0:00
[Music]
0:03
Madame Curie this is no agenda
Madame
0:25
Curie from northern Silicon
Valley where
0:27
it's been raining cats dogs I'm
John
0:31
Steed for well it was only one
hour
0:38
delay could have been a lot
worse
0:41
there's effort beat us of
course this is
0:44
ephra beat us
0:45
although the coach though was
an hour
0:46
late I've been in update hell no
0:49
actually it was great this week
the
0:51
updating I did everything I
needed to do
0:53
and then the very last moment
something
0:55
broke but that that Drive
cloning you
0:58
turned me onto that was a
fantastic
0:59
experience well it doesn't
sound like it
1:03
if it's broke something Oh in
general I
1:07
don't think the drive cloning
broke
1:09
anything I cuz I upgraded
everything
1:12
every update every you know the
dry I
1:16
think it's the drivers from the
the USB
1:18
thing mark of the unicorn think
they
1:19
screwed something up that could
be yeah
1:22
well I dig drive cloning thing
worked
1:23
well if it if it was a hardware
mismatch
1:26
because I've done this a couple
of times
1:28
using this Acronis a little
rate great
1:31
piece of software yeah what it
does is
1:34
it clones the disk onto another
disk and
1:37
and it you've swapped the disks
back
1:40
better than that you just plug
it into a
1:42
USB hit clone and then you swap
the disk
1:45
and it actually worked the
first time
1:47
that was an amazing experience
1:50
yeah boots as if it was the
original
1:54
disk only now you either have
more space
1:57
or you got a faster dry I would
say the
1:59
boot process is ten times faster
2:02
everything's fast it's just I
should
2:04
have I should have ordered this
thing
2:05
with this solid-state drives to
2:07
beginning to begin with
2:09
now and I can see if I run like
the the
2:12
registry scanner it used to be
the drive
2:16
would tap out before the CPU
now the CPU
2:18
goes to 100% the disk is still
80% so
2:21
that's where I see the big
difference
2:25
yeah it's faster faster faster
2:28
yeah even as fast as the super
fast ones
2:30
what you find in these which
are there's
2:32
little dinky cards that don't
run on sat
2:35
on the non SATA SSDs were
probably twice
2:38
as fast I mean regular I did so
much
2:40
this week I even upgraded the
firmware
2:42
in my hearing aids and I heard
the
2:48
difference which is even
funnier anyway
2:52
yeah anyway am the Apple guys
were in
2:54
town last night the you know
James are
2:58
from the Apple podcast HQ and
they
3:01
always like to take couple
podcasters
3:02
out to dinner oh okay and you
would have
3:07
you might have like well first
of all
3:08
you would like to be one of
these cuz
3:10
this it's it's yeah it reminds
me of
3:13
when if I was when it with MTV
you know
3:15
you'd be in a city and then the
3:18
corporate office that MTV would
say yeah
3:20
you gotta have dinner with the
local
3:23
cable affiliate and his wife
you know it
3:25
feels like kind of those deals
were
3:28
there in Austin I got a call up
some
3:29
podcasters alright I'll get a
couple of
3:31
them around the table and we
went to
3:34
foreign and domestic which is a
very
3:37
small can barely be called a
restaurant
3:41
up north and I had the braised
goats
3:45
neck potpie which was a that's
about
3:50
it's disgusting a dish can be
named it's
3:53
you know and because the one
they just
3:55
called it goat potpie the goats
neck it
3:58
was no braised goats neck and
it sounds
4:00
completely like you don't want
to order
4:02
it but the waitress she was
going on and
4:04
on about is the bell take it it
was an
4:07
outstanding product I wouldn't
have
4:09
known it was goat to start off
with
4:11
y'all goat is very hard to
identify it's
4:13
like yeah doesn't taste like
much of
4:16
anything actually it's very
mild version
4:18
of Lance this is milder people
don't
4:20
understand this but goat
actually tastes
4:22
milder than mild lamb if you
don't like
4:25
lamb or goat or or uh sheep but
you
4:29
don't nobody's in this country
you'd
4:31
like goat goat is very mild
find as you
4:34
know here on the No Agenda show
we love
4:38
goat a couple things so what
are you
4:47
guys doing we talk about
anything and it
4:49
was a damn Benjamin was there
and a new
4:51
guy from Apple and I guess they
invited
4:55
Lance Armstrong again but Lance
4:56
Armstrong doesn't come anymore
sends his
4:57
producer like okay nice guy
value is a
5:02
very nice guy so what's going
on they
5:04
have native podcasts on the
Apple watch
5:06
they're very excited about that
and I
5:09
had to ask I said how do I
avoid getting
5:12
a D platform from the iTunes
directory
5:15
which I will remind you I gave
you the
5:19
first version of the directory
myself
5:21
that's what you started off
with yeah
5:23
yeah keep reminding people of
these
5:25
things because they'll forget
yeah the
5:27
answer no hate speech what does
that
5:31
even mean that was my question
I said
5:33
what does that even mean well
you know
5:35
thanks Beach it's like Oh key
dokey they
5:41
have a very broad definition of
hate
5:43
speech in other words if they
hate you
5:45
yes he'll pull your podcast
that's
5:48
honestly that's a bit the way
it sounded
5:51
I don't want to put words in
anyone's
5:52
mouth cuz no one said that but
it's like
5:54
no it was a lot of pret no one
said this
5:56
but my interpretation was there
was a
5:58
lot of pressure and it came
down to we
6:01
got to be in this we got to be
on board
6:02
with this we got to get him off
but they
6:04
kick a lot of stuff off quote
so you
6:07
didn't Britain vitalic Jones
doesn't
6:09
meet up here we kick off stuff
that is
6:13
alt far-right stuff from
Germany and I
6:17
didn't respond to that like
okay I mean
6:20
does that automatically mean
they hate
6:22
Jews and are killing them on
the podcast
6:24
or maybe they just don't like
how
6:26
Germany is being run so it's
very
6:29
generally what those podcasts
are about
6:31
yes but they don't like the
migration
6:34
issues
6:35
having yeah yeah so there's
another
6:37
reason to kick him off kick him
off
6:39
yeah so the bottom line is keep
going to
6:42
the dinners
6:43
keep smiling friendly I think
we'll be
6:48
we'll be just fine
6:50
actually I had a house Benjamin
doing
6:54
dance good yeah yeah he said
yeah he's
6:58
just the same I guess a little
7:00
reminiscing about old days of
old and
7:02
just the typical stuff yeah I
had
7:06
something regarding speech now
I'm a
7:09
little discombobulated mm-hmm I
wondered
7:15
divert I want to dive right
into my
7:17
clipless I was gonna I'll dive
right
7:18
into this after I talk about
that and
7:21
there you go so why don't you
get us
7:23
started and I'll keep searching
for
7:25
whatever the hell it was I was
gonna
7:26
talk about let's go over the
never mind
7:31
I found it shorty you'll like
it and
7:35
it's about hate speech I knew I
had
7:37
something this is the European
7:39
Parliament now we are still in
the
7:41
throes of the Marrakesh
agreement which
7:43
is not discussed in the United
States of
7:46
gitmo nation we're also not
going to
7:48
sign it but the EU is trying to
get
7:50
every one of the 27 member
states to get
7:53
on board the main thrust of
this is that
7:56
we recognize migration as an
7:59
international issue and
everyone should
8:01
be able to migrate to wherever
they want
8:03
no questions asked no borders
no no yes
8:06
yes no borders no nations no
people in
8:09
the end the EU Parliament sees
that
8:12
there will be some additions or
some
8:14
interpretations of the Marrakesh
8:16
agreement regarding speech
meant to be
8:20
the legal framework on which the
8:23
participating countries commit
8:25
themselves to build new
legislation
8:28
and one basic element of this
new
8:30
agreement is the extension of
the
8:33
definition of hate speech the
agreement
8:37
want to criminalize migration
speech
8:42
criticism of migration will
become a
8:45
criminal offense no this is not
the
8:52
onion unless this was
overdubbed somehow
8:55
and I didn't catch it just
finished up
8:57
some of migration will become a
criminal
9:00
offense and media outlets and
that also
9:04
concerns you that give room to
criticism
9:08
of migration can be shut down
there you
9:11
go
9:11
that's bullcrap folks there's
no way
9:15
that this is a real clip it's
okay it's
9:17
the guys at the European Union
he's
9:20
answering questions from the
press he's
9:22
there with other EU Parliament
buddies
9:26
I'm just saying I'm just saying
okay
9:29
well you know what you don't
think that
9:31
this is a little sketchy yes
but I
9:33
searched and I looked and I saw
other
9:36
people say sounds sketchy but
my eyes
9:39
don't lie I mean it's an
European
9:42
Parliament press conference
about the
9:43
Marrakesh agreement and this is
a
9:46
question mark up in arms about
this this
9:48
threat no we know the attacks
already
9:52
said no to it yes the
Hungarians have
9:55
said no to it the Polish have
said no
9:57
there's a lot of people said no
this
9:58
thing is not going anywhere but
that
10:00
that's beside the point
10:02
the point being what you put
that clip
10:04
mm-hmm I will be stunned if
that guy if
10:08
that's actually true stunned
right it's
10:11
going way too far that's going
overboard
10:13
it doesn't surprise me I mean
this is
10:17
exactly what you'd expect hate
speeches
10:18
it's completely broad well it
can be
10:21
interpreted anyway there's no
there are
10:23
no existing laws about in the
United
10:25
States speech of speech but in
the
10:28
Europe in the UK there's all
kinds of
10:30
restrictions on hate snow
follow this
10:32
and I agree with that but I've
never
10:34
heard any discussion of
migration
10:38
becoming a crime you know a
jailable
10:40
offense
10:41
migration sucks it's a jail
damn I think
10:46
it's I don't know if it well
maybe it
10:48
could be even like that but it
means if
10:50
you say something nasty about a
public
10:52
politician in the UK that is an
offense
10:54
that you can go to jail for so
this is
10:56
not that far it's not even
their own
10:58
people okay yeah I was very
surprised
11:08
very surprised bill sounds like
the
11:11
onion to me you know you gotta
be
11:13
careful cuz you know I I do
come I do
11:15
check on things that you don't
believe
11:17
what you say is wrong and that
often but
11:21
that thing you have to admit
out of the
11:23
blue listening to that that's a
little
11:25
bit out of line absolutely but
still I
11:33
see no reason to to not believe
what
11:36
this clip that I've seen it
looks
11:37
extremely believable it's hard
it is
11:40
that's something that you would
call
11:42
unbelievable yeah well it is
11:45
unbelievable I don't know I
just want to
11:47
play it no agenda classic on
the last
11:49
show we had a little
back-and-forth
11:53
about what I'd said about Trump
and you
11:56
said the guy will never win and
I said
11:58
not I think he can and I have
the
12:00
genesis of this from 2015 this
is what
12:04
should be done but no
politicians gonna
12:06
do that he doesn't got a prayer
he won't
12:08
get nominated you make a big
splash make
12:11
it big see he's not spending a
lot of
12:13
money I don't see no his head's
no he's
12:14
not he doesn't have to write I
don't
12:16
think he's spending anything so
it's not
12:17
like it's caught it's just
travel did
12:19
you notice that the Huffington
Post puts
12:21
all Donald Trump news on the
12:22
entertainment section of the
website
12:24
that's objective coverage of
course of
12:27
course okay let's play this
cause
12:28
they're just gonna be
relentless and
12:30
they're gonna there's meetings
going you
12:32
can be sure of this anyone
listening to
12:34
this any time you're listening
there are
12:36
meetings right now in New York
12:40
Washington and elsewhere what
are we
12:43
gonna do about this guy making
president
12:46
why not just let him win honey
they're
12:48
getting paid not to make him
president
12:50
that's what these meetings are
about
12:51
these are not meetings
12:53
these are these are lobbyists
and I
12:57
would think that the lobbyists
will take
13:00
money from other people look
the smart
13:02
money is going to say you know
what
13:04
let's go with this guy let's
run with
13:06
him he's on our side you're
nuts Bush
13:20
from the future oh this is true
thanks
13:24
said chase for pulling that car
now I'll
13:28
play let me look let me play a
happy
13:31
clip because we talked about
Dvorak on
13:34
typing this is this was the
dos-based
13:38
typing tutor that featured John
C Dvorak
13:42
and wouldn't you know it that
there are
13:45
people who love you so much
13:47
they have restored these games
to work
13:49
in a web browser games and in
this case
13:52
the typing tutor I get what is
kind of
13:54
it's kind of a game in fact
there's a
13:56
menu option for games now it's
very it's
14:00
it's like 8-bit and no it's
more I was
14:04
like two bit audio I don't know
what
14:06
kind of audio this was a bit is
the
14:08
right word is it too bit
because it sure
14:10
sounds like it
14:11
27 seconds
14:32
you have to play daily
14:35
no of course not that's what it
sounds
14:37
today hold on back then you
already knew
14:46
I TM I guess the I guess the
old I guess
14:50
the old game that's a good one
idea the
14:57
it doesn't translate somehow
with the
14:59
audio I'm sure do a very good
job but
15:04
the fact that it works is
pretty cool
15:05
yeah you gotta love stuff like
that
15:08
alright that's our show I think
we've
15:10
pretty much handled everything
so much I
15:13
think we're good let's let's do
some
15:16
funny alright this is my fit
this is my
15:20
clip about Trump gassing the
Hondurans
15:22
yeah you mean women and
children and
15:25
little babies and diapers this
comes as
15:27
the Trump administration
defended the
15:29
Border Patrol for firing tear
gas and
15:30
crowds of migrants including
mothers and
15:32
children as they tried to cross
the US
15:35
border from Tijuana Sunday this
is
15:37
Ronald Colburn president to the
Border
15:39
Patrol foundation former
national deputy
15:41
chief of US Customs and Border
15:42
Protection speaking on Fox and
Friends
15:45
Monday the type of deterrent
being used
15:48
is OC pepper spray is literally
water
15:52
pepper with a small amount of
alcohol
15:55
for evaporation purposes it's
natural
15:58
you could actually put it on
your nachos
16:00
and eat it that's some Trump
defense
16:11
right there but I think there's
a better
16:12
one
16:13
you know this has happened
every month
16:16
it throughout the Obama
administration -
16:19
they were tear gassing people
at that
16:21
very same border crossing there
were
16:23
guys trying to ram the crossing
in vans
16:25
three vans at the same time
this is
16:27
nothing new it's not new that
we tear
16:30
gas people at the border it's
just not
16:33
and I don't you know it's like
it's so
16:35
obvious what what mainstream
media is
16:38
doing
16:38
it's just and it's really is
lies I mean
16:42
actually it's not lying because
this
16:43
happened under Trump's regime is
16:45
dictatorship but it's been
happening for
16:48
years years and years so it's
just it's
16:51
disingenuous I think is the the
news
16:55
media thing just just a tad
16:59
I do have some clips to give a
little
17:02
background on the Honduras
thing because
17:03
I think that democracy that now
did a
17:05
very good job of they brought
in Dana
17:08
Frank who just wrote a book
about the
17:10
coup now if you remember and we
it was
17:12
during our show that this
Manuel Zelaya
17:14
who was the elected president
he was
17:18
elected honcho of Honduras and
we
17:21
orchestrated a coup where we
picked him
17:23
up at night and in his bedroom
in his
17:25
underwear at gunpoint put him
on a plane
17:30
flew him to Costa Rica and
dropped him
17:33
off in the middle of the of the
tarmac
17:36
naked and then took off here's
a little
17:43
reminder of this is the
Honduras coup
17:46
Manuel Zelaya but and Dana Frank
17:49
discusses this I want you to go
back to
17:51
2009 when there was a coup in
Honduras
17:55
and the democratically elected
leader
17:58
the Honduran President Manuel
Zelaya
18:01
spoke on Democracy Now about
what
18:03
happened to him if they
attacked my
18:06
house at 5:30 in the morning a
group of
18:08
at least 200 to 250 armed
soldiers with
18:13
hoods and bulletproof vests and
rifles
18:15
aimed their guns at me fired
shots used
18:18
machine guns kick down the
doors and
18:21
just as I was in pajamas they
put me on
18:24
a plane and flew me to Costa
Rica this
18:27
all happened in less than 45
minutes I
18:29
do remember that that's a long
time ago
18:33
yes so this is they've never had
18:35
actually been true dina frank
has done
18:37
some research he's a professor
at UC
18:39
santa cruz and she's come out
with a
18:41
book about this and she they
say there's
18:44
no real smoking gun to prove
that it was
18:46
Hillary who was the state
department
18:48
head at the time who
orchestrated this
18:50
or thus it was
18:51
I a Hillary thing which is part
of the
18:53
reason I think that the CIA
about Trump
18:59
and this whole Hondurans
caravan which
19:02
CNN says doesn't even exist if
you
19:04
remember there's no such thing
it's a
19:07
hoax this is all because of the
policies
19:10
that were instituted by Hillary
and
19:13
Obama and let's play this clip
on
19:15
Honduras coup hillary
responsible when
19:18
you interviewed Hillary Clinton
when she
19:21
was running for president when
you were
19:23
working at the Daily News you
asked her
19:25
about the coup she was not
pleased you
19:28
asked her about her support the
u.s.
