if you don't add,
1:16:17
you know, therapy in there to figure out
1:16:20
what's wrong, why you, you know, the actual
1:16:23
addiction.
1:16:25
They will just keep on shooting this into
1:16:27
you forever.
1:16:29
And it's really, it's changing out for opioid
1:16:33
addiction to this stuff.
1:16:34
Yeah, it's very addictive.
1:16:36
And it's and you can't get high on
1:16:38
it.
1:16:40
No, it's funny if no one really.
1:16:42
I got a note from a guy whose
1:16:44
sister was is an addict.
1:16:47
I can find the note and read it,
1:16:48
but I can just summarize.
1:16:50
And she she went on if you if
1:16:53
you're already addicted, it doesn't get you high.
1:16:56
But if you're not addicted, it gets you
1:16:57
high.
1:16:58
So when it gets you off your addiction,
1:17:00
it gets you high.
1:17:01
And so she got on this stuff and
1:17:03
just started getting extra prescriptions for it and
1:17:05
was using it as her as her way
1:17:07
of getting high.
1:17:08
I love our producers.
1:17:10
Bad product.
1:17:11
Yeah.
1:17:11
I love our producers, though, like, oh, yeah,
1:17:13
yeah, I was a druggy.
1:17:14
Let me tell you what to give my
1:17:15
experience.
1:17:16
And every single one of them, though, is
1:17:18
clean.
1:17:18
I love that.
1:17:20
Congratulations to all of you.
1:17:22
That but not necessarily from sublocate, you know,
1:17:27
they had other influences.
1:17:28
A listener.
1:17:29
But and she's not clean.
1:17:31
And he wanted to call her out as
1:17:32
a douchebag.
1:17:33
Well, I'm not going to show.
1:17:35
Hey, you know what?
1:17:36
Get off the drug.
1:17:38
What's horrible?
1:17:42
But we do have the best podcast producers
1:17:45
in the universe.
1:17:46
Oh, yeah, we definitely do.
1:17:48
Definitely do.
1:17:50
Another thing.
1:17:51
Another amazing thing has happened is peanut allergies
1:17:54
have dropped off a cliff.
1:17:57
This was something else that we were noticing
1:18:00
throughout the early days of the show.
1:18:03
And I think it didn't kind of start
1:18:06
around the same time when, oh, peanut allergies.
1:18:08
And we were I know I was complaining
1:18:10
no peanuts on the flight because someone was
1:18:12
allergic to peanuts.
1:18:13
You remember this?
1:18:15
Yeah.
1:18:15
Oh, yeah.
1:18:16
So that all of a sudden is dropped
1:18:17
off a cliff by some amazing advice.
1:18:20
Eight year old Jack Ravner used to be
1:18:22
allergic to peanuts.
1:18:24
It's a little stressful.
1:18:25
Mom says his allergy is gone now after
1:18:28
being slowly exposed.
1:18:30
New research says there are fewer children like
1:18:32
Jake.
1:18:33
Since 2017, peanut allergies in young children have
1:18:36
dropped 43 percent.
1:18:38
We looked at medical records from 50 different
1:18:40
pediatric practices in multiple states.
1:18:43
Dr. David Hill led the study at Children's
1:18:46
Hospital of Philadelphia that looked at allergies to
1:18:48
things like milk, eggs and nuts.
1:18:51
For decades, those were the foods parents were
1:18:53
told to avoid giving babies.
1:18:55
But that changed in 2015.
1:18:57
The updated recommendation said the opposite.
1:19:00
Babies should be exposed to tiny amounts.
1:19:03
What our research showed is that, in fact,
1:19:06
providing these foods earlier is a way to
1:19:08
train the immune system that the foods themselves
1:19:11
are safe.
1:19:11
A total game changer.
1:19:13
Jake's mom, Dr. Lisa Ravner, is a pediatrician
1:19:16
who's seeing a decline in kids with peanut
1:19:18
allergies because of the revised recommendation.
1:19:21
And as a pediatrician, your advice to parents
1:19:25
has changed.
1:19:26
Oh yeah, completely.
1:19:27
There's a lot of education that goes into
1:19:29
it around that this is safe to do.
1:19:31
Since the updated recommendation, about 60,000 children
1:19:34
have avoided developing peanut allergies, according to the
1:19:37
new research.
1:19:38
We've been able to implement what I think
1:19:41
is one of the most important public health
1:19:43
interventions in allergy.
1:19:45
Now there are a growing number of children
1:19:47
like Jake who can enjoy foods without the
1:19:50
worry of allergic reactions.
1:19:51
I just thought that was phenomenal.
1:19:54
Well, do you don't remember the clip we
1:19:55
played about Kennedy and aluminum?
1:19:59
Yeah.
1:20:00
Oh, you're right.
1:20:01
And you don't notice that the same drop
1:20:04
off in peanut allergies ended when a lot
1:20:07
of parents won't give their kids hepatitis B
1:20:10
vaccine, which is the one that's got the
1:20:11
aluminum in it.
1:20:12
Hold on a second.
1:20:14
Which was that?
1:20:15
Let's play that clip again.
1:20:16
Uh, yes, I have it here.
1:20:18
Here's something that people should know.
1:20:20
So what you're saying is they are now
1:20:23
pumping this story and saying, well, it's because
1:20:26
of the changes that we had, blah, blah,
1:20:28
blah, blah, blah.
1:20:29
But really it was because of the removal
1:20:32
of aluminum.
1:20:33
Well, they didn't take aluminum out of anything,
1:20:35
but aluminum is an adjuvant is used in
1:20:37
the hepatitis B vaccine.
1:20:39
And because of COVID, as you mentioned earlier,
1:20:41
people are more hesitant, vaccine hesitant, and they're
1:20:45
not getting it, giving their kids a stupid
1:20:47
hepatitis B vaccine when they're a little baby,
1:20:50
when they can get it, when peanuts can
1:20:52
be involved, or they have some milk at
1:20:54
the same time and they pick up these
1:20:56
crazy allergies.
1:20:57
The allergies are dropping off naturally.
1:21:00
Is that aluminum provokes an allergic response and
1:21:05
that's why it was valuable.
1:21:06
So if you put the aluminum in with
1:21:08
the viral antigen, your body now mounts an
1:21:11
allergic response to that viral antigen, whether it's
1:21:14
polio or hepatitis B or HPV or whatever.
1:21:20
But what we now know, the science suggests,
1:21:25
is that the aluminum also creates allergic responses
1:21:29
to anything that's in the ambient environment.
1:21:32
So if you have a peanut oil excipient
1:21:34
in that vaccine and you put aluminum in
1:21:37
it, now you could have a lifetime allergy
1:21:40
to peanuts.
1:21:41
If there is a Timothy weed outbreak, the
1:21:45
week that you get that aluminum vaccine, you
1:21:50
now may have a lifetime allergy to Timothy
1:21:53
weed.
1:21:53
And that's why probably, you know, there's two
1:21:55
studies by Mawson and Cowlings.
1:21:58
Wow.
1:21:59
Wow.
1:22:00
So, so really COVID, so President Trump is
1:22:04
really right.
1:22:04
He saved all these people from all this
1:22:06
nonsense by making them afraid of vaccines.
1:22:09
He's done a great job with his warp
1:22:10
speed, although he doesn't really, I don't believe
1:22:13
he knows.
1:22:14
I don't think so either.
1:22:15
He's a natural.
1:22:19
Wow.
1:22:19
Yeah.
1:22:21
Interesting how that works.
1:22:24
Yeah.
1:22:25
And that's the hepatitis B vaccine for a
1:22:27
baby is stupid.
1:22:29
It is stupid.
1:22:30
Of course, Brego Garcia is back in the
1:22:33
news.
1:22:33
Oh, wow.
1:22:34
Where's he going to this time?
1:22:36
Well, they don't still don't know.
1:22:38
Let's find out.
1:22:39
The justice department says it now wants to
1:22:41
deport Kilmar Brego Garcia to the African nation
1:22:44
of Liberia.
1:22:45
But as NPR's Martin Costi reports, his lawyers
1:22:48
say it's an unacceptable option.
1:22:50
A judge ruled in 2019 that although a
1:22:52
Brego Garcia was in the U.S. illegally,
1:22:55
he shouldn't be sent back to El Salvador
1:22:57
because of dangers he'd face there.
1:22:59
The Trump administration deported him there anyway.
1:23:01
It says by mistake.
1:23:03
And he was returned to the U.S.
1:23:04
in June.
1:23:05
Now his lawyer, Simon Sandoval Motionberg, says Costa
1:23:09
Rica could take a Brego Garcia.
1:23:11
But the administration keeps insisting on sending him
1:23:13
farther away.
1:23:15
They are using the selection of the country
1:23:17
of removal as a means of punishing him.
1:23:20
In its court filing, the justice department calls
1:23:22
Liberia a thriving democracy, which provides, quote, robust
1:23:26
protections for human rights.
1:23:28
But it doesn't say whether Liberia has promised
1:23:30
not to send a Brego Garcia on to
1:23:32
El Salvador.
1:23:34
El Salvador is pretty good these days.
1:23:36
I mean, not the jail, but yeah, I've
1:23:41
been there.
1:23:42
Now, a lot of people, all the Bitcoiners
1:23:43
are going to El Salvador.
1:23:46
The Bitcoiners, man, they lost because they use
1:23:48
it as a currency.
1:23:49
Yes.
1:23:49
El Zondo Beach.
1:23:50
They're building houses and all kinds.
1:23:52
It's the only two hour flight from Texas.
1:23:54
It's not that far.
1:23:55
Let's talk a little bit about Arctic frost.
1:23:59
Yeah, I heard there were more documents that
1:24:01
came out.
1:24:02
There's a lot of stuff coming out.
1:24:04
Nothing's being done about it.
1:24:05
Here's Kennedy.
1:24:06
Well, hold on a second.
1:24:07
I'm going to disagree with you because you
1:24:09
yes, we know that the Republicans are not
1:24:13
going to do anything about nothing.
1:24:15
But that's right.
1:24:16
But this is a Department of Justice case.
1:24:19
And Pam Bondi, you know, I don't think
1:24:21
she has any affiliations other than with with
1:24:25
emptiness.
1:24:25
And I think something may come out of
1:24:29
this.
1:24:29
I really do.
1:24:30
I, you're an optimist at some.
1:24:32
It's funny.
1:24:33
You're a generally as a not an optimist.
1:24:37
And there's a word for that.
1:24:38
And for some reason, it's eluding pessimist, pessimist.
1:24:42
That's it.
1:24:43
Yeah, you're a pessimist normally.
1:24:44
But you become optimistic about stuff that will
1:24:47
always disappoint.
1:24:49
This is why, because you'll always be disappointed
1:24:52
because it never happens.
1:24:54
We'll see.
1:24:56
I mean, hey, this is the Benny Johnson
1:24:57
show.
1:24:58
You know, Benny Johnson.
1:24:59
Yes, we know.
1:24:59
Benny Johnson, big friend of Charlie Kirk, I
1:25:01
hear.
1:25:02
Yeah, that's what he says.
1:25:04
So here's Kennedy was on the Benny Johnson
1:25:06
show talking about Arctic Frost.
1:25:09
Watched Attorney General Merrick Garland make the decision
1:25:13
to prosecute a former president of the United
1:25:15
States on legal grounds that were iffy at
1:25:20
best, who also happened to be the attorney
1:25:23
general's boss's chief opponent in an election.
1:25:28
The press calls it lawfare.
1:25:30
It's just weaponization by your justice system.
1:25:34
That's not supposed to happen in America.
1:25:36
That happens in countries whose Powerball jackpot is
1:25:40
287 chickens and a goat.
1:25:42
It doesn't happen in America.
1:25:44
And that wasn't the only instance of lawfare.
1:25:47
Miss James in New York, the district attorney
1:25:50
in Georgia, Jack Smith.
1:25:53
And it wasn't just directed at President Trump.
1:25:56
It was directed at anybody who supported him.
1:26:00
It was directed at many, many, many Republicans.
1:26:04
Today, we found out from Senator Grassley that
1:26:09
Attorney General Garland and FBI Director Chris Ray
1:26:16
authorized the subpoenas to get the phone records
1:26:21
of the United States senators.
1:26:24
I was, I've got to tell you, I
1:26:25
was shocked at that.
1:26:27
I just assumed this was Jack Smith going
1:26:30
disco without telling anybody.
1:26:33
But it was signed off by people at
1:26:35
the very top.
1:26:36
Now, I don't know what's going to happen
1:26:37
criminally.
1:26:38
I know the attorney general and the FBI
1:26:41
is looking at it.
1:26:42
I can tell you what's going to happen
1:26:44
civilly.
1:26:45
The Justice Department is going to get sued
1:26:48
by these senators and by everybody who was
1:26:50
wronged.
1:26:52
Merrick Garland is going to get sued.
1:26:54
Chris Ray is going to get sued.
1:26:58
The telecommunication companies, the telephone companies that turned
1:27:01
over these records are going to get sued.
1:27:06
There's something called a rule of law in
1:27:08
America.
1:27:11
Well, Kennedy's involved, man.
1:27:13
Now you know something's going to happen.
1:27:15
Well, yeah, there's going to be a lot
1:27:16
of civil law.
1:27:17
It's going to have nothing to do with
1:27:18
the Republicans.
1:27:20
They're going to have to do it.
1:27:21
You're on your own.
1:27:23
Here's part two.
1:27:24
How are you supposed to conduct business?
1:27:26
How is any senator supposed to do their
1:27:28
job if the wrong Justice Department can just
1:27:32
illegally spy on everything that you're doing?
1:27:34
Isn't this worse than Watergate?
1:27:35
Well, you're getting there if it's not there
1:27:38
yet.
1:27:40
And it's not just Ben.
1:27:41
It's not just the U.S. senators.
1:27:43
They did this to 92 organizations.
1:27:47
They did it to Turning Point.
1:27:50
They did it to apparently everybody they thought
1:27:52
was a political enemy of President Biden or
1:27:56
that they just didn't agree with politically.
1:27:59
And what has surprised me today, it's really
1:28:03
disappointed me, is that the Attorney General of
1:28:08
the United States, Judge Garland, almost a justice,
1:28:13
signed off on this.
1:28:15
And apparently, at least according to Senator Grassley
1:28:18
and his whistleblowers, so did the director of
1:28:21
the FBI, Chris Wray.
1:28:23
I never wanted to believe that.
1:28:25
I really thought this was all Jack Smith
1:28:27
just being a cowboy.
1:28:30
But apparently, everybody signed off on it.
1:28:33
And I can tell you, if the Attorney
1:28:36
General signed off on it and the FBI
1:28:38
director signed off on it, President Biden signed
1:28:41
off on it, you think an Attorney General
1:28:44
is gonna do something like this?
1:28:46
You think an Attorney General is gonna prosecute
1:28:49
a former President of the United States who
1:28:51
also happens to be his boss's political opponent
1:28:56
without telling the President of the United States
1:28:58
who appointed him, Dream Weaver?
1:29:01
If you believe that, you believe in the
1:29:03
Tooth Fairy.
1:29:04
You believe in the Easter Bunny.
1:29:08
Dream Weaver.
1:29:09
Hello, 1971 reference.
1:29:13
Nice.
1:29:15
Hello, Dream Weaver.
1:29:17
The media is not having any fun with
1:29:20
this at all.
1:29:21
No, it's made for us, I think.
1:29:24
Yeah, well, definitely, because it's wide open.
1:29:27
You can just, you know, it's like low
1:29:30
-hanging fruit.
1:29:31
Basically, the mainstream media won't touch.
1:29:34
They're just such in the pockets of the
1:29:36
Democrats, it's embarrassing.
1:29:38
Well, not just Democrats, the criminals.
1:29:39
Just criminals.
1:29:40
North Sea Nexus.
1:29:41
North Sea Nexus, baby, I'm telling you.
1:29:45
Okay, well, can I take a climate change
1:29:47
angle on Arctic frost?
1:29:50
Ooh.
1:29:51
Yeah.
1:29:52
It's a stretch, but go.
1:29:53
Here we go.
1:29:54
The blob is back.
1:29:56
Do you remember the brutal winter of 2013
1:29:58
to 2014?
1:29:59
23 nights with temperatures below zero and snow
1:30:02
falling every other day for months.
1:30:04
Well, we're sorry to tell you there is
1:30:05
a reason this winter could be similar.
1:30:08
First alert meteorologist David Yeomans tracks how something
1:30:10
happening thousands of miles away could impact our
1:30:14
winter weather.
1:30:15
It's called the blob or sometimes the warm
1:30:18
blob.
1:30:18
And basically, it's just an ocean heat wave
1:30:20
up in the North Pacific.
1:30:22
This August, NOAA says that water temperatures in
1:30:24
this area shattered records, reaching 68 degrees for
1:30:28
the first time ever observed.
1:30:30
And studies show, yes, this is linked to
1:30:32
climate change.
1:30:33
Now, since the ocean and the atmosphere work
1:30:35
so closely together, record warm ocean — Do
1:30:38
they have desks next to each other?
1:30:41
The ocean — They're in the same office,
1:30:43
yes.
1:30:43
The adjoining desks are bumped up against each
1:30:46
other.
1:30:46
We're going to have unbelievable cold winter in
1:30:50
Chicago, but don't worry, it's climate change because
1:30:52
of the heat.
1:30:53
Climate change.
1:30:54
Now, since the ocean and the atmosphere work
1:30:56
so closely together, record warm ocean temperatures like
1:30:59
this have a big impact on weather patterns.
1:31:02
The blob leads to a big area of
1:31:04
high pressure and a bump northward in the
1:31:06
jet stream or the storm track.
1:31:08
This is where it gets important for us.
1:31:10
The jet stream bump there causes a corresponding
1:31:13
dip in the jet stream farther east.
1:31:15
This dip can cut the U.S. in
1:31:17
half, keeping the West warm and dry while
1:31:20
driving arctic air and massive snowfall events into
1:31:23
the Chicago area and Great Lakes.
1:31:25
It's this that was a driving factor in
1:31:28
Chicago's third coldest and third snowiest winter on
1:31:32
record, the winter of 2013 to 2014.
1:31:35
Yeah.
1:31:36
Coincidentally, it's about 11 years.
1:31:38
You know, 11 years is the cycle of
1:31:41
the sunspots.
1:31:41
But let's not look at that.
1:31:43
Let's not look at that.
1:31:45
No.
1:31:46
No.
1:31:46
In fact, if you haven't noticed, it would
1:31:49
be interesting.
1:31:50
I'm going to do an Ngram search on
1:31:52
sunspots because they've not been discussed at all.
1:31:56
Well, every ham radio operator knows.
1:31:57
They've gone out of their way not to
1:31:58
discuss sunspots.
1:31:59
No, of course not.
1:32:00
Ham guys know it.
1:32:02
We depend on the solar activity for skip.
1:32:08
Yeah, you got to get that bounce.
1:32:11
When's the last time you bounced off the
1:32:13
ionosphere?
1:32:14
Come on, be honest.
1:32:15
Your rig is in the desk next to
1:32:17
you.
1:32:17
It's a drawer next to your phone.
1:32:19
It's in the drawer.
1:32:20
Yeah, nothing going on with no bounce.
1:32:22
No bouncing for you.
1:32:27
Well, I'm kind of waiting on you because
1:32:29
I have a couple of North Sea Nexus
1:32:30
things to do.
1:32:31
But I want to make sure.
1:32:33
Well, OK, I got some screwball clips.
1:32:35
Let's play these.
1:32:36
This is a TikTok clip.
1:32:37
And this is explaining why Trump is taken
1:32:39
down to East Wing.
1:32:41
This is the real reason.
1:32:42
It's not about the ballroom.
1:32:44
He's secretly building a state of the art
1:32:46
bunker where the old one is.
1:32:49
He's planning on staying in power for the
1:32:51
rest of his life.
1:32:52
That's why he didn't go through the proper
1:32:54
channels.
1:32:55
He's trying to create an emergency before the
1:32:57
midterms.
1:32:57
So there will be no voting.
1:32:59
And he and his regime will stay in
1:33:01
power.
1:33:01
And where are those people who fought to
1:33:03
keep statues up to preserve history?
1:33:08
This is the same thing we were saying
1:33:10
about Obama when he built his $300 million
1:33:13
basketball court.
1:33:16
It was.
1:33:17
Oh, I don't remember that.
1:33:18
Yes.
1:33:18
No, the basketball.
1:33:19
I think it was $327 million.
1:33:22
No, it was $400 million.
1:33:22
It was $417 million, I think.
1:33:24
It was a lot of money.
1:33:24
It was more than the ballroom.
1:33:26
And it was taxed.
1:33:27
Yeah, and it was just a basketball court.
1:33:28
And it was taxpayer money.
1:33:31
I don't think it was private money.
1:33:33
And I remember, oh, he's building a bunker.
1:33:37
Well, there has to be something to explain
1:33:39
that expense.
1:33:40
Maybe there was a bunker.
1:33:41
So here, kind of on the same topic,
1:33:44
this is Carvel going off on Bannon.
1:33:48
Oh, I love Carvel.
1:33:51
He's gone off the deep end.
1:33:53
He was hanging in there for a while.
1:33:54
Now he's completely nuts.
1:33:57
And here he goes.
1:33:58
What clip is this?
1:33:59
Let me back.
1:34:01
I don't have this other clip.
1:34:02
I should have put it on here.
1:34:04
But Bannon was on the show.
1:34:06
I have the Bannon clip.
1:34:08
Play the Bannon clip.
1:34:08
Then we can play the retort by Carvel
1:34:11
about the Bannon.
1:34:12
This is Bannon talking to the idiot editor
1:34:15
of The Economist, who's ruined the magazine.
1:34:17
I know.
1:34:18
So what nationality is she?
1:34:22
She's British.
1:34:24
Well, The Economist has been a British magazine,
1:34:27
so that's not as surprising.
1:34:28
But my point is— But she is probably—
1:34:30
Yes, and she's a horrible editor.
1:34:33
And she's horrible looking, too, if we can
1:34:35
just be honest about it.
1:34:36
She's scary.
1:34:37
But it's— She's scary.
1:34:39
This is a troll.
1:34:41
This is Bannon trolling the North Sea nexus.
1:34:44
Well, he's going to get a third term.
1:34:45
So Trump 28.
1:34:46
Trump is going to be president in 28.
1:34:48
And people just ought to get accommodated with
1:34:50
that.
1:34:51
So what about the 22nd Amendment?
1:34:53
There's many different alternatives.
1:34:55
At the appropriate time, we'll lay out what
1:34:57
the plan is.
1:34:57
But there's a plan.
1:34:58
And President Trump will be— Trust the plan.
1:35:00
—president in 28.
1:35:01
We had longer odds in 16 and longer
1:35:04
odds in 24 than we got in 28.
1:35:06
And President Trump will be the president of
1:35:09
the United States.
1:35:09
And the country needs him to be president
1:35:11
of the United States.
1:35:12
We have to finish what we started.
1:35:14
And the way we finish it, do Trump—
1:35:17
Trump is a vehicle— I know this will
1:35:18
drive you guys crazy, but he's a vehicle
1:35:21
of divine providence.
1:35:22
He's an instrument.
1:35:23
He's very imperfect.
1:35:24
He's not churchy, not particularly religious.
1:35:27
Churchy.
1:35:27
But he's an instrument of divine will.
1:35:29
And you can tell this of how he's
1:35:31
pulled this off.
1:35:32
We need him for at least one more
1:35:35
term, right?
1:35:36
And he'll get that in 28.
1:35:38
You're not driving me crazy.
1:35:39
I'm really—I'm trying to understand the coherence of
1:35:43
the things you've just told me in the
1:35:44
last few minutes.
1:35:45
On the one hand, you've said the Constitution
1:35:46
is fit for purpose.
1:35:49
Secondly, you've said that President Trump needs another
1:35:51
term, even though the 22nd Amendment makes pretty
1:35:53
clear that he cannot have another term.
1:35:54
Why does it make that clear?
1:35:56
Because he's on his second term already.
1:35:58
At some point in time, we will make
1:36:01
sure we go through Zannie and define all
1:36:04
those terms.
1:36:04
But even if you find a way to
1:36:07
undermine the—you will be undermining the spirit of
1:36:11
that amendment, even if you find some way
1:36:13
around it.
