0:00
Berlin, stop rubbing your ATMs. Adam Curry, John
0:04
C.
0:04
Dvorak.
0:04
It's Sunday, January 11th, 2026.
0:07
This is your award-winning GiveOnNation media assassination
0:09
episode 1833.
0:11
This is no agenda.
0:14
We're all DeBruyner now, and we are broadcasting
0:17
live from the heart of the Texas Hill
0:19
Country here in FEMA region number six.
0:21
In the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:24
And from Northern Silicon Valley, we're watching the
0:26
fall of civilization.
0:28
I'm John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:29
It's a crackpot on Buzzkill.
0:31
In the morning.
0:34
Well, I don't know about that, but it
0:36
is definitely Dimension A and Dimension B back
0:39
on deck, as if it ever went away.
0:45
Yeah.
0:47
Yeah.
0:48
So they're lined up in, uh, last night,
0:50
or the night before, whatever, in Calgary to
0:52
sign the petition to separate.
0:54
Yeah, they expected a small event, and thousands
0:56
of people showed up.
0:58
Here's the problem I have with it.
1:01
I thought this was already on the ballot.
1:05
I have no idea.
1:08
What do they, what do they want?
1:09
They want independence?
1:11
Yeah.
1:12
What do they want?
1:13
No justice, no, no peace?
1:17
No oil, no, what was it?
1:18
No, no something, no oil, no, I don't
1:21
know.
1:21
I didn't hear it.
1:22
Forget the oil one.
1:22
I didn't hear it.
1:24
No justice, no oil, or what is the
1:26
one with the oil?
1:27
There's a bumper sticker.
1:28
Did, did we have a chant?
1:29
Did we have a chant?
1:32
Would have.
1:34
Alberta splitting off?
1:35
I don't think so.
1:36
I don't think there was a chant.
1:38
I don't think so.
1:38
Maybe a chance.
1:40
A chant.
1:41
A chant.
1:41
No, no.
1:42
A chant?
1:43
No, they're Canadians?
1:45
Just a complaint.
1:46
It's just a complaint.
1:47
There's no chant.
1:49
Where's our chant?
1:50
We're not gonna chant at all.
1:53
Man, this is so tiring.
1:57
When the quad swings.
1:58
What, what, which of, what column are you
2:01
looking at?
2:02
Well, I'm looking, I'm looking at all, I'm
2:05
looking at the quad screen.
2:06
That's all kind of the same.
2:08
What happened just as a, maybe a smaller
2:11
side.
2:12
Let me just play.
2:13
This was, this was, I couldn't get any,
2:16
of course, I mean, because it's all Minneapolis,
2:18
Minneapolis, Minneapolis, Minneapolis, Minneapolis, Minneapolis, Minneapolis.
2:23
By the way, between, in Oakland, between January
2:26
1st and January 5th, there were five murders.
2:29
None of it covers, no protests.
2:31
I think Chicago's already had 13, 13, 14
2:35
deaths.
2:36
Who cares?
2:37
You know, they're black.
2:38
Who cares about those black people?
2:39
They're black.
2:39
They're black.
2:40
Who cares?
2:41
No, this is, this story, which Carolyn Levitt
2:48
posted or retweeted from an interview that was
2:52
translated from something in some, some, I guess
2:57
it was Spanish.
2:59
And of course, there's not a single report
3:01
that I could find on it this morning.
3:02
So I had to go to the well,
3:04
to WION, because they're always on top of
3:07
the news.
3:08
The alleged witness account was also shared on
3:10
social media by the White House press secretary.
3:13
In the interview, the guard allegedly described how
3:16
U.S. forces use technology unlike anything he
3:20
has ever seen.
3:21
He said that all their radar systems shut
3:24
down without any explanation.
3:26
It was followed by a lot of drones
3:28
flying over their positions.
3:30
He claimed that a helicopter arrived moments later,
3:34
deploying what he estimated were just 20 U
3:37
.S. troops into the area.
3:38
But he said that these few men came
3:41
armed with something far more powerful than guns.
3:45
The guard claims that the U.S. troops
3:47
shot with precision and speed.
3:49
He said, and I'm quoting, it felt like
3:52
each soldier was firing 300 rounds per minute.
3:56
At one point, U.S. troops launched another
3:58
weapon, according to the guard's account.
4:00
It was like a very intense sound wave.
4:02
And he felt like his head was exploding
4:04
from the inside.
4:05
He claimed that the Venezuelan side started bleeding
4:08
from the nose, while some were vomiting blood.
4:11
They were unable to move.
4:13
An estimated 100 Venezuelan security forces were killed
4:16
in the January 3 attack.
4:19
The White House press secretary, Caroline LeVette, has
4:21
shared the account on social media.
4:23
However, the White House has not confirmed whether
4:26
the administration was verifying the veracity of the
4:29
eyewitness account.
4:30
Now, I have the clip that triggered all
4:33
this.
4:36
And I think this is almost word for
4:38
word what she stole from this guy.
4:40
This is the Maduro security guard's second half.
4:43
And I noticed it says second half.
4:46
He wanted to bring it in second half
4:47
of show.
4:48
Yeah, I didn't expect you to drop it
4:50
at the beginning.
4:51
Well, it's it's it's second half of show
4:53
material.
4:54
I disagree.
4:54
For 18 years, I've been talking about directed
4:58
energy weapons.
4:59
Yeah, OK.
4:59
Yeah, they had a beam.
5:01
It's called LRAD.
5:03
But OK, you know, you can mock me
5:05
all you want.
5:07
I'm not blocking you.
5:08
I'm just saying.
5:09
Mocking, mocking.
5:11
I didn't say block, mock.
5:12
Oh, I'm sorry.
5:13
I normally block.
5:15
Yeah, well, that's that's your go to.
5:17
That's my style.
5:18
That's your go to.
5:19
I normally just block.
5:21
Someone literally sent me a forward from from
5:24
a reject from your email server.
5:26
It said suspicious.
5:28
Blocked due to suspicion.
5:32
Yeah, there's a lot of that.
5:33
That's good.
5:34
This is OK.
5:35
Anyway, this is this came floating around.
5:38
This is passed around the net.
5:39
I don't know where Carolyn got it, but
5:42
the WIO and person obviously, they just took
5:45
this verbatim.
5:46
Everyone did the ones that did it.
5:48
It came it came from an interview that
5:50
is in Spanish.
5:51
Yeah.
5:52
And this is the guy who did the
5:53
interview.
5:54
A security guard that was protecting Maduro has
5:57
spoken and you got to hear what he
5:58
said.
5:58
It's in Spanish, but I'll translate.
6:01
Also, Trump announced that, you know, the cartels,
6:03
they're going after him in Mexico.
6:05
The whole vibe of Latin America has changed
6:08
because of what happened in Venezuela.
6:11
And now that we're getting firsthand accounts from
6:15
people, they were there.
6:17
The soldier says they didn't hear him coming.
6:20
He says the Americans had technology superior to
6:23
anything they've ever seen.
6:25
Everything that they were using for radar, for
6:28
anything was completely taken offline.
6:31
They had drones and the drones were taking
6:36
out bases and taking out things faster.
6:39
They didn't have no technology.
6:40
They've never had to fight against drones.
6:42
He also talks about that there was only
6:44
eight helicopters.
6:45
There was only 20 men that were sent
6:47
in and those 20 men killed hundreds of
6:51
their men.
6:52
And none of those soldiers were injured.
6:55
He talks about, it felt like they were
6:57
firing 300 rounds a minute.
7:00
Nothing they've ever seen, nothing that they can
7:03
compete with.
7:04
And then he also talks to the fact
7:06
that the Americans had some kind of sonic
7:11
shock boom that was sent out and everybody
7:14
immediately started bleeding profusely out of their nose.
7:17
They couldn't even gather themselves because whatever was
7:20
sent at them, made them fall to their
7:22
knees and vomit blood out of their mouth
7:25
and out of their noses.
7:27
They were incapacitated immediately.
7:30
He says he never wants to fear, never
7:33
wants to go through that again.
7:35
Doesn't want to have to fight with the
7:36
Americans again.
7:37
He's sending warnings to everybody out there that
7:40
you think you can fight the Americans.
7:42
You don't even know what their weaponry is
7:44
like and what they're capable of.
7:46
20 men took out hundreds and that's starting
7:49
to spread all through Latin America.
7:53
And now they're not saying, if you want
7:56
me, come and get me anymore.
7:57
They're like, oh shit.
7:58
Especially after Trump says, hey, Mexico, you're on
8:02
the list too.
8:04
So you put the second half because you
8:05
don't believe it?
8:08
You're right.
8:09
I don't believe it.
8:10
I mean, it's not that we don't have
8:11
this sort of weaponry, but I don't think
8:13
it was necessary.
8:14
And I think it's just to scare the
8:16
hell out of these guys.
8:18
I think it was planted.
8:22
That's possible, but it's about time we had
8:25
this technology.
8:25
I mean, they've been experimenting with it long
8:27
enough.
8:28
Yeah, no, I agree.
8:30
And I think we should use it on
8:32
Minneapolis.
8:34
Let's see it in action.
8:35
That would be a practical use.
8:37
Let's see it in action, man.
8:39
But more interesting maybe to me is 300
8:42
rounds a minute.
8:45
I mean, that's five rounds a second.
8:48
What barrel melting device is that, that you
8:51
can hold in your hands?
8:53
And how do you even, it has to
8:55
be a belt or a really big magazine.
8:59
That actually sounded kind of odd, but LRAD,
9:03
that's real.
9:04
I mean, they have been experimenting with it
9:07
for a long, long time.
9:10
And remember, we had the, maybe that was
9:12
what we were experimenting on our own people
9:14
in the embassies, everyone getting sick.
9:18
That's possible.
9:19
I'm just doubting the whole thing.
9:22
Well, we'll see.
9:23
Including the 300 rounds a minute.
9:25
And it's too much opportunity to hit your
9:27
own men with this stuff.
9:30
I mean, there's 25 guys.
9:33
Why can't you just believe that we're awesome?
9:36
You're anti-American, man.
9:38
I think we're pretty awesome.
9:40
This is American ingenuity.
9:42
Actually, if you think about it, it's an
9:43
awesome thing to do, which is to create
9:45
a bullcrap narrative that...
9:48
It just doesn't seem like Carolyn Leavitt would
9:50
do that.
9:51
It just doesn't seem like she...
9:52
No, I don't think she had anything.
9:53
I don't know.
9:53
She may have been freelancing.
9:55
She doesn't, maybe she was part of it,
9:58
part of the scheme to just frighten the
10:00
enemies without having to shoot a shot.
10:04
Maybe, maybe.
10:05
Perfect CIA material.
10:07
They like to do that kind of thing.
10:09
Yeah.
10:09
Well, remember, they had the cancer gun.
10:12
They showed that in what, 1979 or something
10:18
during the hearing about MKUltra.
10:21
Yeah, the church hearings.
10:22
Yeah, the church hearings.
10:23
Yes.
10:24
Remember, they had the cancer gun.
10:25
They held it up.
10:26
Look at this thing.
10:28
We shoot you with this.
10:29
No, it was a heart attack gun.
10:31
I'm sorry.
10:31
The heart attack gun.
10:32
Yeah.
10:34
No, but you know, hey man, if we
10:36
can go to the moon, why wouldn't we
10:40
be able to do this?
10:41
Yeah, your point well taken.
10:42
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
10:44
I know, I'm slowly getting you.
10:46
Slowly, slowly, slowly.
10:48
I'm bringing you to the did not land
10:51
side.
10:54
Eventually, you'll get there.
10:56
Once they get to the math of the
10:57
stuff they destroyed, maybe.
11:01
So, do you want to talk about Venezuela
11:03
or do you want to like jump on?
11:05
Do I have Venezuela clips?
11:06
Oh, I got tons of Venezuela clips.
11:08
I'm not so much about Venezuela, but about
11:10
the big meeting.
11:12
And my buddy was there at the big
11:14
meeting.
11:16
The big meeting of all the oil dudes.
11:19
Oh, I have an oil saga clip.
11:22
Well, let me play the opener, just a
11:24
positioning clip.
11:25
President Trump today meeting with oil executives at
11:28
the White House just hours ago.
11:29
After the U.S. military seized another oil
11:31
tanker linked to Venezuela.
11:33
New video from U.S. Southern Command showing
11:35
the seizure of that tanker in the Caribbean.
11:38
The third one this week.
11:39
U.S. troops were pulling down ropes from
11:42
a helicopter and then taking control of that
11:44
ship.
11:45
During his meeting with oil executives, the president
11:48
saying that he wants quote total access to
11:50
Venezuela's oil.
11:52
All of the companies here today are going
11:54
to be treasured partners in bringing the nation
11:57
of Venezuela back to life, restoring its economy
12:00
and generating great wealth for their companies and
12:04
for their people and also great wealth for
12:08
the American people.
12:10
Meanwhile, the U.S. has now sent a
12:12
delegation to Venezuela in a first step toward
12:15
restoring diplomatic relations after the capture of Nicolas
12:19
Maduro.
12:20
So the video was kind of interesting.
12:21
I saw our guy there.
12:23
It's not the oil baron himself.
12:24
It's the oil baron's partner was there.
12:26
So I saw him and he basically went.
12:30
I think the president asked him.
12:33
So what do you think about Venezuela?
12:35
And he went, yeah, a lot of shale
12:36
there.
12:38
He didn't say we're going to go right
12:40
away, Mr. President.
12:41
But in the video, Tucker was there.
12:44
You see Tucker standing around in that meeting?
12:49
That's interesting.
12:51
No.
12:51
Yeah.
12:52
Now, it's even more interesting that the word
12:54
on the street is he actually had a
12:56
private lunch with the president and then the
12:58
president said, hey, come on, hang with these
12:59
oil guys.
13:03
So there's some reason for that.
13:04
Well, of course, you know, Tucker's Team Trump.
13:07
He's just he's doing his thing, whatever he's
13:10
been told to do, I presume.
13:12
I presume.
13:15
OK, so what you got?
13:17
Well, I got a couple of I got
13:19
three clips.
13:23
For one thing, I just started this mild
13:25
clip.
13:26
You know, they have a this is a
13:29
Venezuela guy in Venezuela.
13:31
And this is the report for I went
13:33
to Al Jazeera to get a bunch of
13:34
stuff.
13:35
Because if you want anything, you got to
13:36
go outside the M5M USA.
13:39
Yeah, because all they're talking about is that
13:41
woman in Minnesota.
13:44
And I just thought it was interesting that
13:46
they actually have boots on the ground in
13:48
Venezuela, a guy floating around reporter.
13:50
We don't have anybody.
13:51
Where's our people?
13:52
Where's ABC, CBS and CNN?
13:55
Roaming.
13:56
That's a good point.
13:57
We don't I don't think I don't think
13:58
I've seen a single report from any of
14:00
our big networks.
14:02
I see another two or four.
14:03
Oh, you don't go.
14:04
I don't want to go there.
14:05
I'm going to get killed.
14:07
So we have to.
14:08
I don't know about that.
14:09
So this I do.
14:11
I think it's a budget thing.
14:12
This is because there's no money.
14:13
Oh, well, there's that, too.
14:14
Yeah, whatever we got to do.
14:15
We got to do this.
14:16
And then you might be stuck there for
14:18
a couple of days of hotel costs.
14:20
Oh, yeah.
14:24
Save your credit card receipts.
14:26
Oh, wait.
14:27
Yeah, OK.
14:30
So here's the Venezuelan reporter from Al Jazeera.
14:35
Is there a report?
14:37
Venezuelans have endured decades of financial hardship.
14:39
But after Washington's promise to roll back oil
14:42
sanctions, there's cautious optimism for an economic turnaround.
14:46
Norris Soto reports now from the capital, Caracas.
14:47
Venezuela has the world's largest known oil reserves,
14:51
and yet its economy has been plunged into
14:54
uncertainty.
14:56
For millions, life has become a daily struggle.
15:01
Ana has lived through years of crippling sanctions,
15:04
shortages and inflation.
15:06
While many others left, she chose to stay.
15:10
She holds on to the days when the
15:12
local currency was worth something and her dreams
15:15
felt possible.
15:18
The hardest part of starting a business in
15:20
Venezuela is economic instability.
15:23
We work based on the U.S. dollar.
15:25
If we had a stable currency, everything would
15:27
be less difficult.
15:29
Well, how about a stable coin for you?
15:33
It's coming.
15:34
It's coming.
15:35
And I'm telling you, stable coin is floating
15:38
around now here.
15:40
Now, this is the ones that got my
15:41
attention, these clips.
15:42
This is.
15:43
If you remember, we played a clip from
15:46
Rubio last show about the three step stages.
15:50
Yeah, there's three stages of what they're going
15:52
to have to do.
15:53
First, you got to do this thing and
15:54
do that.
15:54
And this is one of the stages.
15:55
And this is the Venezuela.
15:57
They're already releasing prisoners.
15:59
Oh, there you go.
16:01
Right groups say Venezuela's government has released another
16:03
group of prisoners.
16:04
They're urging authorities to free more detainees.
16:07
The release has been a long held U
16:09
.S. demand and comes less than a week
16:11
after former President Nicolas Maduro was captured by
16:14
the U.S. About a thousand political prisoners
16:16
are believed to be held in jails across
16:18
Venezuela.
16:19
Yeah.
16:19
Big news in the in the Jesus world.
16:22
Everyone's talking about the pastors they released, supposedly.
16:25
Yes.
16:25
Well, they're doing that.
16:26
That's not being covered by our media.
16:28
800 pastors were released from jail.
16:32
No.
16:32
Well, it's it's covered by like the 700
16:35
pastor media.
16:39
Which I don't follow.
16:40
Pastor News Network, PNN.
16:43
I follow it.
16:45
I follow it.
16:45
So, yeah, you would.
16:47
So and then there's this little gem, which
16:50
is another kind of an interesting gotcha.
16:52
This is the Venezuela oil saga.
16:55
Continues clip.
16:56
President Trump has moved to tighten U.S.
16:58
control over revenue from the sale of Venezuelan
17:00
oil.
17:01
An executive order aims to prevent legal claims
17:04
on the funds by putting the money beyond
17:06
the reach of the courts.
17:07
The administration says the purpose is to ensure
17:10
economic and political stability in Venezuela and to
17:13
curb illegal immigration.
17:15
It says the money will be the property
17:17
of Venezuela, but will be held in U
17:19
.S. treasury accounts.
17:21
Mr. Trump signed the order after meeting with
17:23
more than a dozen oil executives at the
17:25
White House in an effort to raise 100
17:27
billion dollars in investments to fix Venezuela's oil
17:31
infrastructure.
17:31
Wait a minute.
17:32
So it's being put into treasury accounts.
17:35
Owned by Venezuela.
17:40
That Russian money in the EU, anybody?
17:43
That's interesting.
17:44
Of course, I thought so.
17:46
Of course, that's the perfect way to say,
17:47
and now we're going to put some, you
17:49
know, we'll sell you some T-bills and
17:50
then we'll give Venezuela some T-bills for
17:53
your money.
17:53
No, we'll give them the stable coin backed
17:56
by T-bills.
17:57
Well, they can do that.
17:58
Yes.
17:59
That's coming.
17:59
But the whole thing to come.
18:00
The whole thing about the, about now we're
18:03
not, because Trump is fearful.
18:06
He's like with good reason of all these
18:08
liberal judges.
18:10
Oh, yeah.
18:11
Oh, they just slam the hammer down and
18:12
say, no, now you got to return the
18:14
money or whatever.
18:14
I ain't got the money.
18:16
They've got the money.
18:17
Some judge is going to get Maduro out
18:19
of jail and he'll probably go, no, I
18:21
don't want to go.
18:22
It's dangerous out there.
18:23
I like it in here.
18:24
Don't let me go.
18:26
I did read that J.P. Morgan, I
18:31
guess J.P. Morgan has a couple of
18:36
banks or a couple of, what do you
18:40
call them?
18:41
Banks.
18:41
Banks in Venezuela?
18:45
Could be.
18:46
Yeah.
18:46
So everybody's in on this and they're not
18:50
telling us the whole story, which is too
18:51
bad.
18:52
I did come across an interesting article about
18:55
New York representative Richie Torres, who has proposed
18:59
a law.
19:02
Let me see.
19:03
Let me see the exact.
19:05
I don't think they have a name for
19:06
it.
19:08
Oh, yes.
19:08
The Public Integrity in Financial Prediction Markets Act
19:12
of 2026, because he says, I don't think
19:16
it's OK if it were to be that
19:18
way, that anyone inside the administration can make
19:22
money on the exact timing of the invasion.
19:30
Four hundred thousand dollars.
19:33
That's good.
19:34
Yeah.
19:34
Because, you know, that was probably Jared.
19:37
He said, watch this.
19:40
Jared would be the smartest one to do
19:42
that.
19:43
He would.
19:44
And then what are you going to do?
19:46
What's going to happen?
19:48
Hey, if only we had an inside track.
19:51
Where's our boots on the ground?
19:52
Come on, people should have let us know.
19:56
Here's Vice President Vance debunking the the fake
19:59
fake Bloomberg story.
20:02
Which we reported on on the last show,
20:05
and we immediately said, we don't know, but
20:08
it was Bloomberg.
20:08
You think Bloomberg would have some.
20:12
Did it actually come from Bloomberg?
20:14
Are we sure?
20:14
I got it from Bloomberg.
20:17
So Bloomberg reported on it.
20:18
Yeah, here it is.
20:19
I've heard a couple of things.
20:21
One that I was kept out of the
20:22
planning for the Venezuela operation.
20:24
That's false.
20:24
And another that Tulsi was kept out of
20:26
the planning for Venezuela operations.
20:28
That's completely false.
20:29
We're all part of the same team.
20:31
And one of the things that is really
20:32
amazing about that operation is that we kept
20:35
it very tight to the senior cabinet level
20:37
officials and related officials in our government.
20:39
And we kept this operation secret for a
20:42
very long time.
20:42
I'm very proud of that.
20:43
I think it suggests that the team works
20:46
very well together.
20:47
Looking ahead, what is my role?
20:48
Look, my role is going to be whatever
20:49
the president asks me to do.
20:53
Well, every single, or I should say every
20:54
other day, I'm chairing the meeting that we
20:57
do on this among White House principals to
20:59
talk about next steps.
21:00
He kind of let something loose there every
21:03
day.
21:03
I mean, every other day.
21:04
So they have a meeting every other day.
21:06
It's a staff meeting.
21:07
Well, every single, or I should say every
21:09
other day, I'm chairing the meeting that we
21:11
do on this among White House principals to
21:13
talk about next steps to try to ensure
21:15
that Venezuela is stable.
21:16
And as the president has directed us to
21:18
do, to ensure that the new Venezuelan government
21:20
actually listens to the United States and does
21:23
what the United States needs it to do
21:25
under our country's best interests.
21:27
So I'm going to be as involved as
21:28
the president wants me to be.
21:29
So far, that's been very involved.
21:31
And I'll keep on doing that so long
21:32
as the president asks me to do it.
21:35
Yeah.
21:37
You know, I think all of this is
21:38
really everything, including the sonic weapon.
21:43
I think it's all meant to intimidate the
21:44
drug cartels.
21:45
People have no idea.
21:47
The drug cartels have better weapons than most
21:50
of these South American countries have in their
21:52
military.
21:53
There's so much money in this.
21:56
It's hard for people to fathom how much
21:59
money really goes around in the drug networks.
22:02
And I hope it's tax free.
22:06
Oh, yeah, it's tax free for sure.
22:10
So this morning on Face the Nation, Margaret
22:14
Brennan had our Secretary of Energy Chris White
22:18
on the show, and she actually spoke about
22:20
the three point plan of which was one
22:23
releasing the prisoners.
22:24
OK, so Secretary Rubio said there's a three
22:26
point plan, stabilize, rehabilitate, transition.
22:30
This sounds indefinite.
22:32
Even when you heard some of those oil
22:33
executives, Chevron's leadership, they're already in Venezuela, we
22:37
should say, said it'll take 18 to 24
22:40
months to even increase oil production by 50
22:42
percent.
22:43
So how long is this American involvement?
22:46
Because he's saying there it's at least a
22:48
year and a half, two years.
22:50
They've been there for 100 years and likely
22:52
Chevron is going to be there 50 years
22:54
from now.
22:55
But the United States government, how long does
22:57
that role continue?
22:57
You heard the third part of Rubio's question,
23:00
which is transition.
23:01
We want to bring a representative government to
23:03
the people of Venezuela.
23:05
I think then you'll see the full sovereignty
23:08
back to the government of Venezuela.
23:09
We don't have a legitimate government of Venezuela
23:11
today.
23:12
We'd like to move and get there.
23:14
But America's there as a timeline.
23:16
Twenty five years this country's gone in decline.
23:19
Yeah, President Trump out of the box creative
23:21
intervention has allowed us to change the game.
23:26
But I don't know the timeline of that.
23:28
It's not weeks.
23:29
It's more months.
23:30
Could be a year or two.
23:30
Could be more.
23:31
Whatever, we're working on it.
23:36
Of course, way before CBS got into the
23:40
Citgo deal, which we pegged immediately, Paul Singer,
23:46
huge, huge Trump donor who completed his acquisition
23:50
of Citgo in December.
23:52
Maybe it was his prop bet.
23:54
That came up in the conversation.
23:56
So back in November, a U.S. judge
23:57
backed a bid by an American hedge fund
23:59
to purchase Citgo Petroleum.
24:02
The Treasury still has to approve that deal.
24:04
The hedge fund is actually run by a
24:06
big Trump donor, Paul Singer.
24:08
Boom.
24:09
Do you want to preserve?
24:10
Come on, Barry Weiss.
24:12
If you're going to listen to us for
24:13
your stories, just give us some credit.
24:15
Hedge fund is actually run by a big
24:17
Trump donor, Paul Singer.
24:19
Do you want to preserve Venezuelan ownership of
24:22
Citgo?
24:23
Do you want to have America have a
24:25
financial stake in it?
24:26
Trump bought a big portion of Intel company.
24:30
Do you want to own portions of oil
24:32
companies?
24:34
Again, that's going to be up to American
24:36
businesses.
24:36
That's certainly a very real possibility.
24:39
The Citgo sale is part of bringing redressed
24:42
accreditors of the United States for the Venezuelan
24:45
government.
24:46
And of course, one of the capital providers
24:50
in that transaction is a hedge fund provider.
24:53
There's lots of American investors and American refining
24:57
entrepreneurs that are involved in that.