19:30
support for the coup when she
was
19:32
Secretary of State so went from
the
19:35
Democrats right through to
President
19:37
Trump and if you can talk about
the
19:39
extent of this support and why
you see
19:41
that linked to what we're
seeing with
19:45
the migrants today as you say
these are
19:47
refugees from US policy well we
don't
19:51
have a smoking gun that shows
the
19:53
us-backed the coup from before
it
19:54
happened but all the evidence
is very
19:56
clear that the US wanted the
kuda
19:58
stabilized after it took place
that the
20:01
u.s. recognized the bogus
election of
20:03
November 2019 that brought
Porfiry all
20:05
over to power and that the US
has
20:07
continued to recognize the
ongoing coup
20:09
regime especially that of one
Orlando
20:11
Hernandez to although he has
come in he
20:14
stole probably stole him up to
we don't
20:17
really know in 2013 he very
clearly ran
20:19
for president last year in
violation of
20:22
the Constitution which bans
re-election
20:25
and then he stole the election
in
20:26
November last year again
Salvador
20:29
Nasrallah yeah you know against
an all
20:31
united opposition which very
clearly won
20:34
so the US has given but it's so
it's not
20:37
just a question of the u.s.
supporting
20:38
the coup itself I mean clearly
Hillary
20:40
Clinton is was responsible for
that but
20:42
don't forget that Barack Obama
was her
20:44
boss and he's responsible too
20:47
no no this is all coming out
because of
20:54
the the president of Honduras
his
20:56
brother was just arrested as a
major
20:59
drug dealer and the argument
that she
21:02
makes in the book is that this
is a
21:04
narco-state in Honduras yes and
so
21:07
everybody is it's like it's
like the
21:10
gangland is running the place
so all the
21:12
small businesses are closing
down
21:14
because they ought to play
tribute to
21:16
the local boss and all this
sort of
21:18
thing and it's become a
nightmare and
21:21
that's one of the reasons that
they're
21:22
marching on the u.s. to come
into the
21:24
country because we're the ones
that
21:26
probably set this whole thing
in motion
21:28
but hold on a sec so that's
really what
21:32
the media should be reporting
because
21:34
that makes sense to say hey we
did all
21:36
this and that's why they're all
pissed
21:38
off and they're and it's all so
crazy
21:40
and they're running away from
this
21:41
dangerous place and they want
asylum
21:43
apparently some of them do but
they
21:46
can't report on it because then
they'd
21:48
have to say that it was Hillary
and
21:50
Obama who put that in place is
that the
21:53
issue hello
21:55
the current president's brother
arrested
21:58
in Miami for drug trafficking
well we've
22:02
known for a long time two years
now that
22:04
one Orlando's brother Tony was
involved
22:09
in drug trafficking he was in
fact named
22:10
in US federal court
22:12
two years ago and we know that
there are
22:14
drug traffickers from top to
bottom in
22:16
the Honduran government so for
endurance
22:19
this there's no surprise what's
22:20
important is that he actually
was
22:21
arrested and it's going to be
presumably
22:24
brought to justice what the
signal so is
22:26
what would people call an
outsourcing of
22:28
the criminal justice system why
was why
22:31
was he not brought to justice
tonight
22:32
his state excuse me why was he
not
22:34
brought to justice in Honduras
it shows
22:37
that this complete breakdown of
the
22:38
hunter and criminal justice
system that
22:40
this man wasn't brought to
justice a
22:42
long time ago in Honduras okay
now a
22:46
couple of things she also
mentions that
22:49
Hillary put something in her it
went
22:50
that why I lost book in her
hardcover
22:55
edition she took it out for the
22:56
paperback back version it had
to do with
22:58
Honduras oh and a Cavalier
comment that
23:01
she made about putting the
original guy
23:03
who was elected back in office
she said
23:05
well it was something like as
well you
23:08
know what difference does it
make that
23:14
of the paperback version you
got some
23:16
flack for but now there's the
decently
23:19
last clip this is the this is
the where
23:23
Dana Frank makes the argument
that this
23:25
is yeah I was set up by Obama
and
23:27
Hillary and that now all the
troubles in
23:31
that part of the world are
really stems
23:33
from that but it was carried
forward and
23:35
it went right into the Trump
23:37
administration that really
haven't done
23:38
too much about it although they
did
23:40
arrest the brother so they're
maybe
23:42
doing something about it but
then but
23:44
another name kind of crops up
in her
23:46
exposition of who how you can
track you
23:50
know this the the the whole
thing
23:53
through and drag it right
through the
23:56
Trump administration and landed
on one
23:59
guy who happens to be a
coincidental
24:01
player in the Trump
administration see
24:04
if you can figure out who this
is when
24:06
she says his name the US Gate
has given
24:09
this post cool regime
greenlight after
24:11
green light after green lights
who's not
24:12
just but and it's not just
Obama what's
24:14
his name Louis day I was it was
that a
24:19
name at the beginning no okay I
couldn't
24:22
hear the us right after green
light
24:26
after green light so it's not
just but
24:28
and it's not just Obama it's
not just
24:29
Hillary Clinton it's also John
Kerry and
24:32
now Donald Trump and and his
secretaries
24:35
of state tellers and Pompeyo
John Bolton
24:37
at the National Security Council
24:39
mark prep Senator Marco Rubio
who is
24:42
reportedly the person advising
Pompeo
24:44
I'm US policy in Honduras right
now so
24:47
this this is an ongoing policy
and and
24:49
the hunters will be very quick
to tell
24:52
you that the one orlando's
regime
24:54
continues because of use i
support not
24:57
just the police and the
military aid
24:59
which is pouring in but this
will this
25:01
legitimation of the regime and
if you
25:04
want to see the continuities
that key
25:05
figure here is a general john
kelly who
25:08
was the head of the united
states
25:09
southern command out of miami
before he
25:12
was chief of staff for trump
and he very
25:16
much has supported one Orlando
Hernandez
25:19
he called him a magnificent guy
and a
25:21
good friend and here's how we
can see
25:22
this continuity from one regime
to the
25:24
next you think the
25:27
mmm interesting yeah and
nobody's
25:32
talking I mean I was glad that
they
25:34
brought this woman on democracy
now does
25:36
this once in a while they bring
on
25:38
someone who wrote a book so
it's very
25:40
well researched and a lot of
good
25:42
documentation and there she's
got a few
25:43
things to tell us nobody else
will cover
25:45
it no I mean but I'm not so
sure of is
25:48
that the Caravan consists of a
lot of
25:50
Hondurans I mean that has been
so poorly
25:53
covered at all yeah we're not
gonna
25:56
cover nothing in factors here's
I have
25:58
an MBA MSNBC report where this
yes I
26:02
have this I have this report
very good
26:07
and they listened to the
president who
26:09
says it's not women and
children it's
26:11
stone-cold criminals so my first
26:14
question is you're in that tent
camp
26:16
besides that family give us a
profile of
26:19
who is there mostly so they got
the
26:21
reporter on the ground he's in
these in
26:24
the camp he's looking around
what are
26:25
they looking for because it
seems as
26:27
though to your point they don't
actually
26:29
have the necessary information
so they
26:32
know how to cross the border
there could
26:34
have people there could be
people
26:36
yesterday who were running
because they
26:37
thought it was their only
chance right
26:39
and it's very difficult because
this has
26:41
become such a polarizing issue
if we
26:43
kind of take a walk you'll
you'll be
26:44
able to see for yourself again
this is
26:46
the inner sanctum of the
shelter so
26:49
you're gonna see a lot of
families here
26:51
a lot of women and children but
the
26:54
truth is the majority of the
people that
26:56
are part of this Caravan
especially
26:58
outside if we can make our way
all the
27:00
way over there we'll show you
the
27:01
majority of them are men so
people on
27:03
one side that point and say
there are
27:06
women and children here and
that is true
27:08
and then there are others who
point and
27:10
say these are our men that are
trying to
27:12
cross the border and that's
true too
27:14
from what we've seen the
majority are
27:17
actually men and some of these
men have
27:19
not articulated that need for
asylum
27:21
instead they have talked about
you know
27:24
going to the United States for
a better
27:25
life in to find work but if we
come this
27:28
way here we're just gonna leave
this is
27:30
where where there's a food bank
that's
27:32
set up and you've got a long
run do you
27:35
I mean I cut it off after this
you want
27:37
to go for another 42 seconds
with us
27:38
something else in there
27:40
we're just talking about there
are 500
27:41
men lined up line of men
earlier we saw
27:45
about five six hundred men
standing in
27:48
line waiting for food and it
looks like
27:50
that's dwindled down but this
is the
27:52
outskirts and we're gonna pass
through
27:54
here I'm going to show you
where there
27:55
are some there's some police
officers
27:57
and yeah anyway the point was
is that
28:04
the MSNBC girl who is like all
bent out
28:06
of shape about orange man bad
she's
28:11
freaking out all the time well
so I'm
28:17
just a step back for a second
there's no
28:19
evidence these are all Honduran
so it
28:20
could be just a whole bunch of
Mexicans
28:22
who were hanging out getting
ready to go
28:24
and there's been no reporting
on that
28:25
you know the the iconic photo
now of the
28:29
mother were the two kids and
diapers
28:31
we're being tear gassed you
know this
28:33
now alternate shots from all
you can see
28:37
that they were staged
28:38
camera guys everywhere but the
thing
28:41
that really gets me is and
we're talking
28:44
about illegal immigrants and
I've been
28:47
through the system many times
three
28:49
actually have helped people is
there's a
28:51
way to do it and you can do it
it's not
28:53
cheap I think that's a problem
because
28:55
it will cost you probably
between three
28:57
and five thousand dollars to
but you
28:58
know that's what people pay to
the to
29:01
the Coyotes you know to get in
illegally
29:03
so okay but it's construed in
the media
29:07
as you just hate other people
29:10
you just hate brown people you
don't
29:12
want people to come in and and
and
29:14
you'll be an immigrant for the
American
29:17
Dream which is bullcrap because
if you
29:19
come in Legally we want you to
come in
29:21
we want you to have the
American dream
29:23
I still think immigration is
about that
29:26
you can come in you can look at
it used
29:28
to be you'd look at Donald
Trump and say
29:30
I'd be that guy one day you
can't do
29:31
that anymore that's orange man
bad but
29:34
Geraldo who is you know I think
he's
29:37
clearly left-leaning
29:39
although he's on Fox and he's
often a
29:42
voice of reason which is
appreciated but
29:44
he shows the true thinking about
29:48
immigration he's not thinking
about the
29:51
American dream
29:53
coming unglued and then the the
real
29:56
truth slips out refused to deal
with
30:02
this as a media issue because
it's far
30:05
too important gold your spec
Jesse this
30:07
is something that goes to the
very quick
30:09
this goes to my soul designated
pinata
30:16
on fox news I want to say I am
ashamed
30:19
this we treat these people these
30:24
economic refugees as if they're
zombies
30:26
from The Walking Dead I think we
30:28
arrested 42 people aided them
were women
30:30
with children we have to deal
with this
30:34
problem you mainly and with
compassion
30:36
these are not these these are
not
30:38
invaders stop using these
military
30:41
analogies this is absolutely
painful to
30:46
watch this is we are a nation of
30:48
immigrants these are desperate
people
30:50
they walk 2,000 miles
30:51
why don't work because I want
to rape
30:53
your your daughter or steal
your your
30:56
lunch no because they want a
job well
30:58
they want to fill the millions
of
30:59
unfilled jobs we have in the
31:01
agricultural sector they want
to wash
31:03
dishes in the restaurants they
want to
31:04
deliver the pizzas because they
look
31:15
different than their it is
theirs
31:17
Geraldo he says these people
they come
31:20
for the American Dream to wash
your
31:21
dishes to clean your toilets to
pick
31:24
your fruit sauce you Geraldo
fuck you
31:27
I'm sorry I hate that the woman
from the
31:30
view who is called out this
said the
31:32
same thing who's gonna wash our
toilets
31:35
unbelievable that is
unbelievable I'll
31:38
give you okay I'm gonna give I
would
31:41
have given you a clip of the
day of
31:43
whoever recorded that for you I
recorded
31:46
that myself had done a better
job of you
31:50
know maybe using some I
actually tried
31:52
to filtered it was so
impossible to
31:54
filter it I did everything I
could and
31:56
just that was the best I could
get but I
31:59
worked on it it was not just
sent to me
32:00
and unprocessed but anyway
that's that
32:04
is that is really that's hates
32:07
right there yeah we want these
economic
32:09
migrants to come in illegally
to wash my
32:11
floor wash my dishes clean my
toilet
32:15
that's not how I think but
that's how
32:18
Geraldo thinks and why is this
so
32:22
accepted I mean it's beyond me
it wasn't
32:25
accepted on the view and that
woman said
32:27
it did someone call her out on
it they
32:31
all called her out on it good
good
32:33
it's just unconscionable that
she
32:36
apologized yeah well I'm sick
of this
32:40
Geraldo saying that stuff it's
illegal
32:43
illegal immigration not the
same as
32:45
legal migration to come here
for the
32:48
American Dream and we can on
the books
32:50
we could do about a hundred
thousand a
32:51
year I think that's that is the
legal
32:54
limit currently which you know
that's
32:56
the legal immigration it's not
a lot
32:59
when you think about it well
we've got a
33:04
couple of things here
33:08
we've got manna fort I want to
play
33:12
these clips because I just want
to show
33:13
you the difference in the way
people
33:14
cover stuff okay just a little
33:18
background on this between the
show
33:20
notes I'm not gonna read it but
it was
33:22
this is actually I have a
backer I do
33:24
have a background err on manna
fort
33:28
manna fort yeah I actually put
it on
33:31
there Ministry of Truth eNOS as
a you
33:35
know I'm just just a little
background
33:37
err and then we'll talk about
it because
33:38
The Guardian published
something and
33:40
this report is from right after
it was
33:42
published but the Guardian has
since
33:44
changed many pieces of this
article you
33:48
know those it was bogus but I
love these
33:50
little systems that will track
a webpage
33:52
and they'll show it to you and
the
33:53
colors where things change and
they
33:55
completely took it away from
this
33:57
happened to he wanted to do
this a
34:02
source said it could have
happened kind
34:05
of thing and I think the
Guardian
34:07
should get in trouble for what
they did
34:09
the backdrop to this new report
coming
34:11
out from The Guardian just this
morning
34:13
that says Paul Matt afford met
with
34:16
Julian
34:16
Sanj acclaimed WikiLeaks about
four
34:19
minutes ago tweeted out and
disputed can
34:21
you explain what the
significance of
34:23
this would be again if accurate
the
34:25
Guardian is hinging this I
think on one
34:27
well-placed source they're
citing well
34:29
in my understanding Hallie from
one of
34:31
the reporters that's been
involved of
34:33
Lou coordinating who I happen
to know is
34:35
that this is based on an honest
on
34:36
source or sources as well as
some
34:39
documents that they've been
able to
34:40
review you know how they the
34:42
significance of this the the
Guardian
34:44
report says that Paul Manafort
visited
34:47
the Ecuadorian Embassy and
Julian
34:49
Assange in March of 2016 this
was around
34:52
the time is you and I both know
well
34:55
when you being on the campaign
trail and
34:56
I was talking about this that
Paul
34:58
Manafort was was joining the
Trump
35:00
campaign or about to join the
Trump
35:01
campaign we need a little bit
more
35:03
detail on those dates so we can
be
35:04
specific about it in addition
the
35:07
Guardian report says that Paul
Manafort
35:08
had other trips to the
Ecuadorian
35:10
Embassy in London and that
those trips
35:12
started around I believe 2013
if I
35:14
remember the report correctly
and why
35:16
specifically that embassy which
is of
35:18
course where Julian Assange
lived so
35:20
yeah I think this is a report
that beers
35:23
beers more follow up at this
point and
35:25
just to explain some of the
timeline
35:27
here you're correct Tom this
this
35:28
apparently did begin in 2013
sources
35:31
have said Matt afford according
to the
35:32
Guardian went to see a scientist
35:33
recently as spring of 2016
according to
35:36
one of their sources it was in
March of
35:38
2016 as you know obviously Paul
Madoff
35:41
or join the campaign shortly
thereafter
35:42
that the Trump campaign that is
months
35:45
later WikiLeaks released those
emails we
35:47
should note that Paul Matta
forts
35:49
lawyers did not comment at
least to the
35:51
Guardian Tom and I did just
speak to
35:54
Holly just at that point I did
just to
35:56
Jason Maloney Paul Manafort
spokesperson
35:59
and at this point they are not
putting
36:01
out an on-the-record response
although
36:03
that may change later today and
they may
36:05
be able to provide us with
something
36:06
that we can that we can report
so I want
36:08
to say that that we have
reached out to
36:10
Paul Manta fourths
representatives about
36:12
this story as well so the way I
36:13
understand what went down here
his mana
36:16
fort was asked if he had met
with Julian
36:18
Assange he said no and then
immediately
36:22
uh you're lying to us because
and now
36:24
whether the Guardian came first
or
36:26
Mueller gave it to the Guardian
however
36:29
the guard
36:29
and got this information turns
out it
36:31
was really incorrect news from
the
36:37
Guardian yeah let's play the
two clips I
36:39
wanted to play which would go
over the
36:40
same exact thing again but
differently
36:43
yes and let's start with the
metaphor
36:45
update with with vas Assange
info CBS
36:50
something White House press
secretary
36:52
Sarah Sanders dismissed today I
know
36:54
where any conversations were for
36:57
anyone's pardon
36:58
adding to manna forts troubles
the
37:00
British newspaper The Guardian
reported
37:02
today mana Ford held secret
meetings
37:04
with WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange
37:06
inside the Ecuadorian Embassy
in London
37:08
including one in 2016 just
months before
37:12
WikiLeaks released a trove of
stolen
37:15
Democratic emails Manafort
called the
37:18
story totally false
37:19
and deliberately libelous
Assange also
37:22
threatens legal action in
September the
37:24
former Trump campaign chairman
agreed to
37:26
cooperate with the special
counsel in
37:28
exchange for other charges
against him
37:30
being dismissed it was Mahler's
biggest
37:33
victory to date because mana
fort could
37:35
provide valuable information
about any
37:37
cooperation between the Trump
campaign
37:39
and Russia in a court filing
last night
37:42
prosecutors did not reveal what
mana
37:44
fort lied about but promised to
37:46
eventually issue a report
detailing men
37:48
affords crimes and lies his
lawyer says
37:51
he is met with the special
counsels
37:53
office several times and
provided
37:55
truthful information former
whitewater
37:57
investigator Solomon
Weissenberg says
37:59
mana fort may be playing the
long game
38:01
it's a good hypothesis though
he never
38:05
intended to cooperate he's
angling for a
38:07
pardon at some point in time any
38:09
collusion and then the New York
Post of
38:13
all fine publications printed a
report
38:18
printed an interview with Trump
where
38:20
they asked him would you pardon
Manta
38:22
for and he said well it hasn't
come up
38:24
but why would I was not gonna
rule it
38:26
out not gonna take it off the
table
38:28
aa long game in collusion in
cahoots oh
38:31
yeah orange man bad well anyway
the
38:35
point is is that they CBS if you
38:37
listened that carefully was
they kind of
38:40
took the side of the Guardian
it seems
38:42
to me of course
38:43
I thought was a very poorly
done story
38:45
they did no research they never
they
38:47
never pull back the garbage on
no it's
38:50
the Guardian you can always
it's like
38:51
the the New York Times of
England yes
38:55
kind of well did ya meddling in
our
38:58
affairs I might point out the
Brits are
39:00
meddling in our affairs over
here again
39:02
again the better Assange mana
for its
39:05
stories is better Assange mana
for its
39:07
story Democracy Now oh I'm
sorry I had a
39:10
different one queued up lawyers
for
39:13
Julian Assange said the
WikiLeaks
39:15
founder will sue the Guardian
newspaper
39:17
for libel after it reported
Tuesday that
39:19
Paul Manafort held secret talks
with
39:22
Assange inside the Ecuadorian
Embassy in
39:24
London on three occasions the
alleged
39:27
meetings occurred the Guardian
alleged
39:29
in 2013 2015 and in March of
2016
39:34
around the time mana fork/join
Donald
39:37
Trump's presidential campaign
lead
39:39
author Luke Harding cited a
quote
39:42
well-placed source as the basis
of the
39:44
report in a statement Manafort
called
39:46
the report totally false and
39:48
deliberately libelous WikiLeaks
said in
39:51
a tweet quote WikiLeaks is
willing to
39:53
bet the Guardian a million
dollars and