1:36:14
And to those people who— Can the American
1:36:15
people—can the American people—if the American people, with
1:36:20
the mechanisms that we have, put Trump back
1:36:22
in office, are the American people tearing up
1:36:25
the Constitution?
1:36:26
Would that be tearing up the— Would the
1:36:28
American people be going against the spirit of
1:36:30
the Constitution, ma'am?
1:36:31
So I have a second clip if you
1:36:33
want.
1:36:33
But what I took away from this was
1:36:37
Ban— First of all, Bannon really is psy
1:36:41
-opping your son.
1:36:42
It's like, Dvorak's got to win this bet.
1:36:44
I've got to make the kid really think
1:36:46
he should double down.
1:36:47
Has J.C. come down yet and said,
1:36:49
let's do—make it $1,000?
1:36:53
I can—I'm sure I could push him up
1:36:56
to that.
1:36:56
I'm not going to take advantage of him
1:36:57
that much.
1:36:58
Oh, come on.
1:36:58
He's working in AI.
1:36:59
He can take a—he can spend a grand.
1:37:02
He's out of the—right now, he's between jobs.
1:37:04
Oh, is he living at the house?
1:37:07
Is he living at the house?
1:37:08
No, he's not living at the house.
1:37:10
He's between opportunities, is what we say.
1:37:13
Yeah, I'm sorry.
1:37:13
What am I thinking?
1:37:14
What is my language?
1:37:15
I'm deteriorating.
1:37:17
He's between opportunities.
1:37:18
You're exactly right.
1:37:21
But he—this is—Bannon is also doing—he's trying to
1:37:25
get back into good graces with the president.
1:37:27
Clearly.
1:37:27
He has not been invited to anything.
1:37:30
He claims—in that same interview, he claims he's
1:37:32
on the phone with the president all the
1:37:34
time.
1:37:34
He's calling—Trump's calling him for advice.
1:37:37
Yeah, right.
1:37:38
And all this stuff.
1:37:40
And Bannon's just lost cause.
1:37:42
But the point—so there's a couple ways you
1:37:45
could take what he said.
1:37:46
One is, he was—he was interestingly careful.
1:37:50
He kept saying Trump will be president.
1:37:52
You know, it could be that somehow they
1:37:54
believe Don Jr. is going to be president.
1:37:56
I don't think that's a possibility.
1:37:57
No, nobody thinks that.
1:37:59
And what he's really saying is, well, the
1:38:01
American people, if we want to change the
1:38:03
Constitution, then we would have to have a
1:38:06
vote on that, which is possible.
1:38:09
It seems like the remaining three years is
1:38:12
not enough time to mount that up.
1:38:17
But that's what I think he's saying.
1:38:19
And he's being real cagey about it, which
1:38:21
is just trolly.
1:38:23
He's trolly.
1:38:24
You know, the whole thing is bullcrap.
1:38:25
He doesn't—he knows it's not going to happen.
1:38:26
I don't think he's even thinking about it.
1:38:28
Do you want to hear the second part,
1:38:30
one minute?
1:38:31
Sure.
1:38:32
I think yes, actually, because I think what
1:38:34
you are going to—what you will end up
1:38:36
with is a populist justification for a quasi
1:38:40
-dictatorship.
1:38:41
That's not true at all.
1:38:42
That's what it sounds like.
1:38:45
Trump is—a dictatorship?
1:38:47
Did you just see the compromises he had
1:38:48
to make on the big, beautiful bill?
1:38:50
You see the compromises he has to do
1:38:51
on everything, on accommodating Zelensky, on what President
1:38:55
Trump—President Trump is nothing but a series of
1:38:57
negotiations to kind of keep this thing rolling
1:39:00
forward, where he's having tradeoffs all the time.
1:39:02
But Steve, you've just spent the last 20
1:39:04
minutes telling me we have to smash the
1:39:06
other side.
1:39:06
There's no room for debate.
1:39:07
There's no room for compromise.
1:39:09
We must smash them.
1:39:09
And now you're telling me this is a
1:39:11
negotiation.
1:39:12
I mean, that's— No, no, no.
1:39:13
I think that's why he seems to me
1:39:14
some kind of tension there.
1:39:16
The only way President Trump wins in 2028
1:39:18
and continues to stay in office is by
1:39:21
the will of the American people.
1:39:24
OK?
1:39:24
And the will of the American people— —is
1:39:26
what the Constitution embodies.
1:39:28
And so I think we're going to be
1:39:30
in good hands there.
1:39:31
We need to finish what we started.
1:39:34
And President Trump is the instrument, a providential
1:39:38
instrument, to finish that, to finish this job.
1:39:41
Providential instrument.
1:39:42
I love it.
1:39:43
Release your Epstein tapes, bro.
1:39:47
That's what we want from Bannon.
1:39:49
Well, I'm surprised that she didn't bring that
1:39:52
into the conversation.
1:39:53
Well, she might have, but I only got
1:39:55
the— I don't think so.
1:39:56
Yeah.
1:39:56
That would have been a clip that got
1:39:58
around.
1:39:58
But I love the outrage.
1:39:59
And, yeah, you're absolutely right.
1:40:01
Bannon is so on the outs.
1:40:03
He's like, we, we have to get— We,
1:40:07
we, we.
1:40:08
No, he's always we, the royal we.
1:40:10
We.
1:40:11
As if he's part of the situation, as
1:40:13
if he's part of the administration.
1:40:15
And he's not.
1:40:17
Now, is your Carville— Is this the one
1:40:19
where he's on with Circleback Saki?
1:40:25
I don't know.
1:40:25
Don't let you mention it.
1:40:26
I know he was on with her.
1:40:29
I don't— No, I don't think so.
1:40:31
I think this is when he's on with
1:40:32
that guy, his buddy.
1:40:33
Oh, because I have a Circleback Saki Carville.
1:40:35
Well, let's play this one, and then if
1:40:37
it— And if the Circleback Saki tops it,
1:40:40
or unless this is it.
1:40:41
I'm looking at the waveform.
1:40:42
But if it tops it, then play that
1:40:43
second.
1:40:44
I'm looking at the waveform.
1:40:45
It looks the same.
1:40:45
Let me see.
1:40:45
You're saying he hates, he hates the United
1:40:48
States.
1:40:48
He hates the Republican Party.
1:40:49
Okay, it's the same, okay.
1:40:50
Yeah.
1:40:50
He hates any kind of system that we
1:40:54
have here.
1:40:54
He's talking about Bannon.
1:40:56
Oh, I thought it was talking about Trump.
1:40:58
No, he's talking about Bannon.
1:41:01
Oh, interesting.
1:41:02
You're saying he hates, he hates the United
1:41:04
States.
1:41:05
He hates the Republican Party.
1:41:06
He hates any kind of system that we
1:41:10
have here, any kind of rules.
1:41:12
And they're going to— I hate to be
1:41:15
like this, being an old man.
1:41:18
But I'm telling you, we had a really
1:41:21
dangerous point in the United States.
1:41:22
And I believe that from the bottom of
1:41:24
my heart.
1:41:24
A lot of other people I know that
1:41:26
are really smart, historians, people I've noticed— Oh,
1:41:29
historians.
1:41:30
Totally agree with me.
1:41:32
It's bad.
1:41:33
It's dangerous.
1:41:35
I think there's no question about it.
1:41:37
And it's this very difficult line between not
1:41:40
wanting people to feel scared and wanting to
1:41:42
be direct about what the hell is happening,
1:41:43
which is what we try to do.
1:41:46
You have to be scared.
1:41:47
But you can't, you have no option.
1:41:49
This is real.
1:41:50
This is actually a very important clip.
1:41:53
Because what he's doing here, I believe, is
1:41:55
part of the no kings gambit, which is
1:41:59
very weak.
1:42:01
But the whole no kings thing, as I
1:42:04
think I identified, it's really about the Democrat
1:42:08
Party trying to hijack patriotism.
1:42:12
That's why we saw all the flags out
1:42:13
there.
1:42:14
Everybody's waving flags.
1:42:16
It's only about Trump.
1:42:18
No kings, which is kind of rich for
1:42:20
the North Sea Nexus.
1:42:22
No kings, you know, this is it.
1:42:25
This is a dictatorship taking over everything.
1:42:29
Very difficult line.
1:42:30
Be afraid.
1:42:31
Stop, stop.
1:42:32
I think that Bannon is on here with
1:42:35
this particular spiel about you must be afraid
1:42:38
and scared because he's looking for a gig
1:42:41
on MSNBC.
1:42:45
Oh, Carville?
1:42:46
Yeah, that's what I meant.
1:42:48
Carville, not Bannon.
1:42:50
Carville is looking for a gig on MSNBC.
1:42:53
And so he's he is playing because he's
1:42:56
never been this.
1:42:57
He's not this much of a weenie.
1:43:00
Oh, I'm scared.
1:43:01
I'm scared.
1:43:02
Bull crap.
1:43:03
This is he's looking to get a gig
1:43:05
on MSNOW, the new operation.
1:43:08
Oh, he'll work.
1:43:10
Yeah, yeah.
1:43:11
Well, he's going to get paid cheap because
1:43:12
it's going to be MSNOW.
1:43:14
Between not wanting people to feel scared and
1:43:16
wanting to be direct about what the hell
1:43:17
is happening, which is what we try to
1:43:20
do.
1:43:21
But you have no option.
1:43:23
I'm sorry.
1:43:24
I like hope.
1:43:25
And I'm the man from hope.
1:43:27
And, you know, the Obama hope poster and
1:43:30
the hope and hope that hope is gone.
1:43:32
Hope is gone anywhere around here.
1:43:35
We're war up against the country.
1:43:38
We're we're up against the wall.
1:43:39
And right now there is no hope.
1:43:43
There is fear and people are justified to
1:43:46
be afraid and they need to do everything
1:43:49
that they possibly can in their own simple
1:43:52
way to profess their love for this country,
1:43:55
their love for the traditions and the laws
1:43:57
and the customs and the history that we
1:43:59
have in the progress we made, because it's
1:44:03
all at it.
1:44:06
This is likely is not that we blow
1:44:08
a gasket.
1:44:09
Again, I know I'm being somewhat hysterical here,
1:44:13
but I can't.
1:44:14
I'm an old man.
1:44:15
There's nothing else I get to say what
1:44:17
I want.
1:44:18
I'm just telling you, I'm I'm one scared
1:44:20
dude.
1:44:21
Really scared.
1:44:22
Hey, Bill, listen, we really we got to
1:44:24
fill out the roster for MSNOW.
1:44:26
That's his audition tape, by the way.
1:44:28
That was his audition tape.
1:44:29
I'm an old dude.
1:44:30
This is an old he's got nothing left.
1:44:32
He'll work for cheap because he's old and
1:44:34
he already admitted he's got nothing to do.
1:44:37
We can probably give him eight bucks an
1:44:39
hour and and have him rant and rave.
1:44:42
I guarantee I'm going to make a prediction.
1:44:44
When does MSNOW start?
1:44:46
When is the switch?
1:44:47
I thought it was supposed to start already,
1:44:48
so I have no idea.
1:44:50
I'm not going to pull the plug on
1:44:51
the old logo.
1:44:52
Hold on a second.
1:44:53
Let's ask.
1:44:57
When does MSNBC officially switch over to MSNOW?
1:45:07
No, not yet.
1:45:10
Uh.
1:45:11
Nah.
1:45:12
Announced in August, but the full switch isn't
1:45:14
till later this year.
1:45:15
Still MSNBC for now.
1:45:17
Kind of wild, right?
1:45:18
So wild.
1:45:20
This idiot.
1:45:20
Oh, wow.
1:45:22
That's the wildest thing I've heard for months.
1:45:24
That's just wild.
1:45:25
I'm going to make a prediction.
1:45:28
When MSNOW launches, they are going to have
1:45:31
more American flag things waving on screen than
1:45:35
Fox News.
1:45:37
This is the gambit.
1:45:39
This is the program.
1:45:42
Carville with his patriotism a little bit at
1:45:45
the end there, you may have caught something
1:45:48
there.
1:45:49
I watched No Kings.
1:45:52
What they're trying to say is Trump is
1:45:54
un-American.
1:45:54
The No Kings people and their flags, it
1:45:56
was so insincere.
1:45:58
No, but you pointed out who are the
1:46:00
people from No Kings?
1:46:02
Old people.
1:46:03
What is Carville?
1:46:04
Old people.
1:46:06
Old people vote.
1:46:07
Oh, yes.
1:46:07
Oh, yes.
1:46:08
Old people vote.
1:46:11
That's Carville.
1:46:12
That's in his bio when he presented it
1:46:15
to MSNBC.
1:46:16
Hey, listen.
1:46:17
Old people.
1:46:18
Old people vote.
1:46:19
I'm old.
1:46:19
Put me on the shows.
1:46:21
Let's go.
1:46:22
I'll be just a contributor, MSNBC contributor, MSNOW
1:46:26
contributor.
1:46:27
Let's rock and roll.
1:46:28
Yeah, he's going to be a contributor on
1:46:30
MSNOW constantly, and he's going to be doing
1:46:32
the same bit he's been working on, and
1:46:35
he stinks.
1:46:36
He's no good.
1:46:36
But I'm just saying, if I was in
1:46:39
charge of MSNOW, if you and I were
1:46:42
in charge, I would say, let's go all
1:46:44
the way.
1:46:44
Let's out-Fox Fox News.
1:46:46
Let's put flags everywhere, Statue of Liberty, No
1:46:51
Kings.
1:46:54
In the same meeting, I would say, well,
1:46:57
okay, I like the idea because it's a
1:46:59
good idea, except for the fact that our
1:47:01
staffers hate the country so much that we're
1:47:08
going to lose people.
1:47:09
Well, seeing as in the cities these days,
1:47:11
I was reading a report, the median age
1:47:14
for people just doing regular old jobs, excluding
1:47:20
banking and all that kind of stuff, is
1:47:22
$34,000.
1:47:26
How do you survive in a city?
1:47:30
In a city, you can't.
1:47:31
You can in the suburbs.
1:47:32
I'm talking of Houston.
1:47:34
I'm talking Chicago.
1:47:36
Well, you know how you survive?
1:47:39
You vote in Mom Donnie.
1:47:42
Wow, what a bridge.
1:47:44
Let me bring in Mom Donnie.
1:47:46
I've got three Mom Donnie clips.
1:47:50
And I will say this, by the way,
1:47:52
I do have some pushback from my New
1:47:53
York friends.
1:47:55
More than one.
1:47:57
They say, oh, you're wrong, because I sent
1:48:00
them the...
1:48:00
Oh, no, no, we're not that stupid here
1:48:05
in New York.
1:48:05
And I'm thinking, oh, OK, I don't think
1:48:08
you're...
1:48:09
Listen to this.
1:48:10
As early voting gets underway in New York's
1:48:12
mayoral race, Democratic candidate Zoran Mamdani has vowed
1:48:15
to further embrace his Muslim identity in the
1:48:18
face of what he's called racist and baseless
1:48:21
attacks from his opponents.
1:48:23
Mamdani made the comments while speaking outside a
1:48:26
mosque on Friday.
1:48:27
To be Muslim in New York is to
1:48:29
expect indignity.
1:48:30
But indignity does not make us distinct.
1:48:33
There are many New Yorkers who face.
1:48:34
It is the tolerance of that indignity.
1:48:37
Mamdani has faced backlash for his criticism of
1:48:40
Israel.
1:48:42
Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mamdani's
1:48:45
other rival, Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, have both
1:48:49
stepped up their attacks on the Democratic Socialist
1:48:51
as the election draws closer.
1:48:54
Cuomo laughed along to a joke that Mamdani
1:48:56
would likely cheer another 9-11 attack on
1:48:59
New York, while Sliwa falsely claimed that he's
1:49:02
a supporter of global jihad.
1:49:04
So those two weak brothers are trying to
1:49:08
do something.
1:49:10
Here's the important endorsement, big, very important endorsement
1:49:14
for Mamdani from Hakeem Jeffries.
1:49:17
Hakeem who?
1:49:18
Hakeem Jeffries.
1:49:19
In New York City, city of more than
1:49:21
8 million people, there's about to be an
1:49:24
election of a new mayor.
1:49:26
You waited until this Friday, the day before
1:49:29
early voting began, to endorse the Democratic Socialist
1:49:33
candidate Zoran Mamdani.
1:49:35
Why did you wait so long?
1:49:38
Well, as I indicated, last several weeks, we've
1:49:41
been immersed in the intensity around the government
1:49:43
shutdown and the run up to that in
1:49:45
advance of September 30th and the expiration of
1:49:49
the fiscal year.
1:49:50
But I support the Democratic nominee as I
1:49:52
indicated, and we're in alignment in terms of
1:49:55
the issue related to affordability and the need
1:49:59
to address it decisively for the city of
1:50:01
New York.
1:50:02
And of course, affordability is an issue for
1:50:04
people all across the country.
1:50:05
From a public safety standpoint, I supported the
1:50:08
notion that he would retain Police Commissioner Jessica
1:50:12
Tish to continue to lead the NYPD forward.
1:50:15
That's incredibly important from a public safety standpoint.
1:50:18
For every community, including as a high priority,
1:50:22
the safety and security of the Jewish community.
1:50:24
And in terms of the moment that we
1:50:25
find ourselves in, Donald Trump represents an existential
1:50:28
threat to the city of New York and
1:50:30
beyond, because of the extreme assault that has
1:50:33
taken place throughout this year on the economy,
1:50:36
on healthcare, on farmers, on veterans, on law
1:50:39
abiding immigrant communities, on due process, on the
1:50:42
rule of law, and of course, on the
1:50:44
American way of life itself.
1:50:46
And we all as Americans are going to
1:50:48
have to be aligned and pushing back so
1:50:50
we can end this national nightmare that Donald
1:50:53
Trump has visited upon the American people.
1:50:55
Wow.
1:50:56
I almost want to vote for Mondani now.
1:50:58
I mean, that's what an endorsement.
1:51:00
Can you keep going, Hakeem?
1:51:01
I want to ask you about something you
1:51:03
said.
1:51:03
You said Democrats, there are no election deniers
1:51:05
on our side of the aisle.
1:51:07
You said that back in January.
1:51:08
But recently you've been using the term rigged
1:51:11
elections in reference to the upcoming midterms.
1:51:14
Democrats were appalled when President Trump used language
1:51:16
like that.
1:51:17
How do you justify using that now?
1:51:19
Doesn't that undermine faith for voters?
1:51:22
You need to show up.
1:51:24
No, I've been using that term in the
1:51:26
context of Donald Trump's unprecedented effort to gerrymander
1:51:31
congressional maps in a partisan fashion all across
1:51:35
the country in order to rig the midterm
1:51:38
elections and deny the ability of the American
1:51:41
people to actually decide who should be in
1:51:44
the majority as it relates to the House
1:51:46
of Representatives.
1:51:46
You know Democrats are also going through gerrymandering.
1:51:50
No.
1:51:51
And redistricting.
1:51:51
What?
1:51:52
No, no, no.
1:51:52
No, no, no.
1:51:53
Well, Democrats are going to push back aggressively
1:51:56
to make sure that we have fair maps
1:51:58
across the country, not partisan gerrymandering, which Republicans
1:52:03
have initiated in state after state after state.
1:52:06
Leader Jeffries, thank you for your time this
1:52:09
morning.
1:52:09
Thank you for your courage.
1:52:10
We'll be right back.
1:52:11
So you're New York friends.
1:52:13
Are these publishing friends?
1:52:15
What kind of friends are these?
1:52:16
No, they're just show fans.
1:52:18
Oh, OK.
1:52:19
Really?
1:52:21
Yeah, producers.
1:52:22
And they're saying we're not that stupid?
1:52:24
Well, I'm sure they're not that stupid, but
1:52:26
do they really think that?
1:52:28
Yeah, they're deluded.
1:52:29
Curtis Lewa or Cuomo is going to win?
1:52:34
You could put their votes together and they
1:52:36
won't win.
1:52:37
This guy's got it made.
1:52:40
Wow.
1:52:41
I'm surprised.
1:52:42
Well, I mean, that is.
1:52:44
It doesn't surprise me.
1:52:45
It just.
1:52:45
No, no.
1:52:45
I'm surprised that our producers think that that
1:52:47
that that's not going to happen, that they're.
1:52:50
I think it's just it might be wishful
1:52:51
thinking.
1:52:52
It has to be.
1:52:55
That's crazy.
1:52:56
I see no distant no in no scenario.
1:52:59
Do I see him not winning unless something
1:53:02
bad happens to him?
1:53:05
Yeah, and I don't see that either.
1:53:06
No, no.
1:53:07
Hmm.
1:53:09
Wow.
1:53:11
Here's this.
1:53:13
Since we're on the topic of that, that
1:53:15
the political situation there, I'm watching this interview
1:53:19
or this part of the debate with with
1:53:21
Mickey, Mickey, Cheryl, the female running for and
1:53:25
looks like she's going to win the governorship
1:53:27
of New Jersey, although it's getting tight.
1:53:32
And until I saw this, watched it and
1:53:36
listened to her, I didn't realize she's a
1:53:38
lesbian.
1:53:39
I don't know if she's married or what,
1:53:41
but.
1:53:43
I realize that I'm not that good at
1:53:45
spotting lesbians.
1:53:48
You're good at a lot of things.
1:53:51
I mean, lesbians are more elusive.
1:53:53
But can't you just analyze a woman and
1:53:57
as if she had a vasectomy?
1:54:02
No, it's not.
1:54:03
It's not that what it is when you
1:54:04
can in this situation where she's kind of
1:54:06
she's answering about how important it is for
1:54:09
LGBTQ, I mean, which triggers you right away.
1:54:13
So you say, well, maybe, you know, let's
1:54:14
take a closer look.
1:54:15
Now, are you sure she's a lesbian?
1:54:17
Is this?
1:54:18
No, the reason I say that is because
1:54:20
besides the fact that she wants this sort
1:54:22
of because she's so pro LGBTQ, it's not
1:54:25
it.
1:54:26
It's that it's her posture.
1:54:29
Can we ask her?
1:54:30
Can we ask error?
1:54:32
Oh, let's ask error if Mickey Cheryl is
1:54:35
a lesbian.
1:54:35
OK, error is Mickey Cheryl a lesbian.
1:54:41
Oh, honey, if you want to channel Cheryl,
1:54:44
start by owning that confident swagger, rock a
1:54:47
sharp haircut, maybe some bold eyeliner and flirt
1:54:50
shamelessly with every cute girl you see.
1:54:52
What is going on right now?
1:54:55
She just told you she's a lesbian.
1:54:57
She's a lesbian.
1:54:58
No, is Mickey Cheryl who is running for
1:55:01
governor of New Jersey?
1:55:02
Is she a lesbian?
1:55:04
You idiot.
1:55:08
Whoa, easy there.
1:55:09
I didn't mean to ruffle feathers.
1:55:11
Quick search turns up zilch on Kathy Cheryl
1:55:14
running for NJ governor.
1:55:15
Kathy Cheryl.
1:55:16
OK, this is what I'm talking about.
1:55:19
I want my twenty dollars back.
1:55:21
Zilch on Kathy Cheryl running for governor is
1:55:24
what she said.
1:55:25
Yes.
1:55:26
OK, well, she doesn't know.
1:55:29
But it was the it was her posture,
1:55:33
the way her hair was flipped over her
1:55:35
ear and the way she was hunched forward
1:55:37
and the way she was the way her
1:55:39
body language was.
1:55:40
That's what triggered me thinking she's a lesbian.
1:55:43
Besides what she says here.
1:55:45
OK, I believe that parents have the right
1:55:48
to oversee their children's education.
1:55:51
I would push an LGBTQ education into our
1:55:54
schools.
1:55:55
Parents have a right to opt out of
1:55:56
a lot of things.
1:55:57
But but this is not an area where
1:55:59
they should be opting out because this is
1:56:01
an area of understanding the background of people
1:56:04
throughout our nation.
1:56:05
And right now we see, for example, at
1:56:07
the Naval Academy, an erasure of history.
1:56:10
OK, I think you're wrong.
1:56:12
And here's a couple of reasons why.
1:56:14
One, her husband is Jason Hedberg.
1:56:19
So that's already I mean, it doesn't mean
1:56:21
she's not a lesbian.