24:59
So to take Venezuelan-owned refineries that are
25:02
in the United States and legally, through an
25:04
auction process, transfer them to American owners and
25:07
American entrepreneurs in the refining business, I think
25:10
that's fantastic.
25:12
It's pretty contentious what's going on here because
25:16
the president's asking basically to help put the
25:19
shale producers in America on their back foot,
25:22
if not out of business to some degree.
25:25
Because if he's, you know, depending on what
25:26
price they sell this oil for, market prices,
25:31
you know, that basically hurts the shale producers.
25:35
They're all like complaining.
25:36
The oil barons, like he's happy for America
25:38
and for Venezuela, but he's not happy about
25:41
his business, to which I say, oh, I'm
25:44
sorry.
25:45
I'm sorry.
25:46
One plane less.
25:51
One plane less.
25:53
He's going to burn me for that comment.
25:56
Probably.
25:57
Nah, it's OK.
25:59
But even the shale producers, you know, they
26:02
say, hey, if you pay us, we'll go
26:05
and we'll explore.
26:06
We'll go see what's going on.
26:07
So now it comes down to, all right,
26:09
is all that money going to Venezuela?
26:11
Are you going to pay us to go
26:13
and explore some stuff?
26:14
Because no one's really too, like, jumpy about
26:17
it.
26:17
It seems even just looking at, because I
26:20
watched that whole session with the president, you
26:24
know, besides the cordialness of, oh, Mr. President,
26:27
you're awesome.
26:28
It didn't seem like everyone was like, yeah,
26:29
this is great for us.
26:30
No.
26:32
Then, of course, there's the question of corruption.
26:34
There's concern about corruption here, though.
26:36
Will there be Americans installed on these boards?
26:39
And how do you respond to these allegations
26:41
that some Trump donors are going to get
26:43
preferential treatment?
26:45
I can assure you that is absolutely not
26:48
the case.
26:49
Absolutely not the case.
26:50
That means it is.
26:51
Sounds to me like it's completely the case.
26:53
Totally the case.
26:55
Wow.
26:55
So what?
26:56
Me, yeah, me protested a bit too much.
26:58
I can assure you, absolutely.
27:01
Are going to get preferential treatment.
27:04
I can assure you that is absolutely not
27:06
the case.
27:07
And he even has a laugh tale in
27:09
there.
27:09
What a loser.
27:11
Listen to him.
27:12
I can assure you that is absolutely not
27:15
the case.
27:15
Absolutely not the case.
27:17
Think of what President Trump has done for
27:19
the American oil and gas industry.
27:21
He's driven down the price of oil.
27:23
He's dramatically- There's an oversupply of oil.
27:26
And now you're going to put more on
27:26
the market.
27:27
Exactly.
27:28
That's not good for American oil and gas
27:30
companies.
27:30
It makes it less profitable for them to
27:32
actually go and invest in drill baby drill.
27:34
Exactly.
27:35
Democrats and President Biden are fantastic for American
27:38
oil and gas companies.
27:39
He listens exactly to whatever she says.
27:41
But what he's saying- It's a good
27:42
bit.
27:43
Yeah, but what he's saying here is exactly
27:45
what the oil baron has always told me.
27:47
He said, I love that President Trump is
27:49
our president, but it's really bad for my
27:51
business.
27:52
He says, Democrats are good for the oil
27:54
business.
27:55
Republican presidents are bad.
27:56
All you have to do is look at
27:57
the day Joe Biden was elected and look
27:59
at- Go some- Anyone can go
28:01
back and do this.
28:02
Look at the day Joe Biden got in
28:04
office and look at this at the same
28:06
time.
28:06
Look at the stock chart for Exxon.
28:09
Oh, huge- To the moon.
28:12
To the moon!
28:13
That's not good for American oil and gas
28:15
companies.
28:15
It makes it less profitable for them to
28:17
actually go and invest in drill baby drill.
28:19
Exactly.
28:20
Democrats and President Biden are fantastic for American
28:23
oil and gas companies because they try to
28:25
restrict the supply to something that's essential to
28:28
life, which only has one possible impact, which
28:31
is to drive up prices and grow profitability.
28:34
So President Trump is no helper to the
28:37
oil and gas industry.
28:38
And certainly, there's no corruption, preferential placement of
28:41
people.
28:42
There's none of that.
28:43
I can assure you of that.
28:44
I'm in the center of this.
28:45
How are you going to decide the contracts?
28:47
Is the treasury going to approve the Citgo
28:50
dominance there in that?
28:52
That went through a large auction to buy
28:54
- Are you going to bring to Congress
28:55
the decisions you're making about which firms get
28:58
assets?
28:58
Absolutely.
28:59
That was an auction open to all American
29:02
firms.
29:02
There were many bidders, including the coalition of
29:05
bidders you mentioned.
29:06
We want those assets to get as much
29:08
money as possible, to go back to the
29:10
creditors of the Venezuelan government.
29:12
And we want American refinery assets- Who
29:15
are the creditors?
29:16
Oh, that would be the oil companies.
29:18
We want those assets to get as much
29:19
money as possible, to go back to the
29:21
creditors of the Venezuelan government.
29:23
And we want American refinery assets owned by
29:26
Americans.
29:27
They're going to increase the throughput, drive down
29:29
the price of gasoline in America.
29:30
By the way, Citgo is pretty small.
29:32
They're a small player compared to the other
29:35
big boys with the refinery.
29:37
Citgo is pretty small.
29:40
So, it's not a huge deal, but it
29:42
was nice for his buddy.
29:44
I think the president, he knows exactly what's
29:47
going on.
29:48
He talks a big game about drill, baby,
29:49
drill.
29:50
Everyone's saying no, no, no.
29:52
Our shale returns are diminishing.
29:56
So, I think the only way to really
29:58
do it is to give everybody a little
30:01
taste, a little piece of the action, and
30:03
set up shop over there.
30:06
That would be the future.
30:07
It's just not in the shale from everything
30:09
I understand.
30:11
There's a lot of product you can get
30:13
from this heavy crude that you can't get
30:15
from shale.
30:15
Oh, yeah.
30:16
No, it's great.
30:17
And what's interesting is this, I think this
30:20
directly has also affected Iran, which seems to
30:25
be a little less than the video might
30:27
show.
30:27
I talked to Lex yesterday, you know, his
30:29
wife Fariba.
30:30
She has her mom and her sisters live
30:33
in Tehran, although they haven't been able to
30:35
talk to him because the phones have been
30:38
cut off, not just the internet, but phones
30:39
in general.
30:41
And he says, yeah, you know, if you
30:43
stay inside, you're going to be okay.
30:45
It's not all over the country yet.
30:49
It's definitely real.
30:50
And he says, there's no leader.
30:52
There's no one who stood up and said,
30:55
this is it.
30:56
But the reason why this affects Iran is
30:58
because of these ghost ships, where in essence,
31:02
or in reality, Venezuela and Iran were swapping
31:06
oil.
31:09
Because Iran, doesn't Iran have light crude, the
31:13
sweet stuff?
31:15
If you're set up to refine heavy crude,
31:19
that's what you do.
31:20
I don't believe they were swapping oil.
31:23
That's what I've heard.
31:25
That's exactly what they were doing.
31:25
Yeah, but why?
31:26
What would be the point?
31:27
Well, they don't have, I don't know.
31:31
You know what?
31:32
I don't know.
31:32
I don't know enough about it.
31:34
But this is what I've understood is that
31:36
Iran was sending their light over.
31:39
Venezuela has no ability to, or very little
31:42
capacity to refine the heavy stuff.
31:46
That's all done here.
31:48
So low output on refinery.
31:52
But anyway, it's all the drug.
31:55
It's just drug money.
31:56
Oil is drug money.
31:58
Hey, I got some drug seller, put it
31:59
in oil, ship it over the year, ship
32:01
it over there.
32:02
It's just like a really slow Bitcoin.
32:06
Moving all over the seas.
32:09
It's crazy.
32:11
This stuff I've never, I mean, we were
32:13
always into pipelines.
32:14
But now you see these ghost ships and
32:16
everybody pumping it from one ship to another,
32:19
painting new flags, new name, new transponder codes.
32:22
You know, and a lot of American companies
32:26
I think are involved in this.
32:27
It's not just like the Russians did it
32:29
and the Venezuelans and the Chinese.
32:31
There's American corporations involved in this stuff.
32:34
There's money to be made.
32:36
There should be.
32:36
It's literal money.
32:37
I mean, it's all arbitrage.
32:39
It's amazing.
32:40
It's dirty, but it's an amazing business.
32:43
Really?
32:44
So what do you have in Iran?
32:45
Because, you know, so that's, I have a
32:47
couple of other boots on the ground, but
32:49
that was the main one.
32:50
I have the Al Jazeera clips, which I
32:52
thought would be interesting.
32:53
Okay.
32:55
Might as well start with those.
32:56
Iran one and two AJ.
32:59
Iran's government is intensifying a crackdown on protests
33:02
against a severe economic crisis, which are now
33:04
into a second week.
33:05
More than 200 people have been arrested.
33:08
Rallies are taking place in towns and cities
33:10
across the country, with demonstrators setting fire to
33:13
buildings.
33:14
The attorney general has warned that those involved
33:16
in the unrest could face the death penalty.
33:19
Well, a nationwide communication shutdown has been in
33:22
place since Thursday, but some people are managing
33:24
to post videos of the rallies online.
33:26
Protests began over the soaring cost of living
33:28
and plunging value of the local currency.
33:31
Al Jazeera's Tahir Asadi has more from the
33:33
capital, Tehran.
33:33
It's now two weeks we have been witnessing
33:36
protests across Iran in different cities, including here
33:39
in the capital.
33:40
The unrest flared up into violence in several
33:43
locations, leaving fatalities and injuries, both from protesters
33:47
and security forces.
33:49
Arrests are reported, even though when it comes
33:52
to numbers, we don't have any confirmed information.
33:55
The protests actually started in the economic hubs,
33:58
such as the Grand Bazaar, against the country's
34:01
worsening economic situation.
34:03
It quickly spread to other cities.
34:05
Parking rallies initially scattered, but now in more
34:09
cities we see it's going on.
34:11
The state response started by recognizing the right
34:15
of people to peacefully protest.
34:17
But as the situation started to escalate, the
34:20
state has been trying to draw a line
34:22
between protesters and what the Iranian Supreme Leader
34:26
Ayatollah Khamenei called saboteurs, against whom he said
34:30
the Islamic Republic will not give in.
34:32
Yes, it's the big Satan doing it.
34:34
It's America.
34:34
Stop it.
34:35
Stop doing it.
34:36
Yeah, they finally got around to blaming us
34:38
and Israel.
34:40
I'm actually shocked that it started to get
34:43
covered by our PBS, for example.
34:46
I have a clip.
34:46
I have a total of four here.
34:49
By the way, there's another.
34:50
That was another guy from Al Jazeera on
34:52
the street in Tehran reporting, you know, reporting
34:57
as opposed to our NBC, CBS, ABC, CNN
35:01
people.
35:01
Where are they?
35:03
There's not one of them on the street
35:04
in Tehran.
35:05
So they're just making it up and, you
35:07
know, just kind of giving us glossing over
35:10
everything.
35:11
Well, there's no there's no benefit to the
35:13
intelligence organization.
35:15
So there's so why would they go?
35:16
They had there's no safe house for them.
35:18
There's nothing.
35:20
Here's part two of that report.
35:22
The Supreme National Security Council of the country
35:25
called it a joint American-Israeli plot to
35:28
destabilize the country.
35:30
As the security measures have tightened off, the
35:32
Internet shutdown, which started on Thursday night, continues.
35:36
And international calls are severely restricted.
35:40
It's happened following the escalation of protests in
35:43
the capital the same night, as we saw
35:46
many protesters taking to the streets.
35:48
And the mayor of Tehran said government buildings,
35:51
banks, mosques, public transportation vehicles and medical centers
35:55
were damaged.
35:56
Several protesters were arrested.
35:58
Also, speaking of the latest developments, the government
36:01
unveiled a subsidy scheme, which includes a monthly
36:06
payment of around seven U.S. dollars to
36:08
citizens available from today for the lower income
36:12
classes who are struggling to cover daily essentials
36:15
these days.
36:16
Public dissatisfaction exists whether or not people take
36:19
to the streets.
36:20
And many here are now watching to see
36:21
how the government will respond, not just to
36:24
the protests, but to the economic hardships that
36:26
they are facing in their daily lives.
36:28
You know, there's this narrative out on the
36:32
Internet, and I see it in the troll
36:34
room as well, that, you know, it goes
36:37
like this.
36:37
This isn't about oil.
36:39
It's about the petrodollar.
36:40
Well, let me tell you, the petrodollar, actually,
36:43
our deal with Saudi Arabia ended.
36:45
We didn't end like a year ago.
36:48
The 1971 deal, you price it in dollars
36:51
and we'll protect you.
36:53
That actual agreement ended.
36:55
And the petrodollar is over.
36:57
I mean, everyone's already trading in their own
37:00
currency.
37:00
That's why the stable coin gambit is being
37:03
set up.
37:04
So don't worry about the petrodollar.
37:07
It's just it's not it's not a thing
37:09
anymore.
37:10
People, it's.
37:13
So we have they shut down the Internet,
37:16
but there was, according to Grok, which would
37:19
know.
37:20
I asked about Starlink.
37:24
And and it would know because it's Starlink's
37:26
part of the Grok, the Grok empire.
37:29
The Grok, Musk, Grok empire.
37:33
Dave's over 10,000, maybe 20,000 terminals
37:36
have been snuck into the country.
37:38
They're illegal.
37:40
And Musk returned.
37:43
Iran was blacked out from the Starlink system.
37:46
Yeah, but Musk, Musk turned it back on.
37:50
Well, let's just remind everybody how that works.
37:52
Elon turns it on and you get six
37:55
months free.
37:56
After that, you got to start paying for
37:58
it.
37:58
That's exactly what he did in Ukraine.
38:01
Yeah, well, he's he's also said it's free.
38:03
Yeah.
38:03
And so now free with card.
38:07
So they got free.
38:09
And meanwhile, and then because somebody, one of
38:11
our producers, it is bull crap.
38:13
This is not a grassroots because otherwise anyone
38:16
on about the lack of Internet.
38:17
And once you get the terminals sending stuff
38:21
down, then you Bluetooth it between phones.
38:24
I mean, once you because they can't stop
38:26
that.
38:26
Mesh-tastic.
38:28
You make a mesh.
38:30
It's possible that they can have communications from
38:32
outside, inside, whatever.
38:34
And then, of course, they're all yelling.
38:38
This 2CTV guy has been yelling for democracy
38:41
and at the same time for this for
38:43
the Shah.
38:44
Let me just play.
38:45
They insert this clip for a second.
38:47
This is from let me see.
38:49
Where is this from?
38:50
This is France 24.
38:52
I have a comment on it.
38:53
A 13th day of protests in Iran as
38:56
anger on the streets shows no sign of
38:59
subsiding.
38:59
Despite the government shutting off the Internet, images
39:02
of motorcycles on fire and overturned police cars
39:06
are circulating on social media as crowds openly
39:09
defy the regime with cries of death to
39:12
the dictator.
39:13
The protests have spread across Iran to over
39:15
100 cities.
39:16
Even reaching the conservative Mashhad, birthplace of Ayatollah
39:20
Khamenei.
39:21
The supreme leader responded by accusing the US
39:24
of interference.
39:25
The tyrants and arrogant people of this world,
39:28
when they are at the height of their
39:30
pride, they are overthrown.
39:32
Trump will also be brought down.
39:36
Tehran broadcast images of pro-government rallies on
39:39
Iranian television in an attempt to show it
39:42
still has support.
39:43
But videos filmed by locals show a shaken
39:46
regime with this statue of Revolutionary Guard Commander
39:50
Qasem Soleimani being destroyed.
39:52
Always a classic.
39:54
Or the Islamic Republic flag being torn in
39:56
half and Iranians chanting a new slogan, long
39:59
live the Shah.
40:01
In reference to the pro-Western Shah of
40:03
Iran ousted by the 1979 Islamic Revolution, his
40:07
son Reza Pahlavi urged Trump to help the
40:09
protesters.
40:10
Don't abandon the streets.
40:12
I assure you that victory is near.
40:16
According to NGOs, Iranian authorities cracked down on
40:20
protesters, arresting over 2,000 people and leaving
40:23
dozens dead.
40:25
Okay, so from boots on the ground, I
40:27
have a new source.
40:28
This source is great.
40:29
Squirrel Roz, she used to be GCHQ.
40:32
Now she lives in Virginia, supposedly retired.
40:36
By the way, I kept making a mistake.
40:38
The prince, who is not actually the crown
40:41
prince, he just calls himself that.
40:43
He lives in Maryland and he's had his
40:46
Potomac house up for sale for a while
40:48
until this whole thing kicked off.
40:50
Maybe he's taken it off the market.
40:52
But from what the sources say is he
40:55
wanted to go visit Trump at Mar-a
40:57
-Lago and Trump's like, nah, I don't want
40:59
to see you.
41:02
So that guy, and I don't even know
41:04
how.
41:04
Oh, that's a good sign.
41:06
Yeah, so that is a good sign.
41:09
And then from Lex, one other thing.
41:11
I said, hey man, what about the water?
41:12
He said, yeah, the water, it's been a
41:14
problem for decades.
41:16
You know, it rains.
41:17
It's like they're not having huge water issues.
41:23
There's always been management issues with the water.
41:26
But it's purely the economics.
41:27
The economics are the problem.
41:29
And you can't necessarily solve that with a
41:31
new leader.
41:33
No, you can't solve it at all.
41:34
It's like, you know, people expect when Trump
41:36
got into prices to all fall.
41:38
Wasn't going to happen.
41:39
And I do have some interesting news on
41:41
that.
41:42
But let's go to your other Iran clips.
41:44
Yeah, I got just before we played the
41:47
PBS clip, which is the first that at
41:50
least they recognize that something's going on as
41:52
opposed to the other networks.
41:55
I want to play, this is from a
41:56
podcast and it includes this guy, Pepe Escobar.
42:03
You know him, right?
42:04
He's been around for 100 years.
42:06
Yes, he's been around forever.
42:08
Works for RT.
42:10
So you can expect him to have nothing
42:12
but solid stuff.
42:14
And he's on this podcast and he starts
42:17
interviewing the podcasters who he thinks is in
42:20
Tehran.
42:21
And he's going to tell us that nothing's
42:23
going on because there's nothing going on.
42:27
In fact, there's a bunch of these podcasts
42:28
out there that counter all the other podcasts.
42:30
And they say, hey, I'm here.
42:33
Nothing is going on.
42:34
This is bull crap.
42:35
This is just a view.
42:38
Wait, wait, let me get this straight.
42:40
This is Pepe Escobar and he and he's
42:43
talking to someone he thinks is in Tehran
42:45
or someone thinks he's in Tehran.
42:47
No, no.
42:47
Pepe thinks the guy that's doing the podcast
42:50
is in Tehran.
42:51
Oh, OK.
42:52
And so Pepe turns around and says, let
42:54
me interview you for a second because that's
42:56
going to be different.
42:57
And I forget this guy's name.
42:58
I've got an exclusive.
43:00
I guess his name is Nimrod or something.
43:03
I can't remember his name.
43:04
OK.
43:05
All right.
43:05
So this guy, this is kind of amusing
43:07
because the guy's not in Tehran.
43:09
Nima, you are in Tehran.
43:11
Correct me if I'm wrong.
43:13
There are no protests in Tehran.
43:16
Number one, right?
43:17
Not right.
43:18
Let me put it this way.
43:19
Leading the witness.
43:21
I am right now.
43:23
I'm not in Tehran.
43:23
No, I'm not in Tehran.
43:25
But I came to the southwest of Iran
43:28
in the state called Khuzestan for 10 days.
43:30
I arrived in Khuzestan.
43:32
I was.
43:33
Yeah, exactly.
43:34
In the heart of that.
43:36
Wow.
43:38
Wow.
43:38
Let me let me say I got here
43:42
in Iran on.
43:44
It was on December 20, if I'm not
43:49
26, if I'm not mistaken.
43:51
For 10 days, I was in Tehran.
43:53
And I saw what was happening in the
43:56
mainstream media and basically somehow in the alternative
44:00
media, the coverage of what is happening, what
44:04
is happening in Iran, what is happening right
44:05
now in Iran is somehow exaggerated as though
44:09
that all these protesters on the street, you
44:12
know, coming out and they want to do
44:15
regime change and all of that.
44:16
It's nonsense.
44:18
OK.
44:21
Nima.
44:22
Wow.
44:22
Wow.
44:23
Wow.
44:24
You're not there.
44:25
Wow.
44:25
That's amazing.
44:26
Wow.
44:27
That's so good.
44:28
I just found that to be hilarious.
44:31
That is good.
44:33
Yeah.
44:33
Great podcast.
44:34
It's a podcast industrial empire.
44:36
Sounds like our episode number one through 10
44:39
on Skype back in the day.
44:43
And by the way, if they cut off
44:45
the Internet, what's this guy was Nimrod guy
44:47
doing broadcast?
44:49
How's he getting his?
44:50
How's he getting it out?
44:51
Yeah.
44:52
All right.
44:52
So here's the PBS report, which it does
44:55
discuss it.
44:56
And I think it would then they had
44:58
good, good visuals.
45:00
And so I was kind of surprised.
45:03
And tonight's other headlines.
45:05
Tensions are escalating in Iran as protests near
45:07
a second week.
45:09
Today, Iran's attorney general warned that protesters could
45:12
face the death penalty.
45:14
President Trump has warned of retribution if peaceful
45:16
protesters are met with violence.
45:18
Despite efforts to clamp down on dissent, demonstrations
45:22
have grown fueled by anger with the hard
45:24
line ruling regime and the worsening economy.
45:28
Human rights watchers say at least 72 people
45:30
have been killed and more than 2000 detained
45:33
since the protests began.
45:35
Wow.
45:35
Just a top line surface report from PBS.
45:38
Not much else.
45:39
But at least it's something.
45:40
Here's what the president said.
45:42
Iran's in big trouble.
45:43
It looks to me that the people are
45:46
taking over certain cities that nobody thought were
45:49
really possible just a few weeks ago.
45:52
We're watching the situation very carefully.
45:54
I've made the statement very strongly that if
45:56
they start killing people like they have in
45:58
the past, we will get involved.
46:00
We'll be hitting them very hard where it
46:02
hurts.
46:03
And that doesn't mean boots on the ground,
46:05
but it means hitting them very, very hard
46:07
where it hurts.
46:07
Now, where does it hurt?
46:09
Very, very hard for Iran.
46:11
The only sanctions, I guess.
46:12
It can be the oil.
46:13
That's the only thing they've got, you know.
46:16
And by the way, I don't know what
46:18
he's going to do.
46:19
All of this oil and Iran and Venezuela
46:21
and Hezbollah.
46:23
From what I understand, Hezbollah is one of
46:25
the biggest drug networks.
46:27
It's all intertwined.
46:30
It's all related.
46:34
Probably the only people not involved in drugs
46:36
are Russia.
46:38
I wonder, can you get good drugs in
46:39
Russia?
46:40
Does anybody know?
46:40
There was an interesting comment.
46:42
I was watching you guys do analysis of
46:45
the cocaine trafficking.
46:47
No, it's the guy.
46:48
He was the guy who was interviewed by
46:50
what show was this?
46:52
The guy who's the head of Columbia.
46:54
Petro.
46:55
Yes.
46:57
He did a long interview.
46:59
I couldn't clip it because it was all
47:01
in subtitles.
47:02
I have the summary.
47:05
Go play the summary and I'll tell you
47:07
what I heard.
47:07
No, it's a written summary.
47:09
I have a written summary that someone sent
47:10
me.
47:11
Well, a couple of things came up in
47:13
the conversation.
47:14
One, he said that the Venezuelans had already.
47:19
He says those boats that were going to
47:21
that they were blowing up.
47:23
He says he didn't like the idea.
47:26
He says that none of that stuff was
47:27
going to the United States.
47:28
He says the Venezuelans long since stop shipping
47:31
anything to the United States because they put
47:33
a clamp as an agreement.
47:36
So the cocaine use in the United States
47:38
is down.
47:38
He says, but he says is way up
47:42
in Europe, in Europe and Australia.
47:46
Yeah.
47:46
Europe is so cheap.
47:49
It's the market has just been flooded with
47:51
cocaine.
47:52
And he says, and even in Russia, they're
47:54
starting to use it now.
47:56
But he said, but Europe was the thing
47:58
which follows exactly what we've been saying on
48:01
this show, which they're blowing up these boats
48:03
to screw with Europe.
48:04
Yeah, but I guess they're still getting so
48:06
much of it.
48:07
Doesn't make no one's noticing.
48:09
Well, but but no, no, the it's we're
48:12
screwing with Europe because the prices dropped.
48:16
The kids were here and I asked them
48:17
about it.
48:18
You know, I won't say that they're cocaine
48:20
users, but they're young.
48:22
They live in Europe.
48:22
Oh, no, it's so much.
48:24
It's it's you know, you can it's a
48:26
dime bag is a dime bag.
48:28
Literally a dime is so cheap.
48:33
So I got a summary.
48:36
So wait, let's stop there for a second.
48:38
What does this mean?
48:39
If you have the whole continent coked up?
48:43
Well, there's no first of all, less money
48:44
is flowing to the to the the city
48:47
of London, North Sea Nexus drug money networks,
48:50
less money because there's just too much of
48:52
it in the EU.
48:56
And yeah, if you know what, everybody needs
48:58
to be coked up in Europe.
49:00
And I'll tell you why.
49:02
I have a report.
49:03
Hold on.
49:03
This is a.
49:06
Where is it?
49:07
A report from a Dutch guy.
49:10
Hold on a second.
49:12
What did I file that under?
49:17
I got it here somewhere.
49:19
This was doing the rounds here.
49:21
Dutch guy explaining the housing problem in the
49:25
Netherlands.
49:26
This is how the grey replacement is taking
49:27
shape in the Netherlands.
49:29
If you're white and you can't find a
49:30
house in Holland, I have a life hack
49:31
for you.
49:32
Just learn a bit of Arabic and go
49:33
to the next municipality next door.
49:35
A Dutch newspaper brought the following story.
49:38
Thousands and thousands of Dutch people would figuratively
49:40
kill to get this apartment.
49:43
It's a beautiful studio in the center of
49:45
Amsterdam, one of the most coveted areas in
49:47
all of Europe.
49:48
But this Syrian man doesn't really bat an
49:50
eye.
49:50
He got this house from the government, but
49:52
he doesn't even live there because his wife
49:54
also got a house from the government and
49:56
he chooses to live there instead, while renting
49:57
out the studio at the same time.