39:55
its editors head that mana for
never met
39:58
Assange
39:59
you know actually I want to
read some of
40:01
these differences from new
sniffer from
40:03
this Guardian article so this
is the
40:06
original article and then the
change
40:08
came about one hour after that
so first
40:12
of all the headline mana Ford
held
40:13
secret talks with the songs an
40:15
Ecuadorian Embassy 8 hour later
mana
40:17
Ford held secret talks with
Assange in
40:19
Ecuadorian embassy sources say
they're
40:26
backing off fast they're back
pedaling
40:28
as fast as they can but but but
I should
40:30
mention that the right or the
main
40:31
writer who she mentioned and I
guess
40:33
there's some other writer
involved are
40:35
notorious for doing this
creating these
40:37
fake stories on behalf of mi6
or someone
40:40
oh well that makes sense here
it's
40:42
unclear why man afford one and
to see
40:44
Assange and what was discussed
an hour
40:47
later it is uncleared y mana
Ford would
40:49
have wanted to see Assange and
what was
40:52
discussed
40:54
original but the last meeting
is likely
40:56
to come under scrutiny change
but the
40:58
last apparent meeting is likely
to come
41:01
under scrutiny and then they
added a
41:03
paragraph in a series of tweets
41:05
WikiLeaks said Assange Amana
Ford had
41:07
not met Assange described the
story as a
41:09
hoax and then further according
to two
41:12
sources mana Ford returned to
the
41:14
embassy in 2015 the change
according to
41:17
the sources manna fort returned
to the
41:20
embassy in 2015
41:21
next change why manna fart -
farts he's
41:28
now known as manna fart why
manna fart
41:30
sought out Assange in 2013 is
unclear
41:33
the change
41:34
why manna fart might have
sought out
41:37
Assange in 2313 is unclear so
there you
41:40
have it total bullcrap it's
really just
41:45
whoo yeah it never happened and
this is
41:50
something that you could report
on I
41:52
mean this is reportable this
new sniffer
41:53
is great now they're changing
their
41:57
story to have to do the same
thing the
42:01
National Enquirer does they're
walking
42:03
back to story as fast as they
can and
42:05
that would be the technical
description
42:08
yes yeah they are so that was a
scam and
42:13
just staying on this whole any
collusion
42:16
vibe
42:17
CNN claims to have answers to
two of the
42:24
questions that Trump gave in
writing to
42:27
the Mueller team how they got
it who
42:30
knows and we are getting the
first
42:32
insight into how the president
responded
42:35
to Robert Muller's written
questions
42:36
which until now has been a big
unknown
42:39
so source is familiar with this
matter
42:41
tell CNN two things number one
the
42:44
president told the special
counsel that
42:45
Rogers not notice notice what's
going on
42:48
here did I not hear that say
that she
42:50
has these answers and then goes
into
42:52
according to sources let's play
that
42:54
again
42:55
and we are getting the first
insight
42:57
into how the president
responded to
42:59
Robert Muller's written
questions which
43:01
until now has been a big unknown
43:04
so sources familiar with this
matter
43:06
tell CNN
43:06
- that kg number one the
president told
43:09
the special counsel that Roger
stone did
43:11
not tell him about WikiLeaks
and number
43:14
two that the president was also
not told
43:16
about the 2016 Trump Tower
meeting
43:18
between his son campaign
officials and a
43:21
Russian lawyer who of course
promised
43:23
dirt on Hillary Clinton now the
closer
43:25
she answers were described to
us without
43:27
providing any direct quotes and
said
43:30
that the president made clear
he was
43:31
answering to the best of his
43:33
recollection we honor these two
points
43:35
here WikiLeaks and the Trump
Tower
43:37
meeting they are really key as
far as we
43:40
know to robert muller central
mission
43:42
when he started this
investigation which
43:44
is was there any collusion
between team
43:47
collusion and the russians and
if so how
43:49
high up does it go as well yeah
i don't
44:00
know what but it's interesting
but it's
44:03
interesting that she just made
very
44:04
clear that this is according to
sources
44:06
so so she hasn't seen this
according to
44:09
sources now listen what she
does next
44:11
and if so how high up doesn't
go as well
44:14
yeah how is this different what
we know
44:17
he's said here compared to what
he said
44:20
publicly without we're told
Brianna that
44:22
what the president said in
these written
44:24
answers is similar matches
actually what
44:28
he has said in public but of
course
44:29
there's a big difference these
written
44:31
answers would be subject to
criminal
44:33
charges if false that's why it
is our
44:36
understanding that the
president made
44:37
clear his answers were the best
of his
44:39
recollection which is standard
for
44:41
lawyers as a way to shield
their clients
44:43
lying
44:45
make sure that they're not in
any legal
44:47
trouble that's why you do that
to make
44:50
sure you're not in any legal
trouble
44:52
it's the same thing Dana Bash
looking
45:00
better these days actually I'm
not quite
45:02
sure what she's done I think
they
45:03
probably I think she's had her
45:05
programming change so when she
45:07
reconstitute herself as a human
form her
45:11
eyeballs are a little smaller
which
45:13
brings me to my bot story let
me see
45:17
actually now I'll do that later
it's a
45:19
part of OTG it's too lengthy uh
so I got
45:25
another couple of comparison
stories to
45:27
do okay I have the Russia
Ukraine
45:31
dust-up yes I actually have
already not
45:35
beat not going to mainstream
media I'm
45:37
going I'm going to kind of I'm
gonna do
45:38
the PBS compared to Democracy
Now
45:41
knowing PBS I don't think cares
that
45:43
much about the situation but
democracy
45:46
now is a big you know Pro for
some
45:49
reason pro-ukraine a pro you
know hate
45:53
Russia because they're it's all
anti
45:55
Russia and modern socialist and
we have
45:57
huge huge oil interest in
Ukraine all
46:01
the elites do john kerry joe
biden their
46:04
sons have had business there
was it who
46:08
put five billion in was that
Chevron I
46:10
don't remember let's play the
Democracy
46:13
Now version first Russia's
sending
46:16
advanced surface-to-air
missiles to the
46:18
Crimean Peninsula and it's
mounting
46:20
tensions with Ukraine the
escalation
46:22
comes after Russia's Navy
captured three
46:24
Ukrainian ships Sunday and
arrested
46:26
sailors near a narrow waterway
46:28
separating Russia from Crimea
which
46:30
Russia seized in the legally
annexed in
46:32
2014 on Tuesday Ukrainian press
46:35
interesting annexed I thought
was
46:37
annexed she said the next I
want to
46:44
point something out that
especially with
46:46
Democracy Now Russia never
seized it
46:49
they had a co she said
illegally see I
46:56
want to mention something
because I do
46:57
have a couple of reports from
her on
46:59
East Sahara and/or Western
Sahara I'm
47:03
sorry which is an independent
country
47:05
that they won't they won't let
become
47:07
its own independent entity and
she makes
47:09
a big stink about it in the
report when
47:11
you listen to her and and but
all these
47:13
people will do that is by
dialogues from
47:16
the left is why don't they let
them
47:19
choose what they want to what
country
47:20
what they went through for the
rulers
47:22
they go on and about that but
apparently
47:23
the crimeans couldn't can't do
that and
47:26
so now that's a bad thing you
can't do
47:28
that and here because of some
47:29
relationship to rush
47:31
well it's because of okc sahara
when
47:33
you're trying to get out of the
rule of
47:35
Moroccans we do with thatÃs
another
47:36
discussion I just want to point
out this
47:38
kind of nuttiness that you
could keep
47:40
hearing with this with this
reports from
47:43
these guys arrested sailors
near a
47:46
narrow waterways separating
Russia from
47:48
Crimea which Russia seized in
the
47:50
legally annexed in 2005 next
fourteen on
47:53
Tuesday ukrainian President
Petro
47:55
poroshenko said Ukraine faces
the
47:57
prospect of an all-out war with
Russia
48:00
soon everything these Russian
tanks were
48:03
not withdrawn yet they remained
there at
48:05
the ukraine-russia border and
that's why
48:07
I don't want anyone to think
that it's
48:09
entertainment or a game the
country is
48:11
under the threat of a
full-fledged war
48:13
with the Russian Federation hmm
now all
48:19
God you know full-fledged war
the
48:20
Russians it's kind of what you
could
48:23
walk away from his destiny we're
48:24
borderline war is though is the
message
48:27
to come away from with the war
and peace
48:29
report now from Democracy Now
so let's
48:33
listen to something this time
instead of
48:35
listening to the guy from
Ukraine the
48:37
other side of the story from
Putin and
48:40
maybe there's an explanation
that makes
48:42
a little more sense from PBS
Russia's
48:45
military announced today that
it is
48:47
sending more anti-aircraft
missiles to
48:50
occupied Crimea amid a new
crisis with
48:53
Ukraine Russian vessels seized 3
48:56
Ukrainian ships and 24 sailors
in the
48:59
Kerch Strait on Sunday claiming
they
49:02
illegally entered the area today
49:04
President Vladimir Putin
charged that
49:06
Ukraine's president provoked
the crisis
49:09
to help his reelection chances
he busted
49:12
you in the morning if you leave
now a
49:14
small incident occured that
martial law
49:16
was introduced in the country
this is
49:18
being done obviously in the
run-up to
49:20
the presidential polls an
absolutely
49:22
obvious fact now this is a
provocation
49:25
also today the Kremlin said it
still
49:27
expects mr. Putin to meet with
President
49:30
Trump at the g20 summit mr.
Trump
49:33
threatened yesterday to cancel
that
49:34
meeting over the Russian
actions against
49:37
Ukraine now because of the
martial law
49:42
if you think about it
49:44
you get everybody in a war
statute you
49:47
know it's not the word weird
I'm looking
49:49
for uh stature getting
everybody ready
49:52
for war yes what Bush used to
do when he
49:55
will try to get when he got
when he did
49:56
get reelected he we had weird
red alert
49:58
you know the terrorists are
gonna bomb
50:00
us again we gotta be on our
toes and our
50:03
toes because of red alert and
then the
50:05
election happened this was like
a scam
50:08
that Bush pulled on the
American public
50:10
yes and everyone called him out
for it
50:12
as well and so he said it
wasn't a scam
50:15
and this is what's going on I
think
50:16
that's what exactly what I
think Putin
50:18
is exactly right this guy
there's an
50:20
election coming up yeah this is
a great
50:22
way to go is to provoke an
incident put
50:25
martial law in place say that
we're
50:27
gonna be rated any minute by
all these
50:29
tanks and vote for me and vote
for me
50:33
here's the here's the report
from
50:35
Ukraine radio into a radio
Ukraine
50:38
international as far as I can
tell it is
50:41
not your typical USAID outfit
it's not
50:43
that's but funded by the State
50:45
Department although the
Ukrainian
50:47
government did cut its funding
50:48
significantly a year or two
back so
50:51
here's what they have to say
50:53
with a 2003 treaty between
Russia and
50:55
Ukraine designates the kurth's
trade and
50:58
this year of us of has shared
51:00
territorial waters but Moscow
has been
51:02
asserting greater control over
the area
51:04
since its annexation of the
Crimean
51:07
Peninsula in 2014
51:08
particularly since May this
year when it
51:11
opened a new 19 kilometers
linking the
51:14
peninsula to Russian territory
to the
51:16
east of the Kurd straight so
what I
51:18
heard is that there that one of
these
51:22
ships and I know if it's true
or not
51:23
it's Russian propaganda no
doubt that
51:26
one of these ships was ready to
blow up
51:28
the bridge and that's what they
bless
51:30
you and that's what this was
maybe about
51:32
but I like your explanation far
better
51:35
it makes nothing but sense be
afraid
51:38
vote for me
51:39
yeah be afraid vote for me I
like the
51:41
bridge concept but still sounds
bogus
51:45
yeah because that would cause a
problem
51:47
yeah a bridge is like a big
deal it's a
51:50
very big deal yeah just been
recently
51:52
open so but they may know the
dead be an
51:55
act that is an act of war I
would get
51:56
do what they made no and also
there's a
51:58
lot going on we got the Turk
stream you
52:00
know although that's not that
it's you
52:02
know in the Black Sea but this
just a
52:03
lot of activity happened there
right now
52:05
and I I'm sorry I still like
you I still
52:10
like your thesis the best that
that's
52:12
the one that makes sense when
is the
52:13
election exactly do you think
is next
52:15
month coming up now then we
should do
52:18
another scare in about ten days
do we
52:22
can get something going and
yeah so I
52:27
was listening is my last
Democracy Now
52:29
clip I'm listening to it
because they
52:30
had that you know they lead the
news
52:32
with the global warming stuff
because
52:34
that gives a me the opportunity
to go to
52:36
all these global warming gone
fishing go
52:39
to Paris was she this time
she's going
52:41
to Poland next once in Poland
it's it's
52:44
it's the Paris of Eastern
Europe yeah
52:47
Krakow probably a visit so but
I only
52:53
wanted to clip the because I was
52:54
listening to one of the YouTube
guys
52:56
some Nobel laureate going on
and he's
53:00
you know saying that the whole
thing is
53:02
kind of bogus for all kinds of
very
53:05
particular reasons and he never
53:06
mentioned the computer
simulation
53:08
problem that they have but he
did say
53:10
the one thing which was how
come every
53:12
time there's gonna be something
like
53:14
global warming everything is
going to be
53:17
bad nothing good is everything
why why
53:20
do something good there's a
change of
53:27
anything is there no chance that
53:29
anything good could come of it
and so I
53:32
I was that was in the back of
my mind as
53:34
I clip this the global warming
report
53:37
which only talks about all the
horrible
53:40
things that are gonna happen to
see a
53:42
global rise of 3.2 degrees
Celsius or
53:45
nearly 6 degrees Fahrenheit by
the end
53:47
of the century such a rise
would see
53:49
devastating droughts floods and
extreme
53:51
weather with increased sea
level crop
53:53
failures mass migration and
global
53:55
conflict the UN's calling for
new
53:57
investments in renewable energy
and for
53:59
governments to replace
subsidies on
54:01
fossil fuels with taxes to
discourage
54:03
their use the stark warning
came ahead
54:05
of the UN climate talks set for
cut we'd
54:08
say Poland
54:10
next month and I'll be there
reporting
54:11
live I'm Amy Goodman the war
and peace
54:14
report she did make that clear
that
54:16
she's gonna be oh yes so we're
gonna
54:19
have famine and drought by the
way
54:21
droughts and flooding there's a
very
54:22
interesting thing to happen at
the same
54:24
time droughts and flooding and
famine
54:29
and war we're all nobody
everything's a
54:33
baby green land old meltdown
and we're
54:36
gonna end up with the growing
seasons up
54:38
there or maybe they find gold
who knows
54:42
well Al Gore is on the warpath
for this
54:45
and I'm sure this is perfectly
time with
54:47
the polish adventure December
3rd and
54:50
4th or 3rd through the 4th he
will be
54:52
coming to you with 24 hours of
reality
54:56
the climate crisis signs all
around us
54:59
mistakes are high the healthy
future
55:02
hangs in the balance
55:03
tune in December 3rd and 4th
this former
55:05
Vice President Al Gore is
joined by
55:07
world leaders climate and
health experts
55:09
and entertainers in an
examination of
55:12
how the climate crisis
threatens our
55:14
health and communities and what
we can
55:16
do to solve this global
55:17
it's our responsibility to
protect our
55:19
body our planet our future 24
hours of
55:23
reality when we protect our
planet it'll
55:25
protect ourselves yeah baby 24
hour and
55:31
you know the entertainment is
going to
55:33
be the Goo Goo Dolls whoo-hoo I
mean you
55:36
got to tell me what this is
this event
55:37
in New York is this news
Madison Square
55:40
Garden special no it's PC event
is gonna
55:42
be on cable it's a video event
only as
55:45
far as I know online he did
this a
55:47
couple years ago he does this
from time
55:48
maybe it was even last year he
does this
55:51
24 hours of reality and gets
everyone
55:53
together and they'll talk about
it and
55:55
you know then the Goo Goo Dolls
will
55:56
perform now Rihanna wasn't
available
55:58
apparently so uh and I love the
title 24
56:02
hours of reality let's see what
the BBC
56:05
says about all this an orange
man bad
56:07
but you're on climate change as
well he
56:10
says he doesn't believe a
report done by
56:12
his own administration that
points to
56:14
some very serious economic
impacts this
56:17
is a bit of a pattern isn't it
I mean he
56:18
undercuts his own
administration all the
56:20
time why in constantly and it's
if this
56:24
is a president who comes to
office with
56:26
some very firmly held views
this is the
56:28
Reid I think his name is from
the hill
56:30
about immigration about climate
change
56:32
and about the way things used
to be in
56:34
America making America great
again and
56:36
the climate change report is a
part in
56:39
that interesting so it's
because he's
56:41
he's old obviously old
fashioned you
56:44
know so he wants you know his
own white
56:46
drinking fountain
56:47
I'm just wants to keep things
the way
56:49
they are you know it was good
you know
56:51
before climate change I'm just
going to
56:52
go nananana now it's not
happening
56:54
about immigration about climate
change
56:57
and about the way things used
to be in
56:59
America making America great
again and
57:01
the climate change report is a
part of
57:03
that I mean this is something
that there
57:05
is scientific consensus on
there's no
57:07
serious scientific opposition
to the
57:10
notion that there's no serious
57:12
opposition not various
scientific
57:16
opposition to the notion that
climate
57:19
change is real and getting
worse and
57:20
caused by humans but the
president is
57:23
not willing to bend his
preconceived
57:25
notions on that
57:28
[Music]
57:33
crazy the way they passed gloss
over the
57:36
30,000 scientists signed that
letter
57:39
it's not fantastic
57:40
I wonder or the people that
like myself
57:43
would keep complaining that hey
this is
57:45
based on computer simulations
which is
57:46
notoriously useless here's a
question so
57:50
let's just take let's take
Berkeley
57:54
California
57:55
had we implemented everything
necessary
57:58
in 2000 I put in the show notes
again
58:02
that report from 2000 in fact I
will
58:05
read it to you from Reuters
United
58:09
Nations a senior United Nations
and
58:11
environmental officials says
entire
58:12
nations could be wiped off the
face of
58:14
the earth by rate right rising
sea
58:16
levels if the global global
warming
58:19
trend is not reversed by the
year 2000
58:22
this is actually from 89 I'm
sorry yeah
58:24
the 89 report coastal flooding
and crop
58:26
failures would create an exodus
of eco
58:28
refugees threatening political
chaos
58:30
said no Brown director of the
New York
58:32
office of the UN Environment
Program
58:34
UNDP he said governments have a
10-year
58:37
window of opportunity to solve
the
58:39
greenhouse effect before it
goes beyond
58:41
human control and so they were
58:45
predicting disaster by 2000 yes
so what
58:49
would happen if we had
implemented
58:50
everything I mean how much
cooler would
58:54
it be would it be two degrees
to cooler
58:56
right now I don't know it's
cold out
58:57
today hey man
59:00
weather's not climate bro
meanwhile
59:02
France
59:03
Manu McCall he's taking this to
heart
59:07
and here's the strategy for
France as a
59:10
part of their strategy they are
going to
59:12
close 14 nuclear reactors by
2035 yeah
59:17
is he
59:18
cuckoo yeah this is nuts
59:21
I mean that's going to country
it's one
59:25
of the greatest systems in the
world for
59:27
grating energy it's been
flawless it
59:30
hasn't produced a bunch of bad
stuff
59:32
it's it's they're all
standardized so
59:35
all the reactors are the same
so they
59:37
don't cost that much to put up
or staff
59:39
they're not you know the
problem that we
59:41
have with our General Electric
is
59:43
somebody's Westinghouse some of
these
59:44
reactors we they're all custom
made you
59:47
need just you know everyone has
to be
59:49
trained on different reactors
it's a
59:51
disaster yeah although they're
more
59:53
efficient or they fancy or they
do more
59:55
more they develop more power
who knows
59:57
but the French system has been
59:59
absolutely the best and most
reliable in
1:00:02
the world and is clean energy
yep so why
1:00:07
are they doing this advice to
help the
1:00:11
new green country and into I
think
1:00:14
France is 80% nuke
electricity's for
1:00:18
everything yeah can't get that
from wind
1:00:21
but but well they at least may
have
1:00:25
natural gas the other
Netherlands is is
1:00:28
really on track to little gases
and
1:00:31
nearly as clean as nuke I know
but
1:00:33
they're not even gonna do that
they're
1:00:35
going to do wind and solar and
man
1:00:38
they're gonna be it's gonna be
tough to
1:00:40
read at night in in Pitt and
France
1:00:42
without electricity I also
don't really
1:00:47
think that he's gonna go
through with
1:00:48
that it just doesn't seem well
1:00:50
talk is cheap yeah exactly and
with that
1:00:52
talk I'd like to thank you for
your
1:00:54
courage and say in the morning
to you
1:00:55
the man who put the C in
climate change
1:00:58
on c-deck
1:01:00
well i in the morning to you
and mr.