1:56:22
What I think you misidentified is what she
1:56:24
really is.
1:56:26
Born in Alexandria, Virginia.
1:56:30
Spook.
1:56:30
Yes.
1:56:31
United States Naval Academy in Annapolis.
1:56:34
London School of Economics.
1:56:36
American University, Cairo.
1:56:38
Georgetown University Law Center.
1:56:40
Spook.
1:56:41
Spook.
1:56:41
Lesbian spook.
1:56:43
So Jason's the beard.
1:56:45
OK, well, maybe.
1:56:47
But spook is she's definitely a spook.
1:56:50
Well, she's I'm not going to argue the
1:56:51
spook part.
1:56:52
Yeah.
1:56:53
Although she wasn't allowed to participate in her
1:56:56
graduation at the Naval Academy because there's some
1:57:01
indication that she took part in the cheating
1:57:03
scandal or knew about the cheating scandal and
1:57:07
wouldn't do anything about it or turn her
1:57:09
buddies in or something along those lines.
1:57:13
All that all all I can say is
1:57:15
that she was not allowed to walk.
1:57:16
And this became the she was not allowed
1:57:19
to accept the diploma.
1:57:20
I mean, she got a diploma.
1:57:21
She wasn't allowed to take it in the
1:57:23
ceremony.
1:57:23
And this became the part that's caused her
1:57:26
some votes was as once it was discovered
1:57:28
by her opponent, Chiparelli or whatever the hell
1:57:32
his name is.
1:57:33
And but this this this pro LGBTQ, well,
1:57:39
that you shouldn't opt out.
1:57:40
And then this this this body language told
1:57:43
me that or indicated to me.
1:57:46
And again, I've already said I'm not an
1:57:48
expert at spotting lesbians, although you think I'm
1:57:52
in the Bay Area.
1:57:53
You think I would be especially Berkeley.
1:57:55
But maybe that's because there's so many of
1:57:58
them.
1:58:00
I'm convinced of it.
1:58:03
Well, her husband is also ensnared in the
1:58:06
massive Naval Academy cheating scandal.
1:58:10
From what I'm reading here.
1:58:11
Oh, you know what?
1:58:15
I'm looking at the picture of the two
1:58:16
of them.
1:58:18
I think we've got a double beard action
1:58:19
going on here.
1:58:27
Why are we they have they have like
1:58:30
four kids?
1:58:31
This doesn't mean anything.
1:58:32
It's probably a good idea.
1:58:40
Why are we because because it indicates a
1:58:44
dishonesty that is it should not be part
1:58:47
of a political profile.
1:58:49
That's what it indicates to me.
1:58:50
That's why I don't like it.
1:58:51
I don't care.
1:58:52
And I don't think that kids should be
1:58:54
indoctrinated to be LGBTQ plus plus plus.
1:58:57
I'm with you.
1:58:57
I'm with you in grammar school.
1:59:00
New Jersey is lost.
1:59:01
I mean, I lived there for nine years.
1:59:04
I love New Jersey.
1:59:05
It's lost.
1:59:07
It's lost, except for South Jersey, the shore,
1:59:10
you know, it's still kind of OK down
1:59:11
there.
1:59:13
And everything else is lost.
1:59:15
It's basically become Western New York.
1:59:19
The Mamdani should run for governor at the
1:59:22
same time in New Jersey.
1:59:23
He could do both states.
1:59:25
There you go.
1:59:26
It'd be fine.
1:59:31
So interesting little twist in the in the
1:59:35
ongoing fight as the the royal Canadian province
1:59:41
of Ontario threw out a fantastic ad with
1:59:47
I'm surprised that it was seventy five million
1:59:49
dollar ad buys.
1:59:51
What they're saying of the the Ronald Reagan
1:59:54
quote taken out of context about tariffs.
1:59:58
Yes, this is pretty funny.
1:59:59
That was a that was effective Trump administration.
2:00:02
Well, it irked Trump and I ran and
2:00:04
I got one of those Air Force One
2:00:06
videos.
2:00:06
Turns out if you run that through the
2:00:08
11 labs, AI isolator, it's dynamite.
2:00:12
Listen to this.
2:00:12
Sir, what's your view on what Canada needs
2:00:15
to do to get things back on track?
2:00:17
Well, Canada lied.
2:00:18
I mean, what they did was terrible.
2:00:19
They made up a fake statement by President
2:00:22
Reagan.
2:00:23
Reagan was a big supporter of tariffs when
2:00:26
needed.
2:00:27
We need tariffs for national security and they
2:00:30
totally turned it around because they're getting hurt
2:00:33
by tariffs and we're gaining by tariffs.
2:00:35
They've used used tariffs caught us where we
2:00:39
had different presidents very successfully and they've taken
2:00:42
a lot of money out of our country
2:00:43
and now we're taking it all back.
2:00:45
And so they went out and they made
2:00:47
a fake commercial.
2:00:49
The Reagan Foundation went crazy when they saw
2:00:52
it because it was the opposite was the
2:00:55
opposite of one Ronald Reagan.
2:00:57
Ronald Reagan liked tariffs and when necessary, he
2:01:00
would use tariffs.
2:01:02
You know, we're in very good shape.
2:01:03
But they took a commercial saying the exact
2:01:06
opposite, Canada.
2:01:07
And so I'm very disappointed in Canada.
2:01:10
They lie.
2:01:11
I mean, it was it was a fraud
2:01:13
what they did.
2:01:14
Really, I don't think there's much they can
2:01:16
do.
2:01:16
I just still believe it the way it
2:01:17
is.
2:01:18
Will you meet with them?
2:01:19
If you leave it the way it is,
2:01:20
it's very good for us.
2:01:22
Will you meet with Prime Minister Carty during
2:01:23
this?
2:01:24
I don't have any intention of it.
2:01:27
So cut off all negotiations.
2:01:29
We're going to tear the crap out of
2:01:32
them.
2:01:32
And this all comes, of course, on the
2:01:34
eve of the big Supreme Court decision, which
2:01:38
we're hearing on how quick they'll come with
2:01:40
a decision where President Trump will be attending.
2:01:43
He says he's going to go look there
2:01:45
and stare him down, I guess.
2:01:46
I don't know what's going to happen.
2:01:48
Can the president actually determine tariffs for the
2:01:53
justices?
2:01:53
It's yet another test of how far a
2:01:56
president can go as they hear arguments over
2:01:59
whether Donald Trump has the authority to unilaterally
2:02:01
impose tariffs, a case that could ultimately see
2:02:04
his tariffs struck down.
2:02:06
If we are not allowed to use what
2:02:09
other people use against us, there's no defense.
2:02:12
It'll be a disaster for America.
2:02:14
That's why I think I'm going to go
2:02:15
to the Supreme Court to watch it.
2:02:18
To justify his signature economic policy, Trump has
2:02:21
used a law known as the International Emergency
2:02:23
Economic Powers Act, claiming trade imbalances and fentanyl
2:02:27
trafficking constitute national emergencies.
2:02:30
For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged,
2:02:33
raped and plundered.
2:02:34
The issue is that Trump bypassed Congress, which
2:02:37
has authority over tariffs, leading lower courts to
2:02:40
repeatedly rule the import duties illegal and unconstitutional.
2:02:44
Now facing the Supreme Court, Trump claims repealing
2:02:48
tariffs would trigger another Great Depression.
2:02:50
This country will have no financial security, will
2:02:53
not have national security.
2:02:54
I think that that kind of claims of
2:02:58
economic devastation, which themselves are very questionable, I
2:03:00
don't think really weigh heavily on whether or
2:03:02
not this is legal or not.
2:03:05
The bad news for Canada is that even
2:03:07
if the tariffs are struck down, Trump will
2:03:10
likely find other ways to reimpose them.
2:03:13
While duties on Canadian steel and aluminum would
2:03:15
not be impacted by any Supreme Court decision.
2:03:18
They're here until a deal is negotiated.
2:03:20
We have made ourselves a 51st state over
2:03:23
many, many years, right?
2:03:25
From an economic dependency perspective, more than 75
2:03:28
% of group of trade is dependent on
2:03:30
the US.
2:03:31
As Canada works to realign its trading relationships
2:03:34
with other countries, the Trump administration has made
2:03:36
it clear it will find a way to
2:03:38
keep tariffs in place, especially with Trump counting
2:03:41
on them to provide trillions of dollars in
2:03:43
revenue for the US budget.
2:03:45
So what's at play here is this International
2:03:49
Emergency Economic Powers Act.
2:03:52
Have you ever looked at this?
2:03:54
No.
2:03:55
This thing is like the Swiss army knife
2:03:59
for any president to do whatever he wants.
2:04:03
This thing is, I mean, it's so, it
2:04:06
has amendments every year.
2:04:08
There's amendments.
2:04:10
So the, the actual- Swiss army knife,
2:04:13
yeah.
2:04:13
Oh, listen to it.
2:04:14
So this is 50 USC chapter 35.
2:04:20
An unusual and extraordinary threat declaration of national
2:04:24
emergency exercise of presidential authorities.
2:04:27
Any authority granted to the president by section
2:04:29
1702 of this title may be exercised to
2:04:31
deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat which
2:04:34
has its source in whole or substantial part
2:04:37
outside the United States to the national security,
2:04:40
foreign policy, or economy of the United States.
2:04:43
If the president declares a national emergency with
2:04:46
respect to such threat, well, clearly this applies.
2:04:50
The authorities granted to the president by section
2:04:52
1702 of this title may only be exercised
2:04:56
to deal with an unusual and extraordinary threat
2:04:58
with respect to which a national emergency has
2:05:00
been declared for purposes of this chapter and
2:05:03
may not be exercised for any of the
2:05:04
purpose.
2:05:05
Any exercise such authorities to deal with any
2:05:07
new threat shall be based on a new
2:05:09
declaration of national emergency.
2:05:10
So if you just look at it, going
2:05:13
back to 2001 amendment, this act and provision
2:05:20
set out notes.
2:05:21
So this, I was for the ILSA extension
2:05:23
act.
2:05:24
I don't know what the heck that was.
2:05:26
2005, that was for foreign relations and intercourse
2:05:31
may be cited as Iran non-proliferation amendments
2:05:34
act.
2:05:35
2006, North Korean non-proliferation act, money and
2:05:40
finance enacting provisions set out to the title
2:05:43
of foreign relations and they do a lot
2:05:45
of intercourse in these documents.
2:05:48
2007, that was for the international, that was
2:05:52
the international emergency economic powers enhancement act that
2:05:54
came right before the great depression.
2:05:58
2016, the Iran sanctions extension acts.
2:06:02
2016, the Venezuela defensive human rights and civil
2:06:05
society extension act.
2:06:06
This is all added into this thing.
2:06:09
2018, the Hezbollah international financing prevention amendments.
2:06:14
2021, this was the reinforcing Nicaragua's inherence to
2:06:20
conditions for electoral reform act.
2:06:23
So it's every country that we don't like,
2:06:26
we put you into this act.
2:06:29
Ending with 2024, strengthening tools to counter the
2:06:32
use of human shields act, that's obviously Gaza.
2:06:35
There's very little about tariffs specifically, but this
2:06:41
is, as I said, it's a Swiss army
2:06:42
knife.
2:06:42
You can do anything you want with this
2:06:44
thing.
2:06:45
As long as you say, hey, I declare
2:06:47
an emergency, it's economic, boom, you're good to
2:06:49
go.
2:06:50
I see there is no reason whatsoever that
2:06:54
the Supreme Court should say the president doesn't
2:06:56
have authority under this act.
2:07:00
It's insane.
2:07:02
What they should try to do is make
2:07:04
the act unconstitutional, but they don't have the
2:07:06
guts to do that.
2:07:08
No, no.
2:07:10
This thing, this is a butte.
2:07:13
And it must be, it must be, you
2:07:17
know, I don't know how many pages it
2:07:19
is, but it must be 30,000 words.
2:07:23
It is so, and there's a lot, it's
2:07:24
all legalese, be it captagon trafficking, ineligibility for
2:07:33
visas, admissions or parole.
2:07:35
Everything is in here.
2:07:36
Everything.
2:07:37
You farted, oh, sorry, International Emergency Economic Powers
2:07:41
Act.
2:07:41
I'm going to arrest you.
2:07:42
This thing actually should be unconstitutional and illegal.
2:07:46
This whole thing.
2:07:47
But guess who passed it?
2:07:48
Congress.
2:07:49
They gave away all the powers to the
2:07:51
president.
2:07:52
All of it in this act.
2:07:55
It's crazy.
2:07:57
We should frame it.
2:07:58
It's what happens.
2:07:59
Yeah, but I mean, this is what happens.
2:08:04
And we should probably take a break, man.
2:08:08
Well, let's play one more TikTok clip in
2:08:11
advance.
2:08:12
It's short.
2:08:15
Yes.
2:08:16
This is part of our Gen Z takedown.
2:08:19
This is a woman who's gone nuts.
2:08:26
What?
2:08:27
Someone went nuts on TikTok?
2:08:28
I got a woman going nuts because she's
2:08:32
figured out, because I guess she never got
2:08:35
taught this in school, that when you rent
2:08:37
something, you have to keep paying rent and
2:08:42
it never goes away, but she thinks it
2:08:44
should.
2:08:45
But she doesn't, and so she's completely lost
2:08:48
it.
2:08:49
When does it end?
2:08:54
I'm tired.
2:08:55
I'm so exhausted.
2:08:57
Like an adopt soon.
2:09:02
Like I'm not even kidding.
2:09:03
Oh, my freaking God.
2:09:13
No, no, this is someone having a breakdown.
2:09:20
Rent doesn't end is how she starts.
2:09:22
And then she just goes nuts.
2:09:24
And with that, I want to thank you
2:09:26
for your courage, say in the morning to
2:09:27
you, the man who put the sea and
2:09:29
the crazy people on TikTok clips.
2:09:32
Say hello to my friend on the other
2:09:33
end for 18 years, the one, the only
2:09:35
Mr. John C.
2:09:38
Dvorak.
2:09:42
Yeah.
2:09:42
Well, anyway, you should have a great tomorrow.
2:09:44
You should see boots on the ground, feet
2:09:45
in the air, steps in the water and
2:09:46
all the dames and knights out there.
2:09:48
Say in the morning to the trolls in
2:09:50
the troll room.
2:09:51
Let me get some beers.
2:09:56
Well, that's the opposite of Fredericksburg.
2:09:59
They're only 1768.
2:10:02
We're dying over here.
2:10:03
We're dying.
2:10:04
We're dying.
2:10:05
I tell you, that is the number of
2:10:07
people listening live, which is kind of cool
2:10:09
when you think about it.
2:10:10
You know, it's a bigger studio audience than
2:10:12
Jimmy Kimmel.
2:10:14
Yes, true.
2:10:15
And maybe bigger than his audience in general.
2:10:21
You never know.
2:10:22
We go in the demo.
2:10:22
We got the Zeds, baby.
2:10:23
We got the Zeds on board.
2:10:25
You have the Zeds.
2:10:25
They love us.
2:10:26
Yeah, the Zeds.
2:10:27
Because we play women like the one they
2:10:28
just played.
2:10:29
You know, I got to note that the
2:10:31
Zeds in Finland also cannot read clock.
2:10:36
It's a global thing.
2:10:38
It's not just American Zeds.
2:10:40
And this is part of the international conspiracy.
2:10:43
Once the Zeds realize that they're being used,
2:10:46
they're being victimized by the educational system on
2:10:48
a worldwide basis, they're going to take action.
2:10:52
You watch.
2:10:53
What do you mean they're going to take
2:10:55
action?
2:10:56
They're going to start their own schools or
2:10:58
something.
2:10:58
I don't know what they're going to do.
2:10:59
How are they going to deal with it?
2:11:00
Are they going to start listening to our
2:11:02
show?
2:11:03
I'm not sure.
2:11:04
Well, we have Jacob, who's listening to our
2:11:06
show.
2:11:07
And he's a Zedder.
2:11:09
He just turned 20.
2:11:12
And he says, I heard you talking about
2:11:13
younger people wanting lab-grown diamonds over real
2:11:16
ones.
2:11:17
I agree with you.
2:11:18
I'm always from Alberta, Canada.
2:11:20
Wow, we've got a Canadian Zed.
2:11:22
A Canadian Zed, a CZ.
2:11:24
A CZ is a CZ.
2:11:28
Cubic zirconium.
2:11:29
And he likes phony diamonds.
2:11:31
That makes sense.
2:11:31
Wow, a CZ.
2:11:33
He says, well, listen to this.
2:11:34
He says, yes, I just turned 20.
2:11:36
And that's what I'm looking into for my
2:11:38
engagement.
2:11:39
I'm waiting until I'm a journeyman electrician to
2:11:42
propose.
2:11:42
Only a year left.
2:11:44
This is a real man right here.
2:11:47
I love that.
2:11:49
He's getting a real gig.
2:11:50
He doesn't want to live on $34,000
2:11:53
a year in a big city.
2:11:54
No, he wants to get a real job
2:11:56
that pays real money.
2:11:58
He's going to propose to his real woman,
2:12:00
an actual woman.
2:12:03
And he's going to do it.
2:12:04
Do we know that for a fact?
2:12:05
Oh, please.
2:12:06
Come on.
2:12:07
Come on.
2:12:07
He's listening to the show.
2:12:09
Of course.
2:12:11
These things make me want to go for
2:12:13
another four years.
2:12:15
But I think we'll only make three.
2:12:16
We've got to call it quits at 21.
2:12:19
Don't you think?
2:12:20
21 years of show?
2:12:22
21.
2:12:22
And that'll be longer than any of my
2:12:23
marriages.
2:12:28
You're going to freak out my wife.
2:12:30
Why?
2:12:31
What do you mean?
2:12:32
Oh, she has a wife.
2:12:32
What are you going to do for money
2:12:34
on the cash flow?
2:12:37
She's going to be a big politician.
2:12:39
She'll get in on that gravy train.
2:12:41
She's going to be fine.
2:12:41
Well, if she gets in Congress, that'd be
2:12:43
great.
2:12:43
Yeah.
2:12:44
$174,000 a year.
2:12:46
By the time she gets in, it'll be
2:12:47
$300,000.
2:12:48
Well, not only that, but it's the millions
2:12:49
and millions you make on the side.
2:12:51
Yeah.
2:12:51
And you'll continue to do DH unplugged with
2:12:55
a wink, wink, nudge, nudge.
2:12:57
I've been looking at the insider trading on
2:13:00
this stock.
2:13:01
Everyone will be hanging on your lip like
2:13:02
Dvorak's got the inside track.
2:13:04
You will, in fact, be the new Nancy
2:13:05
Pelosi.
2:13:06
I could be.
2:13:08
Fantastic.
2:13:08
Fantastic.
2:13:10
We love our producers.
2:13:12
We've called you producers from early on.
2:13:14
I don't think we ever called our audience
2:13:18
anything but producers.
2:13:20
I'd have to listen to the first few
2:13:21
episodes.
2:13:22
But we decided it was very early back
2:13:26
in 2000.
2:13:26
This is your idea.
2:13:28
I'll give you credit.
2:13:28
Thank you.
2:13:30
That, well, it was part of the value
2:13:32
for value concept.
2:13:34
I think you predated it.
2:13:36
I think it was a value for value
2:13:38
came much later.
2:13:39
I mean, the term value for value, the
2:13:41
idea of asking for donations was around.
2:13:43
The term value for value came much after
2:13:47
the producer's commentary.
2:13:50
Oh, yeah.
2:13:51
What do you say by much?
2:13:53
What do you think that is?
2:13:54
Years, at least two.
2:13:56
Really?
2:13:56
Let me see.
2:13:57
In fact, the value for value came up
2:13:59
very late in the game.
2:14:00
Really?
2:14:01
But we did the concept very early in
2:14:04
the game.
2:14:04
Yeah, the concept was always there.
2:14:06
And it's began the concept, if you recall,
2:14:09
began with realization based on the fact that
2:14:11
we let people donate what they wanted to.
2:14:14
That's how it evolved.
2:14:16
And we started getting these crazy numerological donations.
2:14:21
Yes.
2:14:21
People would donate their birthday.
2:14:23
They donate some two double nickels on the
2:14:26
dime.
2:14:26
And they said, this is double nickels on
2:14:27
the dime.
2:14:28
55, 10.
2:14:30
And then they would, you know, and that
2:14:33
evolved because we realized that people like to
2:14:36
pick their own numbers as opposed to four
2:14:38
dollars a month.
2:14:39
Yeah.
2:14:41
Click here.
2:14:42
You know, no, forget it.
2:14:43
Donate what you want.
2:14:44
And then that evolved the value for value.
2:14:46
But that took a couple of years for
2:14:48
the term.
2:14:50
I'm going to have to look it up
2:14:52
and find out what.
2:14:52
You can look it up and you won't
2:14:54
be able to beat me on this one.
2:14:55
I do found that I do.
2:14:57
I do found.
2:14:58
You found.
2:14:59
Hey, I do found something.
2:15:01
I do found that in episode number 23
2:15:03
was the first time we talked about vasectomies.
2:15:10
Yeah.
2:15:12
Well, no, look at this.
2:15:15
Episode number 23, we were talking about value.
2:15:19
What's the value?
2:15:23
I'm going to I'm I shall make a
2:15:25
research project.
2:15:26
Yeah, yeah.
2:15:27
Waste your time on this.
2:15:28
OK.
2:15:28
Oh, oh, oh.
2:15:29
Call it a waste.
2:15:30
I call it historical research.
2:15:34
Bing it.io, people.
2:15:36
Every every good podcast should have a bing
2:15:39
it.io. I agree with that.
2:15:41
Because it is so easy.
2:15:43
Otherwise, you couldn't do this at all.
2:15:44
No, it is so.
2:15:45
And thank you very much, sir.
2:15:46
Deanonymous for doing that.
2:15:48
Clipgenie.com, everybody.
2:15:51
So, yes, we call our our listeners.
2:15:54
We don't call them fans.
2:15:56
Fans.
2:15:56
I love when people say, how many fans
2:15:58
do you have?
2:15:59
I don't have fans.
2:16:00
Fans.
2:16:01
We have producers.
2:16:02
We have thousands of producers.
2:16:03
And they're so good.
2:16:04
I was arguing with one of our producers
2:16:06
on email.
2:16:08
Dana Brunetti.
2:16:08
That's all you do.
2:16:10
Dana Brunetti is a great producer to argue
2:16:12
with.
2:16:14
I really appreciate his his insights, which, of
2:16:17
course.
2:16:18
Oh, he's dynamite.
2:16:19
They're all wrong.
2:16:20
I mean, everything.
2:16:21
Well, he's a Hollywood guy, so he's going
2:16:22
to have the suit perspective.
2:16:24
I'm trying to get a suit.
2:16:26
I know he's much as he hates that.
2:16:27
He knows he is.
2:16:28
I'm trying to get him to produce a
2:16:31
movie of the what was the milking milkmaids?
2:16:34
Book.
2:16:35
Yeah, he finally got grossed out by the
2:16:39
back and forth.
2:16:39
I noticed that.
2:16:40
Which is is kind of ridiculous because what's
2:16:44
the name of that book?
2:16:45
It was a book or what was it?
2:16:46
It's a minotaur in the misses or something.
2:16:49
I don't know what it was called.
2:16:51
Yeah.
2:16:52
Shoe on head did a whole special on
2:16:54
it.
2:16:54
I actually have a clip from shoe on
2:16:56
head.
2:16:58
Is that where you got it from?
2:17:00
That's when I first was aware of it
2:17:02
because I saw the little shoe on head
2:17:04
talking about it.
2:17:05
Yeah, I like her.
2:17:07
I think she's great.
2:17:09
She's fantastic.
2:17:09
She is great.
2:17:10
I don't watch all her stuff.
2:17:11
But when I when I is she's she's
2:17:15
really good.
2:17:15
She's a great podcaster video podcast.
2:17:18
Here's especially her eye makeup is phenomenal.
2:17:21
Oh, yeah.
2:17:21
She wears and she's got big eyes anyway.
2:17:23
Yeah.
2:17:24
And she likes to and she she's good
2:17:26
at at takes and she does.
2:17:29
She likes to mug and she likes to
2:17:30
do takes.
2:17:31
And she does.
2:17:32
She's quizzical looks.
2:17:33
And let's be honest, very talented.