49:59
The Syrian gentleman pays €700 of rent each
50:02
month for a studio in the very center
50:05
of Amsterdam.
50:05
But he then goes out into the public
50:07
markets and rents the studio out to other
50:09
people for more than double, more than €1500
50:12
a month.
50:13
But that's not even the worst story yet.
50:14
This Syrian man in Rotterdam got a very
50:17
big three-bedroom apartment, of course, from the
50:20
government.
50:21
He's 20 years old and he lives alone
50:23
in the apartment.
50:24
So one might think, why does a 20
50:26
-year-old Syrian man need a three-bedroom
50:28
apartment in Rotterdam?
50:29
What's he going to use the three bedrooms
50:31
for?
50:31
Well, the government said the Syrian man had
50:33
the right to three bedrooms because there was
50:35
an outlook for reuniting with his family.
50:38
The newspaper then asked the Syrian man if
50:40
he had a family, and he answered he
50:42
doesn't even have a girlfriend, no wife, and
50:44
no kids.
50:45
And apart from the apartment, he also gets
50:47
government benefit checks every month because he's not
50:49
declared okay to work yet.
50:51
However, he tells the newspaper that he does
50:53
work on the black market for cash.
50:55
Besides, he rents out the other two rooms
50:57
to other migrants for over €1000 per room
51:01
per month.
51:02
And all of the meantime, the Dutch First
51:03
Channel brings a news story that more and
51:06
more Dutch people, over 30, are living with
51:08
their parents amidst the housing crisis.
51:10
The story says that Dutch people wait with
51:12
getting children because they simply don't have a
51:14
house for themselves yet.
51:15
At the same time, the Syrian migrants get
51:17
free houses because their wife might come, but
51:19
they don't even have a wife.
51:20
It's complete madness, and this is a clear
51:22
example of how the Great Replacement is government
51:25
policy in Europe.
51:26
It's not an accident.
51:27
It's not because the people are stupid.
51:29
It's on purpose.
51:30
Yeah, and so this is why you do
51:32
a lot of coke.
51:33
Like, life's not worth living here anymore.
51:37
The government is corrupt.
51:39
They give everything to migrants, and you can't
51:42
get a house.
51:44
So, hey, look at this cheap snow over
51:47
here.
51:48
I think I'll make myself feel better.
51:50
That would be the way it works in
51:52
my mind.
51:53
And at the same time, it's screwing over
51:55
the drug money networks.
51:57
But listen to this.
51:58
So, as we played on the last show,
52:01
we had a boots-on-the-ground report
52:02
from some other network, I can't remember, someone
52:04
who was there.
52:05
So, President Trump talked with Petro of Colombia.
52:10
And here's the rundown as I've received it.
52:12
It lasted 42 minutes, and apparently, the Colombian
52:16
president agreed to eight points, an eight-point
52:18
plan.
52:19
One, implement bombings against FARC and ELN dissidents.
52:24
So FARC is the...
52:25
That's the big drug boys.
52:28
This is my favorite.
52:29
Start...
52:29
They're revolutionaries.
52:30
Yes.
52:31
Start fumigation with glyphosate on the crops.
52:36
That's a great idea.
52:38
I never even considered that.
52:39
Well, he pushes back on that one.
52:42
Oh, okay.
52:43
Lift the suspension of extradition of drug lords.
52:46
Guarantee free, transparent, and secure elections for the
52:49
opposition.
52:50
Okay.
52:51
Collaborate in the restoration of Venezuela.
52:53
They are bordering countries.
52:55
Strengthen security on the Colombia-Venezuela border to
52:58
combat groups like the ELN when they attempt
53:00
to cross the border, fleeing the new order
53:02
imposed by the United States.
53:03
Stop persecuting the opposition.
53:05
Okay, boss, we promise.
53:07
And peacefully and quietly abandon the Casa de
53:09
Nariño on August of 20...
53:13
What is Casa de Nariño?
53:15
I don't know.
53:15
Let me find out what that is.
53:17
On August 6, 2026.
53:19
Is that the government house?
53:21
What is that?
53:22
I have no idea.
53:23
Yes, the official residence of the president of
53:25
Colombia.
53:26
So there's definitely stuff afoot.
53:28
There's definitely stuff happening.
53:33
And we're not being told.
53:36
No, of course not.
53:37
Well, nobody in our media will do any
53:42
work because they're too busy harping on a
53:45
woman in Minnesota, as opposed to the dead
53:49
kids in Chicago and Oakland.
53:53
What is the Chicago kill list at?
53:56
Chicago.
53:58
No, Shot Clock, I think it's called.
54:00
Shot Clock.
54:02
I think it's the Shot Clock, yeah.
54:03
Yeah, heyjackass.com.
54:05
Let's take a look.
54:07
Oh, it's better than I thought.
54:10
Um, January to date, shot and killed, eight.
54:14
Shot and wounded, 40.
54:15
Total shot, 48.
54:16
Total homicides, 10.
54:20
So it's better than I thought.
54:22
Let's see, what was the 20...
54:24
Total homicides includes knifings.
54:26
Yeah, yeah.
54:28
And other...
54:28
Knifings, knifings.
54:30
Knifings, yes.
54:31
Yes, let me...
54:32
2025, Chicago.
54:35
Here's the list.
54:35
433 people killed, 1,592 wounded.
54:42
How you doing, Darren?
54:44
You enjoying that Chiraq there?
54:48
I do have...
54:51
I do...
54:51
So this is the whole dimension A, dimension
54:53
B.
54:54
And it's crazy to hear all these people
54:58
talking about, well, she had a...
55:00
Whenever someone starts with, well, you can clearly
55:02
see by the wheels turned that way.
55:03
It's like, okay, you're just trying to make
55:06
something go your way by a little piece
55:10
of video.
55:10
And there's all kinds of different angles.
55:13
And it is just...
55:14
We love over-analyzing.
55:15
It's like Charlie Kirk.
55:17
It was the exploding microphone.
55:18
It could never have been a 30-odd
55:20
-six.
55:21
There's no blood.
55:22
There is blood.
55:23
It's only out of the...
55:24
Over and over and over and over.
55:27
It's why you wear a white T-shirt.
55:30
So there's a couple different angles here.
55:34
Actually, I'd like to start with the fraud,
55:36
because that, of course, is now kind of
55:38
being downplayed or is just not making much
55:44
noise as it should.
55:46
And there was a hearing in the House.
55:51
This is Minnesota Representative Robbins talking about the
55:56
way fraud was handled in Minnesota.
56:00
Representative Robbins, do you have any examples of
56:02
how the Walz administration blocked investigators from moving
56:05
forward high-priority fraud investigations?
56:07
Yes, we do, Mr. Chairman.
56:09
I've met with whistleblowers and gotten documents from
56:12
them about how after the original CCAP whistleblower
56:16
report came out in March and April of
56:18
2019, subsequent to that, there was an Office
56:22
of Inspector General within DHS that had investigative
56:26
authority to do surveillance, warrants, and seize electronics.
56:31
And they were shut down.
56:32
They were told they could no longer do
56:34
criminal investigations.
56:35
They were told they could no longer meet
56:37
with the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension agents that
56:40
were assigned to them without supervisor's approval.
56:43
And instead, when they found...
56:46
One of the other members talked about how
56:48
they changed the language.
56:49
They went from calling it fraud to calling
56:51
it overbilling.
56:52
And they created an overbilling committee to all
56:56
the investigative agents now couldn't do criminal investigations,
56:59
and they had to flag issues for billing.
57:02
And then a committee would decide if any
57:05
of that overbilling would be recouped.
57:07
Committee appointed by Waltz?
57:09
No, appointed within DHS.
57:11
Oh, appointed by their own bureaucracy.
57:13
Yes, so they shut down criminal investigations.
57:15
They created a committee to call it overbilling
57:17
and decide if overbilling investigations would even try
57:21
to...
57:21
This is fantastic.
57:23
That's the way you do it.
57:24
It's not fraud, it's overbilling.
57:26
So Scott Besant, our Treasury Secretary, comes onto
57:31
the scene, and he did an interview with
57:34
the Rufo Show.
57:35
I think it's Rufo and something.
57:37
Rufo, it's on The Blaze.
57:39
Sat down for a half-hour interview, and
57:42
he laid it out very clearly, and he's
57:43
not messing around.
57:45
So Chris, first, thanks for having me, and
57:47
thanks for breaking the story, because it's clearly
57:50
something that's been going on and suppressed for
57:53
so long.
57:54
And you could see that the people in
57:56
Minnesota have been carrying this burden, and they
57:58
almost seem...
57:59
Say what?
58:00
Chris Rufo.
58:00
Chris Rufo, yeah.
58:01
...believed. But what we've found, two things.
58:06
Really, three.
58:08
One, this, as you reported, this waste, fraud,
58:12
and abuse in the system, bigger than anyone
58:15
thought, and we'll see where that goes.
58:17
Two, the leakage, and how does this get
58:21
out of the country?
58:22
Either if you were on public assistance and
58:26
you were sending money out of the country,
58:28
one of two things must be true.
58:30
You were getting too much assistance because you
58:33
have excess funds to feed yourself, your family,
58:36
food, clothing.
58:38
Or you've got stolen money, and you're sending
58:41
that out.
58:42
But in either case, money needs to stay
58:45
in the U.S., or your benefits need
58:46
to be cut.
58:48
Three, how can we use the investigations in
58:52
Minnesota as a model for what's happened and
58:56
push it out to the other 49 states?
58:59
Because Minnesota is likely the most egregious.
59:03
Maybe not.
59:03
We'll see.
59:04
I have an open mind.
59:05
But the scale, just because of the population
59:09
sizes, California, Illinois, New York, that what's going
59:14
on here is a microcosm of what's going
59:17
on there.
59:18
And it's like someone on the panel said
59:21
today, benefits have been turned into businesses.
59:24
It is a cottage industry of teaching people
59:27
how to form multiple LLCs, how to game
59:30
the system, how to move money around.
59:34
And we'll see where the money goes.
59:36
I'm here because what Treasury does is follow
59:39
the money.
59:40
We follow the money.
59:41
And we have done it with the mafia,
59:43
where we were able to take them down,
59:45
Mexican drug cartels, and now these Somali fraudsters.
59:49
And we can always do it.
59:51
We'll see what kind of recoveries we can
59:52
get for the American people.
59:55
Yeah, I like it.
59:56
Sounds like he does make mean business.
59:59
I like it.
59:59
I like he's talking about the multiple LLCs.
1:00:02
They know exactly how this is being done.
1:00:04
501c3s are going after that.
1:00:06
They're going after all these financial networks.
1:00:08
You know, you always complain about Congress not
1:00:11
doing anything.
1:00:12
They're not.
1:00:13
They're full of crap.
1:00:14
It's all their moments there.
1:00:16
And I think that.
1:00:17
Yeah, the clip you played earlier is with
1:00:19
Comer.
1:00:19
Yeah.
1:00:20
My favorite.
1:00:21
Well, let's go to Margaret.
1:00:23
Also, by the way, before you do that,
1:00:25
I want to mention something that Besson did.
1:00:28
And I'm noticing this.
1:00:29
It's a rhetorical trick.
1:00:33
You might start picking up on it where
1:00:35
you say the following.
1:00:37
The trick goes like this.
1:00:38
Yeah.
1:00:38
And there's two things I want to talk
1:00:40
about.
1:00:40
I mean, maybe three.
1:00:42
He only mentioned two.
1:00:44
Yeah, he only mentioned two.
1:00:45
But they're always doing this.
1:00:48
I got two things to tell you.
1:00:50
Actually, three.
1:00:52
But at least.
1:00:52
Where is this?
1:00:53
And I'm hearing it over and over and
1:00:55
over.
1:00:56
Well, at least it's Milieu.
1:00:58
At least he didn't do.
1:01:00
I got two things to tell you.
1:01:01
One and B, like Biden did.
1:01:03
Right.
1:01:04
At least he's not doing that.
1:01:04
Biden, yeah.
1:01:06
One and B.
1:01:08
So the representative Ilhan Omar is out on
1:01:13
the trail to, of course, play all of
1:01:16
this down.
1:01:16
And she showed up this morning with Margaret
1:01:18
Brennan.
1:01:19
Well, the administration argues that they have to
1:01:21
do it because the state failed to, right?
1:01:24
The federal government and the state have been
1:01:27
working peacefully together.
1:01:29
And have brought justice.
1:01:31
I love how she talks.
1:01:34
To these 87 people that you've described.
1:01:38
None of this search that they have.
1:01:42
What?
1:01:43
What did you call it?
1:01:44
She swallows your words.
1:01:46
Conducted, has produced any sort of criminal activity.
1:01:52
They haven't been able to charge anyone as
1:01:54
of yet.
1:01:56
The administration also announced they're going to cut
1:01:58
food stamps to Minnesota because they say some
1:02:01
of the food stamp money had been in
1:02:02
Bezalel.
1:02:03
Are you confident that that- And those
1:02:04
are the things that are being litigated.
1:02:06
And it is, again, unconstitutional for them to
1:02:08
do so.
1:02:09
Is it unconstitutional?
1:02:11
How's it unconstitutional?
1:02:13
What are you talking about?
1:02:16
Food stamps are in the Constitution.
1:02:19
Unconstitutional for them to do so.
1:02:21
Is it, are you confident that the fraud
1:02:23
that has been discovered is no longer being
1:02:26
conducted?
1:02:26
Oh, that's a good point.
1:02:27
The troll, I'm saying she has a little
1:02:29
bit of a Christopher Walken type cadence.
1:02:32
That's, that's actually a- Yeah, maybe, I
1:02:36
can see it.
1:02:36
A little bit, a little bit.
1:02:37
You're confident that the fraud that has been
1:02:39
discovered- What are you going to do
1:02:40
about it?
1:02:41
Is no longer being conducted now.
1:02:44
Is there any justification for saying this food
1:02:46
stamp money is somehow being misused?
1:02:48
There are ways to investigate fraud, which we
1:02:51
have been doing in Minnesota, which the federal
1:02:53
government has been doing under the Biden administration.
1:02:56
There is no reason for them to use
1:02:59
this level of rhetoric.
1:03:00
There is no reason for them to fully
1:03:02
stop.
1:03:03
Who cares about rhetoric?
1:03:05
But what do you, rhetoric is just words,
1:03:07
lady.
1:03:08
These, the funding these programs, the only reason
1:03:11
they are doing that is for PR purposes.
1:03:14
And it is harming our state.
1:03:17
It is harming my constituents.
1:03:19
And it is creating the kind of chaos
1:03:21
and confusion that no one needs in this
1:03:24
moment.
1:03:24
Why doesn't the DOJ just go after the
1:03:27
whole brother story?
1:03:28
That's the strongest position they've got.
1:03:30
Well, the Congress, there was a, there was
1:03:31
a meeting of the Oversight Committee.
1:03:33
It was on C-SPAN.
1:03:35
By the way, your YouTube TV now has,
1:03:38
you notice this too.
1:03:39
Yeah, yeah, they have C-SPAN.
1:03:41
C-SPAN 1, C-SPAN 2, and the
1:03:42
rare C-SPAN 3.
1:03:44
Probably save C-SPAN's butt because that was
1:03:47
paid by cable companies and they, they don't
1:03:49
want to pay for it anymore.
1:03:50
So it's probably a cash infusion for C
1:03:53
-SPAN from Google.
1:03:55
That would be my guess.
1:03:57
So yeah.
1:03:57
Anyway, so they have, so I'm watching the,
1:03:59
just you turn it on.
1:04:01
Do you, I mean, it's like watching a
1:04:02
slow train wreck.
1:04:04
You can't really turn it off.
1:04:05
So you're stuck there watching.
1:04:06
And I'm watching Nancy Mace.
1:04:10
Great.
1:04:11
Nancy, is that her name?
1:04:13
Is it Nancy?
1:04:13
I don't think it's Nancy Mace.
1:04:15
I don't think it's Nancy, but she is
1:04:17
now.
1:04:18
Nancy Mace.
1:04:19
Nancy Mace.
1:04:21
Mace and Luna are both on this committee
1:04:24
with, and it's headed by Comer.
1:04:26
So we know this is kind of a,
1:04:28
the oversight committee.
1:04:29
So they're, and this was one of the
1:04:31
subcommittees.
1:04:32
And they're going after, they're making a big
1:04:34
fuss, but they passed it off.
1:04:36
No, no, no, we just got to go
1:04:37
to the ethics committee.
1:04:38
We can't do it here.
1:04:40
They're passing off the guy, the one congressman
1:04:43
who's beating his wife and they want to
1:04:46
investigate that.
1:04:48
And then Omar and Mace is the one
1:04:52
who says, hey, you know, this has got
1:04:55
to be investigated.
1:04:56
She married her brothers.
1:04:57
She should probably be deported.
1:05:00
Yeah, but that's the department of justice.
1:05:03
Who cares?
1:05:04
Congress should just be doing what they're supposed
1:05:06
to do.
1:05:07
What they're doing is- Somebody should do
1:05:08
something about this, about this fraud that she
1:05:10
committed to become an American citizen.
1:05:13
Let's go on to the real fake news,
1:05:16
according to Elon, is that Nick Shirley was
1:05:18
all fake, was all fake, fake.
1:05:20
Because the administration and many conservative allies in
1:05:24
the administration argue that, that this is still
1:05:26
ongoing.
1:05:27
There was that conservative influencer who went out
1:05:29
and posted this video that went viral alleging
1:05:32
that daycare- How do they come up
1:05:35
with, just as a point of question, is
1:05:40
Nick Shirley a conservative?
1:05:42
I mean, is he wearing a MAGA hat?
1:05:45
Is he a registered Republican?
1:05:47
I mean, what- Not that I know
1:05:48
of.
1:05:48
He seemed just like a kid.
1:05:50
With an older handler dude named Dave, who
1:05:53
is not- He's a YouTuber.
1:05:55
Well, we don't know where Dave came from,
1:05:57
but- Dave could be a conservative.
1:05:59
Dave could be a plant.
1:06:00
They never- He could be CIA for
1:06:03
all we know.
1:06:03
Yes, yes.
1:06:04
It's a conservative influencer who went out and
1:06:06
posted this video that went viral, alleging that
1:06:09
daycare facilities were pocketing public funds.
1:06:12
And as you know, he went- Hours
1:06:14
where- What was that?
1:06:17
I couldn't, I didn't hear it.
1:06:19
Laugh Tale.
1:06:20
You listen to her.
1:06:21
Pocketing public funds.
1:06:23
Yeah, and as you know, he went-
1:06:27
That's a bad laugh tale.
1:06:29
Facilities were pocketing public funds.
1:06:32
And as you know, he went- Hours
1:06:34
where these businesses were not operating.
1:06:36
Yeah, CBS went out and- Which again
1:06:38
creates the level of confusion and chaos.
1:06:41
Oh, so CBS now says it's fake, okay.
1:06:44
That it's not necessary in a moment when
1:06:46
we are trying to deal with a serious
1:06:49
problem that needs serious people to be able
1:06:53
to address it.
1:06:53
But do you think, there was no recorded
1:06:55
evidence of fraud according to the CBS investigation
1:06:57
that was conducted, but- Really?
1:07:01
What?
1:07:03
I didn't, I mean, I saw a whole,
1:07:06
that, I didn't, did CBS conclude that?
1:07:11
That's news to me, all right.
1:07:12
But do you think there was no recorded
1:07:14
evidence of fraud according to the CBS investigation
1:07:16
- No recorded.
1:07:17
But Governor Walz did not run for reelection,
1:07:21
he dropped out of the race because of
1:07:22
all of that.
1:07:22
Because he wants to focus on defending our
1:07:26
state.
1:07:27
He wants to focus on getting out of
1:07:29
Dodge.
1:07:30
Focus on defending our state and not defending
1:07:34
a seat.
1:07:34
Do you think there has been a sufficient
1:07:36
level of accountability and ownership of the failure
1:07:40
to have oversight here?
1:07:42
Do you think this ends?
1:07:44
I mean, that is what we want.
1:07:45
So it is again, yep.
1:07:45
We want to collaboratively work with the administration
1:07:49
to try to make sure that there is
1:07:52
no fraud that's being perpetuated on our state.
1:07:57
What we do not want- I love
1:07:59
that, fraud perpetuated on our state.
1:08:01
No, it is your state.
1:08:02
Fraud that's being perpetuated on our state.
1:08:06
In our state.
1:08:07
What we do not want is the level
1:08:09
of terror, of confusion, of chaos that is
1:08:13
being created without any results in this moment.
1:08:17
All right.
1:08:18
Well, she makes a good point about no
1:08:19
results.
1:08:20
Yeah, that's true.
1:08:21
Well, here's the ethics committee thing that you
1:08:22
just brought up.
1:08:23
Very quickly before I let you go.
1:08:25
Because it's not that important.
1:08:27
Ethics committee is not important.
1:08:28
Very quickly before I let you go.
1:08:30
The chair oversight committee said that he wants
1:08:33
to refer you to the ethics committee.
1:08:34
I've been referred like 100 times.
1:08:36
So go ahead.
1:08:38
At your husband's income and net worth.
1:08:41
He said it was tied to private equity
1:08:43
investment funds.
1:08:44
But he seems to be insinuating that you
1:08:46
personally are tied into this welfare scam.
1:08:49
How do you respond to that?
1:08:50
Ever since I've gotten to Congress, they have
1:08:53
been doing these sort of weird ethics investigations.
1:08:58
None of them have yielded anything because I
1:09:01
have been as transparent as I can be.
1:09:05
And there is nothing wrong with any documentation
1:09:08
that I have ever provided to the federal
1:09:10
government.
1:09:11
OK, well, there she goes.
1:09:13
She's as transparent as she can be.
1:09:16
So now we go.
1:09:17
Because I do have some clips of this
1:09:19
stuff.
1:09:21
To the mayor of Minneapolis, who, of course,
1:09:24
showed up on Pooper Show, State of the
1:09:25
Union this morning as well.
1:09:27
We have all the Sunday morning shows.
1:09:29
Thank you very much, Steve.
1:09:30
Welcome back to State of the Union.
1:09:31
Joining us now to respond, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob
1:09:33
Fry and Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hare.
1:09:35
Mayor Fry, your response to what you just
1:09:37
heard from Secretary Noem?
1:09:38
She invoked you.
1:09:39
I have those clips later if we want
1:09:40
to listen to them.
1:09:41
You by name.
1:09:43
That was some wild and crazy stuff, you
1:09:45
know, sounds like she does.
1:09:49
Does he have an arrow in it through
1:09:51
his head when he said that?
1:09:53
Listen to what he says now, though.
1:09:55
It's good.
1:09:56
That was some wild and crazy stuff, you
1:09:59
know, it sounds like she doesn't believe a
1:10:02
single word that she is saying right now.
1:10:04
And I don't know if Donald Trump was
1:10:07
drinking a glass of water, if she'd actually
1:10:09
be able to speak, because here's the thing.
1:10:11
Oh, cute.
1:10:15
He's a ventriloquist now.
1:10:17
I don't know if Donald Trump was drinking
1:10:20
a glass of water, she'd actually be able
1:10:22
to speak, because here's the thing.
1:10:23
She's calling Minneapolis like this dystopian hellhole.
1:10:26
You know how many shootings we've had so
1:10:28
far this year?
1:10:30
Two.
1:10:30
And one of them was ICE.
1:10:32
Two shootings in a large city so far
1:10:34
this entire year.
1:10:35
And one of them is ICE.
1:10:37
This is a safe city.
1:10:39
ICE and Kristi Noem and everything they're doing
1:10:41
is making it far less safe.
1:10:44
Well, listen, you've had two shootings where a
1:10:48
week and a half in, you know, don't
1:10:51
make it sound like it was a whole
1:10:52
year.
1:10:54
You know, it's like...
1:10:56
Yeah, that's a good way he did.
1:10:57
He did that well.
1:10:57
He does it very well.
1:10:58
And by the way, during this time of
1:11:00
year when it's frozen solid outside, very few,
1:11:03
you know, there's not a lot of...
1:11:04
There's not a lot of killing going on.
1:11:05
People don't want to kill when it's cold.
1:11:07
It's too much work.
1:11:08
Here comes the Dimension B Zapruder analysis.
1:11:12
I want you to respond to what she
1:11:14
said about you telling ICE to get the
1:11:16
F out.
1:11:17
She says you and the leaders of Minneapolis
1:11:19
have been demonizing ICE officers.
1:11:22
And it is true that you've been critical
1:11:23
of Secretary Noem for her quick characterization of
1:11:26
the incident.
1:11:27
But you also said on Wednesday, quote, this
1:11:30
was a federal agent recklessly using power that
1:11:33
resulted in somebody dying.
1:11:35
Does your rhetoric need to change?
1:11:38
Yeah, yeah.
1:11:38
I said this was a federal agent recklessly
1:11:40
using power that ended up in somebody dying
1:11:42
because that was a federal agent recklessly using
1:11:44
power that ended up in somebody dying.
1:11:47
It's exactly what happened.
1:11:48
I mean, am I biased in this?
1:11:49
Of course, and I'm biased because I got
1:11:50
two eyes.
1:11:52
Anybody can see these videos.
1:11:54
Anybody can see that this victim is not
1:11:56
a domestic terrorist.
1:11:58
I mean, my goodness, she's like doing a
1:12:00
three or a four or five point turn.
1:12:03
This looks like somebody that's trying to get
1:12:05
out of there.
1:12:06
If doing a three point turn or a
1:12:08
four point turn is a domestic terrorist.
1:12:10
Make up your mind.
1:12:11
My wife is a criminal every single day.
1:12:14
Where's this three point turn thing anyway?
1:12:16
It's a four point turn.
1:12:18
Well, where's the, what turn?
1:12:19
She's just taken off like a rocket.
1:12:21
Yeah, but this is the dementia, dementia B.
1:12:24
Domestic terrorist.
1:12:25
I mean, my goodness, she's like doing a
1:12:27
three or a four or five point turn.
1:12:30
This looks like somebody that's trying to get
1:12:32
out of there.
1:12:33
If doing a three point turn or a
1:12:35
four point turn is a domestic terrorist.
1:12:38
And my, my wife is a criminal every
1:12:40
single day.
1:12:41
This, it does not make sense.
1:12:44
We've got to be operating from a point
1:12:46
of course, have this investigation.
1:12:48
It should be a neutral, unbiased investigation where
1:12:52
you get the facts, you know, and by
1:12:55
the way, I shouldn't be the one conducting
1:12:57
the investigation, nor should Christie know.