1:01:03
adam curry also in the morn
ellis ships
1:01:05
at the scene the boots on the
ground the
1:01:07
feet in the air in the subs in
the water
1:01:08
in the morning all the games
and all the
1:01:09
nights out there in the morning
to our
1:01:11
troll room thank you for
hanging in
1:01:12
there this morning and it was
good to
1:01:14
have you and I didn't look at
you for
1:01:16
troubleshooting this morning
trolls that
1:01:18
would have made me mad but as
always we
1:01:21
love no agendas dream.com
1:01:24
also a big in the morning -
Martin
1:01:25
jayjay Martin brought us the
artwork for
1:01:28
episode 1089 the title of that
was
1:01:30
puppet mouth and this was
actually we've
1:01:34
looked for quite a while to see
what we
1:01:35
wanted to choose and this of
course was
1:01:37
a 33 squared broadcast and he
had the I
1:01:42
don't even know if that was a
photo
1:01:44
montage if we went outside and
took a
1:01:46
yellow wax crayon and wrote no
agenda 33
1:01:50
times 33 on the pavement but it
1:01:52
look good this is a font I've
seen it oh
1:01:54
it's the font well it looked
really good
1:01:56
and we appreciate that Martin
JJ who was
1:01:59
also running at the backup
recording
1:02:00
system for today hopefully just
in case
1:02:02
anything goes wrong and we
always love
1:02:05
when our artists who are part
of our
1:02:07
value network upload something
cool for
1:02:09
us to use for the show it makes
a big
1:02:11
difference an apple will be the
first to
1:02:13
admit that they love about
putting us in
1:02:17
the new and Newton noteworthy
that first
1:02:19
of all we're getting the
downloads or
1:02:21
the what however they measure
that the
1:02:22
feed accesses but also it makes
the page
1:02:25
pretty it changes that
something they
1:02:28
want to portray to their
customer and it
1:02:30
works people click and then we
spread
1:02:33
the word people I think are
being
1:02:36
executive and associate
executive
1:02:38
producers for the show 1090 yes
with no
1:02:41
agenda our generator calms
let's look at
1:02:43
it
1:02:44
Duke Archduke Dwayne Melanson
and tie
1:02:47
guard oregan 33333 we haven't
heard from
1:02:50
him for a while yeah forgive me
pod
1:02:53
father and jcd spend several
months
1:02:55
since my last donation analysis
lately
1:02:57
particularly on topics like
Kanye and
1:03:00
the midterms has been excellent
thank
1:03:02
you
1:03:02
he needs an F Cancer Karma for
his
1:03:05
brother-in-law who just had
major
1:03:06
surgery for Stage four nasal
cancer
1:03:08
please okay absolutely
1:03:12
[Applause]
1:03:15
you've got karma yeah nasal
cancer crazy
1:03:21
yeah not good
1:03:23
anonymous comes in something
over here
1:03:27
anonymous with that 202 dollars
and two
1:03:30
cents please keep this
anonymous and
1:03:33
he's gonna be a knight so would
be
1:03:34
knighted and he's got a
birthday call
1:03:36
out to UM sir he's got his
entitle ster
1:03:41
foamer Brahmin of the tick is
that right
1:03:45
let me see seventh oh this is
not well
1:03:49
on a second holding odd what's
going on
1:03:53
here it says when you said a
note you
1:03:59
know this how this is the check
that
1:04:01
came in but it we all know this
came in
1:04:04
late this is down lower sorry
okay my my
1:04:07
just getting continued
1:04:08
anonymous thing okay give me
anonymous I
1:04:10
believe this donation makes me
a knight
1:04:11
accounting below if my math is
right now
1:04:13
they get the knighting I would
like to
1:04:14
be serf foamer Brahmin of the
technique
1:04:17
of the hut Oh too hot chippy
loop that's
1:04:20
how hatchapee for the round
table please
1:04:24
add hobo stew and fortified
wine okay
1:04:28
North Korean lady Louie Louie
would be
1:04:31
great too I think he means the
North
1:04:34
Korean this North Korean lady
say Louie
1:04:36
Louie I don't think so I think
I know
1:04:37
what he's talking about
1:04:38
okay would be great to and
karma for all
1:04:40
loving light from the Jack
London Square
1:04:43
alright thank you very much
anonymous
1:04:45
looking forward to that
celebratory
1:04:47
knighting later on
1:04:49
[Music]
1:04:59
[Music]
1:05:10
[Music]
1:05:12
you've got karma we've got
anything you
1:05:17
want he'll be the associate
executive
1:05:21
producer James Gilligan will be
another
1:05:24
one 201 dollars and he says
thank you
1:05:27
for the greatest podcast I
appreciate
1:05:30
all the work you do to cut
through all
1:05:31
the crap we hear in the news
keep up the
1:05:33
excellent work can I get a jobs
karma
1:05:36
from my smoking-hot wife Lisa
and a
1:05:40
Fullmer doesn't mean a foamer
1:05:43
I think fool Murray's talked
about a
1:05:45
nail mmm can I get a jobs comma
from my
1:05:51
smoking-hot wife Lisa and a
foamer
1:05:54
I think he means emitted by I
think he
1:05:58
needs a foamer we're gonna give
him a
1:06:02
foamer anyway jobs jobs and
jobs let's
1:06:11
vote for job
1:06:14
you've got karma Jean de santis
in Fort
1:06:20
Pierce Florida comes in with
$200 ITM
1:06:23
and thank you for all you do
I've been
1:06:24
feeling quite lost for some
time but for
1:06:27
six hours a week I know where I
belong
1:06:29
requesting to try out a good
dose of
1:06:31
all-purpose Karma thank you for
your
1:06:33
courage thank you for your
courage here
1:06:35
you go it always works you've
got karma
1:06:38
[Music]
1:06:41
and last on our list is Bret
Winslow
1:06:45
from Dodgeville Wisconsin John I
1:06:48
apologize for spelling grammar
mistakes
1:06:50
I'm Dyslexic and I can do what
I can do
1:06:52
I got what I got
1:06:53
longtime listener dude named
Ben here
1:06:55
I've been monthly doing it for
a long
1:06:56
time I was one was at $10 for a
while
1:06:59
and then I left my job to try
to get out
1:07:00
of the DnB business and take
over the
1:07:03
family farm I put my monthly
1:07:05
contribution down to five well
even
1:07:07
though I worked my butt off the
farming
1:07:09
dream just didn't work out for
me which
1:07:10
is the case for a lot of others
nine
1:07:13
back working in a DnB
consulting gig
1:07:15
which I don't especially like
can I get
1:07:18
some jobs karmas I'm trying to
find
1:07:20
myself something a little more
work-life
1:07:22
balance as they say back in the
eighties
1:07:24
nineties back in the 90s back
in the 90s
1:07:27
I first started watching John
and the
1:07:29
show silicon spin being a geeky
DnB even
1:07:32
in high school what does D&B
mean dude
1:07:35
named Ben dude named Ben George
man bad
1:07:42
I really I never really watched
MTV sad
1:07:48
to say however followed John -
who sure
1:07:51
would not be named online
network then
1:07:53
John himself hit me in the
mouth with
1:07:54
one of his many shameless plugs
I feel
1:07:56
like a douchebag for not having
donated
1:07:57
more than my small monthly
contribution
1:07:59
over the years not sure if it
counts as
1:08:01
being a douchebag just to be
sure can I
1:08:04
get a D dishing I think we can
arrange
1:08:06
for that that should be no
problem
1:08:09
you've been deduced first a $5
1:08:13
subscription you out of the
douchebag
1:08:17
category hell yeah hell yeah
good work
1:08:20
you're both or opened my eyes
to what's
1:08:21
really going on in the medial
and both
1:08:23
dimensions I can't even stand
to listen
1:08:25
to Wisconsin Public Radio
anymore I
1:08:27
stopped my contribution to that
1:08:28
organization story figured I
might as
1:08:30
well give it to you guys for
Christmas I
1:08:32
loved as a simulation theory
however my
1:08:34
understanding of the simulation
1:08:35
hypotheses if that's true we
would both
1:08:37
we would all be BOTS non player
1:08:40
characters in the system the
idea that
1:08:42
if a simulation gets to a
really high
1:08:43
level the artificial characters
1:08:44
themselves would not be able to
see
1:08:46
watches a lot of Star Trek will
never be
1:08:48
able to tell they are
artificial is it
1:08:49
possible we were running into
characters
1:08:51
logged in from some outside now
1:08:52
simulated universe non-electric
next
1:08:55
generation episode that deals
with a
1:08:56
similar idea when one of the
characters
1:08:59
in the holodeck realized he's
in a
1:09:00
simulation that tricks the crew
with his
1:09:02
own hack and tries to take over
this
1:09:04
ship no no I I can tell you
real quick
1:09:09
I believe the simulation is
possibly
1:09:12
real but the simulation runs
for each of
1:09:14
us so you are actually yes
right now you
1:09:18
in my simulation you're a bot
of you and
1:09:20
that bot of you does the same
thing all
1:09:24
the time but you have a
different bot
1:09:27
for me me in her simulation
yeah okay
1:09:36
how can you argue with Elon
Musk bro
1:09:39
Elon Musk there's another
reason this
1:09:42
short is stock right and we
want to
1:09:45
thank our executive producer and
1:09:47
associate executive producers
for
1:09:48
supporting the program we
really work
1:09:51
hard on it we know a lot of
people get
1:09:53
benefit and that that gets me
up in the
1:09:55
morning to know that people
feel better
1:09:57
about the just being inundated
with all
1:10:00
of this crap and especially on
social
1:10:02
media so it's very very painful
for
1:10:04
everybody and we tried to give
you some
1:10:06
solace and this keeps us going
1:10:07
appreciate it we'll be thanking
more
1:10:08
people $50 and above in our
second
1:10:10
segment and another program I
will be
1:10:12
coming to you from Chicago on
Sunday
1:10:15
vollrath
1:10:16
org
1:10:18
and hey and you know the lots
more for
1:10:20
you to propagate to everybody
in your
1:10:22
network our formula is this we
go out
1:10:26
for your people in the mouth
1:10:28
[Applause]
1:10:35
orange man bad
1:10:37
[Music]
1:10:43
hey I got a lot of social
justice
1:10:46
warrior stuff for some not not
clips
1:10:48
necessarily but just some
you'll just go
1:10:50
through a couple stories okay
white
1:10:53
liberals according to research
from Yale
1:10:55
present themselves as less
competent in
1:10:58
interactions with African
Americans they
1:11:01
use simpler language this is
one of
1:11:06
those reports like it's
actually it's
1:11:07
Yale at the Yale School of
Management
1:11:09
and they have not published
this study
1:11:11
yet but they did and it's going
to be in
1:11:13
the Journal of Personality and
Social
1:11:15
Psychology while many previous
studies
1:11:19
have examined how people who
hold racial
1:11:21
bias have in multi racial
settings few
1:11:23
have studied how whites who are
more
1:11:26
well intentioned interact with
people of
1:11:28
other races there's less work
that
1:11:30
explores how well-intentioned
White's
1:11:32
try to get along with racial
minorities
1:11:34
but now they have this and they
and it
1:11:37
turns out for a right-wing
let's just
1:11:39
call them Republicans although
they have
1:11:42
not there's less data of them
speaking
1:11:45
African Americans which is
flooded by
1:11:48
itself there seems to be no
difference
1:11:52
in how they address a group
that is
1:11:54
mainly made up of African
Americans but
1:11:57
white liberals as the study
proclaims
1:12:01
tend to downplay their own
verbal
1:12:04
competence in exchanges with
racial
1:12:06
minorities compared to other
white
1:12:08
Americans act in such exchanges
rut row
1:12:12
I believe they're you're
talking to them
1:12:17
like they're kids to a degree I
think
1:12:20
yeah it's simplifying the
language yeah
1:12:22
cuz you know they've mean way
you're
1:12:24
dumb so I member superior white
liberals
1:12:26
i'ma talk to you like you're
the adult I
1:12:29
really actually think you are
yes that's
1:12:31
great from you yeah they're
from Yale so
1:12:37
you can actually talk with a
bit of this
1:12:41
in Darien Connecticut schools
are now
1:12:45
banning I didn't know this was
a thing
1:12:46
parents in the lunchroom school
1:12:49
lunchrooms
1:12:49
I did not know this but it's
see it
1:12:52
apparently these days lots of
parents
1:12:55
go to see their kids during
lunch break
1:12:58
at the school and hang out with
him what
1:13:01
yeah the helicopter parent what
yes I
1:13:04
would be mortified when I was a
kid if
1:13:08
my parents showed up at the
school lunch
1:13:10
room oh well interestingly that
probably
1:13:13
get beat up
1:13:14
well now it's the parent old
days now
1:13:17
it's the parents who are upset
they're
1:13:20
they're really upset that they
can't
1:13:22
they can't hear Terry Steadman
a parent
1:13:25
told the board she was shocked
and
1:13:27
driven to tears by the news to
just ban
1:13:30
parents from the lunchroom
which is
1:13:31
effectively what you're doing
with this
1:13:33
email I don't think it's right
I don't
1:13:35
think it's in the spirit of a
1:13:36
collaborative environment god
this is I
1:13:42
didn't know it was a thing I
feels like
1:13:45
never heard of such a thing
1:13:46
this is all news to me it feels
like a
1:13:48
punch in the gut parent
Jessica's Jew
1:13:51
whose oldest child is in the
first grade
1:13:53
said in an interview I chose
the town
1:13:55
for the schools I'm so
frustrated the
1:13:57
schools don't want me there
they don't
1:14:04
well maybe these kids maybe
they love it
1:14:07
I don't know everything's
different I
1:14:09
don't have kids of that age
let's keep
1:14:12
going Florida police chief gets
three
1:14:15
years for plot to frame black
people for
1:14:17
crimes and the reason I brought
this
1:14:21
story is you hear the story and
you
1:14:24
think wow that's so racist of
course the
1:14:28
police chief is black that
makes it
1:14:37
Australians on all official
government
1:14:41
forms they've finally figured
it out
1:14:43
they want to be as inclusive as
possible
1:14:45
and Australians now will be
able to
1:14:49
choose from multiple gender
labels under
1:14:52
a new proposal for all of their
1:14:54
governmental paperwork
1:14:57
I should mention 33 different
gender
1:15:00
labels third first of all magic
1:15:04
but Wow 33 and I wish I was 16
but 33
1:15:09
makes more sense in the scheme
of things
1:15:11
and then finally from the
United Kingdom
1:15:14
of Gitmo nation East the BFI
the British
1:15:17
Film Institute who fund a lot
of a lot
1:15:22
of theatrical work movies but I
think
1:15:24
also it's probably fun like the
Downton
1:15:26
Abbey and that kind of stuff
1:15:28
they will withhold funding for
any a
1:15:32
movie that tries to make
villains scary
1:15:36
with the scarred faces no
longer can
1:15:40
villains have scarred faces
because
1:15:42
people with scarred faces are
hurt by
1:15:45
this brother what about a
missing nose
1:15:52
is that okay
1:15:53
oh no no yeah if you look at
all the you
1:15:57
know this if you think about
the famous
1:15:59
villains actually want to bring
up this
1:16:03
article well of course
1:16:06
Blofeld James Bond's archenemy
big scar
1:16:09
we have Freddy Krueger scarred
we have
1:16:13
well Star Wars would even have
scarred
1:16:16
villains and of course we had
the
1:16:17
villain in in the Lion King
whose name
1:16:22
was actually scar that also
should be
1:16:24
foreboding I guess it's a little
1:16:27
overboard people just a little
yeah
1:16:32
before social media we didn't
have all
1:16:35
these problems know what we did
we
1:16:37
probably had them but we didn't
know oh
1:16:40
you know but if it's not
discussed in a
1:16:43
broad manner on you know and
these yeah
1:16:45
we didn't network effect no one
cares
1:16:47
otherwise yeah all right well I
get the
1:16:49
story of the day I think okay
cuz he's
1:16:52
got a never been all bent out
of shape
1:16:54
but it wasn't played by the bag
I'm
1:16:56
stunned this wasn't played by
the
1:16:57
mainstream this is Kushner to
get
1:17:00
Mexico's highest honor Mexico
will
1:17:03
bestow Mexico is highest honor
for
1:17:06
foreigners on Jared Kushner
president
1:17:09
Trump's son-in-law and senior
advisor
1:17:11
when Kushner arrives for the
g20 talks
1:17:13
in Argentina the move to scorn
from
1:17:16
prominent
1:17:17
Mexicans including actor Gael
Garcia
1:17:19
Bernal who called the decision
to award
1:17:21
the Aztec Eagle tremendously
shameful
1:17:25
previous winners include Nelson
Mandela
1:17:27
and the Nobel prize-winning
novelist
1:17:29
Gabriel Garcia Marquez all
right I just
1:17:33
wanted a guy goes arrghh by
this story
1:17:35
because the way you know it's
just one
1:17:36
of these bullcrap things you
get you
1:17:38
know you get awards for being
who you
1:17:40
are for some reason I don't
know why
1:17:41
they're giving it to him but
it's not
1:17:46
like a bunch of Pulitzer or a
Nobel
1:17:48
Prize winner said the only
people to get
1:17:50
it I'm gonna read it some of
the people
1:17:51
to get well he's a he's an
advisor just
1:17:55
so you know she that's what she
said she
1:17:57
said he's an advisor no I I'm
sorry I
1:17:59
didn't catch that yes that's
what she
1:18:01
said she said he's an advisor I
think
1:18:04
she meant advise nerd she
doesn't know
1:18:06
how to pronounce things Melinda
Gates
1:18:11
okay she guy was she getting it
what'd
1:18:14
she do for sleeping with Bill
Gates I
1:18:19
think you deserve a
Presidential Medal
1:18:21
of Honor
1:18:21
[Music]
1:18:24
hurry calm Rick Bayless who's
that Rick
1:18:31
Bayless is a TV cook that
specializes in
1:18:36
cooking Mexican cuisine I can't
believe
1:18:38
MSNBC should run with this
story you can
1:18:40
do this whole thing also
previously
1:18:42
awarded this team duh this team
award
1:18:45
the TV chef the chef
1:18:48
they could make a great story
out of
1:18:50
this here's one that you'll
like Bono
1:18:54
you mean bono bono bono he got
one
1:19:05
meanwhile all the president's
pretty
1:19:07
much got one Walt Disney got
one in 1943
1:19:11
Oh various politicians it's
more like an
1:19:15
entertainment prize than it does
1:19:17
anything I don't know there's
some
1:19:18
people I never heard of
Eisenhower got
1:19:20
one Rafael Trujillo which is a
nasty
1:19:24
dictator got one it's just uh
well we
1:19:28
saw the kings and queens of the
1:19:30
Netherlands really
1:19:31
it up the green Beatrix got one
King
1:19:33
willem-alexander got one Maxima
got one
1:19:37
Wow the Queen - yeah they'd
load it up
1:19:40
with the Netherlands anyway I
could go
1:19:43
on with these people nor King
Olaf of
1:19:45
Norway got one anyways just
well who
1:19:50
knows why find out what the
criteria is
1:19:52
maybe we can with me we can get
1:19:53
ourselves I think it's just I
don't know
1:19:55
if there is any criteria it's
let me
1:19:59
read from the thing it just as
the order
1:20:02
of the Aztec Eagle is the
largest
1:20:05
Mexican order awarded to
foreigners in
1:20:07
the country it was created in
1933 as a
1:20:11
reward to the services given to
Mexico
1:20:14
or humankind by foreigners it
1:20:18
corresponds to similar
distinctions
1:20:20
giving the Mexican citizens
such as the
1:20:22
Khan declaración Miguel
Hidalgo or those
1:20:26
other one it's given by the
Office of
1:20:29
the Foreign Minister on the
instructions
1:20:31
of a council established for
the purpose
1:20:33
headed by the president so in
other
1:20:35
words it's like though Awards
you give
1:20:38
away when your magazine top 10
you know
1:20:40
with the best podcast in the
universe
1:20:43