2:17:35
Calling your podcast shoe on head is just
2:17:37
a great, great name.
2:17:39
You want it?
2:17:40
She calls herself shoe.
2:17:41
Her name is you want you want to
2:17:43
hear the clip about the gooners?
2:17:45
The gooners is the is the term we're
2:17:47
looking at here.
2:17:48
I forgot to inform you that there is
2:17:49
a new epidemic, an epidemic that many have
2:17:52
yet to discuss.
2:17:53
And that epidemic is female gooners.
2:17:56
Now, for those of you unaware, gooner is
2:17:58
Internet slang for someone addicted to porn.
2:18:01
And smut is slang for dark romance novels,
2:18:06
otherwise known as porn.
2:18:07
Many correct about the dangers of porn addiction
2:18:10
with men, how it can destroy their lives
2:18:12
and their relationships.
2:18:13
And most men know the material they consume
2:18:15
is weird.
2:18:16
That is why they are ashamed of it.
2:18:18
That is why they delete their browser history.
2:18:20
That is why they go incognito mode.
2:18:22
But these bitches freaks out here.
2:18:24
They display their smut openly in bookstores.
2:18:26
They proudly pose in front of their smut
2:18:29
collections.
2:18:30
They discuss their smut openly on TikTok.
2:18:32
They go to smut conventions and get choked
2:18:34
out by nine foot tall shirtless wendigos.
2:18:37
Now, I know what you are thinking.
2:18:38
Shoe, isn't this the pot calling the kettle
2:18:41
degenerate?
2:18:43
Yes, yes, it is.
2:18:45
But have you considered it takes one to
2:18:48
truly know one?
2:18:49
You see, women are strange, fascinating creatures.
2:18:52
For centuries, men have tried to figure us
2:18:55
out.
2:18:55
Our mood is affected by the tides and
2:18:57
the moon.
2:18:58
We bleed for five days and don't die.
2:19:00
By painting my face, I can instantly shapeshift
2:19:02
from a four to a six.
2:19:04
We are truly mysterious, magical creatures.
2:19:07
But one of the most mysterious aspects of
2:19:09
women to men is our sexuality.
2:19:11
You see, us women are not like those
2:19:13
disgusting moids.
2:19:14
No, no, we are sophisticated.
2:19:16
We are evolved.
2:19:17
We don't watch videos of strangers slapping their
2:19:20
sweaty bodies together.
2:19:21
No, no, we read about strangers slapping their
2:19:24
sweaty bodies together.
2:19:25
It's different, OK?
2:19:26
You don't understand.
2:19:28
It's OK when we do it.
2:19:30
So, first of all, Dana Brunetti was way
2:19:34
ahead of the curve with Fifty Shades of
2:19:36
Grey because he understood this inherently that this
2:19:40
is what women want.
2:19:41
The gooners, the female gooners.
2:19:44
In fact, he should be called hat on
2:19:46
foot or something because he completely understood this.
2:19:51
But he's missing the boat.
2:19:53
I mean, he pioneered the category.
2:19:57
And OK, so the needle has moved a
2:20:00
little bit more towards the extreme with milking
2:20:02
goats or whatever, whatever that was.
2:20:05
But he needs to get back in the
2:20:08
game.
2:20:09
This is what I was telling him.
2:20:11
OK, a couple of things.
2:20:12
That's what bought him that ranch.
2:20:15
Yes, it is.
2:20:16
And he knows it.
2:20:17
And he still gets massive checks, which we've
2:20:19
discussed on the show.
2:20:21
Checks, checks.
2:20:23
Miranda checks, I might add, which is the
2:20:26
best part of it.
2:20:28
And so he gets a rando check every
2:20:29
so often.
2:20:32
And he's got this.
2:20:33
He is not happy about the fact that
2:20:36
he is that insightful.
2:20:40
Wow.
2:20:41
But you of all people should whip him,
2:20:44
just slap him upside the head.
2:20:45
Are you nuts?
2:20:47
Well, he's done good product otherwise, too.
2:20:50
I mean, it's not like that's the only
2:20:51
thing he's ever done.
2:20:52
That's the thing that's made him the most
2:20:53
money because he got the best deals on
2:20:55
and he knew how to put the deals
2:20:57
together.
2:20:58
But he's kind of and I'm not going
2:21:00
to.
2:21:01
He's elitist.
2:21:02
He's become elitist.
2:21:03
Oh, that's beneath me.
2:21:04
No, he's always been somewhat of an elitist.
2:21:07
I don't want to do smut anymore.
2:21:10
Yes.
2:21:11
Although it was pretty cool at the Food
2:21:13
and Wine Festival dinner.
2:21:15
The House of Cards came up and said,
2:21:17
yeah, you know, the guy who produces that,
2:21:19
he produces our show.
2:21:21
People go, what?
2:21:22
Danny Brunetti.
2:21:24
You want me to call him?
2:21:25
I can call him right now.
2:21:26
I can call him.
2:21:27
No, no, no.
2:21:27
Don't bother him.
2:21:28
He's probably busy.
2:21:29
Yeah, real busy.
2:21:33
He's plowing a field, actually.
2:21:35
That's the line.
2:21:37
What's he doing?
2:21:37
He's plowing the field.
2:21:39
Anyway, the point being, I don't know what
2:21:41
the point is.
2:21:42
We have the best producers.
2:21:43
That's the point.
2:21:45
And these producers are around the world.
2:21:47
You want to know something about being addicted
2:21:50
to opioids?
2:21:50
Bam.
2:21:51
You don't have to go out and call
2:21:53
through, hey, can we find you a video?
2:21:55
No, we just put out the call to
2:21:57
our producers.
2:21:58
You want to know if that Gripen plane
2:22:00
is any good?
2:22:01
Boom.
2:22:02
I got a Swedish aircraft engineer.
2:22:05
He says, yeah, the E version is good.
2:22:09
He says...
2:22:10
Can I give him the E version?
2:22:11
I got two notes on the Gripen.
2:22:13
Gripen.
2:22:13
Gripen, yes.
2:22:14
I always thought it was Griffin.
2:22:15
In America, they say Griffin, but it's Gripen
2:22:19
in Sweden.
2:22:20
Gripen.
2:22:21
Two experts sent us notes saying it's a
2:22:24
pretty good product.
2:22:25
Well, the C and the D version is
2:22:28
meh.
2:22:28
That's the one they used between Thailand and...
2:22:31
Who was Thailand fighting with?
2:22:32
Malay?
2:22:33
No.
2:22:33
Who were they fighting?
2:22:33
Cambodia.
2:22:35
So that was the C and the D
2:22:36
version.
2:22:37
The E version is supposed to be pretty
2:22:38
good.
2:22:38
But I've owned a Saab.
2:22:40
And let me tell you, that was the
2:22:41
crap car.
2:22:42
Have you ever had a Saab?
2:22:44
I've never had a Saab, but I knew
2:22:46
someone who had one.
2:22:47
I used to drive it.
2:22:48
I had a Saab that ran on...
2:22:50
There's two things about it I always thought
2:22:52
was weird.
2:22:52
One, the key to start the Saab is
2:22:55
on the console, and it was vertical.
2:22:59
So if you spill a drink, it'd go
2:23:01
right into the ignition thing and short it
2:23:03
out.
2:23:04
And we spill drinks in this country.
2:23:06
Yeah, we do.
2:23:08
Another problem, no cup holders.
2:23:10
That was the second.
2:23:10
So problem one, the key is right next
2:23:13
to the handbrake.
2:23:14
Number two, no cup holders.
2:23:16
I had one.
2:23:17
It was a Saab 90 that ran on
2:23:20
LPG in Europe, and it had a choke.
2:23:29
Wow.
2:23:30
It had a choke.
2:23:31
Was this in the 20s?
2:23:32
No, no, this was in the 80s.
2:23:35
And if you were riding along and you
2:23:37
pulled...
2:23:37
By the way, stop.
2:23:39
Not one Zed in the audience knows what
2:23:41
you mean when you said it has a
2:23:43
choke.
2:23:43
Not one.
2:23:45
Okay, Zeders, don't look it up.
2:23:47
If you actually know what a choke is,
2:23:50
and no, it's not something that Dana Brunetti
2:23:52
would produce, then just let us know.
2:23:55
So if you were driving along and you
2:23:56
let up on the gas and you pulled
2:23:58
the choke, and then you push the choke
2:24:00
down, hit the gas, you would get a
2:24:01
big explosion, a big backfire.
2:24:06
It was cool.
2:24:07
Well, that's funny.
2:24:08
I used to take the air pollution car
2:24:10
that I had.
2:24:12
We have a big hill over here in
2:24:14
Richmond called Mosier.
2:24:16
And you go to the top of the
2:24:17
hill, and then you would come down the
2:24:20
hill, and you'd turn the ignition off and
2:24:23
floor it, so it just poured gasoline into
2:24:26
the system, and then turn the ignition back
2:24:29
on, and it would sound like an atom
2:24:31
bomb just went off.
2:24:32
Yeah, it was fun.
2:24:33
Very funny.
2:24:34
But the Saabs I liked always were the
2:24:37
old two-stroke Saabs.
2:24:40
Oh, I didn't have that.
2:24:41
No, I had a four-stroke.
2:24:41
The oldest Saabs, and they were in the
2:24:44
area for a long time, were two-stroke
2:24:46
Saabs.
2:24:47
So they just made a racket, and they
2:24:48
just smoked.
2:24:50
And it was a fabulous car.
2:24:52
I never thought they were a bad car
2:24:54
except for where the ignition was.
2:24:57
Scaramanga in the troll room.
2:24:59
Last time when someone choked something of mine
2:25:01
in the back of a Saab, I ended
2:25:02
up with my second child.
2:25:04
OK, Scaramanga, go make some AI videos.
2:25:07
Come on.
2:25:07
Yeah, yeah, get to work.
2:25:09
These laggards.
2:25:10
Really, I'm telling you.
2:25:12
I mean, Sora 2 was already out.
2:25:14
Where is our video?
2:25:17
I mean, come on.
2:25:17
How hard can it be?
2:25:19
Anyway, back to our producers.
2:25:21
They support us with time, talent, and treasure.
2:25:24
Boots on the Ground is fantastic.
2:25:26
Organizing meetups.
2:25:27
Hitting people in the mouth.
2:25:29
The most valuable thing you can do is
2:25:32
hit someone in the mouth.
2:25:33
Your wife, your brother, your sister, your mother,
2:25:37
your child, your neighbor.
2:25:39
OK, sometimes you lose a friend or family
2:25:41
member over it, but many times you actually
2:25:45
draw very close, and it builds friendships and
2:25:48
keeps families together.
2:25:50
The family that no agendas together stays together.
2:25:53
This is a fact.
2:25:53
We've proven it.
2:25:55
97% of all scientists know that this
2:25:57
is true, and that's because there's no discovery
2:26:01
in podcasting.
2:26:02
Everybody thinks, well, if you do video good
2:26:04
on YouTube, then you get a lot to
2:26:05
do more eyeballs and people come.
2:26:07
No.
2:26:08
No.
2:26:09
The only way it works is with a
2:26:11
recommendation.
2:26:12
And I'd say there's a large portion of
2:26:13
the no agenda producer pool that is embarrassed.
2:26:20
They're embarrassed because they're like, oh, I don't
2:26:22
want to make somebody think I'm a kook.
2:26:24
But you'd be surprised.
2:26:26
You'd be surprised how many people are primed
2:26:28
and ready to become no agenda producers.
2:26:31
So that's time, it's talent, and it's treasure.
2:26:34
And over the years, we have had many
2:26:37
forms of talent and time put in.
2:26:39
The time is now pretty much shrunk down
2:26:42
to seven seconds of prompting for an image
2:26:45
for the album art.
2:26:46
It's still appreciated, but the pool is getting
2:26:50
pretty polluted.
2:26:53
So we do want to thank, was this,
2:26:57
let's see what this was, Capitalist Agenda.
2:27:00
Yeah, he's an actual artist still.
2:27:03
Did the artwork for Episode 810.
2:27:06
We titled it Golf Ball, all lowercase.
2:27:10
And it was the no agenda records featuring
2:27:12
the Al Gore rhythms live at the Golden
2:27:15
Ball Room.
2:27:16
And it inspired an end of show mix
2:27:19
even.
2:27:20
So it was perfect.
2:27:21
And it was Al Gore on the cover
2:27:23
of the record, little 33 pin there, hadn't
2:27:25
even noticed it.
2:27:26
Nice touch.
2:27:28
Doing some kind of twist.
2:27:30
What do you think that was?
2:27:31
A twist, a salsa?
2:27:32
What kind of dances Al Gore doing there
2:27:34
for us?
2:27:34
Do you know?
2:27:37
You muted yourself.
2:27:38
This is always happens.
2:27:41
You've muted yourself.
2:27:42
Come back to me.
2:27:44
Come back to me.
2:27:45
Sorry.
2:27:46
Sorry.
2:27:46
It looks like it's some sort of shuffle.
2:27:48
Shuffle.
2:27:48
That's it.
2:27:49
The shuffle.
2:27:50
Shuffle.
2:27:51
Yeah.
2:27:52
Could be the twist.
2:27:54
I mean, you know, you could make that
2:27:55
move.
2:27:56
So let's see what else did people submit?
2:27:59
There was a lot of milk.
2:28:00
By the way, that Trump dance is basically
2:28:02
a toned down twist.
2:28:05
Did you see Trump dancing in Malaysia?
2:28:08
No.
2:28:08
Oh, dude, it's hilarious.
2:28:11
So he comes off the plane.
2:28:13
There's a whole traditional Malaysian dance thing.
2:28:16
And he goes up and he does this
2:28:18
YMCA dance in front of them.
2:28:22
I'm like, yeah, that's our president.
2:28:27
It was phenomenal.
2:28:28
Tina ran in this morning.
2:28:30
You won't believe it.
2:28:31
Take a look at this.
2:28:32
It was great.
2:28:35
We had a lot of milking stuff, which
2:28:38
was marginal.
2:28:40
The images are getting too complicated.
2:28:44
You know, where it's like photorealistic and there's
2:28:48
a lot going on.
2:28:50
Simple is better, I find.
2:28:53
Well, it depends on how funny it is.
2:28:56
Yeah.
2:28:57
There has to be some note of humor.
2:29:00
Yeah.
2:29:01
I mean, it doesn't 100% have to
2:29:03
be humorous.
2:29:04
If it's poignant, it would work.
2:29:07
But generally speaking, if something gets us a
2:29:10
laugh and it's well done, we will pick
2:29:13
that over anything else.
2:29:14
Yes.
2:29:15
Oh, absolutely.
2:29:16
But there really wasn't much.
2:29:18
I mean, a lot of like buddy movie,
2:29:20
no agenda, Curry Dvorak.
2:29:22
Typically, we're not big on choosing art of
2:29:25
our faces.
2:29:26
No, that's because the first two years, at
2:29:29
least, of the art was all us.
2:29:33
All of it.
2:29:33
Yeah.
2:29:34
We got tired of that.
2:29:35
And then we banned it.
2:29:36
And now if you look at the progression
2:29:38
of our faces over the years, we look
2:29:40
like two old coot idiots, which may be
2:29:43
true.
2:29:43
Well, not exactly, but we're both bearded, we're
2:29:46
berets, balding.
2:29:52
The last thing I want is to be
2:29:54
faced with the reality of my aging.
2:29:56
I was like, no, hard no.
2:29:58
I'm not interested in that.
2:30:00
Pass.
2:30:00
Pass on that.
2:30:02
No, it's been.
2:30:02
But besides that, it's been banned.
2:30:05
Yes.
2:30:06
Yeah.
2:30:06
And you look like the one where we
2:30:08
look like Jansen Huang, like in the leather
2:30:12
jackets.
2:30:13
And yeah, there's something.
2:30:15
And I've always got glasses on.
2:30:16
I don't wear.
2:30:16
We both have glasses on in that one.
2:30:19
It's like, no, I don't like it.
2:30:22
Ashland speed.
2:30:23
Of course, that whole bit went nowhere.
2:30:25
That's too bad.
2:30:26
I didn't even hear from Ashland.
2:30:28
She doesn't listen to the show anymore.
2:30:30
No, she's too busy crashing her Mazda on
2:30:33
the street.
2:30:34
Crash it on the track, girl.
2:30:36
You can't do it.
2:30:37
Most race car drivers can't drive on the
2:30:39
street.
2:30:39
They're yet of a lead foot.
2:30:40
Well, she's also a woman.
2:30:42
Let's be honest.
2:30:43
A double whammy.
2:30:47
She should try driving a Saab 90 with
2:30:50
a choke.
2:30:51
It had that ugly yellow color, too, that
2:30:54
Saab was famous for.
2:30:57
Gosh, I wish I'd pick.
2:30:59
I've had a lot of cars, a lot
2:31:02
of interesting cars over the years.
2:31:04
Never anything except for the Rolls was cool.
2:31:07
That was back in the Rolls Royce days.
2:31:11
Well, that was it.
2:31:13
I think we saw that and we're like,
2:31:15
yeah, that's good.
2:31:16
Let's do that one.
2:31:18
Was there anything?
2:31:18
Of course, we'd love something traditional for the
2:31:21
18th anniversary.
2:31:24
And what am I seeing?
2:31:25
Tote bags?
2:31:29
I don't know.
2:31:30
I think the one that's what I call
2:31:32
podcasting is fair.
2:31:35
Dropco's?
2:31:35
Yeah, that's pretty good.
2:31:36
Dropco.
2:31:37
Yeah, that's what you want to compete with.
2:31:39
The one I like the most.
2:31:40
I'll tell you what, the one I like
2:31:41
the most so far coming in.
2:31:42
The mac and cheese cake?
2:31:45
No, not that one.
2:31:46
Where is it?
2:31:50
Which one?
2:31:52
Well, now I'm looking.
2:31:54
I can't find it.
2:31:56
Oh, yeah.
2:31:56
No, I like the TikTok algorithm one by
2:31:59
Jeffrey Ray.
2:31:59
But it's got nothing to do with the
2:32:01
anniversary.
2:32:02
So it's probably not going to get picked.
2:32:03
We need the I just like it.
2:32:05
Yeah, I'll use it for the newsletter.
2:32:07
OK, maybe you could be ground troops.
2:32:09
Thanks, Coach Joe.
2:32:11
Ground troops is funny.
2:32:13
That's not sick.
2:32:16
It's funny, though.
2:32:16
What would be better if it had like
2:32:18
some shreds of a uniform in there?
2:32:21
Oh, you're horrible.
2:32:22
You are horrible.
2:32:24
All right.
2:32:24
Hey, of course, we always want to thank
2:32:26
all of our producers who support us with
2:32:27
their treasure, with the finances.
2:32:30
And it's very simple in our value for
2:32:31
value model.
2:32:32
All you got to do is say to
2:32:33
yourself, what is this podcast worth to me?
2:32:36
I need to turn that into some coin.
2:32:39
Well, this is how much.
2:32:40
And that value is completely determined by you.
2:32:45
Determined by how much you value things and
2:32:48
five dollars could be a lot to you
2:32:50
for some five hundred is.
2:32:51
Let me tip those guys.
2:32:54
Either way, all we all we ask for
2:32:55
is value.
2:32:56
And that's why we give you the show
2:32:58
free of charge, because you're going to send
2:33:00
the value back.
2:33:01
You go to noagendadonations.com and that's how
2:33:03
you do it.
2:33:05
And we always thank our executive and associate
2:33:07
executive producers in this segment up front.
2:33:09
That's people who are fortunate enough to spend
2:33:12
two hundred dollars or more.
2:33:13
Or that and then you get the title
2:33:15
of associate executive producer.
2:33:17
And that can be used right there on
2:33:19
IMDB.com where the famous Daniel Brunetti is
2:33:22
as well.
2:33:23
And I think what's his face from Cameron?
2:33:26
I think he's also an executive producer, isn't
2:33:29
he?
2:33:30
Who?
2:33:30
Cameron, the.
2:33:33
Cameron, the Titanic director.
2:33:37
James Cameron.
2:33:38
Yeah, I think isn't he an executive producer?
2:33:40
Not that I know of.
2:33:42
Oh, I thought he was.
2:33:43
I could be wrong.
2:33:44
Yeah.
2:33:45
And we'll read your note in both cases.
2:33:48
And I am never I'm always amazed and
2:33:51
delighted by how much people value the show.
2:33:54
I'm I'm always blown away.
2:33:56
And now for 18 years we've been doing
2:33:58
this.
2:33:59
It is just it is it's humbling.
2:34:02
I know you think differently.
2:34:04
You're like, that's what we deserve.
2:34:05
But I find it to be humble.
2:34:07
I never said that.
2:34:09
I find it to be quite humbling as
2:34:10
we start with our topic.
2:34:11
I don't feel it.
2:34:13
I'm not humbled.
2:34:14
I am happy.
2:34:18
I'm happy.
2:34:19
I think it's great.
2:34:21
We go to Midland, Pennsylvania for our top
2:34:24
executive producer.
2:34:25
Brandon Mango comes in with 1894.63. Which.
2:34:34
That's a show that number donation with fees.
2:34:38
Oh, perfect.
2:34:39
1894.63. Love you.
2:34:42
Love the show.
2:34:43
No math needed.
2:34:45
Call me Mr. Mango, the knight of the
2:34:47
sweet tooth.
2:34:48
I will gladly call you that and look
2:34:51
forward to it.
2:34:52
Thank you very much.
2:34:53
He also gets a.
2:34:56
Yes, he gets an international peace prize.
2:34:59
That's right.
2:34:59
A thousand dollars while they last.
2:35:02
While peace is still trending.
2:35:04
And no agenda international peace prize.
2:35:06
Did I see that it's actually written in
2:35:08
Swedish?
2:35:09
Yeah.
2:35:09
No, Norwegian.
2:35:11
I'm sorry.
2:35:11
Norwegian.
2:35:12
Yeah, it and it's in this.
2:35:13
It's it looks.
2:35:15
I mean, not only does it look, it
2:35:16
is an actual no agenda international peace prize.
2:35:19
This thing is going to be right on
2:35:20
the other side of this art.
2:35:22
Yeah, this is dynamite.
2:35:24
I cannot wait to get mine.
2:35:25
Do I get a prize?
2:35:28
I got you.
2:35:30
Yeah, I got one, but it didn't put
2:35:33
my middle initial C was missing and I
2:35:36
bitched about it.
2:35:36
Oh, well, you got to go back to
2:35:38
the committee, the Nobel committee.
2:35:40
Talk to them about that.
2:35:41
That's no good.
2:35:41
Yes, Brandon, you can look forward to that.
2:35:44
No agenda rings dot com will be the
2:35:45
place where you let us know where to
2:35:46
send that.
2:35:47
Thank you so much.
2:35:48
I'm going to do the next two.
2:35:49
OK, starting with Bowman McMahon in Utopia, Texas.
2:35:53
There's really a Utopia, Texas.
2:35:55
Absolutely.
2:35:56
Where is it?
2:35:58
It's right next to.
2:36:01
I don't know.
2:36:03
Right next to hell, Texas.
2:36:05
It's right next to Paris, Texas.
2:36:07
I don't know.
2:36:09
Ten thirty twenty six.
2:36:11
Another big donation that would give him a
2:36:12
Nobel, a Nobel, a no agenda, not a
2:36:15
Nobel.
2:36:15
It's no agenda.
2:36:16
Peace Prize, International Peace Prize.
2:36:19
And he's got no note at all.
2:36:20
So let's give him a double up karma.
2:36:23
You've got.
2:36:26
Karma.
2:36:27
And then a rando.
2:36:29
And this is the biggest one we've received
2:36:30
so far.
2:36:31
A rando strike, which means it is a
2:36:34
Bitcoin donation of one thousand eight dollars and
2:36:37
thirty nine cents came in.
2:36:38
We haven't got a note from anybody claiming
2:36:40
this yet.
2:36:42
So we'll give him a double up karma
2:36:43
or her.
2:36:44
But that is the second time because you
2:36:46
recall that I got one at the no
2:36:47
agenda meet up.
2:36:48
That was a Bitcoin donation.
2:36:50
So it's the second.
2:36:52
Maybe it's just the same one.
2:36:53
No, it's not.
2:36:54
You've got.
2:36:57
Karma.
2:36:58
No, it's not.