1:12:59
Uh, but you should have an entity that
1:13:01
is able to do it with some common
1:13:04
sense and operating in reality.
1:13:06
What he's referring, I'm sorry.
1:13:08
The FBI is doing the investigation, not Christie
1:13:10
Gnome.
1:13:11
No, but he's, this guy is, he's nuts.
1:13:16
Um, let's go to, I'm going to go
1:13:18
back in time.
1:13:19
Well, there's a lot of evidence that he
1:13:20
was involved in that.
1:13:22
I think it was a law firm that,
1:13:23
that, that was training these people to do
1:13:26
the fraud.
1:13:26
He may be a fraudster.
1:13:29
Hmm.
1:13:29
Interesting.
1:13:30
I didn't know that that's possible.
1:13:32
It seems like there were 280 people shot
1:13:34
in 2025 in Minneapolis, which doesn't seem like
1:13:37
a small number.
1:13:39
Um, let's go back to Christie Gnome because
1:13:40
he's referring to something that we brought up
1:13:42
in the last episode, which is about the
1:13:44
definition of domestic terrorists.
1:13:47
You said within hours of her being killed,
1:13:49
you said that she was a domestic terrorist.
1:13:51
How do you define domestic terrorist?
1:13:53
She weaponized her vehicle to conduct an act
1:13:55
of violence against a law enforcement officer and
1:13:57
the public.
1:13:58
How are you doing that?
1:14:00
How can you assert with certainty that she
1:14:03
was trying to hurt the officer as opposed
1:14:05
to she was trying to flee the scene?
1:14:08
If you look at what the definition of
1:14:10
domestic terrorism is, it completely fits the situation
1:14:13
on the ground.
1:14:14
This.
1:14:14
Okay.
1:14:15
So I looked it up and figured that
1:14:17
would be worth it because we talked about
1:14:20
it.
1:14:20
The definition is one of the few shows
1:14:22
that actually does the work.
1:14:24
Yes.
1:14:24
18 U.S. Code 2331 brackets five.
1:14:29
In order to be classified as domestic terrorism,
1:14:33
an act must meet all three of the
1:14:34
following conditions.
1:14:36
OK, so count.
1:14:38
OK, OK, OK.
1:14:40
The act itself, the act itself must involve
1:14:43
acts dangerous to human life.
1:14:47
And must check and must be a violation
1:14:49
of the criminal laws of the United States
1:14:52
or of any individual state.
1:14:54
I think we get a check on that
1:14:55
because you're absolutely you're hampering the work of
1:14:58
a federal agent.
1:14:59
The location.
1:15:00
This is the second criteria must occur primarily
1:15:02
within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.
1:15:06
OK, I think that's easy enough.
1:15:08
And here comes the intent.
1:15:11
The acts must appear to be intended to
1:15:13
accomplish at least one of the following multiple
1:15:17
choice hands.
1:15:17
Now we have another group of hands.
1:15:20
There's only three, but now we get three
1:15:22
with sub.
1:15:22
No, no.
1:15:23
Well, it's three with sub.
1:15:24
Yes, subcategory acts, the location and the intent.
1:15:28
Hands on buzzers.
1:15:28
Candidates.
1:15:29
Here we go.
1:15:30
Intimidate or coerce a civilian population.
1:15:34
I don't don't.
1:15:36
I don't think it qualifies.
1:15:38
I'm not catching that.
1:15:38
I'm not getting that either.
1:15:40
Influence the policy of a government by intimidation
1:15:43
or coercion.
1:15:45
I think there's that.
1:15:46
I think you could check that box.
1:15:47
I think it's quest tracking these guys.
1:15:50
She was blocking their work.
1:15:52
She was intimidating the officers.
1:15:55
No, no, no.
1:15:58
We had we already had intimidate or coerce
1:16:01
a civilian population.
1:16:02
Influence the policy of a government.
1:16:05
I don't think it checks those boxes, but
1:16:06
the third box affect the conduct of governments
1:16:10
by mass destruction, assassination or kidnapping.
1:16:16
I think all three are kind of iffy.
1:16:20
But affecting the conduct of the government mass
1:16:23
destruction.
1:16:25
But is it have to match all three?
1:16:28
No, one of one of one of those.
1:16:32
One of those is actually four.
1:16:35
So now there you go again.
1:16:36
You just did what the rhetorical.
1:16:38
No, it was three.
1:16:40
But now there's no.
1:16:41
It's three criteria.
1:16:43
And of each criterion, it has to be
1:16:46
one of those.
1:16:48
So it's subcategories.
1:16:51
So it has to be one of the
1:16:53
subcategories.
1:16:54
Yes, it has to.
1:16:56
It has to be all three of the
1:16:57
main categories and one of the subcategories.
1:17:00
And the intent, I think, is the one
1:17:01
that is questionable.
1:17:05
Acts must appear to be intended to accomplish
1:17:07
at least one of the.
1:17:07
Oh, it's actually three.
1:17:08
I'm sorry.
1:17:09
Intimidate or coerce.
1:17:10
I know.
1:17:12
Intimidate or coerce a civilian population.
1:17:14
No.
1:17:15
Influence the policy of a government by intimidation
1:17:18
or coercion.
1:17:19
Yes, I think I think you're right.
1:17:21
She was trying to influence the policy of
1:17:24
the government, i.e. rounding up illegals by
1:17:27
intimidation.
1:17:28
And I think intimidation is there.
1:17:31
And then affect the conduct of a government
1:17:33
by mass destruction, assassination or kidnapping.
1:17:36
I don't think it's that now.
1:17:38
No, it was number two.
1:17:40
Number two.
1:17:41
That's right.
1:17:41
You go, you're moving on to the next
1:17:44
round.
1:17:44
There is, of course, no specific federal crime
1:17:48
called domestic terrorism.
1:17:51
So you can only prosecute for murder, arson,
1:17:56
weapons offenses, etc.
1:17:58
And it is indeed the Federal Bureau of
1:18:01
Investigation whose jurisdiction this falls under.
1:18:05
So I think I think they can make
1:18:07
a case.
1:18:08
Unless you believe in the three point turn
1:18:11
theory.
1:18:12
If you look at what the definition of
1:18:14
domestic terrorism is, it completely fits the situation
1:18:18
on the ground.
1:18:19
This individual, as you saw in the video
1:18:21
that we released just 48 hours after this
1:18:23
incident, showed that this officer was hit by
1:18:26
her vehicle.
1:18:26
She weaponized it and he defended his life
1:18:29
and those colleagues around him and the public.
1:18:32
The question is, I don't doubt.
1:18:34
My position is I wasn't there.
1:18:37
I didn't see it.
1:18:38
Who's this?
1:18:39
Some people.
1:18:39
Jake Tapper?
1:18:40
Yes, attacker, attacker, tapper, not pooper.
1:18:42
So what is he?
1:18:43
He says, what is he?
1:18:45
He's not interviewing her anymore.
1:18:47
He's part of it.
1:18:48
What kind of a question was that?
1:18:51
Let's do it again.
1:18:52
And he defended his life and those colleagues
1:18:54
around him and the public.
1:18:56
The question is, I don't doubt.
1:18:59
My position is I wasn't your position.
1:19:01
I didn't see crap about your position.
1:19:03
Some people say it was trying to hit
1:19:06
him.
1:19:07
Stop the presses here.
1:19:09
You can't do that.
1:19:12
My position is this a political debate?
1:19:16
This is your position?
1:19:18
It's his position.
1:19:20
I'm telling you.
1:19:20
How is it?
1:19:21
Why does he have a position?
1:19:22
He's supposed to be reporting.
1:19:24
He's doing an interview of somebody.
1:19:26
But now he has a position.
1:19:29
So he's this is a partisan interview.
1:19:32
A gambling?
1:19:35
Come on, CNN.
1:19:37
Yes, that's the worst.
1:19:38
They got to get the Ellison's have got
1:19:40
to take this operation over sooner than later.
1:19:43
Let's continue.
1:19:44
Some people say, no, she was clearly trying
1:19:46
to move her car and flee and get
1:19:48
away.
1:19:49
I don't know.
1:19:50
What I'm saying is, how do you know?
1:19:52
How can you assert for a fact within
1:19:54
hours before any investigation?
1:19:56
This is what happened.
1:19:58
The facts of the situation are that the
1:20:00
vehicle was weaponized and it attacked the law
1:20:03
enforcement officer.
1:20:04
He defended himself and he defended those individuals
1:20:07
around him.
1:20:07
That is the definition.
1:20:09
When there is something that is weaponized to
1:20:11
use against the public and law enforcement, that
1:20:14
is an act of domestic terrorism happened in
1:20:16
our in our shores.
1:20:17
It happened here in our country.
1:20:18
You don't get to change the facts just
1:20:20
because you don't like them.
1:20:21
We will continue to look at this individual
1:20:24
and what her motivations were.
1:20:26
We know that there was throughout that morning
1:20:28
she had harassed and impeded law enforcement operations
1:20:31
that raises the suspicion level with all of
1:20:34
these law enforcement officers as far as paying
1:20:36
attention to what her capacity is.
1:20:38
And as you see on the videos, and
1:20:40
they've proven out that this law enforcement officer
1:20:42
took the action that his training prepared him
1:20:44
for and he worked to make sure that
1:20:47
he could save his own life and those
1:20:48
around him.
1:20:49
Now, let's just look at the true culprits
1:20:51
here because these are it's first the whole
1:20:55
the whole thing is sad.
1:20:56
It's sad all around.
1:20:58
But these are people who've been mind controlled
1:21:00
by their elected representatives.
1:21:02
This is the Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota, Lieutenant
1:21:06
Governor Flanagan.
1:21:08
If you are sick and tired of...
1:21:10
Wait a minute, Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota, that
1:21:12
was Ellison.
1:21:13
Keith Ellison.
1:21:15
No.
1:21:17
No.
1:21:19
I'm sorry, not the Lieutenant.
1:21:22
She is...
1:21:22
Wait, I have it here.
1:21:25
Where was she?
1:21:28
She's the like the under governor or something
1:21:31
like that.
1:21:31
She's the Lieutenant Governor.
1:21:34
OK, Keith Ellison is the Attorney General.
1:21:36
Yes.
1:21:37
OK, there we go.
1:21:39
We're sorry.
1:21:40
All your points are wiped off the board
1:21:42
now.
1:21:42
Everything you got right about domestic terrorism, you
1:21:44
lose those points.
1:21:46
OK, I can start over and still beat
1:21:47
you.
1:21:48
Going to the culprit, the type of people...
1:21:52
Yes, this woman.
1:21:53
This is the clip.
1:21:54
This clip was before our last show.
1:21:57
This is when I brought it up about
1:21:58
them inciting.
1:22:00
Yes.
1:22:00
This woman is disgusting.
1:22:03
If you are sick and tired of your
1:22:05
government being ransacked by Donald Trump and his
1:22:08
minions, literally taking away health care from your
1:22:12
neighbors, stealing food off of the table from
1:22:14
seniors and children and generally being uncool with
1:22:19
the fact that our neighbors are being disappeared.
1:22:21
P.S. Without due process, it is just
1:22:24
called kidnapping.
1:22:25
Then show up and use your voice.
1:22:28
Put your body on the line and use
1:22:30
nonviolent direct action, which is one of the
1:22:33
most important tools in our toolbox to say
1:22:35
I am not OK.
1:22:37
I will not go silently into the night.
1:22:40
I will join arms with my friends, with
1:22:43
my neighbors and with people who generally believe
1:22:46
that folks should be able to afford their
1:22:48
lives, should be treated with dignity and as
1:22:51
human beings.
1:22:52
The key phrase there is put your body
1:22:55
on the line.
1:22:57
Yeah, that's what she said.
1:22:58
What kind of governance is this where you're
1:23:00
encouraging?
1:23:02
What kind of government do you have in
1:23:04
Minnesota where you're encouraging people to go out
1:23:06
and riot?
1:23:07
The only kind I can imagine is one
1:23:09
that is thoroughly corrupt all the way through
1:23:11
and she must be corrupt as well.
1:23:13
Why else would you do that?
1:23:15
Unless you're afraid that the gig is up.
1:23:17
By the way, there's a great mini series.
1:23:20
I think it's on Netflix.
1:23:21
It's called Struck by Lightning.
1:23:24
It's like three or four episodes about James
1:23:28
Garfield, who was elected president almost kind of
1:23:31
as a fluke.
1:23:32
And he was assassinated three months into his
1:23:35
presidency.
1:23:37
That shows you, and that was 1948?
1:23:42
1848.
1:23:45
1848.
1:23:47
1848, I think.
1:23:50
The corruption, because that's what it all, the
1:23:53
corruption of New York and the Port Authority
1:23:58
and just all of these, everybody, all corrupt,
1:24:02
all drunk, all womanizing.
1:24:04
And you just sit there and you watch
1:24:05
it go like, it's only gotten worse.
1:24:08
It's just they covered up better.
1:24:10
They do a better job of covering it
1:24:12
up.
1:24:12
That's the idea.
1:24:13
You learn something.
1:24:15
You learn something.
1:24:16
It's a great series.
1:24:18
Tina and I were just like, holy crap,
1:24:20
no wonder we're in such dire straits.
1:24:22
Anyway, we'll go back to...
1:24:23
The country's always been this way.
1:24:24
Yes, well, all countries are.
1:24:26
I mean, yes, all countries are.
1:24:29
We just have prettier politicians generally these days.
1:24:33
So back to our Ice Barbie and Jake
1:24:37
Tapper, and he's going to do something, a
1:24:39
nice little trick they do over there at
1:24:41
CNN.
1:24:42
I know that you'd like to make me
1:24:43
the topic of this and not what happened,
1:24:45
but I did ask a Democratic senator just
1:24:47
a few minutes ago about AOC's comments, and
1:24:50
I don't actually even know what you're talking
1:24:53
about when I ask questions.
1:24:55
Hold on, maybe we should play that first.
1:24:56
Hold on a second.
1:24:57
Yeah, I'm not following this at all.
1:24:59
The officer appeared to have fired three shots,
1:25:01
the first one through the front windshield, the
1:25:04
second and third through the side window.
1:25:08
What is the justification for the second and
1:25:10
third, given that the officer was out of
1:25:12
harm's way?
1:25:12
You're watching the same videos that I am,
1:25:14
correct?
1:25:14
Yeah.
1:25:14
Yeah, you're watching the same one, so you
1:25:16
see how quickly the situation unfolded, how the
1:25:19
officer was in front of the vehicle when
1:25:20
she sped off, how she ran into him,
1:25:23
and how he had to take quick action
1:25:25
based on his training to defend himself and
1:25:28
his colleagues around him.
1:25:29
Once he's out of harm's way.
1:25:29
That's very clear and factual from the videos
1:25:31
that you can see.
1:25:32
It's nobody's interpretation.
1:25:33
We don't get to change it because we
1:25:35
can see it with our eyes and we
1:25:36
can build on the evidence that we have
1:25:38
on the ground.
1:25:38
You see how everyone is saying we can
1:25:40
see it with our eyes.
1:25:41
I have eyes.
1:25:42
I can see it.
1:25:42
I saw it with my eyes.
1:25:43
I saw something different.
1:25:45
I mean, what color is the dress?
1:25:46
The question is why- doesn't fit somebody
1:25:49
and what they're trying to do to continue
1:25:50
to defraud people in their city and in
1:25:53
their state, continue to take advantage of individuals
1:25:55
and to allow criminals- I don't know
1:25:56
what you're talking about.
1:25:56
That's what Mayor Frye and that's what Mayor,
1:25:59
Governor Walz are doing every day by diverting
1:26:02
the attention and trying to attack a law
1:26:04
enforcement officer.
1:26:05
They're allowing the criminals to go by without
1:26:08
examination.
1:26:09
Are you saying that the second and third
1:26:10
shots, because you just said it happened very
1:26:11
quickly.
1:26:12
Are you saying- I didn't say anything
1:26:13
at all.
1:26:13
I said, watch the videos.
1:26:14
And watch how quickly this unfolded and know
1:26:17
that law enforcement officers every day in this
1:26:19
country are in difficult situations where they have
1:26:22
to make split second decisions to protect themselves,
1:26:24
the public and their colleagues and that they
1:26:26
have to rely on their training.
1:26:28
That's exactly what this officer did and I
1:26:30
know that the left and I know the
1:26:31
crazy activists in this country that are trying
1:26:34
to undermine our way of life will attack
1:26:36
and try to destroy a law enforcement officer.
1:26:38
I'm asking a question.
1:26:39
It's just unacceptable and we're not going to
1:26:40
let that happen.
1:26:41
I'm asking a question is when he's out
1:26:42
of harm's way, what is the reason for
1:26:44
the second and third shot through the window
1:26:46
when he is out, he's not in the
1:26:48
line of sight of the car?
1:26:49
This investigation will continue to unfold and more
1:26:52
and more information will come forward.
1:26:53
She's no good at this point.
1:26:55
What I would appreciate is everybody's- I
1:26:56
know exactly what she should have said.
1:27:00
She should have said he already hit her
1:27:03
with the car.
1:27:04
He had no idea if she was going
1:27:05
to back up and run him over.
1:27:08
She had- he- as far as
1:27:10
- he didn't have that much time to
1:27:11
think about it because it had been dead.
1:27:14
Well, could she have backed up?
1:27:16
She already hit him.
1:27:18
How much would it take for her to
1:27:20
back up and run him over?
1:27:21
He didn't have any time to think about
1:27:23
this.
1:27:23
It was not worth taking a chance.
1:27:26
Can you tell me, Jake, can she-
1:27:28
could you tell me could she not have
1:27:29
run him over?
1:27:31
No, because she was a poet.
1:27:35
Poets don't do that.
1:27:36
So I don't know what the AOC refer
1:27:38
- the reference is, but he's going to
1:27:40
call a- call an equivalency here.
1:27:43
And there really isn't an answer other than
1:27:44
you saw the video.
1:27:46
I want you to ask- I want
1:27:47
to ask a question about the rules of
1:27:48
how law enforcement is allowed to engage when
1:27:51
feeling threatened, per your assertions.
1:27:52
And by the way, he's going to yip
1:27:54
her on this one.
1:27:54
She has no answer for it.
1:27:56
Because I want to show some video to
1:27:58
you right now and ask, what is the
1:28:00
appropriate response for the police officers in this
1:28:02
situation?
1:28:08
Do you know what he's showing?
1:28:11
No, probably the pepper spring or- Those
1:28:27
are law enforcement officers being physically attacked.
1:28:31
By this standard, would any of those officers
1:28:34
be justified in shooting and killing the people
1:28:36
causing them physical harm?
1:28:38
Every single situation is going to rely on
1:28:42
the situation those officers are on.
1:28:43
That they know that when people are putting
1:28:45
hands on them, when they are using weapons
1:28:47
against them, when they are physically harming them,
1:28:50
that they have the authority to arrest those
1:28:52
individuals.
1:28:53
The president pardoned every single one of those
1:28:55
people.
1:28:56
And make sure that they're getting justice for
1:28:58
their actions going forward.
1:28:59
President Trump pardoned every single one of those
1:29:01
people.
1:29:01
And every single one of these investigations comes
1:29:04
in the full context of the situation on
1:29:06
the ground.
1:29:07
She's very combative.
1:29:08
Yes, she, yeah, I agree.
1:29:10
And she's not doing it well, but-
1:29:12
No.
1:29:12
I mean, there's other ways.
1:29:13
She should have just thrown the Ashley Babbitt
1:29:15
thing right at him.
1:29:17
That would have been good.
1:29:18
Yeah, that could have been good.
1:29:19
So, well, there was one police officer that
1:29:21
just shot an innocent woman who wasn't unarmed,
1:29:23
who wasn't hitting him.
1:29:24
Shot him dead.
1:29:25
And he didn't get prosecuted, did he?
1:29:28
Did he, Jake?
1:29:29
Say her name, Jake.
1:29:30
Say her name.
1:29:31
Say her name.
1:29:32
So he could have done, she could have
1:29:33
done that.
1:29:34
She could have pulled the Ashley Babbitt card.
1:29:36
Could have, yes.
1:29:37
She could have also said, and if she
1:29:39
was really a, if she was a J
1:29:41
.D. Vance or somebody who was quick on
1:29:43
her feet, she would have said the following.
1:29:45
Well, those cops knew that those were FBI
1:29:47
agency, FBI guys beating them up.
1:29:50
So they knew it was a wink, wink,
1:29:51
nudge, nudge.
1:29:52
They weren't going to shoot them.
1:29:55
You know what?
1:29:55
You are now the new Kristi Noem.
1:29:57
I hereby nominate you as a director of
1:30:00
the DHS.
1:30:01
It doesn't take a genius to have these
1:30:02
answers.
1:30:03
You would look good in the cowboy hat
1:30:05
and the camo.
1:30:06
You'd be great.
1:30:07
Listen, Jake.
1:30:08
Yeah, just the dresses don't work.
1:30:09
Listen, Jake.
1:30:10
We saw you at the birthday party of
1:30:12
the assistant director of CIA.
1:30:14
We know, we know what you're up to.
1:30:15
We know whose team you're playing on.
1:30:18
So we had to go to France 24
1:30:20
to get some of this information.
1:30:22
Well, there's a coalition of organizations and rights
1:30:26
groups that are organizing these demonstrations.
1:30:28
The biggest one, the ACLU, which most of
1:30:31
our viewers will know, they're the main driving
1:30:33
force behind it.
1:30:34
But they have called for an entire weekend
1:30:37
of process, a process across the country.
1:30:39
Around 1,000 of them are so expected.
1:30:42
There was one here in D.C., just
1:30:44
down by the White House there a little
1:30:45
earlier that we were at.
1:30:47
But the big one here that we are
1:30:49
expecting is going to be taking place on
1:30:51
Sunday when protesters will be gathering near the
1:30:54
National Mall before walking down towards the headquarters
1:30:57
of ICE, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
1:31:00
That's part of the Department of Homeland Security.
1:31:04
But the biggest one by far that we've
1:31:06
seen on Saturday is in Minneapolis, where that
1:31:09
shooting of Rene Goods took place just a
1:31:12
few days ago.
1:31:13
There have been hundreds of protesters gathering in
1:31:17
a central park there before then moving on
1:31:20
and marching through the streets so long past
1:31:22
the site of where Rene was fatally shot
1:31:26
just a couple of days ago.
1:31:28
People chanting her name, shouting justice for Rene.
1:31:31
And there's also a vigil being held there
1:31:34
with a significant amount of flowers and candles
1:31:37
being placed at the site where she was
1:31:39
fatally shot.
1:31:40
So they for now have been mostly peaceful.
1:31:44
There have been a couple of pepper balls
1:31:46
fired towards protesters.
1:31:48
That mainly though outside of an ICE detention
1:31:50
facility inside of Minneapolis, which has really become
1:31:53
a flashpoint of these demonstrations.
1:31:55
That is where these officers come face to
1:31:59
face with the protesters who are protesting their
1:32:02
stay in Minneapolis.
1:32:04
The ACLU, man.
1:32:06
What happened to them?
1:32:07
I remember when I used to...
1:32:09
They were taken over by the communists.
1:32:12
I used to donate to them and I
1:32:14
think it was when President Trump put the,
1:32:18
in hindsight, very smart travel restrictions on coming
1:32:22
into the United States during COVID, which immediately
1:32:25
was called a Muslim ban.
1:32:27
I hate Muslims.
1:32:29
And that was the ACLU.
1:32:30
And then they called me and said, hey,
1:32:32
how come you haven't donated?
1:32:33
I said, well, are you supposed to organize
1:32:36
protests?
1:32:37
Is that your charter?
1:32:38
Well, we have to.
1:32:39
It's important.
1:32:41
You remember that call?
1:32:43
Yeah.
1:32:43
It was during the era of the show.
1:32:45
You talked about it.
1:32:46
I recorded the call.
1:32:47
You got all bent out of shape because
1:32:49
you used to give them a lot of
1:32:50
money, I guess.
1:32:51
A lot of money.
1:32:53
Well, for you.
1:32:54
It was my $10 a month.
1:32:55
For you, it was a lot of money.
1:32:57
Yes, it was.
1:32:58
And so you're giving them a lot of
1:32:59
money and they call and bitch and moan
1:33:02
that you're not giving them more $10 bills.
1:33:05
Yes.
1:33:05
And the next thing you know, you're complaining
1:33:07
about it on the show.
1:33:08
Of course, I remember that.
1:33:20
I thought this was very funny.
1:33:22
I guess I should really play the jingle,
1:33:25
but we'll play this.
1:33:26
You'll say theirs.
1:33:27
Here's my question.
1:33:28
Where is everybody?
1:33:29
Hold on.
1:33:30
Let me play the warning.
1:33:31
This woman.
1:33:32
Everybody needs to be warned before we play
1:33:34
these kinds of a clip from the view
1:33:37
will be played.
1:33:38
Shelter in place.
1:33:42
Let me just say this.
1:33:44
Here's my question.
1:33:45
Where is everybody?
1:33:47
Where is everybody else?
1:33:48
We come to everybody's aid.
1:33:50
Yeah, we help everybody.
1:33:53
Yeah, NATO.
1:33:54
They came and helped us after 9-11.
1:33:56
Where is everybody?
1:33:57
Because what did NATO do?
1:33:59
Just what did NATO do for us after
1:34:01
9-11?
1:34:02
Come and help us.
1:34:04
Come on, NATO.
1:34:05
Come on and help us.
1:34:06
They helped us do what?
1:34:07
Just listen to the clip.
1:34:09
They came and helped us after 9-11.
1:34:11
Where is everybody?
1:34:12
Because where are...
1:34:13
You're worrying about Greenland right now.
1:34:15
Well, I'm not on board for Greenland.
1:34:17
Where is the government?
1:34:19
We are...
1:34:19
Do you realize we don't have a government?
1:34:22
Oh, you mean...
1:34:22
We don't have...
1:34:24
...all their power away.
1:34:25
Yes, I know.
1:34:25
What are you bitching about?
1:34:26
This is a huge and should be our
1:34:30
biggest bitch right now.
1:34:32
It is.
1:34:35
Because all of this is happening because there
1:34:38
is no one doing checks and balances.
1:34:42
Where is the government?
1:34:43
Why aren't they doing their job?
1:34:45
And let me tell you, I feel like...
1:34:48
You know, he hinted yesterday.
1:34:52
Okay, so she basically feels that NATO should
1:34:54
come and help us.
1:34:56
They need to save us.
1:34:59
And I remember the French, we invented Freedom
1:35:03
Fries because the French didn't want to help
1:35:05
us right away.
1:35:06
They didn't help us right away.