and we could have a lunch we
could have
1:20:45
a lunch and then pick and just
start
1:20:46
giving these awards out but we
already
1:20:48
have you know we have the
knighthood
1:20:49
thing which is probably more
and we'll
1:20:52
make that guy a knight on the
spot I
1:20:54
don't know about okay there's
something
1:20:58
that that we need to play a
clip of
1:21:01
we've talked about Jeffrey
Epstein a lot
1:21:04
on the show and he has an
island and
1:21:07
it's known that there's a lot
of mayo
1:21:09
island possibly possibly
underage girls
1:21:13
there and he has his private
plane
1:21:16
what's it called his airplane
is dubbed
1:21:22
the Lolita Express yeah here's
the thing
1:21:26
with the Lolita Express Jeffrey
Epstein
1:21:28
has had Bill Clinton on that
Lolita
1:21:31
Express a lot that there's
flight logs
1:21:33
even without President
Clinton's Secret
1:21:38
Service detail Donald Trump has
also
1:21:40
been on the Lolita Express
1:21:43
to Peto island so has alan
dershowitz
1:21:46
has also been on the lolita
express but
1:21:49
and and in 2008 exclusive club
in 2008
1:21:53
is ahead hedge fund guy jet and
he lives
1:21:56
in Palm Beach yeah what Palm
Beach
1:21:59
Florida
1:22:00
yeah he basically got off for
the slap
1:22:03
on the wrist for being a sex
offender
1:22:05
and I have not looked into the
case and
1:22:08
how that slap on the wrist kind
of took
1:22:11
place but now many of these
girls who at
1:22:15
the time were 14 15 years old
are
1:22:17
speaking out and the Miami
Herald has
1:22:20
done a nice expose this is a
piece from
1:22:23
a video they published along
with it the
1:22:26
whole video is 12 minutes I got
a minute
1:22:27
and a half for you I think
you'll like
1:22:29
it on June 30th 2008 Jeffrey
Epstein a
1:22:32
Palm Beach multi-millionaire
hedge fund
1:22:35
manager received what might
have been
1:22:37
the most lenient plea deal for
a serial
1:22:39
sex offender in US history the
Miami
1:22:42
Herald identified over 60 of
his victims
1:22:44
just young middle and high
school girls
1:22:46
at the time of the abuse more
than a
1:22:48
decade later several of them
are talking
1:22:50
for the first time about how
they were
1:22:52
molested by Epstein and believe
they
1:22:54
were betrayed by the very
prosecutors
1:22:56
who were supposed to hold
Epstein
1:22:58
accountable one child would be
lord over
1:23:01
would be paid substantial sums
of money
1:23:05
would be offered the further
inducement
1:23:07
of being paid a bounty for
anybody else
1:23:11
that she was able to bring to
Epstein a
1:23:14
network developed where many
young girls
1:23:18
in the same kinds of
circumstance wound
1:23:21
up being victimized by the time
I was 16
1:23:24
I brought him up to 75 girls
all the
1:23:28
ages of you know 14 15 16
people going
1:23:31
from eighth grade to ninth
grade at just
1:23:33
school parties that's where I
would
1:23:36
recruit him from all Jeffrey
cared about
1:23:37
was go find me more girls his
appetite
1:23:41
was insatiable he couldn't stop
if he
1:23:44
wanted new fresh young faces
every
1:23:46
single day the sheer volume of
girls the
1:23:50
frequency sometimes
1:23:52
roll were many in the same day
the age
1:23:54
of the girls in some cases
there were
1:23:57
victims that didn't know each
other had
1:23:59
never met each other but they
had a
1:24:01
basically the same story I
remember
1:24:04
there was a staircase and it
was like
1:24:08
kind of like a spiral almost
and she
1:24:10
brings us up the stairs and it
was like
1:24:12
spiral stairs he walked into
his bedroom
1:24:14
around his bed and - almost
like a very
1:24:18
little Hall and then it was
another door
1:24:20
and that's where everything
would happen
1:24:22
was in his bathroom he would
have a
1:24:25
dresser and it was filled with
like the
1:24:28
first drawer was lotion and
then like
1:24:30
the third drawer down was like
sex toys
1:24:32
and it just goes on from there
yeah
1:24:35
really I mean hundreds of girls
hunters
1:24:39
they have lists of hundreds of
girls if
1:24:42
you read the story these were
these were
1:24:46
girls who were mainly they got
200 bucks
1:24:48
but these girls were their
parents were
1:24:50
in trailer part they live in
trailer
1:24:52
parks okay their parents were
on drugs
1:24:54
they were some of them were just
1:24:56
homeless they were taken
advantage of by
1:24:59
this guy in dad this guy was a
mate this
1:25:03
guy was yeah you have to say
seventy
1:25:05
five or hundreds I mean what
what is the
1:25:08
point on his what I'm asking
what does
1:25:12
do you think his point is and
what's his
1:25:13
point he borders easily
boarding heaven
1:25:17
he can't screw the same girl
twice I
1:25:19
mean it doesn't make any sense
normal
1:25:21
person no but they clearly he's
ill and
1:25:24
needs to be locked up in an
institution
1:25:27
and given one of those those
fancy
1:25:29
lobotomies we do these days
with the
1:25:31
ultrasound up or hedge fund
manager I
1:25:33
don't know same thing no I find
it very
1:25:37
disturbing and how did this
happen that
1:25:40
he that he just kind of skipped
off with
1:25:43
no no jail time or anything
it's the
1:25:45
same thing as the pedophile
rings that
1:25:47
you're always moaning about in
Europe
1:25:49
that apparently go right into
the right
1:25:52
up into the judicial yeah and
you'll be
1:25:55
you'll be pleased to know that
this
1:25:57
former detective who just
published a
1:26:00
book called The Lost Boys of
bird Island
1:26:03
a shocking expose
1:26:05
within the heart of the NP
government on
1:26:09
his NP stand for what the hell
was this
1:26:14
mmm so anyway he was uh here's
the his
1:26:18
the headline published his book
exposing
1:26:20
high-level government pedophile
ring
1:26:22
shot in the head days later I
hate it
1:26:27
when that happens
1:26:29
yeah you see just what uh what
is Burt I
1:26:33
do want to see what what
government was
1:26:35
this I was nothing control room
and help
1:26:40
me out I can't see it MP and P
yeah I
1:26:44
have no idea hmm
1:26:49
do a little odd in South Africa
oh wow
1:26:54
yeah the book details the
corruption
1:26:58
within the last apartheid
government of
1:27:00
South Africa and implicated
officials
1:27:03
all the way to the top how high
does it
1:27:05
go including defense minister
Magnus
1:27:08
Milan and the Minister of
Environmental
1:27:10
Affairs John Wiley before his
death the
1:27:13
author Minnie announced that he
was
1:27:15
approached by many more people
with even
1:27:17
more damning evidence which he
plans to
1:27:19
reveal in a sequel of the book
however
1:27:20
that's he died maybe he should
have just
1:27:24
shut up about the sequel yeah
1:27:26
well that's what's happening in
that
1:27:28
first book let's kill this guy
yeah oh
1:27:31
yeah that's what's happening -
well not
1:27:34
exactly the same but at this
Jerome
1:27:37
Corsi guy who's now being
hassled by the
1:27:40
the Mueller team oh is that
stones buddy
1:27:45
yeah of course he's been around
yeah
1:27:47
I've seen him on Alex Jones in
the past
1:27:49
although not recently I haven't
really
1:27:51
been watching but he do coast
to coast
1:27:54
and he was writer he's he's 72
he's a
1:27:58
little older and and he's
writing - I
1:28:01
think he just published a book
about the
1:28:03
deep state okay let's get that
guy cuz
1:28:08
Mueller is all over that maybe
one day
1:28:11
it'll all come out and we'll
really know
1:28:12
what Mueller's role was just
going back
1:28:15
to being hired - was it just
1:28:18
before 911 then Obama comes in
and uh
1:28:21
well you know we need you to
stay for an
1:28:23
extra two years yeah but you
could
1:28:25
there's a 10 year term limit I
will
1:28:27
figure that out
1:28:28
we'll just scrub something over
here
1:28:30
make that work he's so tied into
1:28:32
everything and everybody maybe
one day
1:28:36
we'll find out maybe now the
whole thing
1:28:40
is corrupt yeah this corruption
lurks
1:28:45
yes so I'm surprised that I'm
getting
1:28:49
that we're even talking what
ask yeah
1:28:53
why what do you see why do I
say such
1:28:55
why do you say this John
because my
1:28:57
browser the old might be if I
try to do
1:29:00
anything are you going on
Google to look
1:29:02
up something which I've been
trying to
1:29:03
do here you got frozen or Bing
or any of
1:29:07
them I get now is no you got no
good
1:29:08
internet connection reboot is
what you
1:29:11
always tell me no internet
connection if
1:29:18
I'm talking to you well that's
clearly
1:29:20
it's something with your
browser which
1:29:22
always it are you using
1:29:23
brave no hmm I use brave on the
other
1:29:27
machine uh here hold on let me
help ya
1:29:39
you try that and meanwhile I'm
going to
1:29:41
give you an update the latest
on the e
1:29:44
scooters and I do want to
reiterate I am
1:29:47
very much for the e scooter
revolution
1:29:49
did you balancing one there
pretty cool
1:29:53
so it doesn't fall over right
doesn't
1:29:56
fall over it's got big giant
tires no I
1:29:59
haven't seen that one's like a
Segway
1:30:01
only front and back wheels no I
have not
1:30:05
seen that it looks pretty cool
yeah well
1:30:08
it it's all cool as long as
people drive
1:30:11
it not on the sidewalk and as
long as
1:30:13
they don't throw these things
all over
1:30:14
the place
1:30:15
I mean it's it's there's more
of these
1:30:18
ah here on Second Street
downtown you
1:30:21
know it got trees and you know
they made
1:30:23
a nice little downtown area
there's more
1:30:26
of these things than trees I
mean it
1:30:28
overpowers the landscape
1:30:30
and it's hurting people so in
the past
1:30:33
six or seven months we've seen
more than
1:30:35
a hundred cities in the US get
these
1:30:37
rentable ductless motorized
scooters and
1:30:40
we're seeing a lot of accidents
rack up
1:30:43
in emergency rooms over the
past few
1:30:46
weeks I've been talking to
doctors in
1:30:48
emergency rooms in several
major cities
1:30:50
and they say they're seeing the
rate of
1:30:53
these accidents happen anywhere
from
1:30:56
maybe 10 a month to 10 a day
well I've
1:30:58
heard all sorts of stories a
lot of
1:31:01
people they just kind of lose
control
1:31:03
the scooter because they don't
quite
1:31:04
know what they're doing and
other
1:31:06
incidents I've heard is that
people's
1:31:08
brakes haven't worked I've also
heard
1:31:11
incidents where they push on the
1:31:13
throttle and the scooter just
keeps
1:31:15
going yeah but hold on that's
the
1:31:17
desired result push on the
throttle and
1:31:20
it just keeps on going I don't
know who
1:31:22
you talk to
1:31:22
weird incidents where they push
on the
1:31:24
throttle and the scooter just
keeps
1:31:26
going a lot of doctors are
saying most
1:31:29
of the injuries they see coming
in are
1:31:30
people without helmets a lot of
people
1:31:33
renting the scooters are
tourists
1:31:35
they're not traveling with
helmets or
1:31:36
people just going about their
day-to-day
1:31:38
lives they're not carrying
around the
1:31:39
helmet and this is contributing
to a lot
1:31:42
of head injuries that's part of
the
1:31:44
problem with the scooters
there's
1:31:45
different laws in different
states
1:31:46
different cities so people
don't really
1:31:48
know what the rules are some
states
1:31:51
require helmets some don't in
California
1:31:54
it used to be the law that
everyone had
1:31:56
to wear a helmet but one of the
scooter
1:31:58
companies Birds back to bill to
get that
1:32:01
helmet requirement taken out
and so
1:32:03
starting January people won't
have to
1:32:05
wear helmets in California so
when you
1:32:07
sign up to rent one of these
scooters
1:32:09
you have to click through
agreements in
1:32:12
the app and basically those
agreements
1:32:14
are taking on full
responsibility for
1:32:18
what happens with that scooter
so it
1:32:19
absolves the suit scooter
companies of
1:32:21
any responsibility or liability
so if
1:32:25
you get hurt it's your fault
not the
1:32:26
company that's the part I like
the best
1:32:30
it's the old EULA trick so when
when you
1:32:33
go up to the scooter you want
to ride
1:32:35
then you know you have to have
the app
1:32:36
and then you you say okay I'm
gonna
1:32:39
I haven't sign it off you sign
off you
1:32:41
sign off on everything even if
the thing
1:32:42
is defective you've it blows up
right on
1:32:45
here which I'm waiting for yeah
you know
1:32:50
the old EULA trick yeah so it's
kind of
1:32:54
gets what went or some judge
have some
1:32:57
balls
1:32:57
yeah and throw that whole thing
out yeah
1:33:01
unless you can prove someone
reread it
1:33:04
and if there's any option so I
buy some
1:33:06
software and I've already paid
my money
1:33:11
I pay my money for the software
and I'm
1:33:13
gonna not I don't like this you
LeSueur
1:33:15
say no I don't accept it the
software
1:33:17
won't work
1:33:19
no that's correct in many cases
yeah you
1:33:22
can't get any further it'll say
great
1:33:23
you just can't use the software
correct
1:33:25
what about my money yeah I know
here
1:33:30
there's another issue in that
regard and
1:33:32
something Apple is doing and
there's
1:33:35
lawsuits I think even a
class-action
1:33:36
lawsuit is they do all kinds of
tricks
1:33:41
to not let you repair your Apple
1:33:46
products outside of official
official
1:33:50
Apple channels which is kind of
it's
1:33:53
it's a another side of that
coin it's
1:33:55
like hey I bought this I owned
this I
1:33:56
should be able to do whatever I
want
1:33:58
with it certainly if
something's broken
1:34:00
I should be able to go to
someone who
1:34:01
can repair it but they make that
1:34:03
impossible you know if you try
to if you
1:34:06
try to open this then that gets
disables
1:34:08
like booby-trap basically and
there's a
1:34:10
what is it right of first
ownership or
1:34:13
there's some some basic law
that says
1:34:16
you know you should have the
right to
1:34:18
repair your device yeah you
should well
1:34:24
I bought it yeah that's
unfortunately
1:34:28
that's not how it works but
everybody in
1:34:31
Congress is a lawyer so that's
why we
1:34:32
get stuff like this well I tell
you I
1:34:35
saw it I was taking my
dry-cleaning to a
1:34:37
kathy's and on the third and
and right
1:34:41
there in front of the Guru blue
grocer
1:34:44
is that's where a lot of
homeless guys
1:34:46
hang out yeah I used to give
money right
1:34:48
we talked about this I don't do
it
1:34:50
anymore
1:34:50
yeah no no no because I've
1:34:53
same guy I give money to is
still there
1:34:55
and you'd lies to me so I'm
gonna get
1:34:56
some shoes he doesn't get any
shoes it
1:34:58
doesn't matter I'm done with it
I don't
1:35:00
do it anymore not in Austin at
least
1:35:02
you're fed out and I'll tell
you why I
1:35:03
was very happy about it because
so I'm
1:35:06
walking I see a guy coming
towards me
1:35:07
kind of yeah you can see he's
transient
1:35:09
I think homeless would be the
right
1:35:11
description but transient he
stopped
1:35:12
someone in front of me they
stand shake
1:35:14
their head and he stops me I
said no so
1:35:16
I do my business I walk around
the block
1:35:18
and then he comes from the other
1:35:21
direction he's coming at me
again he's
1:35:24
tracked Enya and of course he
again
1:35:26
asked me I said that you just
asked me
1:35:27
know thirty seconds later he
whizzes by
1:35:31
me on an East scooter meaning
the guy
1:35:33
has a smartphone a means of
payment are
1:35:38
you kidding me Austin hmm just
whipping
1:35:45
by that's pretty much it
definitely oh
1:35:54
this is not gonna help let's
see there
1:36:00
was just a quick Australia
let's play a
1:36:03
little story about apparently
got a lot
1:36:05
of fire and floods going on
there but
1:36:07
probably because of global
warming the
1:36:09
people of Australia grapple
today with
1:36:11
extreme fire and extreme
rainfall Sydney
1:36:15
was inundated with a month's
worth of
1:36:17
rain in a single morning the
deluge
1:36:20
flooded homes and streets and
claimed at
1:36:23
least one life we've had storm
events
1:36:26
before and you South Wales with
that
1:36:28
storm events in Sydney before
but not
1:36:30
this widespread not over this
continuing
1:36:32
period of time we've had in
excess of
1:36:34
100 millimetres of rain already
in some
1:36:37
areas of Sydney but one of the
things
1:36:39
were happening is the rain is in
1:36:42
flooding different areas at
different
1:36:43
times
1:36:44
meanwhile in northeastern
Australia
1:36:47
firefighters in Queensland
State battled
1:36:49
an unprecedented 138 fires as
1:36:53
temperatures soared to 104
degrees
1:36:55
authorities said the fire
danger has
1:36:58
gone to catastrophic that is
the worst
1:37:00
on their scale I didn't hear
global
1:37:03
warming in the report I know I
was wrong
1:37:06
that's wrong that's just wrong
so I've
1:37:08
been working on my Australian
accent I
1:37:12
want to hear it
1:37:13
sure steak and shrimp it's as
far as
1:37:20
I've gotten
1:37:24
John at Dvorak dot-org is where
you can
1:37:27
send your official
pronunciation send
1:37:29
him please send them lots of
audio files
1:37:31
of telling him how to pronounce
steak
1:37:35
and shrimp dikes Zuckerberg was
invited
1:37:40
to the UK to testify in front of
1:37:46
government there he was a
no-show
1:37:48
he sent his I guess the locals
why would
1:37:51
he go
1:37:52
they sent the look well that's
a good
1:37:55
question here is a quick
exchange
1:37:57
between his his proxy from
double his no
1:38:03
body double who would know the
1:38:05
difference and if ever
1:38:07
if ever a good reason to have a
bot in
1:38:09
the simulation it would be that
guy now
1:38:11
so they sent his local VP you
you
1:38:16
apologize for the decision for
Mars luca
1:38:19
berg and not appearing here you
took
1:38:21
responsibility for that how do
you think
1:38:23
that looks as a member of this
poll not
1:38:28
not great you could just see
the call
1:38:35
he's getting from zuckerberg
what did
1:38:37
you say no what about the lines
we
1:38:40
rehearsed but what was this
about it
1:38:43
seems that the UK parliament
has some
1:38:45
info we don't have like another
problem
1:38:47
for facebook the UK parliament
getting a
1:38:49
hold of internal facebook
documents
1:38:52
what's in them so tyler a head
of a
1:38:55
panel questioning of the
facebook vp
1:38:57
tomorrow on fake news and
disinformation
1:38:59
british parliament has obtained
internal
1:39:02
facebook documents from an app
developer
1:39:04
this developer sued facebook
alleging
1:39:06
it's data policies were
anti-competitive
1:39:07
we don't know what's in these
documents
1:39:09
yet and facebook has fought to
keep them
1:39:11
private because they may
include emails
1:39:14
between senior executives the
california
1:39:17
state court ordered to keep
them under
1:39:19
but the chairman of the House
of Commons
1:39:21
committee which secured the
documents
1:39:23
says they can choose to publish
them if
1:39:25
they like so of course we'll
have to see
1:39:28
what happens if they do choose
to
1:39:29
publish them but no matter what
Tyler
1:39:31
it's just yet another headache
for
1:39:33
Facebook all right yeah and the
1:39:35