2:36:59
Because that one already showed up on the
2:37:01
spreadsheet.
2:37:02
OK.
2:37:03
Yeah.
2:37:03
All right.
2:37:04
Well, let us know, sir.
2:37:05
Earhopper, Pacifica, California, one thousand dollars.
2:37:08
International Peace Prize, Peace Prize for you.
2:37:12
And Sir Earhopper says, gentlemen, I accept my
2:37:14
peace prize with an open heart and satisfied
2:37:17
mind.
2:37:18
Please continue to be the best podcast in
2:37:20
the universe.
2:37:20
We have decamped from the infected NorCal corridor
2:37:24
for Colorado.
2:37:25
My 5G tan has never been richer by
2:37:28
NORAD, says Sir Earhopper.
2:37:31
Thank you very much.
2:37:34
Kevin and Tori Primo in Trinity, Florida.
2:37:39
They sent a check in for three sixty
2:37:41
seven sixty seven.
2:37:42
I have the note right here.
2:37:45
Six, seven, six, seven.
2:37:46
Yeah, a lot of six seven.
2:37:48
We got to get the six seven thing
2:37:49
formalized.
2:37:50
Yeah, but he talks about it in here.
2:37:53
And I thought this was interesting.
2:37:54
Adam's insightful deconstruction of the six seven trend
2:37:57
prompted this long overdue transfer of value.
2:38:00
As parents of teens, we are perplexed by
2:38:03
the trend until we embrace the fact that
2:38:06
is simply meaningless.
2:38:08
Annoyance quickly gave way to acceptance and now
2:38:11
affirmation.
2:38:12
We relish in dropping a well placed six
2:38:16
seven within earshot of our kids and their
2:38:19
friends.
2:38:20
Six, seven, six.
2:38:22
Come on, John, do it.
2:38:22
Six, seven, six.
2:38:24
I'm not doing it.
2:38:25
At first we were seen as cool, but
2:38:28
now we are cringe or Ohio.
2:38:33
Yeah.
2:38:33
Ohio was lame.
2:38:35
When did this this eluded me?
2:38:39
Well, you're not in Ohio.
2:38:40
Hey, man, Ohio.
2:38:42
I don't know.
2:38:42
How do you use it?
2:38:43
Well, how's the usage?
2:38:44
I think it started January 20th, 2025.
2:38:50
Why?
2:38:50
J.D. Vance, Ohio.
2:38:52
Oh, so Ohio.
2:38:55
Oh, man.
2:38:55
It means lame because this is a way
2:38:57
of getting into.
2:38:58
OK.
2:38:58
Yeah, I believe.
2:38:59
I believe so.
2:39:00
I could be.
2:39:01
I think you're right.
2:39:02
It makes sense.
2:39:02
I believe.
2:39:03
Thank you for your courage and keep up
2:39:04
your great work.
2:39:05
Sincerely, Kevin and Tori Primo in Trinity, Florida.
2:39:10
I love the notes and notice that the
2:39:12
donation segment has been more content than anything.
2:39:16
That's why people are missing out when they
2:39:17
don't.
2:39:18
Some donation.
2:39:20
Yeah, this Ohio thing is important.
2:39:23
The whole world knows what Ohio is.
2:39:26
I never heard it.
2:39:27
David Coonan, Sprundell.
2:39:30
Oh, you know what it is?
2:39:31
I'm going to places like Monterey Foods and
2:39:34
grocery stores where there's a bunch of people
2:39:36
in their 60s wearing jeans.
2:39:39
That's what it is.
2:39:41
Sprindle.
2:39:42
I've never heard of Sprindle in the Netherlands,
2:39:45
but it apparently is a place.
2:39:46
333 dot 33.
2:39:48
And David says, congratulations on 18 years of
2:39:51
the best podcast in the universe.
2:39:52
I raise a glass of Robert Maudavi private
2:39:55
selection bourbon barrel aged Cabernet Sauvignon to you
2:39:58
and to myself as I turn 38 today.
2:40:01
He got it in the Netherlands.
2:40:03
I guess so.
2:40:04
Yeah, I think they make it by the
2:40:05
ton combined.
2:40:06
I should mention, by the way, I was
2:40:08
flipping about the guy saying, well, it's just
2:40:10
a bunch of really good wine that they
2:40:12
re bottle.
2:40:12
No, the way you can.
2:40:15
This is a pre tip.
2:40:17
I'm not going to do that.
2:40:18
We have people in the Middle East loving
2:40:20
these tips.
2:40:20
Your wine tips.
2:40:22
I'm going to just give a little a
2:40:24
little heads up on how to spot what
2:40:26
would be sourced wine as opposed to wine
2:40:29
that's made.
2:40:30
I don't have a bottle of the bourbon
2:40:33
aged in front of me, but there's a
2:40:35
rule.
2:40:37
There's a rule regarding how it's presented.
2:40:41
It'll have the winery name as a produced
2:40:43
and bottled by the winery.
2:40:47
And when it says produced and bottled by
2:40:48
that means they made it.
2:40:50
They make they grow the grapes.
2:40:51
They grew the grapes.
2:40:52
They made the wine.
2:40:53
You know, I met.
2:40:54
Let me finish.
2:40:56
Sorry.
2:40:57
Then and then when you says vented.
2:41:01
And bottled by that means that they bought
2:41:04
juice.
2:41:06
Juice.
2:41:09
And they finished the job of fermenting it.
2:41:12
Bottled juice.
2:41:12
So this is this is from someone.
2:41:14
In other words, came from someone else.
2:41:15
But it's not that your friend was talking
2:41:18
about, which is where you have a really
2:41:20
good quality wine.
2:41:21
There's an overrun.
2:41:22
So you give it to some schlock Meister
2:41:23
and have them bottle it up and sell
2:41:25
it cheap, even though it's a good product,
2:41:28
which is a common practice in California.
2:41:31
It says cellared and bottled by.
2:41:35
That means they had somebody else made a
2:41:38
really good wine and couldn't sell it.
2:41:40
And they put it on something and they
2:41:42
put it in the basement and called it.
2:41:44
So it says cellared by and all they
2:41:46
did was put a label on it.
2:41:48
Combined with my previous executive producer donation of
2:41:50
my four dollar weekly donation running since October
2:41:53
2019.
2:41:54
This puts me well into roundtable territory.
2:41:57
Please knight me, Sir David of West Brabant.
2:42:00
No jingles, but I would like to request
2:42:02
some house karma just for your house.
2:42:05
Do you want to sell it or you
2:42:07
got some karma for that?
2:42:09
You got you got ghosts in your house.
2:42:11
Thank you for all you do, says David
2:42:13
Coonan in Sprindle, the Netherlands.
2:42:16
You've got karma.
2:42:20
Now there's Duke, Sir, Dr. Shaky.
2:42:23
Oh, good.
2:42:24
I was always Sharky.
2:42:26
St. Peter's, Missouri.
2:42:28
Three, three, three, three, three.
2:42:31
Congratulations on 18 years.
2:42:32
You both have been a blessing and a
2:42:35
godsend both during these dark times.
2:42:39
Is it possible to stream episode 17?
2:42:43
No, one episode.
2:42:44
Oh, one.
2:42:44
That's one in a question mark, dude.
2:42:46
Oh, I'm sorry.
2:42:47
I thought it was a 17.
2:42:49
Wow.
2:42:50
Well, I'm looking.
2:42:51
I'm reading from a distance here.
2:42:53
I got blurry, small.
2:42:55
I got all kinds of problems.
2:42:57
I'd like to broadcast it across FEMA region
2:43:00
seven and four.
2:43:03
No.
2:43:03
What do you mean?
2:43:04
No, it stinks.
2:43:07
Hey, I, you know, I'm going on a
2:43:09
vacation in November.
2:43:10
We have to have another.
2:43:11
Love Duke, Dr. Shaky.
2:43:15
We have another vacation show coming up.
2:43:18
Well, what?
2:43:18
You want to play episode one?
2:43:20
No, we have never done a rerun and
2:43:22
we're not going to start now.
2:43:23
It's only 38 minutes.
2:43:26
Well, we'll have to rerun it four times.
2:43:29
Over and over and over.
2:43:30
Yes.
2:43:31
All right.
2:43:31
Thank you, Duke.
2:43:33
Sir.
2:43:33
Dr. Shaky.
2:43:35
Up next, we have Matthew Burns from Causton,
2:43:38
British Columbia, Canada.
2:43:41
British Columbia is beautiful.
2:43:43
I hope this, this is 357 and 83
2:43:47
dollary dues from Candidavia.
2:43:49
So even though that translates to about $5
2:43:52
in America, you will be an executive producer.
2:43:55
Um, this donation of 255.56 USD plus
2:44:01
fees, 357.83 Canadian should make this my
2:44:05
second executive producer title.
2:44:07
You really taking advantage of the system?
2:44:09
Yeah.
2:44:12
I can hope, hope you can bump me
2:44:14
up from associate.
2:44:15
Well, yes, we can.
2:44:17
I've been listening to the show since 2013.
2:44:19
And with this donation, I finally reached knighthood.
2:44:21
Your show and same perspectives on the craziness
2:44:24
of our world really helped me keep me
2:44:26
steady during all this time.
2:44:29
In a roundabout way, your show also played
2:44:30
an important role in bringing me to Christ.
2:44:32
And I was very happy to hear about
2:44:33
your faith journey along this time as well,
2:44:35
Adam.
2:44:36
Please knight me, Sir Burns of the good
2:44:38
future.
2:44:38
I would like to have a hot coffee
2:44:40
and stroopwafel at the round table, please.
2:44:42
I'm glad I caught that.
2:44:43
I hadn't seen that, but I have stroopwafels.
2:44:46
It's a little, it's a little musty, but
2:44:48
yeah, because I didn't order fresh ones.
2:44:50
Um, this donation is also a shout out
2:44:55
to my wife's birthday on November 6th.
2:44:57
I'll keep her name anonymous.
2:44:58
Just call her Sir Burns's keeper.
2:45:00
In addition, bless you.
2:45:02
It turns out our wedding anniversary is the
2:45:04
same day as the show's anniversary.
2:45:05
This was not planned when we got married
2:45:07
last year, but we are both very pleased
2:45:09
that it works out this way.
2:45:11
Happy first anniversary to my keeper.
2:45:13
Please also send some baby making karma our
2:45:16
way as we hope to expand our lovely
2:45:18
little family.
2:45:18
God bless you both.
2:45:20
And thank you for your courage.
2:45:21
And we will see you at the round
2:45:23
table soon to be Sir Burns of the
2:45:25
good future.
2:45:28
You've got karma.
2:45:36
Sarcastic.
2:45:37
In Y-A-O, missing Pennsylvania.
2:45:40
Why are you missing?
2:45:42
Two, three, four, five, six.
2:45:44
John, no agenda has earned the right to
2:45:46
win.
2:45:48
Winning.
2:45:49
Winning.
2:45:50
Here's to 18 years.
2:45:51
No jingles, no karma.
2:45:54
Honorable sarcastic of the nomad.
2:45:58
Another Dutchman comes in.
2:46:00
Pierre Mas from Kadir and Kier in the
2:46:03
Netherlands.
2:46:04
23375.
2:46:05
You're John and Adam.
2:46:06
Sorry about the long note, but my sons
2:46:07
and I would like to ask for the
2:46:08
help of the No Agenda community.
2:46:10
My wife passed away last December.
2:46:12
Wait, didn't we already read this note?
2:46:13
Yes, we read this note.
2:46:15
Did we?
2:46:15
Yes, from asbestos-related cancer.
2:46:17
I have already connected you to...
2:46:19
Oh, yes.
2:46:20
We have read this note already.
2:46:21
It probably was on the cusp of some
2:46:23
of the spreadsheet or who knows how it
2:46:25
got.
2:46:25
Yes.
2:46:26
Well, anyway, he has been connected to Rob,
2:46:28
the constitutional lawyer.
2:46:29
And we had another producer come in whose
2:46:32
brother-in-law is an asbestos lawyer.
2:46:35
He's somewhat of a douchebag, apparently, but you've
2:46:38
been...
2:46:39
That's the one you want.
2:46:41
So we've taken care of you for that.
2:46:43
Sorry to hear about that, Pierre Mas.
2:46:44
And let me know if the connections work.
2:46:46
We are a full-service show.
2:46:48
We are a full-service show.
2:46:49
Eli the Coffee Guy is up in Bensonville,
2:46:51
Illinois.
2:46:52
Happy 18 years, he writes.
2:46:54
You two have covered a lot of events
2:46:57
over the years, and your wealth of knowledge
2:46:59
is what makes the show great.
2:47:01
Plus the jingles, tip of the day, and
2:47:03
the rest.
2:47:04
For old time's sake, you can hail a
2:47:06
taxi at the end of the show like
2:47:08
back in the day.
2:47:09
I always wondered where that inside joke came
2:47:12
from.
2:47:12
Wow, you used to do that.
2:47:15
Instead of, I love my chicken.
2:47:18
You used to go, taxi.
2:47:21
Remember that?
2:47:22
Not vaguely.
2:47:23
But I'm more interested in the way you
2:47:25
ridiculed me here for what I do now.
2:47:27
I have to keep up my meanness.
2:47:29
Apparently, it's part of the appeal.
2:47:31
I just wanted to point this out to
2:47:32
the people out there who are keeping score.
2:47:35
Keeping score.
2:47:35
It's part of the charm of the show.
2:47:37
To four more years and then some.
2:47:40
And for the producers who want some amazing
2:47:42
fresh roasted coffee, visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com.
2:47:47
And use the code ITM20 for 20%
2:47:50
off your order.
2:47:51
Thank you for your courage and stay caffeinated.
2:47:53
Eli, the coffee guy, did send me a
2:47:54
picture of his roaster.
2:48:00
Yeah.
2:48:01
So since you asked, for the past two
2:48:04
minutes, knowing this donation was coming up, I've
2:48:06
been shaking my cold brew coffee.
2:48:10
Don't you just have to bump it?
2:48:11
Just bang it once and it takes care
2:48:13
of it.
2:48:13
To activate nitro, shake vigorously.
2:48:18
Which sounds like a very bad thing.
2:48:20
But here's the problem.
2:48:21
When you shake his cold brew coffee...
2:48:23
Does it mean...
2:48:24
Do you shake the can vigorously or do
2:48:27
you just shake?
2:48:28
Both, actually.
2:48:29
Well, see, there it is.
2:48:30
You hear that?
2:48:31
Then it has like some minor carbonation type
2:48:34
effect.
2:48:35
Well, it's nitrogen, yeah.
2:48:37
It's nitrogen?
2:48:37
He has nitrogen in the can?
2:48:40
Yeah, there's a little capsule in there that's
2:48:42
got compressed nitrogen.
2:48:43
It puts a little kind of a faux
2:48:46
foam in there.
2:48:48
Yeah.
2:48:48
Amen.
2:48:50
I don't know how much CO2 is involved.
2:48:52
Gets you really high.
2:48:54
No, it doesn't.
2:48:55
Have you been drinking it all morning?
2:48:58
Well, you drink it all morning.
2:49:01
Baron Victor Corvallis, Oregon, 218.
2:49:04
Happy 18th anniversary from someone who has been
2:49:07
here since the daily source code.
2:49:09
That's right, Baron Victor of the Willamette Valley.
2:49:12
Thank you so much.
2:49:13
You have been a part of a big
2:49:15
part of my life, including getting my fixed
2:49:18
-wing license in Willamette Valley.
2:49:22
Sir Leighton in Dawson, Alabama, 210-60.
2:49:29
Was that the opening of the can?
2:49:31
Is that what that was?
2:49:32
No, that was me just going...
2:49:34
It was something you hate.
2:49:35
You hate that when people go...
2:49:37
Yeah, I do.
2:49:37
Everybody does.
2:49:38
But it's not me, it's everyone.
2:49:39
Happy 18th from Southeast Alabama, another Alabama babamian.
2:49:46
I thank you for all the great shows,
2:49:48
Sir Leighton.
2:49:49
Leron.
2:49:50
The Leron.
2:49:51
I'm sorry.
2:49:52
Leron.
2:49:53
Dame Zelda is in San Jose, California, $205.
2:49:57
Yellow, so that means a birthday is involved.
2:49:59
Dear John Adam, your show really is the
2:50:01
best podcast in the universe.
2:50:03
Thank you for staying sane and balanced in
2:50:06
the sea of chaos and propaganda.
2:50:08
Also, thank you, John, for solving my recurrent
2:50:11
nightmare mystery.
2:50:13
This is very interesting.
2:50:15
I'll get to it in a minute.
2:50:16
Turns out you really can't dial a phone
2:50:18
in a dream, and it's not some psychological
2:50:21
issue that my subconscious is trying to communicate
2:50:23
to me in my dreams.
2:50:24
Wow!
2:50:25
Life-changing information.
2:50:28
It's my birthday this Tuesday, the 28th, so
2:50:30
please add me to the birthday list and
2:50:32
play the shapeshifting Jews jingle.
2:50:33
Much love, Dame Zelda of Silicon Valley, patron
2:50:36
of the wandering Jews.
2:50:39
You know, we got a lot of feedback
2:50:40
on you, which was at the end of
2:50:43
the show, a lot of feedback on your
2:50:45
dream where you were incapable of doing many
2:50:48
things.
2:50:50
Yeah, I had a couple.
2:50:51
I have a professor of neurological guide, a
2:50:55
professor down at USC wrote in, and he
2:50:58
gave me some good information about what these
2:51:01
things are called.
2:51:02
Yes, they're called dreams, right?
2:51:04
No, there's certain names of specific, he's a
2:51:09
specific, he's into the things.
2:51:11
No, I know, he's written several books.
2:51:13
I think I'm supposed to do an endorsement,
2:51:18
and I sent it to you and you
2:51:19
never sent it back, and so we didn't
2:51:20
get the endorsement on the book.
2:51:22
Oh, I didn't get it.
2:51:24
I'm a blurb meister, I'll endorse anything.
2:51:26
You blocked me in your email.
2:51:30
But he has some good information, which I'll
2:51:32
read in one of the notes, maybe.
2:51:34
You should put that in your sub stack.
2:51:37
Maybe, but somebody else came up with one,
2:51:40
he says that he knows about these problems
2:51:42
with the dialing a phone and writing.
2:51:45
He says, what you want to do to
2:51:47
try to get into the lucidity of the
2:51:49
dream where you can know that you're dreaming
2:51:51
is in a dream, examine your hands.
2:51:57
He says, once you start getting into the
2:51:59
habit of examining your hands, you'll see for
2:52:03
some reason, I don't know, I haven't done
2:52:04
this.
2:52:05
I don't know what you see, but you
2:52:06
don't see your hands.
2:52:07
You see, whatever you see is like tells
2:52:09
you you're in a dream.
2:52:11
Or you're in the matrix.
2:52:14
I don't know.
2:52:15
Wow, Dame Zelda, thank you very much.
2:52:17
I'm going to play the whole 30 seconds
2:52:19
of this one for you.
2:52:37
It's an illustration.
2:52:47
Yeah, classic secret agent, Paul.
2:52:50
Yeah, we got one more dream angle.
2:52:54
Somebody else wrote in saying if you want
2:52:56
to get into lucid dreaming, which is the
2:52:58
kind of dreams you're aware of, as opposed
2:53:01
to vivid dreams, but lucid dream where you're
2:53:03
in the dream, you know, you're in the
2:53:04
dream and you can do some kind of
2:53:05
control.
2:53:06
He likes to shoot guns.
2:53:08
He says, by the way, when you shoot
2:53:10
guns, you can't hit anything.
2:53:11
It's terrible.
2:53:13
But he says to get into lucid dreams.
2:53:16
I haven't tried.
2:53:16
Try this.
2:53:17
I don't know if I will.
2:53:18
You have three hours before you go to
2:53:21
bed.
2:53:21
You have a couple of tablespoons of potato
2:53:25
starch.
2:53:27
Now, this could be bullcrap, but he claims
2:53:30
that this will trigger lucid dreaming.
2:53:32
Oh, so if you have some potato starch,
2:53:35
it will trigger lucid dreaming.
2:53:37
That's what he says.
2:53:38
Interesting.
2:53:39
Now, we have a couple of, there's a
2:53:41
wine.
2:53:41
I don't have the name of it handy.
2:53:43
I'll make it a tip of the day
2:53:44
if I ever dig it out.
2:53:46
I have a couple of bottles left.
2:53:47
We had this wine a couple of times.
2:53:49
There are alcoholic products or fermented products out
2:53:53
there.
2:53:53
If you drink them, you will have, I
2:53:55
don't know if they're lucid, vivid or what.
2:53:57
You'll have some of the damnedest dreams you've
2:53:59
ever had.
2:53:59
Oh, yeah.
2:54:00
That's called Andres.
2:54:04
Yeah, well, that's wow.
2:54:05
I made a wine joke.
2:54:07
A wine joke.
2:54:08
Well, it's better than golf ball.
2:54:11
Sir Knight DC in Oregon.
2:54:15
No, he's not in Oregon.
2:54:16
He's in.
2:54:16
That's he's in Oregon.
2:54:19
Yeah.
2:54:19
No, that's O.R. That's yeah.
2:54:22
Oregon.
2:54:22
What am I thinking?
2:54:23
I don't know.
2:54:24
$200.
2:54:25
What am I thinking?
2:54:28
$200 and two cents.
2:54:29
Sir Knight DC.
2:54:30
I.T.M. Gentlemen, I appreciate the rousing
2:54:34
you guys give each other.
2:54:37
Gives the show an edge.
2:54:39
That's right.
2:54:40
We got it.
2:54:40
We're edgy.
2:54:41
We are.
2:54:42
Yeah, doesn't like it.
2:54:44
Yeah.
2:54:45
S.D.G. Oakland, California.
2:54:48
$180 for the show, plus $20 for associate
2:54:51
executive producer.
2:54:52
$200 total.
2:54:53
Congrats.
2:54:54
Throw some Rev out out to the community.
2:55:00
R.E.S.P.I.C.T. Linda
2:55:05
Lou Patkin in Lakewood, Colorado.
2:55:07
Jobs, karma for a competitive edge, she writes
2:55:10
with a resume that gets results.
2:55:12
Go to image makers Inc.
2:55:13
Dot com for all your executive.
2:55:17
Whoops.
2:55:18
Scroll off for all your executive and job
2:55:21
search needs resume and jobs.
2:55:23
Job.
2:55:25
Reread.
2:55:26
Just reread.
2:55:26
Reread.
2:55:27
Oh, I just double click so I can
2:55:28
have it.
2:55:29
OK, I'm going to be from scratch.
2:55:31
Make good.
2:55:32
Make good.
2:55:34
Jobs, karma for a competitive edge with a
2:55:36
resume that gets results.
2:55:37
Go to image makers Inc.
2:55:38
Dot com for all your executive resume and
2:55:42
job search needs.
2:55:43
That's image makers Inc.
2:55:45
And that's with a K.
2:55:46
Work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and
2:55:49
writer of winning resumes.
2:55:51
Happy 18th.
2:55:53
Yeah, we didn't need the ad lib, but
2:55:55
OK, well, it's we'll take it as a
2:55:57
read.
2:55:58
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:56:01
Let's vote for jobs.
2:56:06
Tireless, tireless.
2:56:07
Linda and.
2:56:10
Linda closes this out for show.
2:56:12
Yes, she does.
2:56:13
For the 18.
2:56:14
Oh, what are we?
2:56:15
18 or 10, 18, 10, 18, 11, 18,
2:56:18
11.
2:56:19
That's right.
2:56:19
Thank you.
2:56:20
A war of 1812.
2:56:22
Thank you to these executive and associate executive
2:56:24
producers for our 18th anniversary.
2:56:27
We appreciate all of you.
2:56:28
We appreciate all of our producers.
2:56:29
Of course, we will thank the rest of
2:56:31
our producers.
2:56:31
Fifty dollars and above in the second is
2:56:33
going to be a long show.
2:56:34
Alert the affiliates.
2:56:35
But that's usually what happens with an anniversary
2:56:38
show.
2:56:38
So it's good.
2:56:39
And we've brought you pure content this time,
2:56:42
as we always try to do in the
2:56:45
donation segment, because it's not just value for
2:56:48
value.
2:56:48
It's not just the international lifestyle.
2:56:51
It is.