1:35:09
So we got all bent out of shape
1:35:11
and call them Freedom Fries.
1:35:12
Yes, yes.
1:35:15
So, yeah, it seems...
1:35:17
But yeah, it's an obvious ploy.
1:35:20
And, you know, this would be another thing.
1:35:22
Oh, we can impeach him over this and
1:35:24
just keep moving along, doing all that.
1:35:27
It's also boring.
1:35:29
I mean, it is.
1:35:30
I do have my...
1:35:31
I do have a Minnesota clip.
1:35:32
Okay, let's do your...
1:35:34
The Minnesota public citizen woman.
1:35:36
This week, series of shootings by federal agents
1:35:39
enforcing President Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration has
1:35:43
sparked a weekend of protests.
1:35:45
There were rallies and demonstrations across the country.
1:35:48
They were organized after a woman was fatally
1:35:50
shot by an immigration and customs enforcement agent
1:35:53
in Minneapolis on Wednesday.
1:35:55
And a customs and border protection agent wounded
1:35:58
two people the next day in Portland, Oregon.
1:36:00
Lisa Gilbert is the co-president of Public
1:36:03
Citizen, a progressive advocacy group that helped organize
1:36:06
today's protests.
1:36:07
Lisa, what are you hearing from around the
1:36:09
country about turnout and whether or not there
1:36:11
have been any problems or troubles?
1:36:13
Well, turnout has been amazing.
1:36:15
We're holding 1,000 plus events, peaceful, lawful
1:36:19
vigils around the country in this astounding moment
1:36:23
where people are reacting to an atrocity.
1:36:27
It was organized in only 48 hours.
1:36:29
And so the massive numbers we're seeing, the
1:36:32
number of people turning out, telling their neighbors
1:36:35
to turn out, all of it just demonstrates
1:36:38
the real magnitude of the outrage that I
1:36:41
think people are feeling.
1:36:42
Yeah, the outrage, okay.
1:36:45
It's the outrage.
1:36:47
The thing is...
1:36:47
Yeah, like Brock.
1:36:48
The thing is we'll never...
1:36:52
These two dimensions will never see eye to
1:36:55
eye, ever.
1:36:56
I just don't see it.
1:36:58
How can we ever create cohesion?
1:37:00
These are the same generalizing liberal white women
1:37:05
who you clip on TikTok.
1:37:08
Yeah, it's the same people.
1:37:09
So how do we deal with them moving
1:37:13
forward?
1:37:14
You have to have a world war.
1:37:17
A world war?
1:37:18
Wouldn't a civil war be good enough?
1:37:20
We got to have a world war?
1:37:21
No, a civil war is impossible to do.
1:37:23
Well, what do we need a world...
1:37:24
How would a world war help?
1:37:25
That way it unites the country.
1:37:28
A civil war doesn't unite anything.
1:37:30
You want a world war, like everyone said,
1:37:32
they got a common enemy and everyone's got
1:37:34
to get it together because we're all going
1:37:37
to die.
1:37:38
And so you have to have a world
1:37:39
war.
1:37:40
And if that gets rid of the Zeds
1:37:42
who can't read, you put them in the
1:37:44
army, it solves a lot of problems.
1:37:47
I got a great anti-Zoomer note.
1:37:51
Hold on a second.
1:37:52
I think I got that one too.
1:37:54
Yes.
1:37:55
I think it's exaggerated a bit.
1:37:58
From Stefan?
1:37:59
I don't know if it was Stefan.
1:38:01
When you read it, I'll know.
1:38:02
Well, he said, my generation was born in
1:38:05
93, 97.
1:38:06
Yeah, this guy.
1:38:07
Studied under the French system and English system
1:38:09
through primary and high school.
1:38:11
So he says, you know, they taught us
1:38:12
how to touch type, build the database, use
1:38:14
Excel and PowerPoint and websites, understand key components.
1:38:17
It was based on my comment that there's
1:38:19
no more computer science class.
1:38:20
Right.
1:38:21
So he says, when we entered the workforce,
1:38:25
all the hiring managers were shocked at our
1:38:28
computer literacy and thought this had to be
1:38:30
the smartest generation ever.
1:38:32
A year ago, I caught up with some
1:38:34
of my friends over Discord.
1:38:35
Mm-hmm.
1:38:36
Sus.
1:38:37
Who are now...
1:38:38
Not that smart.
1:38:40
Who are now a middle management in tech
1:38:42
companies, i.e. head of operations, customer support.
1:38:46
And they were telling me funny stories about
1:38:48
the new generation, how illiterate they are in
1:38:50
computers.
1:38:51
Some with IT degrees.
1:38:53
And he gives some examples.
1:38:54
I believe that.
1:38:55
I believe this too.
1:38:56
They did not know what or how to
1:39:00
open a command line on Windows.
1:39:03
I mean, I think that's iffy if you
1:39:06
need to know that.
1:39:07
Yeah, it doesn't take much to figure it
1:39:09
out.
1:39:10
They did not...
1:39:11
CMD.
1:39:13
Apple...
1:39:13
Was it Windows key or CMD?
1:39:16
There's a lot of ways.
1:39:16
There's more ways.
1:39:17
There's more ways than one.
1:39:18
That's as many ways.
1:39:19
How to touch type.
1:39:21
Well, that...
1:39:22
I mean, typing skills.
1:39:23
Do they even do typing class anymore?
1:39:25
I don't know.
1:39:26
I don't think so.
1:39:27
How to use Excel or PowerPoint.
1:39:29
That seems like a big issue if you
1:39:32
don't understand the basics of a spreadsheet.
1:39:36
And they didn't know how to troubleshoot when
1:39:38
something went wrong with the computer, i.e.
1:39:41
control, alt, delete.
1:39:42
They couldn't get to the task manager.
1:39:45
Task manager and processes.
1:39:47
And if all else fails, restart the PC.
1:39:50
They just froze like a robot.
1:39:53
Yeah, I can believe that.
1:39:55
The other thing is, I mean, but this
1:39:58
generation that he's discussing, the one he's part
1:40:00
of, do they know the difference between random
1:40:02
access and non-volatile memory?
1:40:05
Well, they're not going to have to know
1:40:06
because you can't buy it anymore.
1:40:08
There's no more RAM.
1:40:12
We're out of RAM?
1:40:12
When did that happen?
1:40:13
Well, this is from CNBC.
1:40:16
This has been going on for a couple
1:40:17
of weeks now, these stories.
1:40:19
AI memory is sold out, causing an unprecedented
1:40:23
surge in prices.
1:40:24
Prices for computer memory or RAM, this is
1:40:26
CNBC, are expected to rise more than 50
1:40:29
% this quarter compared to the last quarter
1:40:31
of 2025.
1:40:33
Because all the AI companies are buying up
1:40:35
the RAM.
1:40:36
There's no more RAM.
1:40:37
And RAM was getting dirt cheap.
1:40:38
That's what was so great about it.
1:40:40
It was getting dirt cheap.
1:40:41
You could put in a huge cache of
1:40:44
RAM.
1:40:44
24 gigs.
1:40:46
And yeah, it's beautiful.
1:40:47
I don't know about that much.
1:40:48
Well, let's take a little sidestep here and
1:40:53
let us listen to a report of the
1:40:58
most recent CES, the Computer Electronics Show, which
1:41:01
you used to cover, I believe.
1:41:03
Didn't you used to cover that?
1:41:04
Or were you more calm?
1:41:05
I used to go all the time.
1:41:06
Yeah.
1:41:07
Even though it's a pain in the ass
1:41:08
because it's crowded, the hotel rooms are high
1:41:11
priced.
1:41:12
It's cold.
1:41:12
It's cold in Vegas.
1:41:15
Sometimes, but not always.
1:41:17
I've been there during, I think, CES when
1:41:19
it snowed.
1:41:20
I was there one year.
1:41:22
It snowed.
1:41:22
I was there that year too.
1:41:23
It snowed.
1:41:24
I was getting on the plane to go
1:41:26
home and it was snowing out.
1:41:28
I'm going, what am I doing?
1:41:29
Why is it snowing in Las Vegas?
1:41:32
I remember like, yeah, we'll just walk home
1:41:33
from the convention center because we didn't have
1:41:35
Uber.
1:41:35
It was snowing.
1:41:36
We didn't have Uber.
1:41:37
We had to grab cabs and it was
1:41:39
like an hour wait for the cabs.
1:41:40
And they're all gypsy cabs that'll rip you
1:41:41
off.
1:41:42
It was all, it was a mess.
1:41:43
I'll just walk home and it started snowing.
1:41:46
Of course you did.
1:41:48
I mean, you always had a car because
1:41:49
when you went to Vegas, the first stop
1:41:51
is the pinball machine museum.
1:41:54
It was a stop.
1:41:56
I used to go to rent a vet
1:41:58
and rent a Corvette too.
1:42:00
Oh, I rented a vet there one year.
1:42:02
Yeah, it's fun.
1:42:03
Yeah, except that was the really plastic ones.
1:42:08
That was maybe, so that must've been-
1:42:10
They were all pretty plastic.
1:42:11
No, but it was like 93 and I
1:42:13
think I hit the gas, the accelerator right
1:42:17
over a speed bump and it ripped the
1:42:19
whole muffler and some fiberglass right off of
1:42:23
the thing.
1:42:24
Yeah, and I parked it there and then
1:42:26
of course they called me later and said,
1:42:27
hey, did you lose a muffler?
1:42:32
These were the good old days, MTV days,
1:42:34
man.
1:42:35
Good times.
1:42:36
So here, let's see a little overview from
1:42:39
the innovation, the incredible innovation of AI at
1:42:43
CES.
1:42:44
This is how AI, well over a trillion
1:42:47
dollars worth of investment is going to change
1:42:49
your life.
1:42:51
Paper thin TVs, Lego that comes to life
1:42:54
with light and sound, and binoculars that identify
1:42:57
bird species in real time.
1:42:59
This year's consumer electronics show was defined by
1:43:03
AI powered innovation.
1:43:05
Innovation, John, innovation.
1:43:06
All you bird watchers out there, take note.
1:43:09
A mix of genuine breakthroughs and eye-catching
1:43:12
concepts that may never see a store shelf.
1:43:15
Romanian deep tech company, Dr. Lumens, AI glasses
1:43:19
for the blind could make shopping or even
1:43:22
hiking possible for the visually impaired.
1:43:24
What happened to dogs?
1:43:27
The seeing eye dogs are great.
1:43:29
No, now you got to have this headset.
1:43:31
By the way, every innovation looks like a
1:43:34
Newton.
1:43:35
You know what I mean?
1:43:36
Remember the Newton?
1:43:38
Oh yeah, the Apple Newton.
1:43:39
It's like this big clunky thing that did
1:43:41
nothing.
1:43:42
You could squirt your business card to someone
1:43:46
else if you were like, you know, 10
1:43:48
inches away.
1:43:49
Well, I'm going to squirt my details to
1:43:51
you.
1:43:51
I forgot about the term squirt.
1:43:54
Squirt, yes.
1:43:54
That was the term they used.
1:43:56
Squirt.
1:43:58
Hey, I went to Boston.
1:43:59
Kind of gross.
1:44:00
I went to Boston to the launch to
1:44:02
get one.
1:44:02
That's how sad I was.
1:44:04
I spent my own money.
1:44:06
I got it.
1:44:06
This thing is, it's the future, the Newton.
1:44:09
You spent your own money?
1:44:10
I did.
1:44:11
During this era, I never spent any of
1:44:13
my money.
1:44:14
Well, this was MTV days.
1:44:16
Yeah, but they should have expenses for you.
1:44:18
They weren't going to send me to, they
1:44:20
didn't believe in the internet, let alone at
1:44:22
the Newton.
1:44:23
Like, no, the Newton.
1:44:24
By the way, have you seen that MTV
1:44:27
Rewind website?
1:44:30
No, but I heard about it.
1:44:31
Yeah, it's pretty cool, actually.
1:44:33
They got a lot of you on there.
1:44:34
No, I'm not.
1:44:35
No, they have no VJs.
1:44:36
No, somebody told me they saw you on
1:44:37
there.
1:44:38
I haven't seen it.
1:44:39
I don't think so.
1:44:41
Send your link to adamacurry.com.
1:44:44
All right, back to the innovation.
1:44:46
So yeah, so this headset is giant.
1:44:48
So now you're blind and you look like
1:44:50
a total idiot with this huge beep, beep,
1:44:53
beep, beep.
1:44:54
Oh, I'm walking.
1:44:55
Oh, I might get it.
1:44:56
The dogs are great.
1:44:58
I think the seeing eye dog association should
1:45:02
stop this right away.
1:45:03
This is crazy.
1:45:04
For the blind, could make shopping or even
1:45:06
hiking possible for the visually impaired.
1:45:09
The headset.
1:45:10
Hiking.
1:45:12
Why stop there?
1:45:13
Water skiing, skiing, biking.
1:45:18
You know, the horse riding, everything.
1:45:20
This is innovation.
1:45:22
Motorcycling.
1:45:23
Motocross.
1:45:24
This is crazy.
1:45:26
This is what AI is doing for us,
1:45:29
bird watchers and blind people.
1:45:30
By the way, we got a lot of
1:45:32
blind people listening to this podcast.
1:45:34
So, you know, I love you.
1:45:36
And I think you're probably laughing with us.
1:45:38
We hope so.
1:45:39
The headset analyzes surroundings and helps a blind
1:45:41
person on their day.
1:45:42
This is the way, this is the reason
1:45:44
I'll tell you why they should be a
1:45:46
very complimentary toward us because these devices are
1:45:50
designed to kill the blind.
1:45:52
That's right.
1:45:54
They want to kill you.
1:45:55
Go hiking on a steep cliff with these
1:45:57
goggles on.
1:45:59
Paragliding.
1:46:00
I mean, the possibilities are endless with AI.
1:46:03
It's replacing a guide dog.
1:46:05
And Chinese company Roborocks' Saros Rover is a
1:46:09
robotic vacuum cleaner.
1:46:11
Now, listen to this thing.
1:46:12
This is an innovation of epic proportion.
1:46:15
A guide dog.
1:46:16
And Chinese company Roborocks' Saros Rover is a
1:46:20
robotic vacuum cleaner with a pair of legs
1:46:23
and motion sensors, allowing it to navigate the
1:46:26
house alone and climb up and down the
1:46:28
stairs, hoovering as it goes.
1:46:30
So this is the big innovation.
1:46:33
10, maybe 15.
1:46:34
When did the Roomba come out?
1:46:36
By the way, bankrupt.
1:46:39
Yeah, it was about time.
1:46:40
I hated those guys.
1:46:42
Really?
1:46:42
You hated them?
1:46:43
I talked to Roomba story before I went
1:46:45
to it once.
1:46:46
I think it was CES.
1:46:48
And I snuck in before they allowed anyone
1:46:52
in so I could start interviewing people without
1:46:54
having to be, you know, having to get
1:46:56
in line.
1:46:57
Nice and quiet.
1:46:58
Yeah.
1:46:58
And so I go into the Roomba guys.
1:47:00
I'm going to give them a big write
1:47:01
up.
1:47:01
And so then the next thing you know,
1:47:03
I'm moving over to the next company and
1:47:04
a bunch of security guys grab me and
1:47:07
they say, hey, what are you doing here?
1:47:08
You're not even supposed to be in here.
1:47:09
And I said, yeah, well, I am in
1:47:11
here.
1:47:11
And I said, well, you got to go.
1:47:14
And so he's escorting me off.
1:47:16
And I said, who is it?
1:47:17
How did you find out I was in
1:47:18
here in the first place?
1:47:19
Says the Roomba guys told me.
1:47:20
The Roomba ratted you out.
1:47:22
The Roomba guys ratted me out.
1:47:24
So I didn't get a good write up
1:47:25
and I've been bitching about it ever since.
1:47:27
And, you know, and meanwhile, we went in
1:47:30
there to interview them, to get them a
1:47:31
good write up.
1:47:32
And this is the thanks I got.
1:47:34
I got booted.
1:47:35
Don't ever cross John C.
1:47:36
Dvorak.
1:47:37
Let this be a lesson.
1:47:38
I have a long memory.
1:47:39
That's for sure.
1:47:40
That's right.
1:47:42
Well, so now the innovation.
1:47:43
So this is what, 15 years ago, maybe
1:47:46
longer.
1:47:46
When did Roomba first come out?
1:47:48
That's at least 20 years ago.
1:47:49
20 years.
1:47:50
So now they have the same basic concept,
1:47:53
only it has two legs and it pops
1:47:56
down.
1:47:57
Downhill.
1:47:58
It climbs the stairs.
1:48:00
Okay.
1:48:01
Wow.
1:48:02
1.3 trillion dollars so far.
1:48:04
It's got to do with AI.
1:48:06
It's smart.
1:48:07
It's really smart.
1:48:09
What it means is that it utilizes AI
1:48:10
and advanced algorithms in order to.
1:48:13
Advanced algorithms.
1:48:14
Advanced algorithms.
1:48:18
Tech industry is not what it used to
1:48:20
be.
1:48:20
That it utilizes AI and advanced algorithms in
1:48:23
order to measure the space around it and
1:48:26
be able to climb steps with its wheel
1:48:29
leg system.
1:48:29
But it's not only just steps and stairs.
1:48:32
It is also ramps, slopes, curved stairs, snail
1:48:36
type of stairs.
1:48:37
Dude, get an illegal alien.
1:48:40
This is crazy.
1:48:42
Yeah, get Maria.
1:48:44
Yeah.
1:48:44
I mean, pay a human being to do
1:48:47
this work.
1:48:48
Carpeted stairs, all types of different surfaces that
1:48:52
the wheel leg can handle.
1:48:53
France-based Ybrush brought its smart Halo toothbrush,
1:48:58
which not only cleans teeth in 20 seconds,
1:49:00
but has gas sensors to detect health conditions
1:49:03
through analyzing users' breath.
1:49:05
Let's be honest.
1:49:07
Brushing teeth was due for an innovation.
1:49:10
I mean, this is the advanced AI economy
1:49:17
that we're going into.
1:49:19
Oh, you just stick this thing in your
1:49:21
mouth and within 20 seconds, your teeth are
1:49:23
clean.
1:49:23
I kind of enjoy that.
1:49:24
And it checks your breath to see if
1:49:26
you have bad breath.
1:49:27
Yeah, I enjoy brushing my teeth.
1:49:29
You know, it gives me a little minute
1:49:30
to think about stuff and walk around while
1:49:33
I'm brushing.
1:49:34
No, no, no.
1:49:34
They're taking that away.
1:49:35
Sensors to detect health conditions through analyzing users'
1:49:39
breath.
1:49:39
Health conditions.
1:49:39
But the AI surge has also given birth
1:49:41
to solutions in search of a problem, like
1:49:44
chargeable design changing bags, lollipops that play music
1:49:48
using bone induction technology.
1:49:51
What?
1:49:52
So the bone induction lollipop.
1:49:55
Why don't they just give you secret messages?
1:49:58
Put the lollipop in your, okay, now's the
1:50:00
time to kill all humans.
1:50:02
Vote Democrat.
1:50:03
Vote Democrat.
1:50:04
That's what I was going to say.
1:50:05
Vote Democrat.
1:50:06
And they have these bags.
1:50:08
So there's a bag and there's like a
1:50:10
flexible screen, poorly, I might add, woven into
1:50:15
the bag and it changes designs.
1:50:18
Wow.
1:50:21
That's great.
1:50:23
All right.
1:50:23
And the last.
1:50:23
I wonder what that cost.
1:50:25
And the last one is my favorite because
1:50:26
it's an oldie.
1:50:27
Surge has also given birth to solutions in
1:50:30
search of a problem, like chargeable design changing
1:50:33
bags, lollipops that play music using bone induction
1:50:36
technology.
1:50:36
See, you know, honey, it's time to go.
1:50:40
I can't because my bag is still charging.
1:50:43
I can't leave the house.
1:50:45
My bag is charging.
1:50:47
Otherwise, my Louis Vuitton logo won't change.
1:50:49
In search of a problem, like chargeable design
1:50:52
changing bags, lollipops that play music using bone
1:50:56
induction technology, or even smart toys that grow
1:51:00
and evolve like real pets.
1:51:02
The Tamagotchi.
1:51:03
They've brought the Tamagotchi back.
1:51:09
There's a bunch of time we had.
1:51:10
Somebody sent me some.
1:51:12
I think one of the people, one of
1:51:13
our producers, maybe is part of this Tamagotchi
1:51:18
group.
1:51:18
There's a big bunch of collectors in the
1:51:20
country of these things still.
1:51:23
And they have meetups.
1:51:26
And you can look up to me, and
1:51:27
it's always, it's all women and one guy
1:51:32
who's living it up.
1:51:36
And each meetup looks like to be about
1:51:40
18 people.
1:51:42
And they're having the time of their lives,
1:51:43
and they have photos online.
1:51:45
And Instagram has a lot of these groups
1:51:47
that show up.
1:51:48
And they post the photos of the collections.
1:51:51
Of the Tamagotchis?
1:51:53
Yeah, then they all have a variety of
1:51:55
them.
1:51:55
I didn't realize there are so many different
1:51:57
weird ones.
1:51:58
Yeah.
1:51:59
I mean, but that was the report.
1:52:02
So I guess, and of course, that's about
1:52:03
it.
1:52:04
Yeah, that sounds right.
1:52:05
Yeah.
1:52:06
So that's what AI is giving us.
1:52:12
Okay.
1:52:12
I think at the end of the day,
1:52:14
I'll say it.
1:52:15
You did it.
1:52:16
I said the end of the day.
1:52:17
I said it.
1:52:18
I think the only winner in the AI
1:52:23
stuff is Google.
1:52:25
I think that Gemini as a search product,
1:52:29
if you get the Gemini Pro, which came
1:52:32
with my phone for some reason, that is
1:52:37
the only actual killer app.
1:52:41
And they supposedly would know how to make
1:52:45
money out of it.
1:52:49
And they have the branding.
1:52:52
They are the search company.
1:52:54
And it does a pretty good job.
1:52:55
I mean, it's not quick.
1:52:57
You know, it has to search stuff.
1:52:58
That can speed up with more servers.
1:53:01
With more money.
1:53:03
Just a little bit more.
1:53:04
More money.
1:53:05
More lithium crystals, and we're good.
1:53:06
I think the big winner is NVIDIA.
1:53:09
Oh, well, yeah.
1:53:10
Because they're the ones that don't even sell
1:53:12
chips anymore.
1:53:14
They're the ones that sell server farms.
1:53:16
Right.
1:53:16
But Google has their own chip.
1:53:17
They've got their own.
1:53:18
Yeah, the A7.
1:53:19
It's supposed to be better than the...
1:53:21
No, no.
1:53:22
Apple's the A7.
1:53:23
No, it's got some number like that.
1:53:26
You can look it up.
1:53:28
But that chip is sold only as a
1:53:30
chip.
1:53:31
And according to my source for this sort
1:53:36
of information, nobody can implement the chip.
1:53:40
They have to say...
1:53:41
And then when they're given the price performance
1:53:43
versus the chip, versus buying an entire server
1:53:45
farm from NVIDIA, everything all put together.
1:53:49
Right.
1:53:50
No, they're not going to buy the Google
1:53:52
chip.
1:53:53
So the only other killer app of AI...
1:53:58
And, you know, please don't email me and
1:54:00
tell me, yeah, it's great for vibe coding.
1:54:02
I do it all the time.
1:54:03
I'm building my own audio mixer on Linux.
1:54:06
Absolutely.
1:54:07
But that's not for the common man.
1:54:10
That's for nerds like us who are making
1:54:12
stuff.
1:54:13
And I don't like to fool...
1:54:14
By the way, Omachi.
1:54:16
I loaded that on the old Surface Pro
1:54:18
6.
1:54:19
That is...
1:54:20
The Linux?
1:54:21
Yeah.
1:54:22
Hamachi?
1:54:22
It's called Hamachi?
1:54:23
It's called Hamachi.
1:54:24
Like a fish?
1:54:24
Yeah, it's Hamachi.
1:54:25
It's like a sushi.
1:54:27
It's Omachi.
1:54:28
Omachi.
1:54:29
Okay, that's better.
1:54:30
Yes, Omachi.
1:54:31
And it is dynamite.
1:54:33
I can't wait.
1:54:33
Why?
1:54:34
Why?
1:54:34
Why?
1:54:35
Because...
1:54:35
What makes it better than any other Linux
1:54:37
that we played with?
1:54:39
Because it's based on HyperLan.
1:54:43
So it's a tiling window manager.
1:54:46
So it's the interface you're liking, not the
1:54:49
Linux underpinnings?
1:54:50
Yeah, no.
1:54:50
I mean, the Linux underneath is just great.
1:54:53
I mean, that's just...
1:54:54
You know, that's Mint.
1:54:55
We've been Mint users for a long time.
1:54:57
It's the interface.
1:54:59
It's a whole different concept.
1:55:01
It's not going to be for the Zoomers.
1:55:04
They're going to be like, how come I
1:55:04
can't drag this window?
1:55:06
No.
1:55:07
So you can just go lightning fast on
1:55:09
this thing.
1:55:10
I don't want to bore you with that.
1:55:12
I want to get to the other...
1:55:14
Why not?
1:55:16
Because we talked about it in the last
1:55:17
show and you already were like...
1:55:19
Yeah, but I still don't understand.
1:55:19
I'm going to have to...
1:55:20
Do I have to go look at this
1:55:21
thing?
1:55:21
I'm going to have to take a machine
1:55:23
and download this thing so I can check
1:55:25
out this interface because I'm going to be
1:55:27
behind the eight ball or behind the curve,
1:55:30
behind the curve if I don't do this.
1:55:32
So I have to actually do this work?
1:55:34
You know, the reason you...
1:55:35
Well, thanks.
1:55:35
Should I tell you the reason why you
1:55:37
will love this interface?
1:55:38
Because it validates your initial proposition for which
1:55:44
you have been scorned for decades.
1:55:47
But the mouse is no good?
1:55:49
That's not what you said, but yes.
1:55:51
That's not what I said, it's true.
1:55:53
There's no evidence anyone wants to use this.
1:55:56
And this thing proves it is in fact
1:55:58
evidence that software developers...
1:56:03
You don't need a mouse with this interface.
1:56:06
You do not.
1:56:07
I mean, if you're using the web browser,
1:56:09
but just for using the interface?
1:56:13
No, you don't.
1:56:14
It's all completely with the keyboard.
1:56:16
It's fast.
1:56:16
It's intuitive.
1:56:18
It's smart.
1:56:19
You don't have to drag windows around.