headaches just keep on coming
1:39:37
Zuckerberg Andy yeah go ahead
well I've
1:39:41
been watching this and since
I'm not a
1:39:42
Facebook user no I I think it
can be
1:39:45
pretty objective I think
they're finally
1:39:47
I think they're fine after they
looked
1:39:49
at the numbers yeah Facebook
this
1:39:51
Facebook that Facebook is
eating the
1:39:54
media's lunch there takes 40
billion
1:39:57
dollars is going to Facebook
that should
1:39:59
be going to the media yes and
they
1:40:01
finally figured out that
Facebook is not
1:40:03
their friend yes yes in fact I
have a
1:40:07
clip here from canden a via the
CBC
1:40:13
Scandinavian radio this guy
actually has
1:40:17
it figured out and he can't
believe that
1:40:19
the canned in a V and
broadcasting also
1:40:22
don't just see what is
happening to them
1:40:24
why does CB c trust Facebook
why does
1:40:28
every outlet on CBC tell its
listeners
1:40:30
to go like them on Facebook not
just CBC
1:40:32
but other journalistic entities
as well
1:40:34
we're CBC so I'm like I don't
care about
1:40:36
the other journalist a entities
why do
1:40:37
the people at CBC mandate that
CBC
1:40:40
personnel promote Facebook why
does CBC
1:40:43
continue to engage in commercial
1:40:44
relationships with Facebook now
that
1:40:47
it's clear to us that Facebook
is a
1:40:48
threat to democracy a CBC as a
public
1:40:51
broadcaster should be
strengthening
1:40:52
democracy so I would like to
hear from
1:40:55
the senior managers of this
corporation
1:40:56
which I do not work for very
clearly and
1:40:59
further every time I've
appeared on this
1:41:01
show to talk about Facebook
Facebook has
1:41:03
complained to CBC and CBC has
not
1:41:05
defended me or it's not
defended our
1:41:07
right to have these
conversations
1:41:08
although metric morning will
start
1:41:09
having yeah right and and and
that to me
1:41:12
is is the hypocrisy of our
reporting on
1:41:15
Facebook that we talk about it
but as a
1:41:17
company we do nothing Jesse
thank you
1:41:18
hopefully I'll come back but if
not
1:41:20
thanks everybody Hersh to
college you
1:41:22
call it mr. Mishra morning like
me on
1:41:27
Facebook
1:41:28
but that's the point that
that's well
1:41:30
may I mean they do it on all
1:41:32
these Nevers like us on
Facebook like
1:41:34
why yeah why should they like
you on
1:41:36
facebook
1:41:37
I mean you're these these media
1:41:39
companies are stupid they've
always been
1:41:41
stupid this is I'm gonna bring
back a
1:41:43
story that's you know a lot of
listeners
1:41:45
have heard a couple times I'll
tell it
1:41:46
again you were there when Craig
Newmark
1:41:49
was telling or what and I'm
sorry when
1:41:51
the Phil Bernstein was telling
the story
1:41:54
back in the day when Craig
Newmark the
1:41:57
guy who did cray or does
craigslist
1:41:59
walked into the Chronicle as big
1:42:02
newspaper in San Francisco
today I've
1:42:04
got this thing about doing
classifieds I
1:42:07
think we should team up and we
can do
1:42:09
take take the classified world
over and
1:42:12
it was like the newspaper guy
said what
1:42:18
do you know about anything get
out out
1:42:20
and so they lost me you know
they lost
1:42:22
them their edge but these guys
have
1:42:24
always been that way the
newspapers have
1:42:26
never been to predict their own
demise
1:42:27
because of the internet they
can't
1:42:29
figure out that advertising
works
1:42:30
differently on the internet
than a dozen
1:42:32
print and so they'd so they're
stupid
1:42:35
when it comes to Facebook and
what's I
1:42:37
think now they're starting to
beat up
1:42:39
Facebook in an unwarranted
manner
1:42:42
well Zuckerberg need has to go
to the
1:42:45
Parliament he's got nothing to
do with
1:42:47
them tell Mossad off as they
sawed off
1:42:51
well there's more coming down
the pike
1:42:54
and for that and I if I were
mainstream
1:42:56
I'd be making a big deal out of
this the
1:42:58
Department of Justice this week
unsealed
1:43:01
charges against eight
individuals in
1:43:04
they're saying one of the
largest
1:43:06
digital advertising frauds runs
in the
1:43:10
billions looks like a lot of
Russian
1:43:13
names here so I didn't know
where these
1:43:16
guys are but the Department
unsealed all
1:43:21
this they had that a federal
court seal
1:43:23
I don't know why they had
seizure
1:43:25
warrants FBI took over 31
domains eighty
1:43:28
nine servers botnets the whole
thing and
1:43:31
was very sophisticated and
they'd 1900
1:43:34
or servers that were just
replicating
1:43:38
people you know doing the mouse
so
1:43:42
finally this is now out this is
where
1:43:44
you want to go after
1:43:45
yeah you want to go for the
judgment
1:43:47
going on for over a decade and
we've
1:43:49
been talking about it
1:43:50
of course yeah so now it's a we
have
1:43:56
here this there's all kinds of
stories
1:43:58
coming out about this now to
here to
1:43:59
international cybercriminal
rings
1:44:01
dismantled an eight defendants
indicted
1:44:03
for causing billions of dollars
in
1:44:05
losses in digital advertising
fraud
1:44:08
finally finally someone's gonna
figure
1:44:11
out how phony it really is they
also
1:44:13
face bag with their two billion
served
1:44:15
how can you have two billion
how can you
1:44:18
still say we serve two billion
people
1:44:19
when you deleted five hundred
million I
1:44:22
mean come on the concern one
please just
1:44:25
do this arithmetic and the last
thing
1:44:29
for Zuck you know this New York
Times
1:44:31
report which no one talks about
where
1:44:35
you know there was some
anti-semitism
1:44:37
going on which they did on
purpose you
1:44:39
know hey let's let's get these
1:44:41
anti-semitic conspiracy
theories about
1:44:43
George Soros out there well
that does
1:44:45
not sit well with the hospital
San
1:44:50
Francisco General Hospital
which was not
1:44:55
was a whole hospital named after
1:44:57
Zuckerberg or a wing he gave
seventy
1:45:00
five million dollars to the
hospital's
1:45:02
foundation is this one called a
1:45:04
Zuckerberg just general or yeah
well
1:45:06
they're going to take donors to
San
1:45:08
Francisco to hospitals him and
the our
1:45:11
sales force guy Benny oh yeah
well
1:45:14
they're taking his name off for
the for
1:45:17
life for the Jew thing yeah
yeah listen
1:45:24
I'll read it to you on Tuesday
San
1:45:26
Francisco supervisor Aaron
Peskin
1:45:27
reportedly reportedly proposed
the city
1:45:30
remove Zuckerberg name from San
1:45:32
Francisco General Hospital
which was
1:45:35
renamed it's not normal for
private he
1:45:39
says it's not normal for private
1:45:40
entities to use information to
spread in
1:45:43
this case anti-semitic
conspiracy
1:45:44
theories on platforms they
control
1:45:46
believe me John when you do this
1:45:48
especially Zuckerberg as a Jew
he's the
1:45:51
worst kind of Jew you can be no
da okay
1:45:55
no I'm not saying he's not the
worst
1:45:56
kind of jewel one way or the
other maybe
1:45:58
is maybe is it I don't care
1:45:59
they're not taking his name off
that
1:46:01
Hospital all right how much
money is
1:46:05
involved
1:46:06
I'm sure Benioff would be fine
1:46:09
just jumping in just to mess
with the
1:46:11
guy or someone will got his own
thing it
1:46:14
says the other system that he's
in a
1:46:15
different hospital system he's
giving
1:46:17
money to them mints mmm
1:46:19
UCSF or something like that
let's get
1:46:21
him any offices Benioff that
know
1:46:24
Zuckerberg is unit now there's
no way
1:46:26
well he's out there saying it
so you
1:46:30
know there's City Council of San
1:46:31
Francisco are a bunch of douche
bags
1:46:33
they say stuff just to get
attention
1:46:35
this you know I don't have any
clips or
1:46:37
anything I could but we haven't
talked
1:46:39
about it much this CRISPR thing
this
1:46:42
gene editing I have the clip
fantastic
1:46:45
apparently he's got another
person all
1:46:48
ready to go Chinese part to a
Chinese
1:46:51
scientist who says he
engineered the
1:46:53
first genetically edited babies
now says
1:46:56
another pregnancy is underway
1:46:58
Hajin Quay made the
announcement today
1:47:01
at an international conference
in Hong
1:47:03
Kong
1:47:04
there's been no independent
confirmation
1:47:05
of his claims but scientists
have
1:47:08
condemned his experiments do
you think
1:47:11
this is really true that he's
really
1:47:12
been successful with this could
be a
1:47:15
fake we know there's been a lot
of
1:47:16
medical fraud and a lot of
people a lot
1:47:20
of people are really into this
CRISPR
1:47:22
thing this gene editing well
we'll see
1:47:24
what happens
1:47:25
oh here comes the baby now it's
a girl
1:47:30
born talking just a gene switch
I got to
1:47:35
meet the first cloned dog years
ago
1:47:37
really yeah I was in Korea
that's what
1:47:40
started it yeah we started at
MIT I
1:47:43
forget the name of this dog was
big I
1:47:45
can't remember kind of dog this
big dog
1:47:47
nice nice guy seemed like a
regular dog
1:47:50
to me it could be a fake but I
think was
1:47:53
the real thing
1:47:54
cloned dog came out on stage
everybody
1:47:56
got to pet him it was very
funny a piece
1:48:00
from John Bolton who I still
understand
1:48:03
why he's why he's in this guy
why isn't
1:48:05
government at all I do not like
this guy
1:48:08
got the goods on somebody
1:48:11
I don't know how he did it but
anyway he
1:48:14
pretty much gave me now 100%
assurance
1:48:17
there is no tape of cash oh
jeez shock
1:48:21
cheese murder
1:48:22
there is no tape of it and he's
gonna
1:48:25
try and weasel out of it but it
really
1:48:28
just strengthens my thought
that there's
1:48:30
no tape let me take the
question of the
1:48:33
tape first no I haven't
listened to it
1:48:34
and I guess I should ask you
why do you
1:48:38
think I should what do you
think I'll
1:48:39
learn from in this room speak
Arabic
1:48:46
[Music]
1:48:49
you want me to listen to what
am I gonna
1:48:51
learn from I mean if they were
speaking
1:48:53
Korean I wouldn't learn any
more from it
1:48:55
either I can read a transcript
to trying
1:49:03
to make the point that
everybody who
1:49:05
says why don't you listen to
the tape
1:49:06
unless you speak Arabic what
are you
1:49:08
going to get from it have you
ready the
1:49:13
president has spoken to our
position on
1:49:15
this issue he's spoken very
clearly and
1:49:18
that is our position
1:49:19
yeah there's no tape and of
course we
1:49:22
want to hear that but they're
all too
1:49:23
chickenshit to say we want to
hear the
1:49:25
murderer that's what we want to
hear we
1:49:27
don't care what language this
is in we
1:49:28
want hear bonesaw we want to
hear the
1:49:34
guy going you know and come on
if this
1:49:38
tape existed surely someone
would have
1:49:40
it by now for now there's a
transcript
1:49:43
we just say as a tape here's the
1:49:45
transcript it's the oldest
trick I'm not
1:49:48
gonna argue you might be right
there
1:49:50
maybe the whole thing could be a
1:49:51
something of a hoax now why do
they have
1:49:54
the tape for in the first place
they're
1:49:55
supposed to have a video too
they said
1:49:57
at the beginning if you
remember we want
1:49:59
to see those videos to see the
video we
1:50:01
don't want to see the tape
video it's
1:50:04
just gone off into the annals
of truth
1:50:06
truthiness John it'll now
forever be
1:50:09
that way there was a tape and
there was
1:50:11
a buzzsaw and they killed him
and and
1:50:14
there was video and don't worry
about it
1:50:16
that's just what happened now
there's a
1:50:18
little extra meme to all of
this and
1:50:21
it's it's mind-boggling whereas
two
1:50:24
years ago even before you know
before
1:50:26
the election we know that there
was
1:50:28
collusion we had lots of
collusion any
1:50:30
collusion between the Russians
and Trump
1:50:32
and it's because Trump is under
control
1:50:34
by Putin and he has all these
financial
1:50:36
and business ties
1:50:38
he just boasted about how much
money he
1:50:40
makes and and you know then so
that's
1:50:42
why he's always been acting in
Russia's
1:50:45
best interest because of his own
1:50:47
personal interest and financial
and
1:50:50
business interest in Russia and
now
1:50:52
although we have never heard it
before
1:50:54
really to this degree it's time
to roll
1:50:57
out the same script for KSA
being
1:51:00
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
here is Adam
1:51:03
Schiff he is now the chair of
the
1:51:05
Intelligence Committee now one
of the
1:51:07
things that you want to probe
is the
1:51:09
president's relationship with
Saudi
1:51:11
Arabia you told The Washington
Post you
1:51:14
have an idea that the president
is going
1:51:17
easy on Saudi Arabia because of
his
1:51:20
business interests and that you
want to
1:51:22
look into that G of any
evidence to
1:51:24
support that going in well look
the
1:51:26
president is not being honest
with the
1:51:28
country about the murder of
Jamal
1:51:29
khashoggi there's I think it's
part he
1:51:32
feels that by saying that we
don't know
1:51:35
or that the world is a
dangerous place
1:51:37
or everybody does it he thinks
it makes
1:51:40
him look strong it actually
makes him
1:51:41
look weak it means that our
allies don't
1:51:44
respect us our enemies don't
fear us
1:51:47
what is driving this I don't
know
1:51:50
whether this is simply an
affinity that
1:51:52
he has for autocrats he seems
to choose
1:51:54
them repeatedly over his own
1:51:56
intelligence agencies or
whether there's
1:51:59
a financial motivation that is
his own
1:52:01
personal finances we do know of
course
1:52:03
he has openly bragged about how
many
1:52:05
millions he makes from Saudi
Arabia is
1:52:08
his personal financial interest
driving
1:52:11
u.s. policy in the Gulf is it
driving US
1:52:14
policy visa be the Russians we
don't
1:52:16
know but it would be
irresponsible not
1:52:18
to find out and how far are you
going to
1:52:21
dig on that well this will not
be the
1:52:24
work alone of the Intelligence
Committee
1:52:27
it'll be our responsibility to
make sure
1:52:29
that we're getting good
intelligence on
1:52:31
not just the murder of Jamal
khashoggi
1:52:34
but also Saudi policy these
will be
1:52:37
gutter in Yemen and that the
Congress is
1:52:39
informed that we can make good
policy
1:52:41
decisions that we can truth
help if the
1:52:44
president is just representing
matter to
1:52:46
the American people so that
word we have
1:52:49
a foreign policy that is driven
by
1:52:51
American interests not by some
interests
1:52:54
of the president so that will
be our
1:52:56
responsibility I think others
will also
1:52:58
have the responsibility of
looking at
1:53:00
are there financial
entanglements with
1:53:03
the Gulf are there financial
inducements
1:53:06
that the president has not to
want to
1:53:08
cross the Saudis that cannot be
allowed
1:53:10
to drive u.s. policy okay couple
1:53:13
first of all what the hell is
this we're
1:53:15
gonna truth tell this is new
for me so
1:53:18
we will be able to truth tell
the public
1:53:21
about it I'd is that short for
telling
1:53:24
the truth well I don't know why
would
1:53:28
you use that term I've never
heard of it
1:53:30
okay and then the other guy
said lizard
1:53:33
so you never know what's gonna
come out
1:53:34
of his mouth but you know the
the
1:53:36
American public voted before
majority in
1:53:40
the House of Representatives
which is
1:53:42
great that okay so now go do
stuff I
1:53:46
mean the president doesn't make
laws and
1:53:48
doesn't you know that yeah he
can he
1:53:51
said international treaties but
you
1:53:54
ultimately you're in charge
just go make
1:53:56
the policy you want to make and
sir I
1:54:00
can't be the only one who's
tired of
1:54:02
this investigating everything
and the
1:54:04
same goes for the Republicans
it's
1:54:06
tiring can't believe I'm saying
it
1:54:11
better believe it yeah it's
just come on
1:54:14
man just a more truth-telling
is it
1:54:16
better yeah I'm I'm truth
telling you
1:54:18
right now bro
1:54:19
truth telling you truth telling
oh I got
1:54:22
a funny one here chunk we
haven't talked
1:54:24
about chunk in a long time
1:54:26
chunk was on with seltzer water
boy you
1:54:31
know that brian Stelter on
whatever his
1:54:34
media show is and he's talking
about a
1:54:36
OC and he says something really
1:54:39
appropriate which fries Seltzer
waters
1:54:42
brain I mean and it's just me I
was like
1:54:44
you guys are that you guys are
the
1:54:46
problem and I'll play it until
we're
1:54:48
tired of hearing him but what I
found
1:54:51
interesting was how seltzer
water
1:54:53
pronounces his name now it's
cen K and
1:54:58
we always say chunk but what is
it that
1:55:00
what is it really
1:55:01
shink shink shink I think
shangri-la
1:55:05
yeah let's listen to a seltzer
so drink
1:55:08
drink a stop is to Twitter
drink drink
1:55:12
drink Jake
1:55:16
hey kids inc so drink drink as
Trump is
1:55:18
to Twitter is Acacio Cortez to
Instagram
1:55:21
because that one of the lessons
here
1:55:22
she's using a new platform in a
new way
1:55:24
well I mean look yeah you can
say that
1:55:27
Trump was untethered from the
donors in
1:55:30
a sense as well because she
didn't raise
1:55:31
enough money from them and so
hence he
1:55:34
was able to speak out more
vociferously
1:55:36
on social media subscribe
cortez on the
1:55:39
does on the left but I gotta
say one
1:55:41
thing in her defense
1:55:43
from what you just mentioned
Brian look
1:55:45
you say she doesn't do enough
interviews
1:55:47
on television now but let's be
fair when
1:55:49
she needed those interviews you
guys
1:55:51
weren't there for her so before
the
1:55:53
election almost but our job
isn't no no
1:55:57
no no no no no but Brian it
isn't about
1:55:59
being there or being or not
it's about
1:56:02
you guys didn't think she had a
chance
1:56:04
so you didn't give her any
outlet at all
1:56:06
and so the people in her
district didn't
1:56:09
get a real sense of you know
who had the
1:56:12
better point of view she
overcame that
1:56:14
anyway and went on to win so if
you
1:56:18
think hey well she's got to go
on
1:56:20
television to speak to the
people
1:56:21
apparently she didn't she had
to go on
1:56:23
The Young Turks and social
media to
1:56:25
speak to the people and she did
and she
1:56:27
won so she doesn't owe
television
1:56:29
anything she doesn't know the
Democrats
1:56:31
anything she doesn't know
Republicans
1:56:33
anything so she can go on a
make her
1:56:35
case anywhere she likes and it's
1:56:37
incredibly effective I think
the guys
1:56:39
making a very good point and I
and I
1:56:41
agree that I've always said
watch out
1:56:43
for AOC ma'am you don't have to
be smart
1:56:45
and I think lots of people
would agree
1:56:48
with me that to be to be
president even
1:56:53
official she certainly was the
the media
1:56:57
the public her voice this is
gonna be
1:57:00
very interesting to watch now
they're
1:57:02
all offended but she owes she
owes the
1:57:05
media any questions I take your
point
1:57:07
about they're not getting enough
1:57:09
attention before she won but I
don't
1:57:12
think that's particularly