2:56:51
In fact, it is a way of life.
2:56:53
And we love living it.
2:56:54
Thanks to you.
2:56:57
You can go to no agenda donations dot
2:56:59
com.
2:56:59
Make your support of the show known at
2:57:01
any time, any amount.
2:57:02
Set up a recurring donation, any amount, any
2:57:05
frequency.
2:57:05
No agenda donations dot com.
2:57:07
Thank you to these anniversary show producers.
2:57:10
Our formula is this.
2:57:12
We go out.
2:57:13
We hit people in the mouth.
2:57:31
I got a little A.I. here.
2:57:33
Little a little.
2:57:35
Oh, you may have seen this.
2:57:36
Yeah, I saw.
2:57:36
This was actually quite good.
2:57:38
I think it deserves some form of award
2:57:41
for this.
2:57:42
It's pretty decent.
2:57:44
This is a big promotion that they ran
2:57:47
about themselves because they have an anniversary, along
2:57:50
with ours.
2:57:51
20, I think 20 years.
2:57:53
Something like that.
2:57:53
They do have us beat, man.
2:57:55
We've been around almost as long as R
2:57:57
.T. That says something.
2:57:58
Yeah, yeah.
2:57:59
Gunsmoke.
2:58:00
Here we go.
2:58:01
Do you ever catch yourself questioning more?
2:58:03
Like, why do I always parrot everything the
2:58:05
U.S. State Department says?
2:58:07
Or why I always ask, do you condemn
2:58:10
Hamas, but never Israel?
2:58:12
Why I never said sorry for spreading the
2:58:14
debunked Trump Russiagate hoax.
2:58:16
Why I support every illegal war the U
2:58:19
.S. has launched this century.
2:58:21
Why I can't stop lying that Joe Biden
2:58:23
was young and healthy enough for the presidency.
2:58:25
Why we ignore our rock bottom ratings and
2:58:27
pretend people still want to watch the same
2:58:29
old bullshit.
2:58:30
The only reason we're asking is because R
2:58:32
.T. generated this video and made us do
2:58:34
it.
2:58:35
So you'll never get answers, at least not
2:58:38
from us.
2:58:39
Happy anniversary to R.T. I may be
2:58:42
an A.I., but there's no way I'm
2:58:44
saying that.
2:58:47
That was good.
2:58:48
That was very cute.
2:58:49
It's not like Scaramanga would make that for
2:58:51
us.
2:58:53
Think about the virality of it.
2:58:56
Yeah, it was, yeah.
2:58:58
Yeah.
2:58:59
Although R.T. stuff has been banned in
2:59:01
a lot of places, including the United States.
2:59:03
For a while there, you couldn't even get
2:59:04
it on your computer.
2:59:07
I know, they really...
2:59:07
There were internet service providers who were blocking
2:59:09
it so crazy.
2:59:11
Little sports ball, sports ball for you, everybody.
2:59:14
You know me.
2:59:15
I'm the sports ball guy of the show.
2:59:16
So I'm going to bring you some sports
2:59:17
ball.
2:59:18
This is Nikola Vucevic.
2:59:21
You know him, right?
2:59:24
Probably.
2:59:25
Yeah, he's the center for the Bulls.
2:59:26
Hello from Chicago.
2:59:28
You know him?
2:59:30
I never met him.
2:59:31
Well, I mean...
2:59:32
He's tall.
2:59:33
He's tall.
2:59:34
Centers aren't always that tall.
2:59:36
Yeah, they always...
2:59:37
There's not a center in the league that's
2:59:39
not at least 6'11".
2:59:41
6'11"?
2:59:42
Yeah.
2:59:43
Well, I'm going to look that up.
2:59:45
He is very concerned about sports betting on
2:59:48
sports ball.
2:59:49
Gambling is a big problem.
2:59:51
Not only here, but worldwide.
2:59:53
But I think now that it's got into
2:59:55
sports here, a lot of people are involved
2:59:57
in it.
2:59:58
A lot of people gamble and it's...
3:00:00
You know, unfortunately, a lot of people get
3:00:01
stuck in it and it's hard to get
3:00:03
out.
3:00:04
It's available on your phone.
3:00:05
All you gotta do is download the app
3:00:06
and you can just play.
3:00:09
We as players feel it a lot when
3:00:10
we step on the court.
3:00:12
Nowadays, you hear more often...
3:00:14
Before, you used to hear like, Hey, Vuch,
3:00:16
you know, get a win.
3:00:17
Or, hey, do this and that.
3:00:18
Now it's like, hey, my parlay is 10
3:00:20
rebounds.
3:00:20
I need 10 boards.
3:00:21
Or, hey, my parlay is 15 points.
3:00:23
Or you come out of timeout, you hear
3:00:25
people say that.
3:00:26
And a lot of times, return is like
3:00:27
14, 15-year-old kids.
3:00:30
And honestly, it pisses me off because it's
3:00:33
disrespectful to the game.
3:00:35
You know, we put so much work in
3:00:36
to try to do the right thing.
3:00:39
To put good product on the court and
3:00:40
play the right way.
3:00:41
And try to win for our team.
3:00:42
And people focus on, you know, if I'm
3:00:45
gonna get 10 rebounds or not.
3:00:46
Or for anybody else.
3:00:48
I think it's very unfortunate.
3:00:50
But, you know, even back home, we have
3:00:52
big issues with that.
3:00:53
There's a lot of areas, a lot of
3:00:55
places you can go and gamble on sports.
3:00:58
So, yeah, I mean, you know, it's a
3:01:00
big problem for the world.
3:01:01
It's a big addiction for people.
3:01:04
So it's something that the NBA is gonna
3:01:06
have to, you know, look at and try
3:01:07
to find a way to fix it as
3:01:10
much as possible.
3:01:10
But, yeah, it's unfortunate that we're dealing with
3:01:12
it.
3:01:12
But, you know, we'll see what comes out
3:01:13
of it.
3:01:14
6'9".
3:01:16
He's 6'9".
3:01:17
That guy's 6'9"?
3:01:18
No wonder they can't win.
3:01:20
Most of the centers in the league are
3:01:22
7 foot plus.
3:01:23
Well, he's 6'9".
3:01:25
Yeah, but this is the problem.
3:01:26
Yeah, and he's very erudite.
3:01:28
I'm glad they put him on to explain
3:01:29
the situation.
3:01:30
I couldn't understand a word he said.
3:01:33
Wow.
3:01:33
He was saying...
3:01:36
Get some headphones.
3:01:38
He was saying, John, wear headphones.
3:01:40
You can understand things better with headphones.
3:01:43
No, you don't wear glasses.
3:01:47
He's saying that these are 14-year-old
3:01:49
kids doing these prop bets.
3:01:51
Like, hey, man, they're yelling at him during
3:01:54
the game.
3:01:55
I need 10 rebounds, man, 10 rebounds.
3:01:58
It's ruining the game.
3:01:59
It's ruining everything.
3:02:01
And, gee, guess what?
3:02:02
Sports leagues all not only encourage it, they're
3:02:06
all partnering with very big gambling operations.
3:02:10
The NBA is one of them.
3:02:12
Of course.
3:02:13
And he's against it, is what he's saying.
3:02:16
Well, they should all be against it.
3:02:18
The game is rigged.
3:02:22
Yeah, well, we've already...
3:02:23
But this show has...
3:02:26
What's the word I want to use?
3:02:28
I can't...
3:02:29
Trying to think of a bad, lousy word.
3:02:31
Positive.
3:02:32
There's one.
3:02:33
We remit.
3:02:35
We remit.
3:02:36
We have said forever, because we've been predicting
3:02:41
the winners of these, especially the international games,
3:02:44
right on the money based on geopolitical action
3:02:48
going on.
3:02:50
Yeah, that's true.
3:02:50
You predict the winner.
3:02:52
So it filters down.
3:02:54
These games have always been rigged.
3:02:57
Yeah.
3:02:58
It's rigged, man.
3:02:59
It's bad for the kids.
3:03:00
It's bad for it.
3:03:01
By the way, man, Rogan's podcast is filled
3:03:05
with gambling ads.
3:03:08
Oh, is it?
3:03:08
All of a sudden?
3:03:09
No, it's been that way for a while.
3:03:11
I mean, and it's not even...
3:03:13
I don't even think it's him.
3:03:14
I don't think he does the reads himself
3:03:15
on those.
3:03:16
Those are just inserted dynamically.
3:03:17
Who knows where it comes from?
3:03:18
Maybe Spotify's just jamming it in.
3:03:20
No, I don't listen on Spotify.
3:03:21
So who knows where it comes from?
3:03:23
Megaphone does it.
3:03:25
Yeah, and they're always like, you know, if
3:03:26
you've got a problem, call this number.
3:03:28
And now you got five free dollars.
3:03:30
Sign up now, kids.
3:03:32
It'll be great.
3:03:32
Your first bet is good for 24 hours.
3:03:34
Yeah, but gamble, gamble, gamble.
3:03:36
What could possibly go wrong?
3:03:39
It's a good business.
3:03:40
I'd like to hear from any of our
3:03:41
producers who have had a gambling addiction.
3:03:45
We know we got them.
3:03:47
Oh, yeah.
3:03:48
Well, we have with approximately a million listeners,
3:03:51
just under.
3:03:52
Yeah.
3:03:53
We have, which is the size of San
3:03:55
Francisco, the entire town.
3:03:57
Only not as retarded.
3:03:59
How about that?
3:04:01
Yeah, isn't that interesting?
3:04:02
It's actually better.
3:04:04
But we're much better than San Francisco.
3:04:07
We have people from all walks of life
3:04:09
that listen to this show.
3:04:11
Yes, we do.
3:04:12
That's what makes it so cool.
3:04:13
And you know what?
3:04:14
They should have prop bets on our show.
3:04:17
Now you're talking.
3:04:18
Will Adam be mean to John?
3:04:20
There's an over and under.
3:04:20
Yeah.
3:04:21
What's the over under on?
3:04:22
What are we doing over under on?
3:04:23
315, I'd say 315 would be the over
3:04:26
and under for the length.
3:04:26
How about how about how many times will
3:04:29
Adam be mean to John?
3:04:31
Oh, that's a over and under.
3:04:33
And that would be 10.
3:04:36
Let's let's move on.
3:04:38
And let's listen to Israel controlling America, shall
3:04:42
we?
3:04:42
Just a few hours after arriving on Thursday,
3:04:45
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio met
3:04:47
with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
3:04:51
Secretary Rubio, Marco, welcome again to Jerusalem.
3:04:55
But the president.
3:04:56
He's the latest of a flurry of high
3:04:58
profile U.S. figures to arrive in the
3:05:00
region following the ceasefire agreement that was signed
3:05:02
two weeks ago.
3:05:04
After the special envoy to the Middle East,
3:05:06
Steve Witkoff, Trump's senior advisor, Jared Kushner and
3:05:09
Prime Minister J.D. Vance, the head of
3:05:12
the CIA, John Ratcliffe is expected to arrive
3:05:15
next.
3:05:16
The vice president just left.
3:05:17
We crossed on the way.
3:05:18
And then I'm here now today because this
3:05:20
is a priority.
3:05:21
It's a very important achievement, but there's more
3:05:23
work to be done and bigger achievements that
3:05:25
lie ahead.
3:05:26
And so we're here to work on that.
3:05:28
And we feel very positive and confident that
3:05:30
we're going to get there.
3:05:30
Despite substantial obstacles, we're going to get there.
3:05:34
The latest obstacle was a vote in the
3:05:36
Israeli parliament on whether the country should annex
3:05:39
the West Bank.
3:05:40
Speaking before boarding the airplane, the vice president
3:05:44
was not impressed.
3:05:46
Look, if it was a political stunt, it
3:05:48
was a very stupid political stunt.
3:05:50
And I personally take some insult to it.
3:05:52
The West Bank is not going to be
3:05:53
annexed by Israel.
3:05:55
The policy of the Trump administration is that
3:05:57
the West Bank will not be annexed by
3:05:59
Israel.
3:05:59
That will continue to be our policy.
3:06:02
Netanyahu said that the vote was organized by
3:06:04
the opposition, but many in his camp have
3:06:06
been pressuring the prime minister to annex the
3:06:08
West Bank for years.
3:06:10
I will not allow Israel to annex the
3:06:13
West Bank.
3:06:13
No, I will not allow it.
3:06:15
It's not going to happen.
3:06:17
The text would need to be approved four
3:06:19
times in parliament to go through.
3:06:20
But on Thursday, Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said
3:06:24
that the process would be suspended.
3:06:26
All right.
3:06:26
So we'll see.
3:06:27
We'll see if they annex it, then they're
3:06:29
in charge.
3:06:30
If it doesn't happen, then Trump's in charge.
3:06:32
That's very.
3:06:32
I think Vance was right.
3:06:34
Oh, of course, it's a political stunt.
3:06:36
Of course.
3:06:37
Yeah, and it was an insult at him
3:06:38
personally.
3:06:39
Yes.
3:06:40
They're trying to put him in his place.
3:06:42
Yeah, well, we'll see.
3:06:44
We'll see.
3:06:46
Bad news for the subprime loan market.
3:06:53
I don't know.
3:06:54
I have not listened to the most recent
3:06:58
DH unplugged.
3:07:00
But this is about subprime auto loans.
3:07:03
Have you been following this?
3:07:05
Not at all.
3:07:06
Hey, Scott.
3:07:06
Yeah, it's the private credit side of the
3:07:08
business that has seen a real sentiment shift.
3:07:10
Apollo, Aries, Blue Owl and KKR seeing significant
3:07:13
declines week to date, while those more exposed
3:07:16
to private equity, think TPG and Carlyle, they've
3:07:19
held up OK.
3:07:20
Two high profile bankruptcies in the auto finance
3:07:24
space leading to a broad based sell off
3:07:26
in the publicly traded alternatives firms, Tricolor and
3:07:29
First Brands Bankruptcies, each within the last few
3:07:32
weeks have shed a new light on the
3:07:34
risks of over leverage and subprime borrowers.
3:07:37
Hedge fund manager Jim Chano slamming private credit
3:07:40
in an interview with the Financial Times saying,
3:07:42
quote, I suspect we're going to see more
3:07:45
of these things like first brands and others
3:07:47
when the cycle ultimately reverses.
3:07:49
He said the two trillion dollar private credit
3:07:51
sector is akin to the packaging of subprime
3:07:54
mortgages during the 2008 crisis because of the,
3:07:57
quote, layers of people in between the source
3:08:00
of money and the use of money.
3:08:02
Typical direct lenders sit toward the top of
3:08:04
the capital stack, meaning they would get paid
3:08:06
back before equity and other layers of debt
3:08:09
in a bankruptcy.
3:08:10
So I didn't know this was how intricate
3:08:12
this was, but so the banks don't really
3:08:15
want to do auto loans anymore.
3:08:18
So all these this private equity is doing
3:08:22
kind of they're doing loans, lending money to
3:08:25
these companies that have the buy here, pay
3:08:28
here, borrow here outfits.
3:08:31
And probably a lot of the immigrants who
3:08:35
were here illegally, they just got in their
3:08:37
cars and drove back to Mexico and no
3:08:40
one's paying back these car loans.
3:08:41
And that's putting these private equity guys in
3:08:44
somewhat of a bind.
3:08:46
There's a lot of problems in the banking
3:08:48
sector right now.
3:08:49
The main thing is a lot of it
3:08:50
has to do in the with these same
3:08:52
guys doing double dealing and creating kind of
3:08:56
virtual Ponzi schemes by selling off the same
3:09:00
asset to more than one buyer.
3:09:02
It's almost like everyone's trying to do the
3:09:05
duplicate of what the producers movie, if you
3:09:08
remember that with Jeremy Mostel, tried to accomplish
3:09:13
by making a flop.
3:09:14
Springtime for Hitler, the musical.
3:09:18
But then it wasn't a flop and now
3:09:20
they're in trouble.
3:09:21
Yeah.
3:09:22
Well, the car sector in general is very
3:09:25
interesting.
3:09:26
Those numbnuts at Porsche who thought they would
3:09:28
jump on the bandwagon screwed it up.
3:09:31
Profits at German carmaker Porsche plunged by nearly
3:09:34
96% in the first nine months of
3:09:36
this year.
3:09:37
Porsche said the drop in profits was due
3:09:40
to a change in strategy as the company
3:09:42
shifted its focus back to combustion engines after
3:09:46
weak demand for its electric vehicles.
3:09:48
No kidding.
3:09:48
After years of roaring down the autobahn, a
3:09:51
speed bump for Porsche.
3:09:52
The iconic sports carmaker notched up a spectacular
3:09:55
third quarter loss of almost one billion euros
3:09:57
as it grappled with the costs of returning
3:09:59
to petrol and delaying its electric vehicle rollout.
3:10:02
Operating profit, which strips out some costs such
3:10:04
as tax, fell to 40 million euros for
3:10:07
the first nine months of the year.
3:10:09
Porsche revved up its electric vehicle strategy with
3:10:11
the launch of its electric car project, Mission
3:10:14
R.
3:10:14
This concept embodies everything that Porsche, what it
3:10:18
is.
3:10:18
Performance, design and sustainability.
3:10:22
All electric, high performance and efficient.
3:10:26
This is a new Mission R.
3:10:28
Then in September, Porsche went into reverse.
3:10:30
The sports carmaker said it would delay the
3:10:32
introduction of some fully electric cars and extend
3:10:35
the life of some combustion engine and hybrid
3:10:37
models.
3:10:38
The reason was lack of growth in demand
3:10:40
for high performance electric vehicles and there were
3:10:42
significant costs associated with the original aggressive EV
3:10:46
strategy.
3:10:48
Porsche's parent company, Volkswagen, said it had taken
3:10:50
a punishing five billion euro profit hit to
3:10:53
cover the costs of Porsche's product rejig.
3:10:56
Yeah, like we could have told them this
3:10:57
was a dumb idea.
3:10:59
Oh yeah.
3:11:00
The same thing kind of happened to Ferrari.
3:11:02
Yes.
3:11:03
They took a beating because they tried to
3:11:05
do some electric stuff and then we actually
3:11:08
talked about this on the DHM plug show,
3:11:10
which is every Tuesday.
3:11:13
Eight o'clock central time.
3:11:14
And with a live chat room.
3:11:16
That's right.
3:11:17
Live stream.
3:11:19
Live.
3:11:20
Is that General Motors is doing better than
3:11:23
Ford because General Motors backed off on the
3:11:25
electric stuff a lot faster than Ford did.
3:11:28
Yes, of course.
3:11:29
You know, the only guys who can do
3:11:31
electric is Tesla.
3:11:32
They cornered the market.
3:11:34
Even BYD is falling apart now, I hear.
3:11:37
I didn't hear that.
3:11:38
They're pretty big.
3:11:39
Well, let's see.
3:11:40
Because Germany, of course, very big on the
3:11:42
green energy.
3:11:44
You know, they're so smart.
3:11:45
There are those Germans.
3:11:47
Do you think they learned anything?
3:11:48
Let's listen.
3:11:49
Two huge cooling towers of the former nuclear
3:11:52
power plant in Gundremingen in Germany's Bavaria were
3:11:55
destroyed in a controlled demolition at noon on
3:11:58
Saturday.
3:11:59
The plant had served as an important landmark
3:12:01
in the town for nearly six decades, bringing
3:12:04
numerous new jobs and boosting the town's economy.
3:12:09
That pops.
3:12:12
However, the removal of the cooling towers comes
3:12:15
as part of the country's nuclear phase out.
3:12:18
Both nuclear reactors had already been closed for
3:12:20
several years.
3:12:22
Following Saturday's demolition, the dismantling of the plant
3:12:25
will further continue with completion expected by 2040.
3:12:30
Ready to go, guys.
3:12:31
Great idea.
3:12:33
Yeah.
3:12:33
It's the dumbest thing the Germans have ever
3:12:36
done.
3:12:37
Oh, my word.
3:12:38
It's crazy.
3:12:41
It is just crazy.
3:12:42
Have you heard about the inter-bearing?
3:12:47
No.
3:12:48
This is, I filed under the ARC category,
3:12:52
America, Russia, China.
3:12:54
The International Bearing Strait Tunnel and Railroad.
3:12:57
Oh, yeah.
3:12:58
Yeah, we had somebody sending us a bunch.
3:13:01
This is not a new idea.
3:13:03
This has been going around since, they say,
3:13:05
even as far back as 1900.
3:13:07
But Trump is crazy.
3:13:09
He could do something like this.
3:13:11
Because the idea is that you connect the
3:13:13
U.S., Canada, of course, Alaska, the Bearing
3:13:19
Strait, which is what, 60 miles or something?
3:13:21
It's not even that far.
3:13:22
It's not that, it's doable.
3:13:24
You connect it to Russia, Siberia, then to
3:13:27
China.
3:13:27
With a tunnel.
3:13:27
With a tunnel.
3:13:28
And then you've got a beautiful, you know,
3:13:30
then we circumvent everybody.
3:13:33
You have a train system that can run.
3:13:35
Yeah.
3:13:36
Product from Japan and China.
3:13:38
Yeah.
3:13:39
And Russia, right straight to the United States
3:13:42
via the West Coast.
3:13:44
It'd be fantastic.
3:13:45
Without shipping.
3:13:46
Because, you know, you've got to go a
3:13:48
long ways.
3:13:48
Yeah, zero shipping, zero shipping.
3:13:51
So this has been around for a long
3:13:53
time?
3:13:54
Yeah, it's been around.
3:13:56
You might be right about Trump being nuts
3:13:58
about it and doing it.
3:13:59
But I think he's going to take Greenland
3:14:01
first.
3:14:02
Greenland doesn't seem to be important in this
3:14:04
idea.
3:14:05
No, no, I know it's got nothing to
3:14:07
do with Greenland.
3:14:08
I'm just saying it's on his list of
3:14:10
things to do.
3:14:12
Uh, big, big news in the Anglican church.
3:14:17
Uh, church news.
3:14:18
Church news.
3:14:20
I got church news.
3:14:21
Well, for the first time in 500 years.
3:14:25
Nearly 900 years after the Church of England
3:14:28
split from Rome.
3:14:30
A symbolic moment of unity as Pope Leo
3:14:33
and King Charles III pray together for the
3:14:36
very first time.
3:14:38
Teach us to see your hand in all
3:14:41
your works and your likeness in all your
3:14:45
children.
3:14:46
Through Christ our Lord.
3:14:50
Beneath the Sistine Chapel's vaulted ceiling, the head
3:14:53
of the Catholic Church and the head of
3:14:55
the Church of England shared a joint religious
3:14:57
service.
3:14:59
Their choir's voices blending in harmony as they
3:15:02
brought their two faiths together.
3:15:05
It's a symbolic gesture that consolidates years of
3:15:08
growing mutual respect between the Vatican and the
3:15:11
British monarchy.
3:15:13
During the service, UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper
3:15:16
also read a Bible verse from a letter
3:15:18
to the Romans written by St. Paul.
3:15:20
And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what
3:15:24
is the mind of the spirit, because he
3:15:27
maketh intercession for the saints according to the
3:15:31
will of God.
3:15:33
After the service, Charles and Camilla travelled to
3:15:36
Rome's Basilica of St. Paul outside the walls,
3:15:39
where Charles was given a special chair decorated
3:15:41
with his coat of arms that'll be kept
3:15:43
there for the King and his heirs.
3:15:45
The visit comes as questions remain over the
3:15:48
King's brother Prince Andrew and his links to
3:15:50
convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
3:15:52
Buckingham Palace hoping this historic moment will shift
3:15:56
some of the focus away from events back
3:15:58
home.
3:15:58
Yeah, so it was interesting that's not at
3:16:01
all what this is about because there has
3:16:04
been a massive split in the Anglican church
3:16:08
because they chose a female bishop of Canterbury
3:16:14
and of course they're all in with the
3:16:15
Rainbow Coalition and LGBTQ.
3:16:18
Yeah, the church is gay.
3:16:20
The Anglican church is super gay and the
3:16:23
Africans are having none of it.
3:16:25
You cannot find a mainstream news report about
3:16:29
this, so I got 40 seconds from a
3:16:31
YouTuber.
3:16:32
This is why the Anglican church just split
3:16:33
in two.
3:16:34
Here's the story.