1:56:21
Just click, click, click.
1:56:22
Boom, boom, boom.
1:56:23
It's over here.
1:56:23
It's over there.
1:56:24
It's done.
1:56:25
It's great.
1:56:27
Yeah, I have to check it out, I
1:56:28
guess.
1:56:29
The other innovation, the other killer app in
1:56:33
AI is, of course, as we also identified
1:56:36
on this podcast, they put a bikini on
1:56:39
her.
1:56:39
And this is causing quite the stir.
1:56:43
After X's AI tool Grok came under fire
1:56:46
for generating sexualized deepfakes, Elon Musk's response has
1:56:50
drawn further criticism.
1:56:51
The scandal began when Grok, an AI chatbot
1:56:54
on X, gained the ability to generate images
1:56:56
last year.
1:56:58
With just a text prompt, users in so
1:57:00
-called spicy mode could generate adult content.
1:57:02
Demands poured in.
1:57:04
Wait until you hear the European lawmaker talk
1:57:06
about it.
1:57:07
The chatbot to virtually undress existing images of
1:57:09
X users, flooding the platform with explicit, unconsensual
1:57:13
images of women and children.
1:57:15
So we are very well aware of the
1:57:16
fact that X or Grok, or X for
1:57:20
Grok, is now offering a spicy mode.
1:57:22
A spicy mode?
1:57:24
Spicy mode.
1:57:25
They have Grok, X is currently offering a
1:57:29
spicy mode.
1:57:29
We're very well aware of the fact that
1:57:31
X or Grok, or X for Grok, is
1:57:34
now offering a spicy mode, showing explicit sexual
1:57:38
content with some output generated with childlike images.
1:57:43
This is not spicy.
1:57:44
This is illegal.
1:57:45
This is illegal.
1:57:46
It's not spicy.
1:57:47
This is appalling.
1:57:48
This is disgusting.
1:57:50
In response to the outcry, the platform limited
1:57:52
image generation and editing tools to paying subscribers
1:57:55
on Friday.
1:57:56
European authorities bashed the move, saying it doesn't
1:57:58
go far enough to stop the pornographic images.
1:58:01
In the UK, Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office
1:58:04
said that the response was insulting to victims
1:58:06
and raised the possibility of banning X in
1:58:08
the country.
1:58:09
Others echoed his call.
1:58:11
We want these companies to take responsibility and
1:58:13
to do the right thing.
1:58:14
Nothing is off the table.
1:58:15
We'll continue to make sure that we protect
1:58:17
children from these online harms.
1:58:20
In the United States, Democratic senators have also
1:58:23
called for X and Grok to be removed
1:58:25
from the App Store until the issue is
1:58:27
resolved.
1:58:28
Spicy mode!
1:58:32
To save the children from seeing Keir Starmer
1:58:35
in a bikini, basically.
1:58:37
This is what it's all about.
1:58:38
Here's the irony clip.
1:58:40
Well, Ashley Sinclair is one of the women
1:58:42
who says her image was sexualized by Grok.
1:58:45
She also happens to be Elon Musk's girlfriend
1:58:47
and mother.
1:58:48
You talked over it.
1:58:49
You talked over it.
1:58:50
I'm sorry, but I started over.
1:58:51
This is the irony clip.
1:58:53
Well, Ashley Sinclair is one of the women
1:58:55
who says her image was sexualized by Grok.
1:58:58
She also happens to be Elon Musk's ex
1:58:59
-girlfriend and mother to one of his children.
1:59:02
Well, she's been telling me about what she's
1:59:04
experienced this week on X.
1:59:06
This issue started for me, I believe it
1:59:08
was two days ago now.
1:59:09
I received a text from a friend and
1:59:12
when I opened that text, it was a
1:59:13
link to Twitter in which a photo of
1:59:15
me where I was fully clothed was then
1:59:17
undressed and put into a bikini.
1:59:19
I immediately responded.
1:59:23
Stop putting your photos on the internet.
1:59:26
Grok saying I don't consent to this.
1:59:29
Please confirm that I don't.
1:59:30
And then at Grok, please don't do this.
1:59:32
I do not consent to this.
1:59:34
There's no context window.
1:59:36
Consent and do not produce any more images.
1:59:39
And Grok confirmed that I don't consent and
1:59:41
that it wouldn't produce any more.
1:59:43
However, Grok continued to produce more and more
1:59:45
images and more and more explicit images in
1:59:48
which I was also getting younger in these
1:59:50
photos.
1:59:50
People found photos of me at 14 years
1:59:53
old that they undressed, put into a bikini.
1:59:56
Other photos of me where I had a
1:59:58
high neckline as an adult with my son's
2:00:01
backpack in the background.
2:00:02
I was stripped where I look basically nude,
2:00:05
bent over and many of these still remain
2:00:08
up on the platform.
2:00:09
The picture was of her bent over.
2:00:11
And as of this morning, despite Twitter's claims
2:00:15
that they were putting safeguards, I saw a
2:00:18
girl that Grok claims is between 10 and
2:00:20
14 years old undressed by Grok.
2:00:23
In the last 24 hours, they removed my
2:00:26
checkmark and demonetized me completely.
2:00:28
After I spoke out about this with no
2:00:30
explanation given, the only thing I've done is
2:00:32
speak out against this issue and asked-
2:00:35
It's amazing when punishment in the world is
2:00:38
seen as losing your checkmark.
2:00:41
They've punished me by removing my checkmark.
2:00:45
Maybe that's so that Grok won't make images
2:00:48
of you is what I'm thinking.
2:00:49
Spoke out about this with no explanation given.
2:00:51
The only thing I've done is speak out
2:00:53
against this issue and asked Grok to stop
2:00:56
doing this because you can't undo abuse.
2:00:59
X has said that now only paying subscribers
2:01:02
will have access to this feature.
2:01:05
I mean, that's being condemned roundly by the
2:01:07
UK government.
2:01:08
When you heard that they were doing that,
2:01:10
what did you think?
2:01:11
Well, so now you can continue producing the
2:01:14
CSAM material, but now you just have to
2:01:17
pay Elon Musk $8 to do it.
2:01:21
Irony abound, I tell you.
2:01:23
There's something going on with the UK.
2:01:25
I have a clip.
2:01:28
And I think, I'm not sure who, I
2:01:30
mean, Starmer's got, they're going after Starmer.
2:01:34
Yeah, he's no good.
2:01:34
There's this, yeah, he's no good.
2:01:37
And you get this kind of, just listen
2:01:38
to this report.
2:01:40
I'm going to preface it before you even
2:01:42
play it.
2:01:43
This is bullcrap.
2:01:46
And I think Nigel Farage and the CIA
2:01:49
and other people are behind it because during
2:01:53
the video, I'm just going to say, during
2:01:56
the video that they're playing, they keep putting
2:01:58
in pictures of Farage and all the things
2:02:01
that these guys do.
2:02:02
And it's a group out of the UK
2:02:04
called, I think, Britstorm.
2:02:09
And Britstorm produces, and one of our producers
2:02:12
actually sent me a couple of these things
2:02:14
as if they were real, which I'm kind
2:02:16
of disturbed by.
2:02:18
But these are phony reports.
2:02:20
They're completely created.
2:02:21
They're total fiction.
2:02:23
And they always have pictures of Farage, so
2:02:27
I think he's behind it.
2:02:28
And they're all used to promote the monarchy
2:02:32
and to, by chiding them, and to condemn
2:02:37
Starmer as being a horrible person.
2:02:40
And I want to play one of these.
2:02:41
This is like, I have two.
2:02:44
Just the question, since we really need to
2:02:47
take our break, do you want to tease
2:02:50
this and come back after the break?
2:02:51
Or do you want to play four and
2:02:52
a half minutes now?
2:02:54
I would just as soon tease it.
2:02:56
Of course.
2:02:57
What do you think?
2:02:58
Do a professional tease.
2:03:00
When we get back, you're going to hear
2:03:01
something that's jaw-dropping.
2:03:04
And with that, I want to thank you
2:03:06
for your courage.
2:03:07
Say in the morning to you, the man
2:03:08
who put the sea in spicy mode.
2:03:10
Say hello to my friend on the other
2:03:11
end, the one, the only, Mr. John C.
2:03:19
Yeah, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam
2:03:20
Curry.
2:03:20
In the morning, all ships that see boots
2:03:22
on the ground, feet in the air, subs
2:03:23
in the water.
2:03:24
And the names of knights out there.
2:03:26
In the morning to the trolls in the
2:03:28
troll room.
2:03:28
Hold on, let me count your trolls.
2:03:32
Well, well, we broke the 2000 barrier.
2:03:38
That's been a while.
2:03:40
2009 trolls listening live in real time to
2:03:43
the best podcast in the universe.
2:03:46
We appreciate that, of course.
2:03:47
They are listening live on one of those
2:03:50
modern podcast apps at podcastapps.com.
2:03:53
Or perhaps they are in the troll room
2:03:56
themselves at noagenda.stream, trollroom.io. And they're
2:04:01
here to find out what the boys have
2:04:03
to say.
2:04:03
That's exactly why they're here.
2:04:05
And we told you, we told you, we
2:04:07
had the reports.
2:04:09
We had the big AI innovations.
2:04:11
We had it all for you.
2:04:12
We are deconstructing it for you in real
2:04:14
time.
2:04:14
With boots on the ground clips and everything
2:04:16
else.
2:04:16
We do it twice a week, Sundays and
2:04:19
Thursdays.
2:04:19
And we're happy to have you on board.
2:04:21
We run on the value for value model,
2:04:24
which we have done for more than 18
2:04:27
years.
2:04:28
All we ask is after we have given
2:04:30
you clearly something of value, because our time,
2:04:34
our energy, our brainpower goes into doing it.
2:04:38
Our organization skills are incredibly adequate.
2:04:44
Be that as it may.
2:04:47
But if you got anything out of it,
2:04:49
if you found this to be valuable, then
2:04:51
all you have to do is reciprocate by
2:04:53
sending us something back.
2:04:55
You can do that with your time, your
2:04:56
talent, or your treasure.
2:04:57
And those are the three categories.
2:04:59
Time and talent has kind of been, well,
2:05:01
we still have a lot of boots on
2:05:02
the ground.
2:05:03
We have people making clips.
2:05:04
We appreciate that so much.
2:05:05
I in particular have a good stable of
2:05:08
people who at least not always clip everything,
2:05:12
but will send me worthwhile clips to look
2:05:16
at and time codes and all of it's
2:05:18
appreciated really.
2:05:19
And I don't have some heuristics nightmare of
2:05:24
a blocker on my email.
2:05:26
So I'm also John's secretary.
2:05:29
So here's the thing, you can stop telling
2:05:32
me that fusion power is great and John
2:05:35
is wrong, because you need to talk to
2:05:38
John, okay?
2:05:39
You need to talk to John, not me,
2:05:42
because I'm not the expert.
2:05:43
John is more versed in this.
2:05:46
It's more of his wheelhouse because he studied
2:05:49
it.
2:05:49
Now he may have antiquated ideas, but you
2:05:52
need to talk to johnatdvorak.org.
2:05:54
And if you get blocked, then you email
2:05:56
me and say I'm blocked and I'll forward
2:05:58
it to him.
2:05:59
Remember the bounce on Eudora?
2:06:01
Maybe you could bounce something.
2:06:04
You could bounce an email.
2:06:06
That's what I can do.
2:06:08
No, no, that's bouncing.
2:06:09
That's bouncing it back.
2:06:10
But there was a specific command on Eudora,
2:06:13
which you can't do anymore because of DKIM
2:06:15
and SSWIM and all that stuff.
2:06:19
I've lost cause.
2:06:20
Eudora was great.
2:06:21
It was a great product there in this
2:06:23
era.
2:06:23
Yeah, you hit the bounce key and then
2:06:25
it went to you and it never looked
2:06:28
like it came to me.
2:06:29
It was great.
2:06:30
You could reply and I was out of
2:06:31
it.
2:06:31
That's gone.
2:06:33
That's gone with the spammers.
2:06:35
So anyway, one of the ways you can
2:06:36
contribute is by prompting your way into the
2:06:39
top of the leaderboard on noagendaartgenerator.com.
2:06:43
And we always want to thank the artists
2:06:46
for all the work they do.
2:06:47
It's not a huge amount of work, but
2:06:49
clearly they're doing something.
2:06:51
And I think Jeffrey Rea did a pretty
2:06:53
good job with this artwork that we chose
2:06:55
for episode 1832.
2:06:57
We titled it Lincoln's Dome.
2:06:59
And this was all the polar bears with
2:07:02
a little map of Greenland.
2:07:04
And they were all wearing MAGA hats.
2:07:07
It was an American flag in the background.
2:07:09
It was cute.
2:07:10
I thought it was.
2:07:11
It was cute.
2:07:11
That was a cute image.
2:07:13
There were some other things.
2:07:15
Let's go take a look.
2:07:16
The icebreaker, which I use for the newsletter.
2:07:18
You know, information on the icebreaker I got
2:07:21
from Wonderhelm up there in Finland.
2:07:26
Let me see.
2:07:27
I have it here.
2:07:27
The icebreakers.
2:07:28
Yes, he says the big beautiful ships are
2:07:31
not as big as you think they are.
2:07:34
Apparently, the icebreakers that we purchased from Finland
2:07:38
are significantly smaller than the ones that Finland
2:07:41
use themselves.
2:07:44
According to experts, they are not actually capable
2:07:49
to sail all the way to Alaska to
2:07:54
go break the ice.
2:07:56
And they may not be even that capable
2:07:59
for the polar region in general.
2:08:03
Which sounds to me like the Finns are
2:08:06
ripping us off.
2:08:08
And maybe that would sound that sounds like
2:08:10
the Finns are ripping us off.
2:08:12
Yeah, I think so.
2:08:13
So, President Trump, you should do something about
2:08:16
those Finns.
2:08:16
They're no good.
2:08:18
They're ripping us off.
2:08:20
He's like, big beautiful ships.
2:08:21
What's this?
2:08:22
This thing doesn't even work.
2:08:24
We should be careful about that.
2:08:27
Let's take a look.
2:08:28
So, yeah, we had the icebreakers.
2:08:31
I kind of like Lincoln doing his own
2:08:35
Lincoln...
2:08:38
The head.
2:08:39
Lincoln's head, but yeah, the head.
2:08:40
Lincoln masonry.
2:08:43
What else was there?
2:08:47
There wasn't much.
2:08:48
I mean, there's stuff that was attractive, but
2:08:50
it wasn't usable.
2:08:52
And like, so now we have a new
2:08:54
guy come in to take your Lollababy.
2:08:59
It's like some dude with a butt plug
2:09:02
is not going to get chosen.
2:09:04
I can just tell you this right now.
2:09:06
Like, what are you wasting your...
2:09:08
This is a waste of valuable AI power.
2:09:12
Yeah, that was kind of it.
2:09:14
A lot of cartoony stuff.
2:09:15
A lot of ice Barbie.
2:09:17
Come on, man.
2:09:17
That's old.
2:09:18
Get with it.
2:09:19
Do something new and fresh.
2:09:20
Something fresh.
2:09:22
Tramp stamps.
2:09:24
You can do better.
2:09:25
I know you can prompt better.
2:09:27
I know you can.
2:09:28
Please.
2:09:29
Especially for today.
2:09:30
We're already looking at dire straits.
2:09:32
Yeah, it doesn't look good so far.
2:09:34
Like some kid in Amsterdam doing coke.
2:09:36
This is not interesting.
2:09:38
All right.
2:09:38
All right.
2:09:40
noagendaartgenerator.com.
2:09:41
That's where you can upload your art.
2:09:43
And we always like to thank the artist
2:09:45
who wins.
2:09:46
And we thank everybody for participating in our
2:09:48
grand contest.
2:09:49
How easy it has become.
2:09:51
And the final of the three Ts is
2:09:53
treasure, which means we want to thank people
2:09:55
who support the program financially.
2:09:57
Without that, we can't do our work.
2:09:58
We can't continue.
2:09:59
We have to find other things to do.
2:10:01
We thank everybody.
2:10:02
$50 and above.
2:10:03
And in this segment, we thank the executive
2:10:05
and associate executive producers who are in the
2:10:07
position to support us with $200 or more.
2:10:10
You become an associate executive producer.
2:10:12
We'll read your note.
2:10:13
$300 or more, an executive producer.
2:10:15
And we will read your note as well.
2:10:16
And you get those credits, which you can
2:10:18
use anywhere that Hollywood credits are recognized, including
2:10:22
imdb.com.
2:10:23
And we start off with a Bitcoin donation
2:10:26
from Dame Catherine.
2:10:28
She is the Bitcoin granny from Bangkok, I
2:10:32
believe.
2:10:33
Yep.
2:10:34
And she sends us $1,022 and one
2:10:39
penny.
2:10:40
And there's a reason for that.
2:10:41
As she says, ITM John and Adam.
2:10:43
I'm sending a little bit of extra BTC
2:10:44
in case of any fluctuation.
2:10:47
And this is a birthday shout out for
2:10:48
my grandson, Ryan Sutton.
2:10:49
He'll be eight years old on January 11th,
2:10:52
which is a show day, which is today.
2:10:54
Also, I'd like him to become a knight.
2:10:56
His title will be Sir Ryan, Knight of
2:10:58
the Colorado Jungle.
2:10:59
Now the entire Sutton family are royals in
2:11:03
Durango.
2:11:04
And here is my plug prepared for me.
2:11:06
Hey, I just have to share.
2:11:09
River's Edge Wellness Center is my go-to
2:11:11
full day spa, IV therapy, med spa, hormone
2:11:15
therapy.
2:11:16
And in the summer, the only rooftop bar
2:11:18
overlooking the Animas River.
2:11:20
Book your experience at riversedgedurango.com.
2:11:24
I think she can land a helicopter there
2:11:26
because I consulted on that for her for
2:11:28
free.
2:11:29
And she says, thank you for the best
2:11:30
podcast in the universe.
2:11:31
Well, thank you, Crypto Granny.
2:11:33
We appreciate you very much, actually.
2:11:36
Anonymous comes in with three, three, three, three,
2:11:38
three.
2:11:39
Hey, Jance is my second three, three, three,
2:11:41
three, three donation.
2:11:44
He writes or she writes.
2:11:45
It could be anybody.
2:11:48
I reserved, I served, I reserved.
2:11:51
I served the nation for a total of
2:11:53
17 years between my army and my contract
2:11:55
time.
2:11:55
I was effectively fired from my contract for
2:11:59
refusing the COVID vax.
2:12:01
In 21, wow.
2:12:03
No chance for an exemption was provided.
2:12:07
My objections noted and preserved in email traffic.
2:12:11
Yes, good.
2:12:12
I worked for a classified USG client providing
2:12:17
high threat security, not allowed to say much
2:12:20
more than that.
2:12:21
Blackwater.
2:12:22
But they should have not kicked me off
2:12:26
the project.
2:12:27
I know you didn't say that.
2:12:28
I just made that up.
2:12:29
I cannot find a lawyer to help me
2:12:31
get justice for what they did to me
2:12:33
and others with the COVID mandate.
2:12:35
It seems many avenues are already closed due
2:12:37
to the statute of limitations.
2:12:40
One of the five years.
2:12:41
I don't think so.
2:12:42
Which I find hilarious as we were never
2:12:45
even noticed the mandate had been lifted.
2:12:48
Notified.
2:12:50
Notified the mandate had been lifted.
2:12:52
Yeah.
2:12:52
Notified or notice is the same basically really
2:12:56
changed the meaning.
2:12:58
Reaching out to my elected reps has been
2:13:02
no help, but I did get a good
2:13:05
canned email.
2:13:06
Yeah, of course you would about how bad
2:13:07
RFK is.
2:13:10
Yeah, I hit up ODNI as well as
2:13:13
I listened to Thursday's show today, Saturday.
2:13:16
I was struck by the notion I could
2:13:18
reverse shill.
2:13:20
Don't get me wrong.
2:13:21
The donation shill isn't a bad thing.
2:13:24
If you need a resume or some candy,
2:13:28
I don't get the candy joke.
2:13:29
Yeah, that's a little John's candies.
2:13:31
Oh, right.
2:13:33
John's candy.
2:13:34
So I decided to knock out donation number
2:13:37
two and ask the no agenda nation.
2:13:39
If there are any lawyers among them brave
2:13:41
enough to help me hold these bastards accountable
2:13:44
to or try anyway, I don't run any
2:13:47
daycare.
2:13:48
So I don't know that I could pay
2:13:50
you much.
2:13:51
But if you take a piece of it,
2:13:53
I think, but if you think we could
2:13:55
win money, you can have however much you
2:13:58
want.
2:13:58
You'd not as a third is the max.
2:14:00
I know you lawyers run on that.
2:14:03
Keep on keeping on Adam and John.
2:14:04
Though I have paused my biweekly no agenda
2:14:08
listening from time to time.
2:14:10
I have found value in the show since
2:14:12
whenever Adam went on Tom Woods, Tom Woods.
2:14:18
He's in the early days of covid.
2:14:20
Thanks.
2:14:21
Direct the lawyers to to covid law, covid
2:14:25
law at PM dot me.
2:14:29
So I'm thinking since it's a military case,
2:14:32
maybe rob the constitutional lawyer, former Jag.
2:14:35
I don't know.
2:14:35
I don't know if he does these covid
2:14:37
cases or not.
2:14:38
Could be an interesting one.
2:14:40
Get all your back pay and some damages
2:14:43
and probably get the lawyers paid for.
2:14:45
Yeah, I think so.
2:14:47
By the way, as you mentioned in the
2:14:49
newsletter, I would like to remind everybody it's
2:14:51
the end of the year.
2:14:52
That means that your sustaining donations are probably
2:14:56
expiring.
2:14:57
Credit cards do expire.
2:14:59
And it is important that you check your
2:15:01
sustaining donations.
2:15:02
If you have one for your instant night,
2:15:04
your your your night layaway program, etc.
2:15:07
Because PayPal does a very poor job of
2:15:10
letting you know that that's happened.
2:15:11
Yeah, they just kick it.
2:15:13
Yeah, they just kick it off.
2:15:14
And it hurts the show.
2:15:17
Onward with another 333 dot 33 donation from
2:15:19
Sir Aditya from Hyde Hyderabad.
2:15:25
Hyderabad in India.
2:15:28
India?
2:15:29
Yes.
2:15:31
Sounds like that.
2:15:31
I think so.
2:15:32
Is it India?
2:15:32
Sounds like it should be Pakistan, but that
2:15:34
would be a mistake.
2:15:35
India.
2:15:35
Happy New Year, John and Adam.
2:15:38
Douchebag call out to all the listeners in
2:15:40
the subcontinent.
2:15:42
And a jobs karma for all.
2:15:45
Oh, there it is.
2:15:47
Sir Aditya from the East India Company.
2:15:50
Does not surprise me.
2:15:51
Well, welcome aboard.
2:15:52
I think you need to.
2:15:53
I think.
2:15:54
Have we heard from Sir Aditya ever?
2:15:55
Not that I know.
2:15:58
You've been de-douche.
2:16:00
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:16:03
Let's vote for jobs.
2:16:05
You've got karma.
2:16:09
Let me go to associate executive producers with
2:16:11
Baroness Amy coming in from Jefferson, Wisconsin.
2:16:15
23456.
2:16:16
I've been listening since 2012 when when Baron
2:16:19
John the Fabulous hit me in the mouth.
2:16:23
Jobs karma from other production producers helped him
2:16:27
find a great job in 2025.
2:16:29
Now I'm in need of jobs karma myself
2:16:31
as I face the possibility of a layoff.
2:16:35
I've made it through two rounds over 22
2:16:37
months.
2:16:38
The last one just three months ago with
2:16:40
karma from the best podcast in the universe.
2:16:43
I'm sure if I don't make it through
2:16:45
this round, it's for a reason and there
2:16:48
will be something better out there.
2:16:51
I'd love a Reverend Manning boom shakalaka, followed
2:16:54
by a little girl boom shakalaka and a
2:16:57
TPP jobs karma.
2:16:59
Please thank you for your courage.
2:17:00
Baroness Amy of FEMA Region 5.
2:17:06
Boom shakalaka, boom shakalaka, boom shakalaka, boom shakalaka,
2:17:09
boom shakalaka, boom shakalaka.
2:17:10
Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs,
2:17:14
jobs, jobs.
2:17:14
You've got karma.
2:17:17
You ask, we deliver.
2:17:20
Sean Holman, Noblesville, Indiana, Associate Executive Producership with
2:17:25
21911.
2:17:27
D-Nice is still a juice bag.
2:17:31
Does that mean I should give him a
2:17:33
juice bag?
2:17:33
I might as well.
2:17:34
Juice bag, no juice bag, juice bag.
2:17:40
Chemtrails jingle, please.
2:17:44
Done, you got it.
2:17:46
Linda LePak, and there she is in Castle
2:17:48
Rock, Colorado, $200 jobs karma for a competitive
2:17:51
edge.
2:17:51
She writes with a resume that gets results.
2:17:53
Go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive
2:17:58
resume and job search needs.
2:17:59
That's imagemakersinc with a K, and work with
2:18:02
Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs, and writer of
2:18:04
winning resumes.
2:18:07
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:18:10
Let's vote for jobs.
2:18:11
You've got karma.
2:18:17
And Eric Sachs is in Bridgeville, Pennsylvania.
2:18:20
Sends us $200.
2:18:21
We thank you, Eric.
2:18:22
Did not see a note, but that, of
2:18:23
course, still gets you an Associate Executive Producer
2:18:26
credit and a double up karma for you.
2:18:29
You've got karma.
2:18:34
And finally, last on the list is Charles
2:18:36
Shelton in Duncombe, Iowa, $200, and he actually
2:18:42
did send a note, but the note is,
2:18:46
I guess he emailed it too, and so
2:18:47
here it is.
2:18:48
Come on, come all to the Midwest Midwinter
2:18:51
Meetup on Friday, January 23rd, 2026 at 630.
2:18:57
I bring the speakers, and you bring the
2:19:00
requests.
2:19:01
Get ready to get down and have a
2:19:02
night on the town.
2:19:03
Food and drinks will be produced.
2:19:05
Adult beverage available for purchase.
2:19:08
Reserve your spot.
2:19:09
Fast Space is limited at Rides Bar and
2:19:12
Grill Banquet Center, Fort Dodge, Iowa.
2:19:17
Details found at tinyurl.com slash mid-winter,
2:19:24
and on the Meetup page.
2:19:26
Just go to the Meetup page.
2:19:27
And shout out to Wake the Dead and
2:19:30
the Resonant State Podcasts.