unusual for
1:57:14
somebody running for Congress
she's not
1:57:15
running for president I think
then it
1:57:17
would be a different story
1:57:19
[Music]
1:57:20
just real quick and look I
think that
1:57:23
unfortunately stop stop this is
where
1:57:26
chunk should say well that's a
great
1:57:28
argument of you guys also
1:57:29
cover Bernie Sanders very well
yes and
1:57:34
saying crazy stuff that's
different than
1:57:37
trumpet from the other side but
he had
1:57:39
huge audiences and it deserves
some
1:57:42
coverage you guys didn't cover
him at
1:57:44
all in favor of Hillary no no
of course
1:57:48
not how he go I don't now he
goes into
1:57:50
this thing about because well
I'll play
1:57:53
his argument but you're so
right and if
1:57:56
only Bernie had understood how
to use
1:57:59
Twitter effectively he could
have killed
1:58:01
it yeah it's not in his DNA he
doesn't
1:58:05
understand it but this is they
are
1:58:07
they're really kind of like
what are you
1:58:09
saying
1:58:10
you can't be a politician
without the
1:58:12
media that's pretty much what
chunk
1:58:14
drank janki's drank jank is
saying and I
1:58:19
think he's right that you don't
need it
1:58:21
but these people they're not
happy now
1:58:24
his reason for it and you'll
hear now is
1:58:26
kind of me not running for
president I
1:58:28
think then it would be a
different story
1:58:30
[Music]
1:58:32
just real quick and look I
think that
1:58:34
unfortunately the media covers
people
1:58:36
with more money and a lot of
that is
1:58:37
corporate money and so it's not
just
1:58:39
about a costumer Cortez it's
about the
1:58:41
future and in 2020 will you
cover
1:58:43
progressive candidates that run
1:58:45
uncorrupted and my guess is no
and then
1:58:48
you'll turn around and
sometimes labor
1:58:50
progressive candidates and
conservative
1:58:52
candidates we should cover them
and make
1:58:54
sure people know about both of
them but
1:58:55
I absolutely absolutely but
1:58:57
unfortunately you give an
advantage to
1:58:59
people with more money and you
do it all
1:59:01
the time
1:59:01
and unfortunately I think it
aids in a
1:59:03
bets corruption I would love to
discuss
1:59:06
that more than the picture I'm
not sure
1:59:07
how we have more donor money
that's your
1:59:11
argument that because they have
more
1:59:12
donor money they get more than
average
1:59:13
this idiot doesn't even
understand how
1:59:16
it works and he's in the middle
of it
1:59:17
does the media show what you
same people
1:59:20
who raise a lot of money to get
more
1:59:21
attention no no Brian are you
saying
1:59:24
that not everybody in the media
says
1:59:26
well that person is a better
chance for
1:59:27
winning because they have more
money so
1:59:29
there's this obsession with
who's raised
1:59:31
more money and has more
legitimate hmm
1:59:33
that's the rail of the
mainstream media
1:59:35
which is and not held in the
actual
1:59:37
elections yeah interesting Jake
thanks
1:59:39
for being here
1:59:40
drank interesting chanc a great
drink
1:59:43
thank you very much it's great
thanks
1:59:45
for being here dick you're
never getting
1:59:46
on again my show
1:59:47
tell me about you write about
that tell
1:59:51
me hide me anyway he's not
gonna get on
1:59:53
there again no you can't go in
the media
1:59:56
they accused him of all these
things you
1:59:58
got him cozy up to him yeah
he's always
2:00:00
gonna be honest he's in a state
of
2:00:02
dissonance all the time
2:00:04
chink drank jank cuz this is he
has good
2:00:08
thoughts I mean that's not
that's very
2:00:10
much the way I think about
things which
2:00:13
of course makes it good that's
just a
2:00:14
media thought it's just like
dude to
2:00:15
read realism of right being
realistic
2:00:18
right but then you know he
forgets to
2:00:21
point out the birth sounds were
supposed
2:00:22
to know anything about the
media for
2:00:24
some reason to an immediacy
it's doing
2:00:27
the media sure that's great no
agenda
2:00:34
imagine all the people who
could do this
2:00:36
oh yeah that'd be fab
2:00:43
well we do a few people thank
for show
2:00:46
1090 huh sorry with Sir Hank
Scorpio in
2:00:49
Gatineau Quebec 1 5 3 2 9 and
it was
2:00:55
made in Canadian dot he may be
oh is it
2:00:58
that might have been 202 can
the Navy
2:01:00
and doubloons
2:01:01
they could be 153 29 let me see
it we'll
2:01:06
move them up to us three
Canadian in US
2:01:13
dollars let's see oh they'll be
the
2:01:16
other way all the way around
actually US
2:01:19
dollars in Canadian okay come
on Google
2:01:26
you can do it doesn't even work
doesn't
2:01:33
even work not read his donation
note
2:01:35
assuming this is the case okay
this
2:01:37
Knight is in need of some
serious jobs
2:01:38
karma for the past five years
have been
2:01:40
competing an apprenticeship to
become a
2:01:42
power alignment tech over the
last five
2:01:45
years I've traveled all across
the
2:01:46
province of Ontario working and
no
2:01:48
agenda has been there keeping me
2:01:50
entertained and informed for
the ride
2:01:52
now that I'm qualified I will
be given
2:01:54
full-time placement somewhere
in Ontario
2:01:56
it's a big province so I asked
for some
2:01:58
tried and true in a jobs karma
placement
2:02:01
Karma anywhere close to Ottawa
will do
2:02:04
nicely yeah I think the goat
may be able
2:02:07
to help out on this one as well
I think
2:02:09
you could work him in there at
some
2:02:11
point Adam thank you for your
courage
2:02:12
sir Hank Scorpio yes 153
dollars is two
2:02:17
hundred and three dollars can
Dan avian
2:02:19
we actually won on the deal
it's kind of
2:02:23
I'm not sure yeah he moves up to
2:02:24
executive producer ship
associate
2:02:26
executive producer ship as
should be and
2:02:28
of course we play whatever he
requests
2:02:30
jobs jobs jobs and jobs let's
vote for
2:02:35
job
2:02:36
you've got ARMA thank you very
much
2:02:44
Brian man in Burlington
Wisconsin 126
2:02:49
and he's got a 50 birthday
thing the
2:02:52
douching is what is needing
here a spec
2:02:58
free since March and loving it
thanks
2:03:02
huh then you get some tase's at
TSA tips
2:03:07
work yeah Richard force in
zhuge uh
2:03:11
Switzerland which is now Krypto
Valley
2:03:14
$109 he requested that so I
just threw
2:03:20
it in anonymously California
hundred
2:03:26
nine dollars he sent a note in
that is
2:03:28
touching because it's like a
problematic
2:03:30
a situation that he lives with
in now
2:03:33
he's going to be he's going to
he's
2:03:35
going to be latest today he's
gonna be
2:03:37
knighted yeah he's gonna be
knighted in
2:03:39
his he had a birthday for his
way what's
2:03:41
going on what's problematic
what how can
2:03:43
we help the doctor is in what's
going on
2:03:44
it was something we can't do
anything
2:03:47
about all I don't think he goes
on and
2:03:51
says he'd been to twice a week
you know
2:03:53
he likes the show he doesn't
like to
2:03:54
listen the mainstream media
along with
2:03:56
the daily meditation practice
which has
2:03:57
been remarkably beneficial in
managing
2:03:59
the size of my amygdala MIG
delay cuz he
2:04:04
has to anticipated holiday
expenses
2:04:07
would not allow me to send any
more
2:04:08
funds your way this year but it
appears
2:04:09
the donation I secure my
knighthood even
2:04:11
though I thought it was assured
years
2:04:13
ago and I sent one Bitcoin as a
donation
2:04:15
to the daily source code and
what's
2:04:17
ahead and consider donation he
goes on
2:04:19
about that I know it's wrong
anybody
2:04:21
like to give my smoke smoking
hot wife
2:04:23
Pamela birthday call out when
she hits
2:04:25
her next milestone on December
11th alas
2:04:30
her amygdala are under constant
stress
2:04:33
since her face bag newsfeed is
2:04:36
overwhelmed with Trump hatred
no no so
2:04:39
she despises the No Agenda show
it off
2:04:46
whenever she is in range of
2:04:48
sound of the podcast oh the
only way I
2:04:50
might persuade her to listen to
an
2:04:52
entire show would be to honor
her in
2:04:54
this way so I hope she
appreciates the
2:04:56
gesture well I think no I do I
think
2:05:01
that's problem that may be
problematic
2:05:03
is this his wife or girlfriend
wife
2:05:06
I truly appreciate what you two
are
2:05:10
doing and there's no one else
in the
2:05:12
media seems to exercise critical
2:05:14
thinking leaving the rest of us
under
2:05:16
constant assault from all sides
by
2:05:18
screaming morons telling us how
to speak
2:05:21
think and act to avoid
offending anyone
2:05:23
no matter how much they
themselves may
2:05:25
offend me thankfully I have a
thicker hi
2:05:28
than most of them do it can
obviously
2:05:30
take quite a bit more an abuse
without
2:05:32
even a sniffle from my bruised
ego so
2:05:36
the doctor 73's the doctor is
in here's
2:05:39
what I would recommend if
you're going
2:05:42
to let her hear anything this
is the
2:05:43
Siri here's how I do it first
you take a
2:05:46
snippet of the birthday segment
and
2:05:49
maybe this segment edit out with
2:05:52
everything that we just said we
like
2:05:53
Barbara all that stuff get it
up then
2:05:56
editing the birthday wish which
is
2:05:57
pretty straightforward and then
say
2:05:59
darling you can call a darling
2:06:01
sweetheart honey bun but I
think that we
2:06:06
both would really benefit I've
already
2:06:08
seen this myself if we just
didn't go on
2:06:12
Facebook for a while let's do it
2:06:14
together let's just do it
together and
2:06:16
let's just see if we feel any
different
2:06:18
after say a month and if we
feel a
2:06:20
little better then we'll go for
another
2:06:22
month and then around month
three then
2:06:25
you start slipping in the best
podcast
2:06:27
in the universe yeah and this
episode
2:06:30
too by the way
2:06:31
so she'll remember oh yeah
that's right
2:06:33
it may work but I would not
just say hey
2:06:37
listen to the show it's a great
happy
2:06:39
birthday try it flowers that's
mine
2:06:46
Facebook is a dick yes oh I
have a clip
2:06:50
about that later on all right
onward sir
2:06:52
Steve in youing New Jersey 101
oh one he
2:06:55
was some
2:06:56
karma give him some of that at
the end
2:06:58
happy friendsgiving he says yes
sir
2:07:02
Steve yeah Joseph her L in
Moyock North
2:07:05
Carolina a 100 Jonathan rose in
Netanya
2:07:12
oh is that Jones really yes or
Joe no he
2:07:16
likes the ironic Hitler nine
nine nine
2:07:18
from the Jew what does it say
I'm the o
2:07:22
for the judo nation surge oh no
rhymes
2:07:33
with Bono so now then it was
Minister
2:07:35
John oh oh you know you
pronounce it so
2:07:38
different yeah if it rhymes
with Bono
2:07:41
whose name is Bono then it's
Sir John oh
2:07:44
it's not bode oh no John John
once
2:07:49
called you Joan Joan Joan
suitable Sir
2:07:54
Stephen Hutto's in st.
Petersburg
2:07:55
Florida came with seventy
seventy
2:07:57
anonymous 6666 I had some jobs
jobs
2:08:01
covered for you Michael
Robinson 5433
2:08:05
Eric sir Eric ho Cole in
deutschland
2:08:09
came through that perfectly
this time
2:08:11
Jobe assessee parts unknown
William well
2:08:14
born in Kennesaw Georgia or
possesses at
2:08:18
50-38 and Hoka was at 52
William well
2:08:22
born 50-33 in Kennesaw Georgia
very
2:08:25
famous place he says according
to the
2:08:27
Wikipedia the California Zephyr
has 33
2:08:30
stops on its route coincidence
I think
2:08:33
not huh let's look that up
2:08:37
Brian Burgess in Pelican Rapids
2:08:40
Minnesota
2:08:45
50:33 he says people are
getting sick as
2:08:49
a trump coverage it's really on
them not
2:08:52
the show yeah I agree
2:08:53
yes Scott Nelson 5001 in
Melbourne
2:08:56
Florida
2:08:56
Darren Dennis zu ski Dennis
Dennis
2:09:00
Dennis key Danny no no no no
Zdenek
2:09:04
youit's Didache Hewitt's
2:09:07
could be anyways in Dubai hey
Dubai we
2:09:11
need some reports some flydubai
yes
2:09:13
Peter just sir Peter taught A's
in up
2:09:16
Terrence Jeffries Ellen in
Oakland
2:09:20
Michigan
2:09:21
Robert mikowski and Rhinebeck
New York
2:09:24
Adam Eng these are all $50
donors by the
2:09:27
way from Darren in Dubai Peter
in onward
2:09:31
Adam in Windsor California 50
Louis pass
2:09:35
store in Miami Florida
2:09:36
sir Paul from Horseheads Joe
Jose
2:09:43
Ferreira in Newbury Berkshire
UK and
2:09:47
last but not least Sonya Girgis
in soya
2:09:52
set New York yes you guys are
the best
2:09:55
thanks and Merry Christmas Mary
amygdala
2:09:59
to you - all right good list
thank you
2:10:03
very much everybody for
supporting the
2:10:06
show it was fun talking about a
model
2:10:09
again last night with with
Apple guys
2:10:12
everyone really greet everyone
yeah ever
2:10:14
really agrees we've we've
really hit it
2:10:16
on the head that's the way to
do it but
2:10:19
you know the problem is
everyone thinks
2:10:21
there's shortcuts it takes a
while and
2:10:23
you need an outstanding product
it takes
2:10:26
a lot of work takes a you have
to have
2:10:27
the product is number one yeah
I mean if
2:10:31
you're not selling people as
the product
2:10:32
you gotta have a really really
good
2:10:34
product and that's always the
problem
2:10:35
people think they're good and
they're
2:10:37
just not and it's very
difficult to be
2:10:40
good witness our own show we
have our
2:10:42
ups and downs thank you again
2:10:45
also thanks everybody who came
in under
2:10:47
$50 many for anonymous reasons
but also
2:10:50
on a lot of our different
programs or
2:10:53
layaway programs just monthly
2:10:55
subscriptions we appreciate it
all very
2:10:57
much and we will bring you
another
2:10:58
program on Sunday right here on
the best
2:11:02
podcast in the universe no
agenda
2:11:03
show.com please support us at
balram org
2:11:06
slash jobs jobs and jobs let's
vote for
2:11:12
jobs
2:11:15
you've got karma
2:11:19
[Music]
2:11:26
[Music]
2:11:27
and here we go with our
birthday list
2:11:29
for today it is the 29th of
November
2:11:31
2018 we say happy birthday to
Francisco
2:11:34
ta da anonymous in NorCal says
happy
2:11:37
birthday to Pamela who
celebrates on
2:11:39
December 11th birthday to his
brother
2:11:43
Zack turning 36 in November 29th
2:11:46
Mike a young mom says happy
birthday to
2:11:49
her mom she turns 58 today and
strangely
2:11:52
not on the list is the letter
we had
2:11:59
[Music]
2:12:03
mentioned Jessie she's just had
her
2:12:05
birthday so Stevie Jesse and
then who
2:12:08
was the guy with his wife
that's the one
2:12:12
we read is that the D was on
never that
2:12:14
was Pamela
2:12:15
yep Pamela yeah but who was it
saying
2:12:17
happy birthday to Pamela
anonymous
2:12:19
anonymous okay happy birthday
everybody
2:12:24
and please stay away from face
bags
2:12:27
happy birthday from you your
best
2:12:29
podcast in the universe
2:12:32
very confusing sorry I knows I
miss I
2:12:36
messed it up I messed that one
up I did
2:12:38
it was might mess it up earlier
alright
2:12:39
let's let's do some knighting
so we got
2:12:42
a full table now your full table
2:12:44
thank you very much come on you
know who
2:12:50
you both are also Francisco ta
da
2:12:53
and Michael howdy gentlemen
thank you
2:12:56
very much for your support of
the No
2:12:57
Agenda show in the amount of
$1,000 or
2:12:59
more that gives you a seat here
in our
2:13:00
round table of the No Agenda
knights and
2:13:02
dames and I am very proud to
pronounce
2:13:04
the Casey Sir silent night sir
former
2:13:08
brahim of the loop sir dude
named Benton
2:13:12
bit anonymous and Sir Michael
of Calgary
2:13:15
and Vegas gentlemen for you we
have
2:13:18
hookers and blow rentboys and
chardonnay
2:13:19
hobo stew and fortified wine
park and
2:13:22
poi geishas and Saki breast
milk and
2:13:24
pablum bong hits in bourbon
rubinettes
2:13:26
woman Rosie and of course
mutton and
2:13:29
Mead all of you head over to no
agenda
2:13:31
nation.com slash rings pick up
some no
2:13:35
don't pick up anything in order
to pick
2:13:36
them up you got to send off your
2:13:38
information to Eric the shill
2:13:39
that's what it is and that is
your ring
2:13:41
size I'll get it off to you as
soon as
2:13:43
possible and please remember
also for
2:13:44
other nights who are receiving
their
2:13:46
rings it's great when you tweet
them out
2:13:48
put them on mastodons will
boost them
2:13:50
and thank you again for
supporting us
2:13:52
Dvorak that org slash na now
here we
2:13:54
have ham radio guys ham radio
is the
2:13:58
public service network of last
resort
2:14:01
when the apocalypse comes we're
the guys
2:14:04
who are going to save the world
right
2:14:06
right I'm rebooting our hams
it's time
2:14:11
and there's a reason for it
there's a
2:14:15
new mode John I know if you
keep up with
2:14:17
the the ham developments I try
there's a
2:14:20
new digital mode which is ft 8
an ft 8
2:14:28
it does something very amazing
it takes
2:14:32
very low-power and very quickly
is able
2:14:35
to exchange information with
other
2:14:37
stations and it can do this all
over the
2:14:40
globe it's done purely through
2:14:42
propagation you know shit
bouncing off
2:14:44
asteroid
2:14:45
meteorites the moon I don't
know what
2:14:47
it's it's insane how well it
works
2:14:49
really phenomenal because you
can do is
2:14:52
on very low power you need
special
2:14:55
licensing for this well
interestingly
2:14:58
you can you you you can do with
a
2:15:00
technician license I think
there may be
2:15:03
some people doing it on VHF UHF
but HF
2:15:06
is where all the action is and
yes you
2:15:08
will need your license for that
as well
2:15:11
but that you know you'd need a
general
2:15:14
license in order to do that to
get to
2:15:15
these frequencies where
everyone is but
2:15:17
there's a new version of it
already
2:15:20
called js8 call and this allows
you to
2:15:24
do a whole bunch of incredibly
cool
2:15:26
things besides just actually
instead of
2:15:29
sending just your callsign you
can send
2:15:30
messages it does about ten
words per
2:15:33
minute is the speed which
considering
2:15:36
you know I'll give you an
example five
2:15:38
watts you can get around the
globe
2:15:41
with conditions being right but
even
2:15:42
when conditions aren't that
great it
2:15:44
does very well and just think
of a light
2:15:46
bulb you know just how much
energy is
2:15:48
five watch really it's not a
lot of
2:15:49
energy and but what's also cool
is you
2:15:53
can relay stuff and you kind of
auto
2:15:55
answer and something I can send
a
2:15:57
message to a station say relay
this
2:15:59
message to everyone near you
here's it
2:16:01
or within your reach which
could be a
2:16:03
much more powerful station you
can have
2:16:05
an auto answer with certain
information
2:16:07
and you can just you know
basically text
2:16:10
back and forth so what I'd like
to do is
2:16:13
I want to set up a No Agenda
ham Network
2:16:16
with this system because
everyone can
2:16:18
kind of participate if you if
you're a
2:16:20
ham
2:16:20
you don't need necessarily need
the huge
2:16:22
antenna but we couldn't connect
all of
2:16:24
our rigs together and do some
relaying
2:16:26
and and rag2 together you know
talk
2:16:28
about our gear gear in the
truck right
2:16:34
now in the driveway and I'm
about to go