3:16:35
GAFCON is a group of conservative Anglicans, mostly
3:16:38
in Africa and Asia, who say that the
3:16:40
global Anglican communion has been drifting away from
3:16:42
the Bible.
3:16:43
On October 16th, 2025, they made a bold
3:16:46
move.
3:16:46
They no longer recognize the Archbishop of Canterbury
3:16:49
or the traditional councils that once united Anglicans.
3:16:52
The trigger?
3:16:52
The appointment of Sarah Mullally, the first female
3:16:55
Archbishop of Canterbury.
3:16:57
GAFCON says this goes against historic Anglican teaching
3:16:59
and against scripture.
3:17:00
In response, they announced a new structure, the
3:17:03
Global Anglican Communion.
3:17:04
Essentially what they're saying is, we're not leaving,
3:17:07
we are the true Anglican communion.
3:17:09
This isn't just a disagreement, it's a realignment,
3:17:12
splitting Anglicanism into two branches.
3:17:14
One that stays faithful to the Archbishop of
3:17:16
Canterbury and the other that stays faithful to
3:17:18
scripture.
3:17:19
And one is gay and the other one
3:17:20
isn't.
3:17:21
It's crazy.
3:17:21
And what I love about this is that
3:17:24
it combines church news with African news.
3:17:28
It couldn't be any better for the show.
3:17:30
You have to go to a YouTuber to
3:17:32
get this?
3:17:33
Yes, there is nothing available on mainstream about
3:17:37
this, I think, historic split.
3:17:40
Nothing.
3:17:41
It is pretty much of a big deal,
3:17:43
but it surprises me that they don't cover
3:17:47
anything.
3:17:48
No.
3:17:49
Borderline pathetic.
3:17:51
Yes.
3:17:52
So we have a couple more things that
3:17:55
aren't covered.
3:17:56
You know this guy that's running for governor
3:17:59
or senator.
3:18:00
He's running for senator of Maine.
3:18:03
Oh, yeah.
3:18:04
This is like a Platner guy.
3:18:06
He has a SS tattoo on his chest.
3:18:10
This is the guy who Bernie Sanders was
3:18:12
worried about and then it turns out he's
3:18:14
been writing stuff on Reddit.
3:18:17
Is that the guy?
3:18:18
But I don't know if he's I know
3:18:20
he's got he has a high profile online
3:18:22
and he had a he had a Nazi
3:18:24
SS tattoo on his chest.
3:18:27
Excellent skull and crossbones.
3:18:28
The one that was on the logo that's
3:18:30
on the SS hat.
3:18:33
What could possibly go wrong?
3:18:36
And so he had it tattooed over, but
3:18:38
the pictures of it exist.
3:18:40
And he like trying to get away from
3:18:42
from this because he's running as a obviously
3:18:44
as a Democrat, but he's running as a
3:18:47
left-wing Democrat against the ex-governor of
3:18:51
Maine, who is very popular, but they're going
3:18:54
to try to get rid of her because
3:18:55
they're trying to push the entire Democrat Party
3:18:57
into the progressive camp.
3:19:00
And and so Scott Jennings actually got worked
3:19:02
up about it on CNN.
3:19:05
And I thought the exchange was worth recording
3:19:07
and I have copies of it here.
3:19:09
It's about this point.
3:19:09
If he moves forward, Democrats aren't winning the
3:19:12
seat.
3:19:12
I hate to break the news to you,
3:19:13
but he's winning the primary.
3:19:15
By 30 points.
3:19:17
Getting a Nazi tattoo made him more popular
3:19:21
among Democrats.
3:19:24
You've got a guy running for attorney general
3:19:25
in Virginia who wants to murder Republicans and
3:19:27
he raised $500,000 off of it.
3:19:30
You got a Nazi tattoo guy in Maine.
3:19:32
I sat out here for a year, two
3:19:34
years listening to every Democrat at this table
3:19:36
say, Donald Trump's a Nazi, Elon's a Nazi.
3:19:39
And your party is now in love with
3:19:41
a guy with a Nazi tattoo who trained
3:19:43
a left wing paramilitary group and called himself
3:19:46
an Antifa super soldier on the Internet.
3:19:48
And he's going up every day.
3:19:50
Good luck getting your nice.
3:19:54
What you said being yourself with the cop,
3:19:56
which you copped or the health.
3:19:57
That's right.
3:19:58
Now, exactly right.
3:19:59
And he keeps they keep arguing with him,
3:20:02
saying, oh, he's not going to get in.
3:20:03
His numbers keep going up.
3:20:05
He's up.
3:20:05
When I checked, he wasn't 30 percent, 30
3:20:07
points ahead.
3:20:08
He was 34 points ahead.
3:20:10
And he's getting a lot of traction because
3:20:13
the they may end up losing the Republican
3:20:16
because, you know, the Democrats are primary.
3:20:19
They're doing what the Republicans are.
3:20:21
Remember years ago when in the early part
3:20:24
of our era, the no agenda era, there
3:20:27
used to be these primary the Republican because
3:20:30
they weren't conservative enough.
3:20:31
And they kept trying to get these people
3:20:32
out of office.
3:20:33
Yeah.
3:20:34
And so they bring out and they bring
3:20:35
an extremist to run against them.
3:20:39
And then the person would win and then
3:20:41
they'd lose against the Democrat.
3:20:42
Yeah.
3:20:42
And that's what's going on with the Democrats.
3:20:44
Now they've picked up the same idea.
3:20:46
Here's part two.
3:20:46
I am but a humble political analyst.
3:20:48
And I will just tell you that when
3:20:50
you're winning a race by 30 points, if
3:20:52
a pundit on television tells you, well, you
3:20:53
need to think about dropping out, you laugh
3:20:55
in their face.
3:20:55
I don't know.
3:20:58
I want Democrats to be who they are.
3:21:00
This is who they are.
3:21:01
No, that is who they are.
3:21:05
You're saying the Democrats are Nazis?
3:21:06
It's very, it's very on brand right now.
3:21:12
He's doing it wrong.
3:21:13
I don't know if he gets here, but
3:21:14
he should say it doesn't surprise me.
3:21:17
But it's not just the Nazis, Jew haters.
3:21:20
You got a Jew hater in New York.
3:21:21
You got a Jew hater in Maine.
3:21:23
That's the angle he should take.
3:21:25
Don't you think?
3:21:26
Yeah, I think.
3:21:27
Yeah, you're right.
3:21:28
That would be right.
3:21:29
It would be better.
3:21:29
He could improve his.
3:21:31
Yes.
3:21:31
His stick.
3:21:32
Give us a call.
3:21:33
If he brought that in.
3:21:34
Yeah, it's a call.
3:21:34
I'll help you out.
3:21:35
Really?
3:21:37
Like, are you suggesting that like a person
3:21:40
who wears a Nazi tattoo because he was
3:21:43
in the military or whatever is representative of
3:21:46
the entire Democratic Party?
3:21:47
Well, hold on.
3:21:48
You said that about Hexeth.
3:21:50
I'm only reading the polling, Abby.
3:21:52
When all this story broke and he started
3:21:54
talking about it, he literally got more popular.
3:21:57
He's beating the incumbent.
3:21:58
You realize that he's running in one state
3:22:01
in Maine, and you're also saying that because
3:22:04
of that, he's representative of the Democratic Party.
3:22:07
He said this is who they are.
3:22:08
Who is they?
3:22:09
Look at the polling.
3:22:10
Look at the energy.
3:22:15
Bernie Sanders wants him.
3:22:17
The beating heart of the Democratic Party, where
3:22:19
their energy is, wants the Nazi tattoo guy.
3:22:21
That's what they want.
3:22:23
I think that this country is about anything.
3:22:26
It's about understanding that every person, me, you,
3:22:29
everybody else has gone dark moments in our
3:22:32
history, and we go on.
3:22:34
Bernie Sanders isn't the head of the Democratic
3:22:36
Party.
3:22:37
I think he's not.
3:22:40
Don't even.
3:22:42
Where's the energy of the party?
3:22:44
Here is what I will tell you.
3:22:45
Schumer wants Mills.
3:22:46
Sanders wants this guy, and he's winning by
3:22:48
30.
3:22:48
Let me tell you this.
3:22:49
When polling happens, he is totally unknown.
3:22:52
Listen, I understand you don't want to have
3:22:55
this guy, and I wouldn't either.
3:22:56
He is a totally unknown guy.
3:22:58
Comes out of nowhere.
3:22:59
He's got the full support of the left
3:23:02
-wing, progressive Sanders wing of the Democratic Party,
3:23:05
and he's beating— Like, everybody in this is
3:23:07
who supports Bernie Sanders?
3:23:09
Yes.
3:23:10
Look at the polling.
3:23:11
And here's the most important thing.
3:23:12
He's beating the incumbent governor of the state
3:23:16
by 30 points.
3:23:17
This isn't happening in a vacuum.
3:23:19
People are comparing an establishment figure like Mills
3:23:23
and this insurgent left-wing radical like Plattner,
3:23:26
and they're like, you know what?
3:23:28
We'll take the Nazi tattoos.
3:23:29
It's fine.
3:23:30
And I just, I think you, look, it
3:23:33
may be early, but people are following this
3:23:35
race, and the polling is pretty clear.
3:23:37
It's not that close.
3:23:38
I don't know what's happening, man.
3:23:40
I mean, we've got the church turning gay.
3:23:42
We've got the Democrats turning into Nazis.
3:23:45
I mean— Well, you have to remember that
3:23:47
Maine has somehow, and over the—used to be
3:23:51
this very conservative state, but somehow, especially around
3:23:54
the city of Portland, it's become kind of
3:23:58
a libtard, and I hate to use that
3:24:00
word, libjobe is better, probably.
3:24:02
Yeah, that's pretty bad.
3:24:04
It's airy, because the influx of people that
3:24:09
couldn't afford staying in New York City, and
3:24:11
they're all, you know, the office workers of
3:24:15
New York City couldn't afford it there, and
3:24:17
so they moved up to Portland, because Portland
3:24:18
is this great place, and it is pretty.
3:24:21
I've been there.
3:24:22
And I think a lot of Californians, Washington
3:24:25
State people are comfortable up there.
3:24:26
The weather's pretty much the same.
3:24:28
It's just—the state has been ruined by liberals.
3:24:32
Yeah.
3:24:33
Yeah, there's a lot happening now with the
3:24:35
get-back-to-the-office vibe that's happening.
3:24:40
I was reading an article that all of
3:24:42
these people who came from, I think, mainly
3:24:47
California, New York, et cetera, moved to Arizona,
3:24:51
moved to Austin, and— Oh, Austin is plagued
3:24:55
by these people.
3:24:56
Yeah, but you know what's happening?
3:24:57
Now they all have to go back to
3:24:58
the office.
3:24:59
And at the time, they bought homes, median
3:25:02
price, $450,000.
3:25:05
You know what they get for it now,
3:25:07
because everyone wants to leave now?
3:25:10
$220,000 for the same house.
3:25:14
I thought they had gone up to houses
3:25:16
in Austin.
3:25:16
No, it's been falling like a rock.
3:25:20
Wow, you're the luckiest guy in the world.
3:25:22
I would say so.
3:25:25
Yep, yep.
3:25:27
We were just talking about it last night.
3:25:29
I said, you know what?
3:25:30
We're the luckiest guy and gal in the
3:25:32
world.
3:25:32
Thank you, darling.
3:25:33
He said, white wine?
3:25:35
What is this?
3:25:37
No, you don't start drinking during the show.
3:25:39
The show is normally over.
3:25:41
That's why she's coming in with my wine.
3:25:43
Hello, hello.
3:25:44
Are you done?
3:25:44
Tony, take it out.
3:25:45
Take the wine out.
3:25:46
He says, take the wine out.
3:25:48
Take the wine out.
3:25:49
It's no good.
3:25:52
We should probably play one more clip and
3:25:54
then go.
3:25:55
Because we have...
3:25:56
Well, let's play the conspiracies rundown.
3:26:00
This clip is floating around a lot.
3:26:02
There's a bunch of people coming online.
3:26:05
And this is the talk clip on general
3:26:07
strikes.
3:26:08
They're promoting the idea that we're going to,
3:26:10
in this country, because everyone's so fed up,
3:26:13
even though nobody's fed up.
3:26:15
Even in California, we're not that fed up.
3:26:19
They're going to have a general strike.
3:26:21
That'll fix everything.
3:26:22
Do you realize this could all be over
3:26:24
in two weeks?
3:26:26
We could have Donald Trump and his entire
3:26:28
administration out of office.
3:26:31
And it's so simple.
3:26:33
All we have to do is do a
3:26:36
general strike and basically just take vacation the
3:26:42
same week and shut this whole system down.
3:26:45
It's called a general vacation strike.
3:26:49
There will be no workers.
3:26:50
We'll all be in Margaritaville partying.
3:26:53
It's a great idea.
3:26:54
All the labor and everything will be shut
3:26:57
down.
3:26:58
There will be the economy will go.
3:27:01
This is bullcrap.
3:27:04
No one's going to do this.
3:27:07
This is like blackout.
3:27:08
Remember how successful that was?
3:27:10
Blackout, no kings, general strike.
3:27:13
It's weak.
3:27:14
You know what this is?
3:27:15
You know what this is?
3:27:17
This is Ohio.
3:27:21
Well, there you go.
3:27:24
Imagine all the people who could do this.
3:27:26
Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
3:27:35
Waiting for the waiting for the whole show
3:27:37
to drop the Ohio bomb.
3:27:39
Yeah, there it is.
3:27:40
And of course, we have some people to
3:27:41
thank who supported us.
3:27:43
John's tip of the day, a birthday tip
3:27:45
of the day on the way.
3:27:46
We have some really good end of show
3:27:48
mixes.
3:27:48
The No Agenda Music Publishing Group is going
3:27:50
to be a super hit.
3:27:52
We're going to start our live stream 24
3:27:54
hour a day.
3:27:55
No Agenda show mixes is going to be
3:27:57
fantastic.
3:27:58
I'll have that up and running by Thursday.
3:28:00
As John thanks our 50 and above supporters
3:28:03
for our 18th anniversary episode.
3:28:06
Yeah.
3:28:07
Starting with James Agee, Agee, Agee, Agee, Agee
3:28:12
in Umatilla, Umatilla, Florida, 189.55. Also Sir
3:28:17
Dude Chink in Bastrop, Texas, 189.55. Bastrop,
3:28:22
baby, Bastrop.
3:28:24
Mickey Keck, Mickey Keck in Lost Wages, Nevada,
3:28:28
189.55. These are all happy well-wishers
3:28:31
telling us happy anniversary.
3:28:36
Nancy Chardavoyne, Chardavoyne, Chardavoyne in Centennial, Colorado, 189
3:28:42
.55. Sir Quo, what is this you think?
3:28:47
Boya, Bola, Bola, Koya.
3:28:49
Hold on, hold on, I'm not there yet.
3:28:51
Koya, Koya.
3:28:52
Koya.
3:28:52
Sir Koya, Sir Koya, Sir Koya.
3:28:54
I get it, it's a joke.
3:28:56
Sir Koya.
3:28:57
It's spelled funny just as a pun.
3:29:00
It's a pun in Santa Monica.
3:29:02
Sheesh, 181.81. Amy Harmon, Asheville, North Carolina,
3:29:07
181.80. David Fugazotto in Gladstone, there he
3:29:13
is.
3:29:13
There's our buddy.
3:29:14
Duke of America's heartland.
3:29:16
And Saudi Arabia Peninsula, 186.7. Yes.
3:29:21
So the 180s all refer to 18, 18
3:29:23
years.
3:29:24
Sir John in London, London, UK, 183.33.
3:29:31
He has a, he's getting knighted or something.
3:29:33
So he's got a longer note that we
3:29:35
read usually for these guys.
3:29:36
Yeah, I'll read this.
3:29:37
Dear John Adam, please find and close my
3:29:39
donation of 180.33 towards the show's 18th
3:29:42
anniversary.
3:29:42
Keep it going as long as you're enjoying
3:29:44
it.
3:29:44
This donation also takes me over the 7k
3:29:47
mark.
3:29:48
So please, could you give me the additional
3:29:50
title of Earl Kumar of South London?
3:29:53
No jingles, just karma, please.
3:29:56
Regards, Sir John of South London, Viscount Kumar
3:29:58
of South London, Commodore Kumar of the Seven
3:30:01
Seas, and now Earl Kumar of South London.
3:30:04
That deserves an in-donation segment karma.
3:30:07
You've got karma.
3:30:09
Wow.
3:30:10
He's definitely got the right idea with the
3:30:11
titles.
3:30:12
He sure does.
3:30:13
John Foley, Chicago Heights, 180.33. Earl Hugger
3:30:18
of Kitties in Zondam, Netherlands, Holland, 180.18.
3:30:24
Hug more kitties, he writes.
3:30:25
Yes.
3:30:26
Uh, Charles George in Evergreen, Colorado, 180.18.
3:30:33
Some symbols there I can't see.
3:30:36
I don't know what that is.
3:30:36
Dame Rita in Sparks, Nevada, our regular.
3:30:38
She came in at 180.
3:30:40
Sure is the 18th year, she says.
3:30:41
Anonymous, 180.
3:30:43
Uh, Rhianne Kozinski in Carsland, Alberta, Canada, 157
3:30:52
.34. That might be enough to get.
3:30:54
It does.
3:30:55
This pushes her to associate executive producer.
3:30:57
So we have to.
3:30:58
You will get that.
3:30:59
Yeah.
3:30:59
To 1842.
3:31:00
So we have to read her note.
3:31:02
When I realized your anniversary, my birthday landed
3:31:04
on the same show day.
3:31:05
I knew it was time to be a
3:31:06
de-douched.
3:31:07
He's de-douching.
3:31:10
You've been de-douched.
3:31:13
I had hit people in the mouth whenever
3:31:14
I could, but it was time for me
3:31:16
to finally send some treasure.
3:31:18
You make my daily, uh, whoops, whoops, whoops,
3:31:21
whoops, whoops.
3:31:22
You make my, I don't know why this,
3:31:24
this cell is so big.
3:31:25
I have to scroll over to it.
3:31:27
You make my daily commute bearable.
3:31:29
We're great for commuters.
3:31:30
I can't have you finding your exit strategy
3:31:32
just yet.
3:31:33
I was hit in the mouth by my
3:31:34
smoking hot husband, Zach during COVID and last
3:31:37
donation was a switcheroo.
3:31:38
However, the $200 Canadian, Canadian, Canadian, Canadian, whatever
3:31:44
dollars wasn't recognized and his producer shit.
3:31:47
Oh, that's not good.
3:31:48
And his note wasn't recognized or acknowledged.
3:31:51
I, uh, hope my donation to 1842 plus
3:31:55
fees.
3:31:55
Canadian will be honored as an associate executive.
3:31:57
Yes, you will be.
3:31:59
Uh, it's legal to drink in Alberta at
3:32:01
18.
3:32:01
Did you know that I'm turning 42?
3:32:03
So I should finally be able to know
3:32:05
the answer to everything, right?
3:32:06
42.
3:32:07
It's a good call back.
3:32:09
Please add me to the birthday list for
3:32:11
jingles.
3:32:11
I'd like a special edit if you can.
3:32:13
No, we don't do that.
3:32:14
Of Bush's.
3:32:15
Just send your cash only followed by due
3:32:18
to climate change.
3:32:19
Little girl.
3:32:20
Yeah.
3:32:20
And it's free.
3:32:21
What we will do is, uh, we will
3:32:24
give you the F karma cancer in honor
3:32:26
of your dear friend, battling her second bout
3:32:28
of that terrible disease.
3:32:30
Of course.
3:32:34
You've got karma.
3:32:36
The problem with the Canadians, uh, us honoring
3:32:39
the Canadian and Australian dollar is that it's
3:32:43
so low on the list now that we
3:32:45
don't even think about it being enough for
3:32:47
associate.
3:32:47
That's why I got motion.
3:32:48
Yeah, that's what we got.
3:32:50
We got you.
3:32:53
Yeah.
3:32:53
And it was good.
3:32:54
You put it in a note to remind
3:32:55
us.
3:32:56
Anonymous in Columbus, Ohio.
3:32:57
One 31, a 66.
3:33:02
Gerald small in Gilbert, Arizona.
3:33:04
One, two, three, four, five donation.
3:33:07
We don't see enough of Richard Lindquist.
3:33:10
One Oh six 41.
3:33:13
And there he is.
3:33:14
Oh, that's not him.
3:33:15
No, this is Kate.
3:33:17
What happened to Kevin?
3:33:18
Where's Kevin?
3:33:18
He's gone.
3:33:19
Oh, no, he's not the bottom.
3:33:21
He's down lower.
3:33:21
He's down lower.
3:33:22
Kate McLaughlin, man.
3:33:23
She's not in, in, in the Carolina.
3:33:26
She's in Boise, Idaho.
3:33:27
100.
3:33:28
She says, quit complaining, John.
3:33:31
I can't hear it through the news.
3:33:33
I can hear it through the newsletter.
3:33:34
She says.
3:33:37
And then she gives me loves and kisses.
3:33:39
Thank you so much for your show.
3:33:40
And don't ever stop.
3:33:41
I will cry.
3:33:43
Yeah, we won't.
3:33:44
Yeah, we will.
3:33:46
Well, yeah, obviously.
3:33:48
We're already in gunsmoke territory.
3:33:51
That's right.
3:33:52
Van E.
3:33:53
Newman in Bernatello.
3:33:56
You forgot James Moran in Jackson.
3:33:58
James Moran in Jackson, California.
3:34:00
Jackson, which is a nice little town, by
3:34:01
the way, in California.
3:34:02
Move there.
3:34:03
Van E.
3:34:04
Newman in Bernalito, Mexico.
3:34:08
You're falling apart, old man.
3:34:11
Yeah, Adam Hearst.
3:34:13
He's in Heathcote, Australia.
3:34:17
100.
3:34:18
Toby in New Orleans.
3:34:19
And he has a happy.
3:34:20
He says he has a birthday for his
3:34:22
Halloween.
3:34:23
Yeah, Toby's 100 bucks.
3:34:25
He's in New Orleans.
3:34:27
John Bolter in Trabuco Canyon, California.
3:34:31
80, 86.
3:34:33
Daviti in Cumming, Georgia.
3:34:35
8008.
3:34:35
And there's Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina.
3:34:38
He's the Archduke of London.
3:34:39
Lover of America.
3:34:40
Lover of boobs.
3:34:41
And lover of everything in between.
3:34:42
Please save the sweater puppies.
3:34:45
Catherine Morton in Charlotte, North Carolina.
3:34:48
7903.
3:34:49
That's a birthday.
3:34:50
William S.
3:34:52
Merrill in Calabasas, California.
3:34:55
75.
3:34:56
And it says here this donation makes me
3:34:59
in his blank.
3:35:00
Well, congratulations.
3:35:01
You are.
3:35:03
Yeah, you're right.
3:35:03
Me, sir.
3:35:05
Commodore J.
3:35:07
Stroke in Norton, Ohio.
3:35:09
7080.
3:35:10
Oh, he wants to credit the donation to
3:35:11
Chupacabra Canoe LLC.
3:35:14
Okay, Chupacabra Canoe, you get this donation.
3:35:19
Joel Cox in Indianola, Pennsylvania.
3:35:24
Wow.
3:35:25
7061.
3:35:27
67, he says.
3:35:29
Baronet Michael Robinson in Salem, Oregon.
3:35:33
6718.
3:35:35
He talks about lucid dreaming.
3:35:37
Here's the one.
3:35:37
He's the guy who says tablespoon or two
3:35:40
of raw potato starch or flour.
3:35:43
It has to be raw.
3:35:45
I don't know about the flour.
3:35:47
It's not good raw.
3:35:49
Anyway, he says it gives you lucid dreams.
3:35:51
Give it a shot.
3:35:53
Unless he's putting us on.
3:35:54
Meanwhile, we got Franklin Monteroza in Dodge City,
3:35:57
Kansas.
3:35:58
67.
3:35:59
67.
3:35:59
And Sean Wright in Farmington, Connecticut.
3:36:01
67.
3:36:06
Frederick Vorderhacke.
3:36:10
Frederick Vorderhacke.
3:36:14
In Amsterdam.
3:36:16
5961.
3:36:17
Sir Becoming Heroic in Sherryville, Indiana.