2:19:34
All right.
2:19:35
Well, thank you all.
2:19:36
Jingles, JCD, donate, and two to the head.
2:19:39
I didn't see, I didn't see that.
2:19:40
That was somehow my spreadsheet was below the
2:19:46
fold.
2:19:46
Okay, donate and two to the head.
2:19:51
Okay, here we go.
2:19:54
You've got.
2:19:58
Donate, donate, donate.
2:20:02
Karma.
2:20:05
Well, there it is.
2:20:06
Our executive and associate executive producers for episode
2:20:09
1833.
2:20:10
We appreciate you.
2:20:12
A little light in general today, but of
2:20:14
course, Crypto Granny saved the day.
2:20:16
We do appreciate that.
2:20:17
You can go to noagendadonations.com to support
2:20:20
the show.
2:20:20
We need it.
2:20:21
You get the value, send the value back.
2:20:23
If you don't get value, what are you
2:20:25
doing listening?
2:20:26
Stop it.
2:20:27
That's not worth it.
2:20:28
Only, what is it?
2:20:29
What is it?
2:20:29
It's lower now.
2:20:30
It's like one and a half percent donate
2:20:31
to the show.
2:20:32
Is that what it is?
2:20:33
The current, the current percentage?
2:20:36
Yes, probably 0.9. 0.9. You freeloaders.
2:20:44
Well, we try.
2:20:45
We try hard.
2:20:46
If you like the show, you want to
2:20:47
continue.
2:20:48
Tina hopes we'll make it 20.
2:20:49
I don't know, four more years.
2:20:51
Everybody says it.
2:20:52
They say it.
2:20:55
noagendadonations.com.
2:20:56
And if you feel like doing a recurring
2:20:58
donation, you can do that anytime, any amount,
2:21:01
any frequency.
2:21:02
And of course, if you have one of
2:21:03
those set up, check your credit card.
2:21:05
Make sure it's still valid.
2:21:06
noagendadonations.com.
2:21:07
Congratulations to these producers.
2:21:10
Our formula is this.
2:21:12
We go out, we hit people in the
2:21:15
mouth.
2:21:25
Yeah, that's a good idea, Matthew.
2:21:30
We should quit at episode 1999.
2:21:32
That's a great idea.
2:21:36
No, no, I'm not going to do that.
2:21:38
Hey, welcome back, everybody.
2:21:39
As we mentioned before the break, John's got
2:21:42
some really good clips regarding some AI stuff
2:21:47
that Farage's event is supposedly behind.
2:21:50
John, what do you have on deck for
2:21:52
us?
2:21:53
So there's this operation, and you should check
2:21:56
him out on YouTube, because all the reports
2:21:57
are very similar in terms of like...
2:21:59
You should have started with, thanks, Adam.
2:22:02
Yeah, and so...
2:22:05
Can't play along.
2:22:06
So to a point.
2:22:09
So let's, this is UK King Says No.
2:22:12
A minute ago, breaking news is shattering Westminster
2:22:15
tonight.
2:22:16
As King Charles takes a historic step no
2:22:18
monarch has dared in over three centuries, leaving
2:22:22
the Prime Minister's government on the brink of
2:22:24
a full-scale meltdown.
2:22:26
Inside Buckingham Palace, events unfolded that will be
2:22:29
studied in constitutional law lectures for generations, exposing
2:22:33
a scandal so monumental that mainstream media are
2:22:37
scrambling to spin, soften and control the narrative.
2:22:41
But here is the raw, unfiltered truth that
2:22:44
could redefine the future of British politics.
2:22:47
At precisely 2.15 this afternoon, Prime Minister
2:22:50
Keir Starmer arrived at Buckingham Palace carrying the
2:22:53
Digital Identity and Migration Control Bill.
2:22:56
The visit was expected to be routine.
2:22:59
20 minutes, a formal audience and royal assent
2:23:01
granted as a matter of course.
2:23:04
He was accompanied by his inner circle, including
2:23:07
Chief of Staff Sue Gray, Communications Director Matthew
2:23:11
Doyle and Attorney General Victoria Atkins.
2:23:14
They expected a rubber stamp.
2:23:15
Instead, they walked into what is now being
2:23:18
described as a constitutional earthquake.
2:23:21
According to three palace sources present in the
2:23:24
room, King Charles refused to sign the bill.
2:23:27
There was no delay and no request for
2:23:29
amendments.
2:23:30
The refusal was immediate and absolute.
2:23:32
The King reportedly looked the Prime Minister directly
2:23:35
in the eye and said six words that
2:23:37
are already being described as historic.
2:23:40
I cannot, in good conscience, approve this.
2:23:43
The room fell silent.
2:23:45
Witnesses say the Prime Minister's face flushed red
2:23:47
as the implications sank in.
2:23:49
What followed stunned even seasoned palace staff.
2:23:52
The Prime Minister allegedly leaned across the ornate
2:23:55
desk and issued what one courtier later described
2:23:57
as a borderline treasonous warning, telling the King
2:24:01
that he was a ceremonial figurehead, not a
2:24:04
politician, and that Parliament would remind him what
2:24:07
happened to monarchs who forgot their place.
2:24:09
Sue Gray is said to have audibly gasped.
2:24:13
That's actually pretty good for a phony.
2:24:16
I'd like it.
2:24:18
Yeah, it's when you start, well, for one
2:24:20
thing, there's no documentation for this anywhere.
2:24:23
No.
2:24:23
But if you look at this operation, this
2:24:25
UK Britstorm, they have all these phony reports.
2:24:30
They got one from about three weeks ago
2:24:31
where the same basic scenario took place.
2:24:36
And Starmer has put through some stuff to
2:24:39
end the monarchy.
2:24:42
And it's got Charles all bent out of
2:24:44
shape and blah, blah, blah.
2:24:47
That's the second report?
2:24:49
No, that's not.
2:24:50
The second was just more of the same.
2:24:52
No, there's just tons of these.
2:24:53
There's one after another, after another, after another.
2:24:56
And each one is pretty much presented the
2:24:57
same way.
2:24:58
They show a lot of images.
2:24:59
They have fake dirt on the screen.
2:25:02
So it looks like, you know, I don't
2:25:03
know why they do that with their videos.
2:25:05
And they have, and then they always have,
2:25:08
they keep cutting to Farage in all these
2:25:11
videos.
2:25:12
And Starmer's this, he's a jerk and he's
2:25:14
going to get killed.
2:25:15
And he's treasonous.
2:25:17
And then they cut to Farage yelling, you
2:25:19
know, shaking his fist at something.
2:25:21
Then they go on and on and on
2:25:22
about how bad Starmer is.
2:25:24
And they cut to Farage.
2:25:25
So there's something, this whole, and this is
2:25:28
on YouTube.
2:25:28
And it's normally with these fake reports that
2:25:32
you run into on YouTube.
2:25:34
There's a, there's, if you read about, if
2:25:38
you read enough, it tells you that this
2:25:42
is an enactment.
2:25:43
Oh, no, no.
2:25:43
It says at the very bottom, it says,
2:25:46
synthetic content, learn more.
2:25:49
And you click on that link and it
2:25:50
has this huge page about, it's AI.
2:25:53
Let's just shorten up that page.
2:25:54
It's AI.
2:25:55
Yes, synthetic content.
2:25:56
But no, they don't put the disclaimer.
2:25:59
Oh, really?
2:26:00
Yeah.
2:26:01
That's illegal.
2:26:02
Put a bikini on it.
2:26:04
So, so this will, then the second half
2:26:06
is just more of the same if you
2:26:08
want to hear it.
2:26:09
Yeah.
2:26:09
It's entertaining.
2:26:11
It's called King.
2:26:12
I didn't have the UK, just Kings.
2:26:14
King Charles did not flinch, remaining seated with
2:26:18
his hands calmly folded on the desk.
2:26:20
He responded with measured precision.
2:26:22
He told the prime minister that he had
2:26:24
read every word of the bill and had
2:26:26
consulted constitutional scholars, former judges and civil liberties
2:26:31
experts and that his decision stood.
2:26:34
He then did something extraordinary.
2:26:36
The King slid a 40-page legal opinion
2:26:38
across the desk authored by Lord Sumption, one
2:26:41
of the country's most respected former Supreme Court
2:26:45
justices.
2:26:46
The document reportedly dismantles the bill's legal foundations
2:26:50
in detail.
2:26:51
Palace sources say the prime minister did not
2:26:53
even glance at it.
2:26:55
He picked up his briefcase, failed to make
2:26:57
the customary bow and stormed out of Buckingham
2:26:59
Palace.
2:27:00
Security footage leaked shortly afterwards appears to show
2:27:03
the prime minister moving rapidly towards his car,
2:27:06
his anger clearly visible.
2:27:08
But the crisis extends far beyond a dramatic
2:27:11
confrontation between crown and government.
2:27:14
As ministers push through surveillance legislation with an
2:27:18
estimated cost of £3.7 billion, critics point
2:27:22
to the state of public services and the
2:27:25
treatment of veterans.
2:27:50
Five of the five companies expected to benefit
2:27:52
reportedly have senior executives who contributed to the
2:27:56
prime minister's leadership campaign.
2:27:58
Margaret Ellis, a retired postal worker from Yorkshire
2:28:02
and a lifelong Labour voter, summed up the
2:28:04
public mood when she said that when the
2:28:07
king shows more compassion for ordinary people than
2:28:10
the prime minister, something has gone badly wrong.
2:28:14
Okay, what's the kicker?
2:28:16
That's the kicker that you would throw this
2:28:18
thing in there where the king doesn't care.
2:28:21
He's showing more compassion than the prime minister.
2:28:25
I thought that was a nice touch.
2:28:30
There's a bunch of these out there.
2:28:32
People have to be careful.
2:28:33
Well, yeah, I mean, YouTube has become a
2:28:36
cesspool.
2:28:39
Jeffrey Sachs, his voice is also used on
2:28:42
a whole bunch of these videos.
2:28:44
You'll see a different person and it takes
2:28:46
you about a minute before you're like, okay,
2:28:48
this is one of those phony Sachs.
2:28:50
He must be watching Rumble.
2:28:53
Rumble is probably better.
2:28:55
It might be at this point.
2:28:57
So for the Zoomers who have emailed us
2:29:00
multiple times about the cost of affordability, in
2:29:05
essence, is what they're talking about, cost of
2:29:07
housing, etc.
2:29:08
Here are three moves President Trump has made
2:29:10
this week, which I thought were interesting.
2:29:12
I have no clips because, you know, why
2:29:14
would the news report on it?
2:29:15
The first is the president is urging Congress
2:29:20
to create legislation, and there's a lot of
2:29:22
excitement about this, to slash interest rates to
2:29:26
10% for one year.
2:29:28
So cap it at 10%, which could make
2:29:31
a big difference for a lot of people.
2:29:33
I don't know if they can do that.
2:29:35
I mean, is that something Congress can do?
2:29:37
Whether they can or not, I don't think
2:29:40
it'll make a big difference.
2:29:40
One counter argument to this is that it'll
2:29:44
just encourage people to use their credit cards
2:29:46
more.
2:29:46
It'll make things worse.
2:29:49
That may be.
2:29:50
I think there's a lot of people who
2:29:51
have probably three credit cards all maxed out,
2:29:55
and they're just paying interest, and it's 24,
2:29:58
28%.
2:29:59
So maybe.
2:30:00
If you're smart, it will be maybe a
2:30:04
way to get out of some of this.
2:30:05
The second thing...
2:30:06
If you're smart.
2:30:08
Operative words.
2:30:09
Okay, but let's...
2:30:10
You're not smart if you've got three maxed
2:30:12
out credit cards.
2:30:14
I'm trying to encourage the younger generation who
2:30:17
are coming to us for advice.
2:30:19
So what would your advice be instead of
2:30:21
being snide towards them?
2:30:22
What should they do if this indeed takes
2:30:24
place?
2:30:24
I'm not being snide toward them.
2:30:26
I would say don't use a credit card.
2:30:29
Pay with cash or debit cards.
2:30:31
Okay.
2:30:32
The second one we already discussed, and the
2:30:35
president calling for legislation to ban institutional investors
2:30:38
in the housing market, which we discussed, and
2:30:41
of course that's good.
2:30:42
But the one that I've been thinking was
2:30:44
going to happen finally happened.
2:30:46
I kept saying the president is doing something
2:30:49
with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
2:30:51
These are the two, the big mortgage backers,
2:30:55
which I believe were pretty much nationalized during
2:30:59
the 2008 created financial crisis.
2:31:03
And he has told them, because they've been
2:31:05
wildly profitable during all this time, and they
2:31:07
have a lot of cash.
2:31:08
And he said, go ahead and buy $200
2:31:13
billion worth of mortgage bonds, which immediately sent
2:31:16
mortgage rates lower.
2:31:18
And they expect the rates to go 5
2:31:20
% maybe lower in this coming year, which
2:31:24
would be great news for people with adjustable
2:31:26
mortgages, and maybe some better news for first
2:31:30
-time homebuyers.
2:31:32
Yeah, I agree.
2:31:34
I told you something was going to happen,
2:31:35
and we couldn't figure out what it was,
2:31:38
but this was the gambit.
2:31:40
That would work.
2:31:41
Yeah.
2:31:41
It's a great idea.
2:31:43
He's trying.
2:31:45
See a Democrat president do something like that.
2:31:48
Only a real estate guy could think of
2:31:50
that.
2:31:51
That's true.
2:31:52
Really?
2:31:53
Real estate guy.
2:31:54
So I do have a genuine second half
2:31:58
of show clip.
2:31:59
Okay.
2:32:00
Well, then in that case, where is my
2:32:03
second half of show?
2:32:04
I haven't used it.
2:32:06
It's not even in the lineup anymore.
2:32:11
Where is the second?
2:32:12
Oh, here it is.
2:32:15
Now entering second half of show.
2:32:18
All right, second half of show.
2:32:21
Where are we going?
2:32:22
Gravity, girl.
2:32:25
NASA, space, aliens, gravity.
2:32:28
Let's talk about my second favorite topic.
2:32:30
So I saw this yesterday and this morning,
2:32:35
and I actually thought it was pretty interesting.
2:32:37
It randomly came up on my For You
2:32:38
page.
2:32:39
So it says, on August 12th, 2026, so
2:32:42
this coming August, the world will lose gravity
2:32:45
for seven seconds, NASA knows.
2:32:47
They are preparing but won't let us know
2:32:49
why.
2:32:49
So according to the article that I read
2:32:51
attached to that, it's saying that this is
2:32:54
some project called Project Anchor that NASA has
2:32:58
an $89 billion budget for.
2:33:00
And the plan is to see if Earth
2:33:02
can survive losing gravity, how they're going to
2:33:04
do this, why they're going to do this.
2:33:06
None of this, the article talked about.
2:33:09
You guys kind of know if you've been
2:33:10
following me for a minute, how I feel
2:33:12
about NASA.
2:33:12
We just go ahead and reference the moonwalk
2:33:15
on that one.
2:33:16
Do I think they do some good things
2:33:17
for sure?
2:33:17
Do I think they waste money?
2:33:18
Absolutely.
2:33:20
It's not really giving us any information.
2:33:21
And now they're labeling it like the conspiracy
2:33:23
theorists are talking about this.
2:33:26
So my question to you guys, especially people
2:33:28
that follow it a little more than I
2:33:29
do, do we know what this is?
2:33:31
Is it true?
2:33:33
Is it going to happen?
2:33:35
Somebody explain it to me?
2:33:36
Or is this just some more internet hype?
2:33:38
But they're claiming it has something to do
2:33:40
with that black hole or whatever that is.
2:33:43
There's better terms that I don't know.
2:33:44
And that's what's going to cause us to
2:33:46
lose the gravity for seven seconds.
2:33:47
Doesn't seem like a long time.
2:33:49
But think about a seven second earthquake out
2:33:51
of 9.0. What do we think about
2:33:52
this?
2:33:53
Conspiracy or something that NASA is probably really
2:33:55
doing?
2:33:56
Gee, let me think.
2:33:57
What do we think about this?
2:33:59
Are you not just putting clips in and
2:34:00
not putting TikTok in front of it just
2:34:02
to throw me off?
2:34:03
Is that what you're doing?
2:34:05
It wasn't on TikTok.
2:34:06
It was on Insta, I think.
2:34:08
On the Insta.
2:34:09
Well, hold on.
2:34:09
Hold on.
2:34:20
All right.
2:34:23
Well, the answer, of course, is that, you
2:34:26
know, nothing will happen.
2:34:27
We'll just all bounce up for a bit
2:34:29
because the Earth is flat.
2:34:30
Here is some actual second half of show
2:34:33
news coming to us from NASA.
2:34:36
The administrator, Isaacson, who has...
2:34:38
His ears could take us to the moon.
2:34:40
I hate to be, you know, to talk
2:34:42
about someone's personal appearance.
2:34:43
But, dude, you know, pin those puppies back.
2:34:47
Thank you, Bethany.
2:34:48
And thank you for everyone being here on
2:34:50
short notice.
2:34:52
For over 60 years, NASA has set the
2:34:55
standard for safety and security in crewed spaceflight.
2:34:59
In these endeavors, including the 25 years of
2:35:02
continuous human presence on board the International Space
2:35:05
Station, the health and the well-being of
2:35:07
our astronauts is always and will be our
2:35:09
highest priority.
2:35:10
Yesterday, January 7th, a single crew member on
2:35:14
board the station experienced a medical situation and
2:35:17
is now stable.
2:35:19
After discussions with Chief Health and Medical Officer
2:35:22
Dr. J.D. Polk and leadership across the
2:35:25
agency, I've come to the decision that it's
2:35:27
in the best interest of our astronauts to
2:35:29
return Crew 11 ahead of their planned departure.
2:35:32
Within the coming days, the Dragon Endeavor spacecraft
2:35:35
will depart the International Space Station with Commander
2:35:38
Zena Cardman, Pilot Mike Fink, Kimya Yui from
2:35:43
JAXA, and Oleg Platonov of Roscosmos and safely
2:35:47
return them to Earth.
2:35:49
We expect to provide a further update within
2:35:51
the next 48 hours as to the expected,
2:35:54
anticipated undock and reentry timeline.
2:35:56
So this is raising a lot of questions.
2:35:59
Like, what happened and who did it happen
2:36:01
to?
2:36:02
Is it the Japanese, the Japonaut?
2:36:04
Is it the cosmonaut?
2:36:06
Is it an astronaut?
2:36:08
What do you think?
2:36:10
I think that one of them was a
2:36:12
female, right?
2:36:13
I believe so, yes.
2:36:15
Pregnant.
2:36:19
Yes, that would be a medical incident.
2:36:24
So she's pregnant.
2:36:25
They don't want to, you know...
2:36:27
Who done it?
2:36:27
Who done it?
2:36:28
And the way it went was, well, you
2:36:31
know, it'd be kind of interesting to experiment
2:36:33
with a birth in...
2:36:37
In space.
2:36:38
Well, we don't really have the right doctors
2:36:40
for that.
2:36:40
We don't have an obstetrician.
2:36:41
We don't have an obstetrician.
2:36:43
Birth in space.
2:36:46
And so you end up with, okay, well,
2:36:50
we just got to ship them back.
2:36:51
That's the only reason not to say anything.
2:36:54
They could have said somebody has an ulcer
2:36:56
or they have a, you know, something.
2:36:59
They would have told us some details if
2:37:01
it wasn't something simple.
2:37:03
I think you're nailing it here.
2:37:04
That's what we do on this show.
2:37:06
Next week, end of next week will be
2:37:08
great.
2:37:09
I'm very excited for the first time.
2:37:11
I'm really excited about Davo, because we can't
2:37:14
say Davos.
2:37:15
It's Davo.
2:37:16
Davo.
2:37:17
Davo.
2:37:18
Davo.
2:37:19
CNBC will be live at Davo sitting on
2:37:21
the stupid snow set they're always at.
2:37:23
But this is going to be great.
2:37:25
President Trump is going to Davo and he's
2:37:27
bringing with him Treasury Secretary Scott Besant, Commerce
2:37:32
Secretary Howard Lutnick, Energy Secretary Chris Wright.
2:37:38
The drinking club.
2:37:39
Well, wait.
2:37:42
Jameson Greer, head of U.S. trade policy.
2:37:45
Steve Whitkoff, the deal man.
2:37:48
AI and cryptozar David Sachs.
2:37:51
Michael Kratios, head of the White House's science
2:37:54
and technology policy.
2:37:56
And Dr. Oz.
2:37:58
I mean, this is full force.
2:38:01
This is going to be great.
2:38:02
What do you think is going to happen?
2:38:04
All right, we're here.
2:38:05
This is a shakedown.
2:38:07
Give us all your money.
2:38:09
You're done.
2:38:11
I have no idea what they're bringing.
2:38:13
What's Dr. Oz going to do?
2:38:15
Oh, he's just along for the ride.
2:38:16
He's fun.
2:38:17
I bet he's a fun guy.
2:38:18
He's just a fun guy.
2:38:20
I'm sure Trump, hey, let's bring Oz.
2:38:22
I think he's the handler.
2:38:24
Have you noticed his hair's turned dead white?
2:38:26
Yeah, we've talked about the CIA hair now.
2:38:28
That's an interesting point.
2:38:29
But you would listen to, I mean, you've
2:38:31
got, look at all these guys.
2:38:33
You've got Besson.
2:38:34
Great job, boring.
2:38:37
Whitkoff, boring.
2:38:38
Besson's a character.
2:38:39
Yeah, David Sachs, annoying.
2:38:41
But you bring in Oz, you know, Oz,
2:38:43
he's probably got the jokes.
2:38:47
Maybe.
2:38:48
I think that's what it is.
2:38:49
I gotta tell you one.
2:38:52
Hey, hey, Don, I got a great joke
2:38:55
for you.
2:38:56
Listen to this one.
2:38:57
What do you call five hookers in Davos?
2:39:01
Rich.
2:39:03
There it is.
2:39:04
Hey, one final one for those of you
2:39:06
who are on the on the GLP ones.
2:39:10
Gee, who would have thought this warning would
2:39:12
have to come out?
2:39:13
Weight loss medications like Wigo V and Ozempic
2:39:16
have changed the game for people looking to
2:39:18
shed a few pounds.
2:39:19
However, new research shows people who stop taking
2:39:21
the drugs could see an increased risk of
2:39:24
diabetes and heart disease.
2:39:25
Don't stop taking it.
2:39:27
The study published in the British Medical Journal
2:39:29
reviewed the trials of more than 6000 adults
2:39:32
who use GLP ones and other weight loss
2:39:34
drugs.
2:39:35
The results are a cautionary tale as people
2:39:38
who went off the meds regained weight almost
2:39:40
four times faster than those who simply stopped
2:39:43
exercising or didn't stick to a healthy diet.
2:39:46
That rapid weight gain then had a domino
2:39:49
effect on overall health as people then had
2:39:52
an increased risk of developing conditions like high
2:39:55
cholesterol and high blood pressure.
2:39:57
Doctors say the findings point to how these
2:39:59
medications are not a quick fix and anyone
2:40:02
looking to take the drugs should consider the
2:40:04
long-term effects.
2:40:05
Yeah, so whatever you do, don't stop taking
2:40:08
it.
2:40:08
You need to keep taking it.
2:40:10
Oh, you know, we have a friend, I'll
2:40:13
put it that way, who works at a
2:40:15
plastic surgery center and she says that the
2:40:21
wealthier ladies, when they can't get one, you
2:40:26
know, because it's all, a lot of it's
2:40:29
by prescription, but if they can't get their
2:40:30
prescription filled, they're like drug addicts if they
2:40:33
can't get their GLP one.
2:40:35
They're freaking out.
2:40:36
I need my GLP.
2:40:37
I need to, I need my, I need
2:40:39
to get it.
2:40:39
I need to get it.
2:40:40
And this only contributes to it.
2:40:43
This is, this is the, this is big
2:40:44
pharma at work.
2:40:46
Yeah, they do.
2:40:47
You have to give them credit for doing
2:40:48
their job.
2:40:49
Yeah, don't stop taking our meds.
2:40:51
When did it become meds?
2:40:53
Just like sus, who says that?
2:40:56
But meds, all the kids like, I got
2:40:58
to take my meds, meds.
2:41:00
Who came up with that?
2:41:03
Meds, you're, you're diminishing powerful pharmaceuticals to meds.
2:41:10
Meds.
2:41:11
All right, let's wind it up with some
2:41:12
Berlin power.
2:41:13
I'll play your clip first.
2:41:14
Is that okay?
2:41:15
Yeah, this is a, this is a TikTok
2:41:17
clip from a woman in Berlin, bitching and
2:41:19
moaning about the lack of power.
2:41:21
And I thought that report was as good
2:41:22
as anything I've been hearing on the mainstream
2:41:24
media.
2:41:25
It's day five of the big Berlin blackout.
2:41:28
And it's officially now the longest power outage
2:41:31
in Germany's capital since World War II.
2:41:33
And yes, it's minus six degrees right now
2:41:35
here in the morning.
2:41:36
So people are freezing in their homes.
2:41:39
According to Berlin police, there has been a
2:41:41
rise in break-ins.
2:41:42
Robbers trying to get into people's homes or
2:41:44
businesses.
2:41:45
Rubbers.
2:41:45
Or rubbing ATMs. They're rubbing ATMs. Berlin, stop
2:41:50
rubbing your ATMs. Get into people's homes or
2:41:53
businesses or rubbing ATMs. This city's power grid
2:41:56
was attacked by allegedly a left-wing extremist
2:42:00
group called the Vulkangruppe.
2:42:02
They claim to fight rich people and climate
2:42:04
change by destroying infrastructure.
2:42:07
But Berlin's mayor just confirmed that anyone who
2:42:09
was affected by the power outage and checked
2:42:11
into a hotel that still had power will
2:42:14
get their money back.
2:42:15
Yeah, I have an actual M5M report on
2:42:19
this, which I got from City News, which
2:42:21
is still kind of a podcast group, I
2:42:24
think.
2:42:24
City News is not M5M.
2:42:27
No, it's not.
2:42:27
But it's a better report.
2:42:29
German officials are calling it the longest blackout
2:42:32
the country has seen since the Second World
2:42:34
War.
2:42:35
For tens of thousands of Berlin residents, power
2:42:37
is finally being restored after nearly five days
2:42:41
in the dark and cold following a suspected
2:42:43
arson attack.
2:42:45
The fact that the federal public prosecutor's office
2:42:48
has now taken over, as the senator of
2:42:50
the interior said here a few days ago,
2:42:52
underlines what this is about.