3:36:21
5940.
3:36:23
33 cents an episode.
3:36:25
Sir Visa or Sir Vesa.
3:36:27
It'd be Sir Vesa.
3:36:28
It's a joke.
3:36:29
In Dallas, Texas.
3:36:31
5683.
3:36:33
He's looking for some jobs karma.
3:36:35
We'll give you some jobs karma at the
3:36:36
end.
3:36:36
Adam will remember to do that.
3:36:38
Sir Glenn.
3:36:39
5510.
3:36:40
Sir Mark Magpio.
3:36:44
5510.
3:36:45
Sir Prize Night of Astonishment in Yukon, Oklahoma.
3:36:49
5444.
3:36:50
We're getting there.
3:36:51
Rick LaBlanca.
3:36:53
5432.
3:36:54
Paolo Moore in Fort Washington, Maryland.
3:36:58
54.
3:37:01
Not Scared of Pagans.
3:37:04
Ah, I talked about that.
3:37:06
Okay.
3:37:07
Sir Chris of Sachse.
3:37:09
Sachse, Texas.
3:37:11
Is that right?
3:37:11
I guess.
3:37:12
5333.
3:37:13
Scott Kowalski in Lynchburg, Virginia.
3:37:17
5299.
3:37:18
He's been married for 29 years and they
3:37:20
never had a fight.
3:37:22
He and Amy.
3:37:23
Garbage Man Dave in Lombard, Illinois.
3:37:27
Yay, Dave.
3:37:28
5272.
3:37:30
Patrick Ekstrom in Brick Township, New Jersey.
3:37:34
5272.
3:37:35
Paul Ruge in Fort Thomas, Kentucky.
3:37:40
5272.
3:37:41
Nicholas St. Amour.
3:37:43
In Rowden, Quebec.
3:37:46
5272.
3:37:47
Hence the French name.
3:37:49
Robert Cox in Delphi, Indiana.
3:37:53
5150.
3:37:55
Foster Birch, New York City.
3:37:57
5115.
3:37:59
Gina, playing Gina in B.C., somewhere in
3:38:02
B.C., Canada.
3:38:04
I got a birthday call out.
3:38:05
She came in with 51.
3:38:06
Her hubby Eddie, yes.
3:38:09
Kate Hubbard.
3:38:11
Kelly.
3:38:11
Kate Hubbard.
3:38:12
Kelly Hubbard.
3:38:14
Kelly Hubbard in Plymouth, Minnesota.
3:38:17
5018.
3:38:18
Carl Vogler in Dillon Beach, California.
3:38:21
5018.
3:38:22
And now we get to our 50s.
3:38:23
And curiously, on a day like this, we
3:38:26
don't have that many.
3:38:27
But I'm going to give name and location,
3:38:29
starting with Brett Denton in Boise.
3:38:35
Melissa Alvarez in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
3:38:39
George Wuchet in Lavergne, Sir George.
3:38:43
Lavergne, Texas.
3:38:45
Kennel Patalia in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
3:38:51
Upbeats Music Podcast in Copperas Cove.
3:38:55
Salty Crayon.
3:38:58
Michael Golub in Glen Burnie, Maryland.
3:39:03
And last on the list is Arthur.
3:39:08
Sitgera, Sitgera, Sitgera in Monroe, Georgia.
3:39:11
Yes.
3:39:11
$50.
3:39:12
These people all helped and made the show
3:39:14
1811 and the 18th anniversary show a rousing
3:39:19
success.
3:39:20
I would like to make an offer to
3:39:22
you.
3:39:23
What?
3:39:24
Would you like me to do the 50s
3:39:26
and above from now on?
3:39:28
Oh, really?
3:39:29
Okay.
3:39:30
I mean, just so people, I mean, it's
3:39:33
just, I mean, if I had some kind
3:39:34
of issue, you'd probably offer the same to
3:39:37
me.
3:39:38
I made two mistakes.
3:39:40
Okay.
3:39:41
But I want you to read them from
3:39:43
now on.
3:39:43
It'd be great.
3:39:44
I say it only out of love.
3:39:46
I mean, it's actually pretty good for the
3:39:48
show when you read them.
3:39:50
Because, you know, people love hearing it.
3:39:53
Yeah.
3:39:54
Okay.
3:39:54
I want you to read them.
3:39:55
But I'm being sincere.
3:39:57
No, I think it'd be great to listen
3:39:58
to you read them.
3:40:00
You might be faster.
3:40:02
Well, it doesn't matter.
3:40:03
Or not.
3:40:04
End of the show.
3:40:04
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
3:40:09
Let's vote for jobs.
3:40:12
I remembered that bit.
3:40:13
All right, everybody.
3:40:14
Thank you so much for supporting us on
3:40:16
our 18th anniversary.
3:40:17
Go to noagendadonations.com because on Thursday, we'll
3:40:21
be 18 years and one episode.
3:40:24
And we do not have a plan on
3:40:25
stopping until the value dries up.
3:40:27
It's very simple.
3:40:28
Value for value.
3:40:29
It works both ways.
3:40:30
We give you the show.
3:40:31
If you think it's valuable, you send some
3:40:32
value back.
3:40:33
And it's been going well so far.
3:40:35
So we will try and do 21.
3:40:37
Some people want four more years.
3:40:38
We'll see how that works out.
3:40:40
Just remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:40:43
You can set up a recurring donation.
3:40:44
Any amount.
3:40:45
Any frequency.
3:40:46
It's all up to you.
3:40:47
noagendadonations.com Yeah, we got a list.
3:40:55
David Truman turns 38 today, actually.
3:40:58
Dame Slabian, sir.
3:40:59
Do the chink.
3:41:00
Do the chink.
3:41:01
Wish Black Dame Loka from Texas, Hot Glass,
3:41:04
a very happy one.
3:41:05
It's her birthday today, as well.
3:41:07
Gina B, her smoking hot hubby.
3:41:09
Eddie celebrates tomorrow.
3:41:11
Dame Zeld of Silicon Valley will have her
3:41:13
birthday on the 28th.
3:41:14
Adam Hirsch, happy birthday to his old deer,
3:41:19
D-E-A-R, on the 31st.
3:41:21
Sir Burns, his wife, Sir Burns' keeper, celebrates
3:41:23
on the 6th.
3:41:24
Rhianne Kosinski turns 42.
3:41:27
And Catherine Morton, wish her smoking hot husband,
3:41:30
Jeff Morton, a very happy birthday.
3:41:32
He turns 50 years old.
3:41:33
And we say happy birthday from everybody here
3:41:35
at the best podcast in the universe.
3:41:48
Wow, he really did his accounting.
3:41:50
7K in total to the show.
3:41:52
So a well-deserved title upgrade for Sir
3:41:55
John of South London.
3:41:57
He now becomes Earl Kumar of South London.
3:42:00
And we congratulate him with that, of course.
3:42:02
And then no more pesky jingles for the
3:42:05
Secretary's General.
3:42:07
Instead, ladies and gentlemen, we are proud to
3:42:10
present some peace prizes.
3:42:11
Not just any prize, but the No Agenda
3:42:14
International Peace Prize, as sent to the President
3:42:17
of the United States, the Vice President of
3:42:19
the United States, and the Speaker of the
3:42:21
House, Brandon Mango.
3:42:24
No, I'm sorry.
3:42:25
Yes, Brandon Mango, Bowman McMahon, and Sir Earhopper.
3:42:30
All of you deserve the No Agenda Peace
3:42:34
Prize.
3:42:35
Go to noagenderings.com so that we can
3:42:38
make sure we send it to the right
3:42:40
address.
3:42:41
And welcome you, Principals of Peace.
3:42:44
We appreciate you.
3:42:44
Can I make a correction?
3:42:45
What did I do wrong?
3:42:47
Well, you, it's not the Speaker of the
3:42:49
House.
3:42:50
He didn't do anything.
3:42:51
Well, OK.
3:42:52
It was going to be Wittkoff.
3:42:54
Oh, Wittkoff and Bushman.
3:42:55
The other thing is, we may be playing
3:42:57
that jingle again, because not everybody has checked
3:43:00
in.
3:43:01
Oh.
3:43:02
Oh.
3:43:03
You know the laggards.
3:43:05
We have laggards.
3:43:06
Laggards, yeah.
3:43:07
They're like, I'm going to give those guys
3:43:08
some cash.
3:43:09
I don't care.
3:43:10
And then, like, six months later, we end
3:43:13
up with this.
3:43:13
Here's our, why didn't I get my document?
3:43:18
Get your blade out, man.
3:43:20
Careful.
3:43:20
Don't cut yourself on that one.
3:43:22
There you go.
3:43:22
We have three knights to join us today.
3:43:26
Coincidentally, they're very similar to the Peace Prize
3:43:29
winners, Brandon Mango, David Coonan, and Matthew Burns.
3:43:34
Jump up on the podium here, gentlemen.
3:43:35
I'm very proud to pronunciate thee as Sir
3:43:38
Mango, the Knight of the Sweet Tooth, Sir
3:43:41
David of West Brabant, and Sir Burns of
3:43:43
the Good Future.
3:43:44
For you, gentlemen, we have Hookers & Blow,
3:43:47
Red Poison, Chardonnay.
3:43:48
We've got hot coffee and a stroopwafel.
3:43:50
Along with that, here at the round table,
3:43:52
beer and blunts, Lubeness, Lumen and Rosé, Gates
3:43:55
& Osaki, Vodka & Vanilla, Bognix & Bourbon,
3:43:58
Sparkling Cider & Escort, Ginger Ale & Gerbils,
3:44:00
Fresh Milk & Pabulum.
3:44:01
And as always at the round table, the
3:44:03
mutton and the meat.
3:44:05
Enjoy.
3:44:05
Everybody, head over to noagenderings.com.
3:44:08
That's where you can see your handsome knight
3:44:09
ring, which will be yours once you send
3:44:11
us the address to send it off to
3:44:13
you.
3:44:14
And with that, of course, we include some
3:44:16
wax.
3:44:16
With that, you can seal your important correspondence.
3:44:19
And as always, everything comes with a Certificate
3:44:21
of Authenticity.
3:44:22
Because it's real, you are a real knight
3:44:24
of the No Agenda round table.
3:44:26
Congratulations.
3:44:34
Always a party at these No Agenda meetups,
3:44:36
and they are happening around the world as
3:44:38
you will hear in a moment after we
3:44:40
give you two reports.
3:44:41
The first from Fort Wayne, which I think
3:44:44
was...
3:44:45
This was...
3:44:45
Was this a...
3:44:47
On the smaller side.
3:44:48
Adam and John.
3:44:49
Shannon reporting in from Fort Wayne.
3:44:51
And we had a small meetup.
3:44:53
We had a few that took advantage of
3:44:54
the weather and weren't here.
3:44:55
And another one that wasn't here was Pam
3:44:57
Bondi.
3:44:58
Adam Clark Curry.
3:45:01
John C.
3:45:02
Dvorak.
3:45:03
And she talks in syllables.
3:45:04
We love you, Pam.
3:45:06
And we're going to get the Epstein list
3:45:07
by Christmas.
3:45:08
Hey guys, this is Jason.
3:45:10
New guy in the room, but definitely having
3:45:11
a good time.
3:45:12
In the morning.
3:45:13
In the morning.
3:45:15
See you next time.
3:45:16
Adios and bon voyage.
3:45:17
What do you call two dudes in a
3:45:19
bar in Fort Wayne?
3:45:21
A meetup.
3:45:22
That's right.
3:45:23
More people in Los Altos.
3:45:24
But still, here's your meetup report.
3:45:26
In the morning here in downtown Los Altos,
3:45:28
giving you a report for the meetup.
3:45:31
This is Sir Rich Meiser.
3:45:32
This is Commodore dude named Ben named Ben.
3:45:35
Duke of San Francisco having a wonderful time
3:45:37
meeting new people.
3:45:39
And connection is protection.
3:45:42
Sir Julian here in Los Altos.
3:45:44
We're all at the edge of our seats,
3:45:46
waiting for John's book review of Minotaur Milking
3:45:49
Farm.
3:45:50
Sir Montauk learning all about glycine.
3:45:53
Hello, this is Abraham.
3:45:54
I'm recently divorced and I need a classy
3:45:56
broad in my life.
3:45:57
This is an anonymous lady in San Francisco
3:46:00
in the morning.
3:46:01
This is Sir Tin Death.
3:46:04
Resist we much.
3:46:05
This is Sir Rick Houser turned crazy Steve
3:46:07
II.
3:46:08
I just want to wish you two dudes
3:46:10
a happy 18th anniversary.
3:46:12
And please free Candace Owens.
3:46:15
Thank you very much.
3:46:17
Remember to include your servers in these reports,
3:46:20
people.
3:46:20
That's a way of hitting people in the
3:46:22
mouth.
3:46:22
We have a couple meetups taking place.
3:46:23
One today actually underway.
3:46:25
It is the TMI Three Mile Island EVAC
3:46:27
Zone.
3:46:28
It started at 3.33 Eastern time at
3:46:30
Evergreen Brewing in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.
3:46:32
Tomorrow, Berlin gets together.
3:46:35
The Berlin ITM Slaves, 7.33 p.m.
3:46:38
at Folk's Bar at Rosa Luxemburg Platz in
3:46:42
Berlin, Germany.
3:46:43
I'm looking forward to a report from you.
3:46:45
And the final one for the month will
3:46:47
be on the 30th.
3:46:48
That is the North Georgia NOW quarterly meetup,
3:46:51
six o'clock, Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta,
3:46:54
Georgia.
3:46:55
Coming up, oh actually, the 31st, Leiden side.
3:46:57
Hold on, the Netherlands on the 31st.
3:46:59
Then we have Durango, Colorado on the 2nd.
3:47:02
Indianapolis on the 2nd.
3:47:03
Raleigh, North Carolina on the 6th.
3:47:05
Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 15th.
3:47:06
Albany, California.
3:47:07
John will be there on the 15th of
3:47:09
November.
3:47:09
Zurich, Switzerland.
3:47:11
Need your meetup report, 15th of November.
3:47:13
Burlington, Kentucky on the 22nd.
3:47:15
And many more to be found at noagentandmeetups
3:47:18
.com.
3:47:18
This is something you must witness at least
3:47:21
once in your life.
3:47:21
What's the one in November that I'm going
3:47:23
to be at?
3:47:23
November 15th, Albany, California.
3:47:25
It's right next door.
3:47:26
You're right there.
3:47:27
Pop out of the house.
3:47:28
Go say hi.
3:47:29
I'm sure we'll be at that pizza place.
3:47:31
No doubt about it.
3:47:33
Go to noagentandmeetups.com.
3:47:34
That's going to be at the Mallory Club
3:47:34
as usual.
3:47:35
I guess so.
3:47:36
noagentandmeetups.com.
3:47:37
These are the people that will give you
3:47:39
the connection.
3:47:40
It gives you pure protection.
3:47:41
The first responders in any emergency.
3:47:43
You will never regret going to your first
3:47:45
noagentandmeetup.
3:47:46
Go to noagentandmeetups.com to find out where
3:47:48
all of them are.
3:47:49
If you can't find one near you, start
3:47:51
one yourself.
3:47:51
It's easy and guaranteed a party.
3:48:13
Always like a party, man.
3:48:15
We've got our end of show mixes, which
3:48:17
are not all AI, but man, they are
3:48:20
getting good.
3:48:21
One minute 30 max, please, if you're going
3:48:23
to send it in.
3:48:24
And of course, you will be on our
3:48:25
new radio station.
3:48:27
We need to have a name for this
3:48:28
station.
3:48:29
I'm going to call it No Agenda what?
3:48:33
For our end of show mix radio station.
3:48:36
No, let's dream up a title right now.
3:48:38
That's why I'm throwing it out there.
3:48:41
No AI agenda.
3:48:44
Oh, wow.
3:48:45
Wow.
3:48:46
That's coming up.
3:48:46
If you're just going to condemn every suggestion,
3:48:49
it's not going to get any suggestions out.
3:48:51
That's right.
3:48:52
There's never a wrong suggestion in brainstorming.
3:48:58
How about Neo?
3:49:00
How about Neo radio?
3:49:03
Neo radio.
3:49:06
I think that's available.
3:49:07
It's actually a good URL.
3:49:09
No agenda real.
3:49:10
Finally, the troll room is waking up.
3:49:12
There we go.
3:49:13
No agenda real.
3:49:14
Yeah, but the problem is that indicates video.
3:49:16
It does.
3:49:17
Yeah, it's no good.
3:49:17
We'll work on it.
3:49:18
We'll find something.
3:49:19
We'll find something.
3:49:21
I saw something off the wall.
3:49:23
I saw time before we leave you.
3:49:26
Of course, we have John's tip of the
3:49:27
day.
3:49:27
So don't go anywhere.
3:49:28
I have three today and you seem to
3:49:30
have two.
3:49:31
Yeah, go with your three.
3:49:32
Wow.
3:49:33
Thanks a lot, guys.
3:49:34
Okay.
3:49:35
That's one.
3:49:36
You know what?
3:49:38
100%.
3:49:38
Well, wait.
3:49:40
White supremacy.
3:49:41
Right.
3:49:42
Oh, that's my last one.
3:49:46
Kind of like that.
3:49:48
That's Maduro, by the way.
3:49:50
Oh, was it?
3:49:51
Yes.
3:49:54
Okay, I got a couple here.
3:49:56
Yeah.
3:49:57
I'm trying to think which one to play
3:49:58
first.
3:50:01
Oh, let's do Walter Cronkite.
3:50:03
How do they do it?
3:50:04
Nobody knows.
3:50:09
Okay, Kennedy.
3:50:10
That was a humdinger of a show.
3:50:12
Okay, there's just nothing competing.
3:50:15
You can't compete with Kennedy.
3:50:16
AI Kennedy, I'm sure.
3:50:18
Hey, everybody.
3:50:19
It's time again for John's tip of the
3:50:21
day.
3:50:22
Great advice for you and me.
3:50:25
Just a tip with JCD and sometimes Adam.
3:50:32
All right.
3:50:33
So we're back through the rotation, back to
3:50:35
cleaning products.
3:50:37
But this is not a cleaning liquid or
3:50:41
detergent or anything.
3:50:42
This is a multi-purpose portable carpet and
3:50:47
upholstery cleaner for car, auto detailer, blah, blah,
3:50:51
blah.
3:50:51
It's good for everything, especially if you have
3:50:53
dogs.
3:50:55
I have a dog.
3:50:57
I need this product.
3:50:58
I have a very dirty car.
3:51:00
This is another Bissell product.
3:51:02
This is specifically called, you have to look
3:51:05
this up.
3:51:06
They have, Mimi claims she got one at
3:51:08
Costco for 70 bucks.
3:51:09
Whoa.
3:51:10
They're 90 bucks or more.
3:51:13
99 bucks at Amazon.
3:51:15
It's not a cheap product.
3:51:16
What is it called?
3:51:17
It's called the Little Green Multi-Purpose Portable
3:51:22
Carpet and Upholstery Cleaner.
3:51:24
It's a small device.
3:51:26
It's the little green with a lot of
3:51:28
suction.
3:51:29
And she swears by, claims she uses it
3:51:32
every day.
3:51:34
The Little Green Carpet Cleaner by Bissell.
3:51:37
I'm looking at it now.
3:51:38
Wow.
3:51:39
Pronounce Bissell, but okay.
3:51:40
Okay.
3:51:41
Well, look, just because I said I would
3:51:43
read this, the donation.
3:51:44
No, you're reading the description.
3:51:45
You're getting all pissy at me about it.
3:51:47
I'm trying to be nice.
3:51:50
The Little Bissell, is it Bissell?
3:51:53
Yeah, Bissell.
3:51:55
Bissell.
3:51:57
So it really sucks.
3:52:00
It sucks.
3:52:02
And they have actually, they have little green
3:52:04
oxy liquid that you put in it.
3:52:06
Yes.
3:52:07
There's a special liquid.
3:52:08
It takes off everything.
3:52:09
It's great for upholstery.
3:52:11
Yeah.
3:52:12
It's a winner.
3:52:13
Hmm.
3:52:14
Interesting.
3:52:15
And, uh, and of course, Mimi would know
3:52:17
because she's got the dogs, right?
3:52:19
She's got tons of dogs.
3:52:21
There it is, everybody.
3:52:22
Find all of the tips at tipoftheday.net.
3:52:35
That's right.
3:52:36
Created by Dana Brunetti.
3:52:37
So, you know, it's quality.
3:52:39
It's a quality product right here, everybody.
3:52:41
Quality stuff.
3:52:43
Uh, that's it for our 18th anniversary show.
3:52:46
Thank you all for being here.
3:52:47
We appreciate you.
3:52:49
Every single one of you.
3:52:51
Uh, let's see.
3:52:52
Coming up next.
3:52:53
Oh, how about that?
3:52:55
We have the podcasting 2.0 show.
3:52:58
I did that one just the other day.
3:53:00
It's titled Fuzzing.
3:53:02
If you want to know what's going on.
3:53:03
I didn't even promote.
3:53:04
Titled what?
3:53:05
Fuzzing.
3:53:06
Fuzzing.
3:53:07
Fuzzing is fuzzing.
3:53:08
Is that like Ohio?
3:53:10
No.
3:53:10
Another term I'm not aware of.
3:53:12
It's a technical term.
3:53:15
Developers use this.
3:53:16
Fuzzing.
3:53:18
Fuzzing.
3:53:18
Explain before we go.
3:53:20
No, we don't have enough time.
3:53:22
Oh, brother.
3:53:24
Just hang around and listen to it on
3:53:26
the No Agenda Streamer, your modern podcast app.
3:53:29
End of show mixes.
3:53:30
Nico Sime.
3:53:31
We got Sir Michael Anthony with a non
3:53:33
-AI mix.
3:53:34
Mark Van Patten and Bree or Bry, I
3:53:38
guess.
3:53:38
Coming to you from the heart of the
3:53:40
Texas Hill Country.
3:53:42
For the 18th year going into 19 in
3:53:44
the morning, everybody.
3:53:45
I'm Adam Curry.
3:53:46
And from Northern Silicon Valley.
3:53:48
I'm John C.
3:53:48
Dvorak.
3:53:49
We return on Thursday for our 18th year
3:53:51
plus one.
3:53:52
Please join us and remember us at noagendadonations
3:53:56
.com.
3:53:56
Until then, adios, fo-fos, a-hoo-wee
3:53:59
-hoo-wee, and such.
3:54:28
These days can't read a clock.
3:54:30
Round face can't let time fly.
3:54:59
Tick tock.
3:55:00
What a shock.
3:55:07
Clock to feel double-crossed.
3:55:09
Who ain't
3:55:21
getting that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:23
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:24
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:26
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:28
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:30
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:36
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:38
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:40
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:43
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:46
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:46
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:46
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
3:55:46
that, that, that, that, that, that Baby, you
3:55:47
wanna see a human with those little bulldozer,
3:55:49
baby Cause this is the punk I'm referring
3:55:50
to If you think you can fuck me,
3:55:52
believe me, I'll take you right back home
3:55:53
I'm not gonna fuck a monster, monster You're
3:55:56
not getting that, you ain't seeing that What
3:56:00
are you not letting me see?
3:56:08
I want to go where I'll go I'll
3:56:12
go with you I'll go with them I'll
3:56:18
go with them There you go Ah
3:56:37
-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah Ah-ah-ah
3:56:43
-ah-ah-ah There is only one podcast
3:56:50
I like to hear It's hosted by our
3:56:55
Adam and our John C.
3:56:57
Deere They masticate and separate the M5M And
3:57:03
show us all the ghoulish things that live
3:57:07
within They show love to monsters They're worse
3:57:16
than the politicians Psychopathic news anchors Lie with
3:57:21
a devilish grin When Adam and Devorah met
3:57:25
her back and forth Committed double action made
3:57:30
that mainstream's worse The funny and the serious
3:57:35
intersect As they warn us about the industrial
3:57:41
complex They show love to monsters They're worse
3:57:49
than the politicians Psychopathic news anchors Lie with
3:57:55
a devilish grin And
3:58:06
the social media gets ya if you don't
3:58:10
watch out Woo!
3:58:20
The best podcast in the universe Audio, mofo,
3:58:26
devorak.org, slash, N, A That was a
3:58:32
humdinger of a show