2:42:54
Not a minor arson attack, not sabotage, but
2:42:57
a terrorist attack.
2:42:58
The mayor of Germany's capital says on January
2:43:00
3rd, a group of left-wing extremists set
2:43:03
fire to a major power grid in the
2:43:05
southwest portion of Berlin.
2:43:07
He says the blaze immediately cut off electricity
2:43:10
to 45,000 homes, 2,200 businesses and
2:43:14
multiple hospitals, leaving nearly 100,000 residents without
2:43:18
heat or power during a period of freezing
2:43:20
temperatures.
2:43:22
Better protection of this critical infrastructure is important
2:43:25
for Berlin.
2:43:27
We will be working closely with the other
2:43:28
state premiers, but also with the federal government
2:43:31
to discuss how we can better protect critical
2:43:33
infrastructure in our country.
2:43:34
The left-wing extremist group known as the
2:43:37
Volcano Activist Group has claimed responsibility for the
2:43:40
attack, saying it was a protest against fossil
2:43:43
fuels in Germany.
2:43:45
In a statement, group leaders apologized to less
2:43:47
affluent residents impacted by the power cuts, but
2:43:50
said it, quote, has less sympathy for the
2:43:53
many owners of villas.
2:43:56
We don't care if you have villas.
2:43:59
So climate activists, you buying that?
2:44:04
I'm not buying anything.
2:44:07
I mean, it's possible because these guys are
2:44:10
nuts in Germany anyway, and, you know, in
2:44:13
the olden days, everyone would have a little
2:44:15
hearth with a coal burning, you know, you
2:44:19
could burn coal in it and keep warm
2:44:21
during these periods of no power.
2:44:24
But you can't have that, it's illegal.
2:44:28
And you can't, everything has to, so all
2:44:30
the, throughout, especially Berlin, it's all been electrified,
2:44:34
so everything has to be electricity.
2:44:36
So it's just asking for trouble.
2:44:38
Well, I mean, I don't, I don't understand
2:44:40
why they're blowing up the power grid the
2:44:42
way Germany's going, just wait a year or
2:44:44
two and it'll shut down by itself.
2:44:46
Yeah, it will.
2:44:47
Who needs that?
2:44:48
I'm going to show my support by donating
2:44:50
to No Agenda.
2:44:51
Imagine all the people who could do that.
2:44:54
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
2:45:02
And indeed, we do have a few people
2:45:03
to thank that gave us $50 and above
2:45:06
for today's show.
2:45:08
And Adam will read them off one at
2:45:10
a time.
2:45:11
Karen Fatula kicks us off from St. Clairsville,
2:45:13
Ohio, $137 and says, thanks for the exceptional
2:45:17
podcast.
2:45:17
You want some house selling karma?
2:45:19
I'll give that to you at the end.
2:45:20
Christopher Ebert, Spartanburg, South Carolina, 105.35 cents.
2:45:26
Ralph Wetten, Spearwood, Washington, 82.
2:45:29
Western Australia.
2:45:30
Oh, sorry, thank you.
2:45:32
In Australia, that's right.
2:45:35
$89.20. Is that dollarettes or is this
2:45:37
translated to U.S.? That would be U
2:45:40
.S. Okay, $89.25. Kevin McLaughlin.
2:45:44
There he is, our Archduke of Luna, lover
2:45:46
of America and boobs from Concord, North Carolina,
2:45:48
8008.
2:45:49
And he says it's a boom donation.
2:45:51
We knew that.
2:45:51
Monica Boyle is in Quista, New Mexico, and
2:45:56
gives us also a boob donation.
2:45:59
What does she say here?
2:46:00
Nancy Pelosi said Confederate fags in the last
2:46:02
episode.
2:46:04
Really?
2:46:06
Hold on.
2:46:07
Hold on.
2:46:08
Well, there's one way to find out.
2:46:10
Let's see.
2:46:11
Let's listen to it.
2:46:13
Joining me now is House Speaker Emeritus Nancy
2:46:14
Pelosi, Democrat from California.
2:46:17
Just given everything that happened about 25 years
2:46:20
later.
2:46:21
Well, today is an emotional day for all
2:46:23
of us.
2:46:24
Five years since the president of the United
2:46:27
States incited an insurrection on the Capitol, on
2:46:31
the Congress, on the Constitution.
2:46:33
On our ability to honor our oath of
2:46:36
office to certify the election of the president
2:46:39
by way of certifying the Electoral College.
2:46:43
What was sad is that this president refused
2:46:46
to send the National Guard.
2:46:48
He keeps saying, oh, I wanted it, but
2:46:50
they didn't.
2:46:50
Well, the mayor and Nancy, they didn't want
2:46:52
it.
2:46:52
His own secretary of defense testified under oath
2:46:56
that that was not true.
2:46:58
But he is not under oath, so he
2:47:00
just lies, lies, lies, lies.
2:47:02
So it's but what's important is our democracy.
2:47:05
What happened then was horrible, was horrible.
2:47:09
Confederate fags under Lincoln's dome.
2:47:13
Yeah, she said Confederate fags.
2:47:16
She did.
2:47:16
All right.
2:47:17
Confirmed.
2:47:17
Thank you.
2:47:18
Well worth the donation.
2:47:21
Joseph Wyke, I think it is, Miami, Florida,
2:47:24
77-77, which we believe is 69-69
2:47:27
plus the fees.
2:47:28
Thank you.
2:47:28
Michael and Marion Coorey in Smyrna, New York,
2:47:33
71-71.
2:47:34
A birthday call out for Russ, going to
2:47:36
be 71.
2:47:38
And de-douched.
2:47:40
You've been de-douched.
2:47:43
James Scott is in Parlin, New Jersey, 66.
2:47:46
Thank you, Timothy Tillman, Mechanicsville, Virginia, 56-83.
2:47:52
Paul Erskine, Erskine, Lake Forest.
2:47:56
Erskine, yeah.
2:47:56
Erskine, you think it's Erskine?
2:47:58
Yeah, it is Erskine.
2:47:59
Lake Forest, Washington, 52-22.
2:48:01
And he says, hi, John.
2:48:03
Jim Fredericks, Fredericks in McFarland, Wisconsin, double nickels
2:48:07
on the dime, 55-1.
2:48:10
Al from Anchorage, Alaska, with a Bitcoin donation,
2:48:14
I believe, 54-35.
2:48:16
Wants a goat karma.
2:48:17
We'll combine that at the end for you.
2:48:19
Jody Zolman, 52-72.
2:48:21
Thanks for keeping me sane.
2:48:23
Bad Idea Supply, $50.50. Roderick Brown in
2:48:28
Mermaid, Canada.
2:48:32
What is this?
2:48:32
What is P-E again?
2:48:33
Prince Edward Island.
2:48:35
Prince Edward Island, yes.
2:48:36
These are the 50s already.
2:48:37
Rene Knigge in Utrecht in the Netherlands, 50.
2:48:41
Stephen Shoemake in Zinnia, Ohio.
2:48:43
Martha Phillips in Raleigh, North Carolina, 50.
2:48:46
Tim DelVecchio in Blandon, Pennsylvania.
2:48:49
And our last $50 donor, Angela D.
2:48:52
Cesario, Cesaro, sorry, Somerset, Massachusetts.
2:48:55
And she wants to be added to the
2:48:58
birthday list, birthday show day.
2:49:00
Yes, woo-woo.
2:49:01
DeCesaro.
2:49:02
There we go, DeCesaro.
2:49:03
I got it.
2:49:04
That's it, $50 and above.
2:49:06
Thank you all very much.
2:49:07
We appreciate it.
2:49:08
And of course, we don't mention anyone under
2:49:09
$50 for reasons of anonymity.
2:49:12
But we appreciate every single- A total
2:49:15
of 28 donations, including executive and associated executive
2:49:19
producers, for 800,000 listeners.
2:49:23
Yeah, there's something wrong with it.
2:49:24
There's something off with that.
2:49:25
People say it's the economy, but I still
2:49:29
see them drinking lattes.
2:49:30
You can send five bucks.
2:49:32
I mean, if that's all that we're worth
2:49:34
to you, maybe not.
2:49:35
I don't know.
2:49:36
What do you think?
2:49:38
I think it could be better.
2:49:40
It's just my thought.
2:49:43
So thank you.
2:49:44
Thank you very much.
2:49:45
Noagendadonations.com.
2:49:46
Here's the jobs and regular karma.
2:49:49
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:49:52
Let's vote for jobs.
2:49:55
I'm lying.
2:49:56
Go to Noagendadonations.com and support the show.
2:50:00
Noagendadonations.com.
2:50:01
Any amount, any time, any frequency for these
2:50:04
sustainable donations.
2:50:05
And remember to check the expiration date on
2:50:08
your credit cards.
2:50:09
Noagendadonations.com.
2:50:15
And there she is, Dame Catherine, wishing her
2:50:18
grandson, Ryan Sutton, a happy birthday.
2:50:20
Happy birthday, Ryan.
2:50:21
You turned eight years old today.
2:50:22
A lot of road ahead of you, son.
2:50:24
Angela De Cesaro celebrating today.
2:50:28
And Michael and Marion Coorey wish Russ Coorey
2:50:30
a happy birthday.
2:50:31
Russ is turning 71.
2:50:33
He still reads the newspaper without his glasses,
2:50:35
I'm told.
2:50:35
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best
2:50:37
podcast in the universe.
2:50:41
Before we go to our single nighting, we
2:50:44
have a make good note for James Scott,
2:50:46
who sent the donation in for the last
2:50:47
show.
2:50:47
He says, the reason I wanted to send
2:50:49
out a note was to announce the February
2:50:50
1 meetup at the 3BR for the Central
2:50:54
Jersey Meetup Ground.
2:50:57
As always, it is the drink and we
2:50:58
know things meet up.
2:51:00
But as always, the no things part is
2:51:02
always questionable.
2:51:04
On the January 1 broadcast, you moved me
2:51:06
to donate after the stories on AI and
2:51:08
its interaction with people.
2:51:10
And he gave us a story below about
2:51:11
his recent experiences.
2:51:12
So thank you very much.
2:51:13
And that will show up on the meetup
2:51:15
calendar at noagendameetups.com.
2:51:17
And now it is time to knight this
2:51:20
young man, a brand new.
2:51:21
Here we go.
2:51:22
I got a blade for you.
2:51:24
Yep, Ryan Sutton.
2:51:26
Thanks to your grandma, you are about to
2:51:28
become a knight of the NOAH Jenga round
2:51:30
table.
2:51:30
How about that?
2:51:32
$1,000.
2:51:33
She did it for you, son.
2:51:35
And I am hereby proud to pronounce you
2:51:37
as Sir Ryan Knight of the Colorado Jungle.
2:51:41
For you, we've got, well, I'm not going
2:51:43
to give you the requisite stuff because you're
2:51:45
a little too young for that.
2:51:46
However, I would like to give you some
2:51:49
cookies and vodka.
2:51:52
Harvest and halibut.
2:51:53
Oh, you might as well start young with
2:51:55
these kids.
2:51:56
Gases and sake.
2:51:57
Vodka, vanilla, bong hits and bourbon.
2:51:58
Sparkling cider and escort.
2:52:00
Ginger ale and gerbils.
2:52:01
Breast milk and pablum.
2:52:02
Maybe you should start easy with the mutton
2:52:04
and mead.
2:52:05
All right.
2:52:05
Ryan, head over to noagenderings.com.
2:52:08
That is where you can see this fabulous
2:52:10
knight ring that you're going to get.
2:52:13
Have someone to figure out your ring size.
2:52:15
Maybe you should get one for the growth.
2:52:17
You know, he's going to grow.
2:52:18
His kid's going to grow like crazy in
2:52:20
a couple of years.
2:52:21
So maybe get a little bit bigger and
2:52:23
put some scotch tape in it to hold
2:52:24
it on your finger.
2:52:25
You'll get some cool stuff with that.
2:52:27
A certificate of authenticity from your uncles, Adam
2:52:31
and John.
2:52:31
And some wax.
2:52:32
So get some flame.
2:52:35
Yeah, melt some wax at home.
2:52:37
Granny's going to love it.
2:52:38
You can use that for your Cignet ring.
2:52:41
noagenderings.com.
2:52:42
Thank you all very much for supporting the
2:52:43
best podcast in the universe.
2:52:54
We don't have any meetup reports to bring
2:52:57
you.
2:52:57
But of course, the meetups do take place
2:52:59
all the time.
2:53:00
All over the world.
2:53:01
We are bad.
2:53:01
We are worldwide.
2:53:03
Go to noagendermeetups.com to find out exactly
2:53:05
where they're taking place.
2:53:06
Or you can always start one yourself.
2:53:08
On the 15th, this coming Thursday, Charlotte's Thirsty
2:53:11
Third Thursday Monthly Meetup.
2:53:12
7 o'clock at Ed's Tavern in Charlotte,
2:53:14
North Carolina.
2:53:15
And on the way this month, on the
2:53:17
calendar, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
2:53:19
Bergendal in the Netherlands.
2:53:20
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
2:53:22
Indianapolis, Indiana.
2:53:23
Alpharetta, Georgia.
2:53:24
And Oakland, California.
2:53:25
Many more to be found at noagendermeetups.com.
2:53:27
You have to go to at least one
2:53:28
meetup.
2:53:29
I guarantee you'll want to go to the
2:53:31
meetups every single time.
2:53:33
It's fun.
2:53:34
You get together.
2:53:34
You have a drink.
2:53:35
It's like coffee klatsch.
2:53:37
You're going to love it.
2:53:37
These people are going to give you connection,
2:53:40
which gives you protection.
2:53:42
Your first responders in any emergency.
2:53:44
noagendermeetups.com.
2:53:45
If you can't find one near you, start
2:53:47
one yourself.
2:53:48
It's easy and always a party.
2:54:08
It's like a party.
2:54:10
All right.
2:54:11
Let me see now.
2:54:12
I have a couple of ISOs.
2:54:17
It's always due here.
2:54:22
Okay.
2:54:23
I have four, actually.
2:54:25
I think some of them are pretty good.
2:54:26
Do you want to play yours first?
2:54:27
Because you were holding them in abeyance over
2:54:30
last week's show.
2:54:31
Did I hold the last week's shows in
2:54:33
abeyance?
2:54:33
Yeah, you said you didn't want to play.
2:54:36
Oh, that's interesting because I have three new
2:54:39
ones and the one's in abeyance.
2:54:43
Well, I mean, would you want me to
2:54:46
play yours first?
2:54:47
Uh, no.
2:54:48
Okay.
2:54:48
Here, come on.
2:54:49
So you hold them in abeyance again.
2:54:50
Oh, here we go.
2:54:51
I mean, folks, that is magic.
2:54:55
Yeah, I thought that was pretty good.
2:54:57
No, that sucks.
2:54:59
What's going on here?
2:55:00
No, I don't like that one.
2:55:02
These guys are great.
2:55:03
Come on, that's pretty good.
2:55:05
We're great.
2:55:05
We're great.
2:55:06
Or you guys are meant to report the
2:55:10
truth.
2:55:12
That's a lot of JD Vance.
2:55:14
Okay.
2:55:15
I hope you have something better for me.
2:55:17
I have plenty.
2:55:18
Okay.
2:55:19
What do you got?
2:55:20
Let's start with the new ones.
2:55:22
I put the ones in abeyance.
2:55:24
They're still in abeyance.
2:55:25
Value for value.
2:55:27
Value for value.
2:55:28
Donate, please.
2:55:31
Could have done a little more on the
2:55:33
uptalk.
2:55:38
I thought it was appropriate for today's show.
2:55:42
Great work.
2:55:43
Wow.
2:55:43
Great work.
2:55:44
Kiss these guys on the lips.
2:55:48
No, no.
2:55:52
And doodle.
2:55:54
Golly darn doodle.
2:55:55
What a great podcast.
2:55:57
No, that sucks.
2:55:58
Maybe it's wow.
2:55:59
Great work.
2:56:00
Kiss these guys on the lips.
2:56:01
I think that one's actually the best one
2:56:03
compared to value for value.
2:56:05
Donate, please.
2:56:06
Nah, I always tell people to donate at
2:56:08
the end of the show.
2:56:08
We'll take the great work.
2:56:10
Great work.
2:56:11
Kiss these guys on the lips.
2:56:12
Yeah.
2:56:13
Yeah.
2:56:14
But you don't have to.
2:56:14
It's not an instruction.
2:56:16
Just think kiss on the lips.
2:56:18
I'll send them a donation.
2:56:19
Hey, everybody.
2:56:20
It's time before we go to listen to
2:56:22
the fabulous tip of the day.
2:56:24
Great advice for you and me.
2:56:27
Just a tip with JCD and sometimes Adam.
2:56:34
Yeah, I want to promote.
2:56:36
This is funny because I had one set
2:56:38
up that I forgot to move over here.
2:56:42
So I'm going to go with my Manuka
2:56:44
honey.
2:56:45
You familiar with this stuff?
2:56:47
You've talked about honey before.
2:56:49
I don't know if it's...
2:56:50
Not Manuka.
2:56:51
Not Manuka?
2:56:52
Okay.
2:56:52
Yeah, it's Manuka honey.
2:56:53
In fact, we should look it up.
2:56:55
M-A-N-U-K-A.
2:56:57
I think that's how it's pronounced.
2:56:58
Manuka honey.
2:57:00
It's native New Zealand tea tree.
2:57:04
And it has high levels of methyl glyoxyl,
2:57:12
M-G-O.
2:57:13
Do I want that?
2:57:14
Do I want methyl glyoxyl?
2:57:17
It's an antibacterial.
2:57:19
So you do want it.
2:57:21
And it aids wound healing, digestion, and immunity.
2:57:25
This is the only honey that has this
2:57:27
stuff in it.
2:57:27
Everything else, you know, just a bunch of
2:57:29
sugar.
2:57:29
It also has blood sugar impacts, allergies.
2:57:36
It has...
2:57:37
You know, you should read about it before
2:57:38
you use it because it's a very powerful
2:57:40
product.
2:57:41
But the reason I brought it up is
2:57:43
because Mimi has this big dog.
2:57:45
Yes.
2:57:46
And the dog had got his toe in
2:57:48
a bind that was going to be infected.
2:57:51
And it had to be...
2:57:52
Had to cut his leg off.
2:57:54
Had to cut his toe off.
2:57:56
Oh.
2:57:57
But she just doused it with Manuka honey
2:58:00
for about a week or two.
2:58:03
Put a little protection over so the dog
2:58:04
didn't lick the honey off.
2:58:05
And it healed completely.
2:58:07
Wow.
2:58:08
And it's notorious for healing deep wounds.
2:58:15
It's a very notorious honey.
2:58:16
Well, I've never heard of it.
2:58:18
Very expensive.
2:58:18
Does it taste good?
2:58:20
I've never tasted it.
2:58:21
So you just put it on your wound.
2:58:23
I don't have any wounds yet, but I
2:58:25
do have a jar of it.
2:58:26
But this stuff cost a fortune.
2:58:28
It's got like a little bitty jars, like
2:58:30
15 bucks.
2:58:31
Wow.
2:58:32
And according to the medical people, you should
2:58:34
only use medical grade.
2:58:36
But now look into it because there is
2:58:37
a grading system.
2:58:39
And if you have the highest grade Manuka
2:58:41
honey, which has got a grading of 10
2:58:43
or more than the numbers usually on the
2:58:45
jar.
2:58:47
It's fine.
2:58:49
The things you learn on the No Agenda
2:58:51
show.
2:58:52
Amazing.
2:58:53
That is John's tip of the day.
2:58:55
Noagendafun.com tipoftheday.net for all of them.
2:59:09
I'm going to get some of that.
2:59:10
That goes along with my Chinese salve.
2:59:13
My burn cream.
2:59:14
Yeah.
2:59:14
The burn cream, which people love.
2:59:16
You need your burn cream and your honey
2:59:18
and your kit.
2:59:19
Especially when you're traveling.
2:59:22
That's it for today's broadcast.
2:59:24
We enjoyed you being here.
2:59:26
All more than 2,000 listening live.
2:59:29
And hundreds of thousands listening on the delayed
2:59:31
podcast.
2:59:32
Support the show, would you?
2:59:34
Coming up next on the No Agenda stream.
2:59:37
Abs in a six pack.
2:59:39
This will be episode 274 with Sir Seat
2:59:41
Sitter.
2:59:42
So make sure you stay tuned for that.
2:59:44
And end of show mixes.
2:59:46
Some slop, some not.
2:59:47
We've got an MVP, of course.
2:59:49
He's always, always bringing us the end of
2:59:51
show mixes.
2:59:52
We got Sir F.U. That's Why.
2:59:54
And Deez Lost from Toronto.
2:59:57
So it's a three for some real end
3:00:00
of show mixes.
3:00:01
Coming to you from the heart of the
3:00:02
Texas hill country.
3:00:03
Right here in Fredericksburg.
3:00:05
We are in the hill country.
3:00:06
It's beautiful here.
3:00:07
In the morning, everybody.
3:00:08
I'm Adam Curry.
3:00:10
And from northern Silicon Valley, where it's beautiful
3:00:12
here too.
3:00:12
But it's cold.
3:00:14
I'm John C.
3:00:15
Dvorak.
3:00:15
It's about 35 here.
3:00:17
So it's cold as well.
3:00:18
And it's less colder.
3:00:19
It's cold.
3:00:20
Hey, we'll be back on Thursday.
3:00:23
Until then, remember us.
3:00:25
Noagendadonations.com.
3:00:26
Until then, adios, mofos.
3:00:28
Hui, hui.
3:00:29
And such.
3:00:31
Listen to me.
3:00:33
Because the corporate media.
3:00:35
The literal vampires in the mainstream.
3:00:38
They aren't going to tell you the truth
3:00:40
about Greenland.
3:00:41
They want you focused on the distraction of
3:00:44
the week.
3:00:44
While the globalist ghouls at the UN try
3:00:47
to lock down the ground.
3:01:23
Selling off the soil while the permafrost dies.
3:01:26
Deep underground where the documents stay.
3:01:29
They're prepping for the shift.
3:01:30
They'll pave the way.
3:01:31
National security.
3:01:33
That's the story that they sell.
3:01:34
But it's a technocratic prison in a frozen
3:01:36
shell.
3:01:37
The gateway is open and the lock is
3:01:39
in the hand.
3:01:39
They're carving up the map of forbidden land.
3:01:42
It's the gateway to the north.
3:01:44
Can't you see the ice hitting from the
3:01:50
sun?
3:01:50
The battle for the Arctic has already begun.
3:01:53
Greenland is the key.
3:01:55
Greenland is the prize.
3:01:58
Don't believe the script.
3:02:00
Don't believe the lies.
3:02:12
After the protest in Minneapolis and across the
3:02:14
country.
3:02:14
After an immigration agent shot and killed a
3:02:17
woman on the street.
3:02:18
It just walks away from where George Floyd
3:02:20
was killed in 2020.
3:02:21
That's all.
3:02:22
That's all you need to know.
3:02:23
Oh yeah.
3:02:24
Oh yeah.
3:02:24
It's much worse than we were led to
3:02:26
believe.
3:02:29
Exactly the George Floyd stuff.
3:02:30
Over and over and over again.
3:02:32
It's like a loop.
3:02:33
It's like a fractal.
3:02:34
It is a fractal.
3:02:36
It's like a loop, loop, loop, loop.
3:02:38
It's non-stop.
3:02:40
In places where they know they will not
3:02:42
get political cover, these sorts of protests tend
3:02:45
to be disrupted relatively early.
3:02:48
They tend to stay more peaceful.
3:02:50
Zero credibility.
3:02:52
Exactly the George Floyd stuff.
3:02:55
It's a carbon copy.
3:02:56
George Floyd II.
3:02:58
Absolutely.
3:02:59
They want to show.
3:03:00
Tim Walton really is finding himself on the
3:03:03
wrong side of history here with their sanctuary
3:03:05
city policies.
3:03:06
It's like a loop.
3:03:07
It's hard to say what you do in
3:03:08
a moment like that.
3:03:12
It's a carbon copy.
3:03:13
It's like a fractal.
3:03:14
It is a fractal.
3:03:16
Oh yeah.
3:03:16
Oh yeah.
3:03:17
Oh yeah.
3:03:17
A hero.
3:03:19
Let him ride.
3:03:20
Let him burn the tires.
3:03:21
We won't let them tear us apart.
3:03:23
A man of the people.
3:03:24
A hero.
3:03:26
This is all talk.
3:03:27
The whole thing is sad.
3:03:28
This is all designed to get more votes
3:03:30
for the midterm.
3:03:31
Put your body on the line.
3:03:33
Get out there.
3:03:34
Really?
3:03:35
Someone's trying to run me down with a
3:03:36
car.
3:03:36
I might pull my weapon too.
3:03:38
Not everything online by design is meant to
3:03:40
spin you up.
3:03:42
MK, alter yourself and lose your mind.
3:03:44
Find Project Monarch and that butterfly design.
3:03:47
Seeing butterfly tattoos have been on my mind.
3:03:50
Operation Bluebeam, Longleash, Moses and the paperclip.
3:03:53
Mockingbird, Gladio, Condor, Stargate.
3:03:55
I mean, that's just a tip.
3:03:57
Dr. Ewan Cameron at McGill.
3:03:59
Another sign you're listening to a spooky show
3:04:02
chill.
3:04:02
Back to Shannon.
3:04:03
OKC, KFC, UFC, TFC.
3:04:06
Don't forget that they want to bring in
3:04:08
an online currency in the form of a
3:04:10
CBDC.
3:04:11
My guess is the USTC.
3:04:13
All I want is BCC.
3:04:15
History rhymes most of the time and I'm
3:04:17
just trying to give you clues and remind
3:04:19
myself at the same time.
3:04:21
Don't listen to that much music anymore.
3:04:23
But reading books and podcasting when done well.
3:04:25
Plunder World.
3:04:27
So much more.
3:04:28
So much more.
3:04:29
Yo, man, get these trading cards and Plunder
3:04:31
World is so much more.
3:04:35
Yeah.
3:04:36
Shout out to the Plunder World store.
3:04:40
You'd be surprised like that one little, oh,
3:04:43
that $5 message.
3:04:44
You hear that, keep it going.
3:04:45
You say when you upload it, you might
3:04:46
listen to clips and listen to the source
3:04:48
material.
3:04:49
It's just like somebody still cares out there
3:04:52
and finds value.
3:04:52
That's the real magic of value for value.
3:04:56
Ignoring somebody cares out there what you're doing.
3:05:08
Wow, great work.
3:05:14
Kiss these guys on the lips.