2:16:38
in and see the missus did the Y
L the y
2:16:41
L the young lady the wile you
know and
2:16:44
the apocalypse comes where the
guys who
2:16:46
are gonna save the world right
so being
2:16:50
a lookout for that no agenda
hams we
2:16:52
have a lot of them so I wanted
to reboot
2:16:54
that it's important that we
would keep
2:16:56
our networks running
2:16:58
I agree are you gonna join it
oh yeah
2:17:01
absolutely
2:17:02
okay yes now I wanted to get
this out of
2:17:07
the way which was it looks like
there
2:17:09
was a six-week cycle on the
money Oh
2:17:11
event uh-huh that was a fail
and then
2:17:15
they had the backtrack and it
became
2:17:17
this huge nightmare nobody
knows and we
2:17:20
can't get any reporting on it or
2:17:22
anything else I do remember
what had
2:17:24
happened and this is the well
you can
2:17:27
play this clip it pretty much
explains
2:17:29
most and week cycle before
actually
2:17:32
played just for those who are
new I may
2:17:34
not know what the six week
cycle is we
2:17:35
have it on good authority that
the FBI
2:17:38
in particular possibly other
government
2:17:40
agencies but the FBI creates
some havoc
2:17:44
somewhere and saves us from
imminent
2:17:46
death about every six weeks and
usually
2:17:49
it's some Patsy that they give
a fake
2:17:51
bombs to with a they rent the
van for
2:17:54
him giving the fake detonator
button and
2:17:56
as he presses it they swoop in
and
2:17:57
they've saved the day once
again and
2:17:59
that keeps the budgets flowing
it
2:18:01
happens every six weeks let's
see what
2:18:02
happened in this cycle we are
gonna be
2:18:04
in tonight here with a false
alarm that
2:18:05
sure look like the real thing at
2:18:07
America's Hospital Walter Reed
National
2:18:10
Military Medical Center just
outside
2:18:12
Washington DC that is where
presidents
2:18:15
have their checkups and wounded
warriors
2:18:16
are treated today police and
first
2:18:18
responders swarm the facility
after
2:18:20
someone apparently made a
monumental
2:18:23
mistake here's David Martin it
was just
2:18:25
after 2:00 p.m. this afternoon
when SWAT
2:18:28
teams responded to reports of
an active
2:18:30
shooter at Walter Reed Medical
Center
2:18:32
where American servicemen and
women
2:18:34
recover from their wounds it
turned out
2:18:37
to be just a drill gone wrong
but no one
2:18:40
told the patients and staff
some of whom
2:18:43
sheltered in place they just
evacuated
2:18:45
us out into a parking garage a
medical
2:18:48
technician texted CBS News
estimating
2:18:51
the number of evacuate between
80 and 90
2:18:53
we're being told it was a drill
CBS
2:18:56
texted back we were told it's
not a
2:18:59
drill he replied among those
that took
2:19:02
shelter were an amputee and a
veteran
2:19:04
suffering from traumatic brain
injury
2:19:06
one of them told CBS News
patients were
2:19:09
loaded into wheelchairs
2:19:11
some holding crutches over
their heads
2:19:13
those who could walk were
pushing the
2:19:15
wheelchairs there was fear some
guys
2:19:18
grabbed baseball bats or
whatever there
2:19:20
was he defend themselves from
the
2:19:23
Pentagon to the FBI to local law
2:19:25
enforcement
2:19:25
the Maryland congressman Dutch
2:19:27
Ruppersberger who was there
everyone
2:19:30
thought it was the real thing
there were
2:19:32
people that were very concerned
and
2:19:35
upset and afraid it's my
understanding
2:19:37
the montgomery county police
came and
2:19:39
didn't know about it there are
a lot of
2:19:42
people that really had serious
issues
2:19:43
the navy which runs walter reed
later
2:19:46
found out that one of the
medical
2:19:48
centers subordinate commands
had been
2:19:50
planning a drill and as part of
the
2:19:52
planning accidentally triggered
the
2:19:54
alert the Navy calls that an
improper
2:19:57
use of the warnings all right
David
2:20:00
Martin thank you very much it's
no six
2:20:02
weeks cycle that's not even
close
2:20:04
there's no FBI involved it's
completely
2:20:06
that's that's nothing to do
with it no
2:20:09
you look into the FBI's
involved yeah I
2:20:12
was backed off because this was
a
2:20:13
disaster now do they still have
you when
2:20:15
I have their name associated
with it do
2:20:17
you think they still have to
pay the
2:20:18
crisis actors their per diem no
no what
2:20:21
did they even put him in place
I think
2:20:22
the whole thing was just but
I've been
2:20:29
looking at the Democratic
Republic of
2:20:32
Congo as Ebola has sparked up
again what
2:20:36
we're waiting for it to no
agenda show
2:20:38
is for the military to be sent
over
2:20:40
because as all kinds of groovy
stuff we
2:20:42
want to protect and it's not
the Ebola
2:20:45
patients Congo has begun the
first ever
2:20:48
trial to test the effectiveness
and
2:20:50
safety before experimental
Ebola drugs
2:20:53
the World Health Organization
calls it a
2:20:55
giant step toward finding a
treatment
2:20:57
that will save lives so far the
current
2:21:00
outbreak in Congo there have
been 365
2:21:03
confirmed Ebola cases 189 of
those
2:21:06
patients have died how does
this work
2:21:10
I thought they had a they
already did a
2:21:13
trial for Ebola I thought that
a vaccine
2:21:16
hold on let's see let's see we
have the
2:21:18
only by the way this number
higher than
2:21:21
the one that got all the
publicity just
2:21:22
a few years ago
2:21:23
let's have an old
2:21:24
from this is Sanjay Gupta on
the vaccine
2:21:26
and again non-essential
travelers no
2:21:28
longer go to to West Africa
they makes
2:21:32
it they talked about several
different
2:21:34
things including a question
that comes
2:21:35
up quite a bit with regard to
vaccines
2:21:38
or some sort of treatment for
patients
2:21:40
with Ebola and dr. Frieden
who's the
2:21:43
head of the CDC said look he he
believes
2:21:44
up still a year away before
something
2:21:47
like that's approved and this
is 2014
2:21:49
this clip so they just gave up
and just
2:21:52
stopped making that did not go
no need
2:21:55
to go five years you still
haven't
2:21:57
figured it out
2:21:58
it doesn't mean things like
that won't
2:21:59
get used in an experimental more
2:22:01
compassionate you standpoint
but the
2:22:03
idea about having a vaccine
available
2:22:04
for sort of for mass
vaccinations that's
2:22:07
just not going to be available
he thinks
2:22:08
for at least a year or so
probably not
2:22:10
during this particular outbreak
well I'd
2:22:13
like to know what happens that
year went
2:22:16
by yeah but this is 2014-2015
now we're
2:22:19
in 2018 and there's nothing and
nobody
2:22:22
talking about anything what are
you
2:22:24
kidding me here's a foul Qi
from the st.
2:22:26
Lucie if it's the same date
2:22:28
ouchy yeah this is the old
Falchi yeah
2:22:30
yeah the old necks broke that's
about
2:22:33
she also from 2014 he says
finally there
2:22:37
was a story in The New York
Times this
2:22:39
week Mike Leventhal and you
know New
2:22:42
York Times must be true
referred to it
2:22:43
at the end of his report that
scientists
2:22:46
had come up with a vaccine a
decade ago
2:22:48
that was a hundred percent
effective in
2:22:51
stopping Ebola in monkeys but
because of
2:22:55
the fact that the disease then
was so
2:22:56
rare that there wasn't a market
there
2:22:59
wasn't an incentive to test it
and to
2:23:01
develop it question is there
some way
2:23:04
first of all do you think we
could have
2:23:06
had if there had been a
full-speed
2:23:08
effort ten years ago could we
have had
2:23:10
an Ebola vaccine by now and
secondly is
2:23:12
there some way when there is so
little
2:23:14
market for it that we can get
these
2:23:16
things developed just in case
we get
2:23:18
into this kind of situation
answer the
2:23:19
both question certainly without
2:23:21
pharmaceutical backing you're
not gonna
2:23:24
get a vac a vaccine didn't we
give these
2:23:27
guys money for this to
something I
2:23:29
remember something there was
some funds
2:23:31
made available but that was
mostly for
2:23:33
Zika
2:23:35
sure we could've well that's
when Ebola
2:23:37
turned to Zika had one now you
can't
2:23:39
predict because there's
scientific
2:23:40
issues there
2:23:41
we ain't not scientifically
stinks but
2:23:44
what the government is doing
now here we
2:23:46
through a program called barter
the
2:23:48
biomedical Advanced Research
Development
2:23:50
Authority is to be able to
finance
2:23:52
things will you kiss a
stockpile so the
2:23:54
government is realizing that
even if
2:23:56
there isn't the the need out
lies just
2:23:59
lies just all lies so this has
been
2:24:03
going on for 15 years then they
talked
2:24:08
about 2004 yeah so 15 years
yeah 14 so
2:24:12
it's not about Ebola I just
don't
2:24:15
believe it it's just a lie
2:24:16
[Applause]
2:24:19
[Music]
2:24:20
[Applause]
2:24:22
I see some virus the killer
from Nigeria
2:24:27
[Applause]
2:24:33
let's see how we do in the
Congo troops
2:24:35
are coming small heads are
coming no
2:24:40
that's not my Zika all right I
keep
2:24:42
mixing all these memes up let's
play a
2:24:45
little kind of a throwaway clip
I got
2:24:49
here mm-hmm
2:24:50
this is on apparently they
found a bunch
2:24:51
of manuscripts from Malcolm X's
book The
2:24:54
Autobiography of Malcolm X very
famous
2:24:56
story that was I guess edited
quite a
2:24:59
bit biggest Milken was a little
more
2:25:01
mean-spirited then they put him
out
2:25:03
tomorrow okay yeah in one
paragraph
2:25:06
Haley softened the Malcolm's
immoral
2:25:08
white devil to read fat cat
whites it
2:25:11
was further one wrong lie in the
2:25:13
published book - two-faced
whites
2:25:14
another he could write for The
Guardian
2:25:17
Malcolm said the American black
man is
2:25:20
wasting his time straining to
integrate
2:25:23
it can't be done that phrase
also didn't
2:25:26
make it into the book I think
the
2:25:28
question that scholars are
gonna ask is
2:25:29
is he helping shape the message
and you
2:25:32
know was there something that
Haley had
2:25:34
as an agenda and I think it's
2:25:36
complicated I think Malcolm X
really
2:25:38
shines through from the first
page I
2:25:40
have no doubt that that is
Malcolm X's
2:25:43
story and it's a very American
one
2:25:45
Malcolm was often critical of
Martin
2:25:47
Luther King's approach to racial
2:25:49
progress but in this 24 page
chapter
2:25:51
titled the Negro one of three
that went
2:25:54
unpublished Malcolm uncannily
predicted
2:25:56
America would one day elect an
2:25:58
african-american president in
the year
2:26:00
2000 Oh in the year 2000 yeah
he was
2:26:05
late he was 8 by 8 years yeah
look now
2:26:09
of course those that know no
doubt no
2:26:10
doubt we can do that there's a
big
2:26:13
article in The New York Times
that a lot
2:26:17
of people are talking about and
it's the
2:26:20
it's a feature story with the
Big D it's
2:26:22
actually New York Times
Magazine I'm
2:26:24
sorry feature story the insect
2:26:26
apocalypse is here what does it
mean
2:26:30
about feeding us insects no
this is what
2:26:34
I was going to ask you so it's
a long
2:26:36
story almost shaggy-dog from
the author
2:26:39
or him or herself about bugs
and daiji I
2:26:42
used to have when I was
2:26:43
riding my bike had to keep my
mouth
2:26:45
closed and I've noticed there's
less
2:26:46
bugs I'm not getting so many
bugs any of
2:26:49
this of course is due to global
warming
2:26:51
I don't have to tell you that
and that's
2:26:53
to be more bugs with global
warming my
2:26:56
question is how can you be all
worried
2:26:59
about the the bug apocalypse
and then do
2:27:04
you want people to eat the rest
that are
2:27:06
still here ah you're right don't
2:27:08
understand the fly in the
ointment
2:27:12
[Music]
2:27:20
good taste like poo yeah what
we were
2:27:27
rights actually I should say
one of our
2:27:31
producers was very right in
bringing the
2:27:33
story to my attention initially
uh the
2:27:36
Boeing 707 37 max aircraft the
crash the
2:27:41
Lion air that seems like we
were spot-on
2:27:43
about what happened to get an
alert on
2:27:47
our phone that that's not what
you want
2:27:50
to be here this is what you
wanted to
2:27:52
hear
2:27:53
investigators are revealing more
2:27:54
findings into that deadly lion
air crash
2:27:57
last month in Southeast Asia
I'm sure
2:28:00
you'll remember it a
preliminary report
2:28:03
found the plane was not air
worthy
2:28:05
because there were technical
problems
2:28:07
reported on previous flights
the pilots
2:28:10
struggled with an automated anti
2:28:12
stalling system that repeatedly
forced
2:28:15
the plane's nose down but it's
unclear
2:28:18
why the pilots did not follow
procedures
2:28:20
to disable the system to
characterize
2:28:23
this as a rollercoaster ride
from hell
2:28:26
would not be an overstatement
but very
2:28:29
simply what happened here was
there is a
2:28:33
new system in the Boeing 737
max which
2:28:38
is different from the old
Boeing 737
2:28:41
airplanes it wasn't in the old
planes
2:28:44
it's in the new plane and this
new
2:28:45
system was put in because of
some unique
2:28:49
characteristics about the new
plane
2:28:51
essentially what it is it's
called the
2:28:53
maneuvering characteristics
augmentation
2:28:56
system or M casts and it's
designed to
2:28:59
basically take control of the
airplane
2:29:01
away from the pilot a kind of
little
2:29:04
pilot but not in a little pilot
to
2:29:06
prevent the plane from stalling
2:29:07
when stalling is not like your
car
2:29:10
stalling it's when there's not
enough
2:29:11
air traveling over the wing to
create
2:29:13
enough lift to keep the plane
in the air
2:29:15
so in this instance very simply
what
2:29:18
happened was plane to pull up
as soon as
2:29:22
they raised the flaps this new
system
2:29:23
this can pass system kicked in
it
2:29:26
thought because of a
2:29:29
probably a defective
angle-of-attack
2:29:31
sensor that the nose of the
airplane was
2:29:34
way up in the air or higher
than it was
2:29:36
and it automatically pushed the
nose of
2:29:39
the plane down the pilot and
co-pilot
2:29:42
were not trained on how to
react to this
2:29:45
if you believe Lyon air it was
not in
2:29:49
the operating manual if you
believe the
2:29:52
Allied Pilots Association there
was
2:29:57
little or no information about
this new
2:29:59
system disclosed to flight crews
2:30:02
including Lyon airplane and so
they were
2:30:05
in a situation which was
completely new
2:30:08
and tragic so now we're just
waiting to
2:30:11
see who's gonna get sued over
this well
2:30:14
dude story I heard was that
there was a
2:30:18
bunch of what's there are
Southwest it
2:30:22
is a big 737 user and the
pilots that
2:30:26
had interaction with the max so
they
2:30:30
never heard of this there was
no they
2:30:33
never got a memo the first time
they
2:30:35
heard about this whole system
and that
2:30:37
you could flip it off
completely was a
2:30:41
procedure the way it works in
aviation
2:30:43
these procedures are documented
and
2:30:45
while these guys were
struggling they
2:30:47
were more than like they should
have
2:30:49
been pulling out manuals and
saying okay
2:30:51
here's the checklist if this
happens and
2:30:53
because you can't really think
about all
2:30:54
the l-let me try this now you
go by the
2:30:57
book you and it in the the
procedure
2:30:59
should have said pull the
circuit
2:31:00
breakers and it would have been
fixed
2:31:02
but in fact they had different
2:31:05
instructions based upon the the
behavior
2:31:08
of the previous version of the
aircraft
2:31:10
the guys that were deposits
that we're
2:31:13
talking about sirs
2:31:14
we didn't know anything about
this until
2:31:16
we saw this report in this
airplane now
2:31:19
we look now we know yeah but
let me say
2:31:22
I doubt if this is gonna happen
again
2:31:24
because everybody because it's a
2:31:25
horrible situation everybody
knows but I
2:31:27
think Boeing's gonna get sued I
think so
2:31:29
too
2:31:29
remember they just brought
their a two
2:31:32
years ago they brought their
avionics
2:31:33
in-house so the question is can
they
2:31:35
blame it still on some Indians
or are
2:31:37
they gonna blame it on
themselves
2:31:38
don't blame it on a nice
2:31:40
sure they gonna blame another
and we've
2:31:43
cut all ties with that with the
company
2:31:45
that we outsource to it'll
never happen
2:31:47
again
2:31:47
we're sorry but it also showing
data I
2:31:51
mean the 787 plane was so out
sourced
2:31:54
now because they were thinking
of this
2:31:57
new vias a new world we're gonna
2:31:58
outsource everything as a
global and so
2:32:01
they outsource pretty much
everything to
2:32:02
the on the plane to the point
where the
2:32:04
plane was late by what two
years yeah
2:32:07
you can get the thing too you
know it
2:32:09
was just a piece of crap
because of the
2:32:10
all the outsourcing cost a more
money
2:32:12
than they would have saves they
just
2:32:14
built the damn plane up in
Everett but
2:32:16
it's also it shows you
technology is
2:32:20
really going to become a
massive issue
2:32:22
in our lives and you're gonna
see it
2:32:24
with people relying on
technology to get
2:32:27
you places so we're gonna see
some big
2:32:30
outages of the ubers and that's
gonna
2:32:31
bring down entire cities for a
day we'll
2:32:34
see you know outages with
Google for
2:32:36
nest and your door and whatever
else you
2:32:39
tie into it this is really it's
bad and
2:32:42
people rely on this way and you
know one
2:32:47
of the big industries on the
internet
2:32:49
I'd say and I don't know too
much about
2:32:50
it but recruitment has got to
be a huge
2:32:53
industry I mean these the these
job
2:32:56
boards a monster board oh yeah
you're
2:32:59
right
2:32:59
so they've taken another step
and
2:33:01
they're all shitty about it too
2:33:04
wait until you hear what's
going on and
2:33:06
these guys they're so to
improve the
2:33:12
hiring process we're adding
some more
2:33:15
technology which I'm sure will
get you
2:33:17
the perfect hire hello what's
your name
2:33:24
hi my name is Jason Bellini
this is Vera
2:33:27
a robot to the does job
interviews what
2:33:31
are the three top important
tips for a
2:33:32
salesperson she's done 10,000
of them
2:33:36
and Counting
2:33:37
congratulations we choose you
as one of
2:33:40
the best candidates for sales
2:33:41
representative what looks like
the
2:33:43
future is already a reality
hiring is
2:33:47
undergoing a revolution almost
all of
2:33:50
Fortune 500 companies now use
some form
2:33:53
of automation which keeps
winking at me
2:33:56
and then really her eyes at me
but many
2:33:58
companies are also trying to
look under
2:34:00
the hood of job applicants and
assist
2:34:02
them in completely new ways
they're
2:34:05
quantifying human behavior human
2:34:08
expressions voices turning that
into
2:34:11
data we're now using artificial
2:34:13
intelligence to help companies
find the
2:34:16
very best talent and most
likely you are
2:34:18
being analyzed by an algorithm
experts
2:34:21
called the proliferation of
artificial
2:34:23
intelligence machine learning
and data
2:34:25
science tools the Wild West of
hiring
2:34:28
critics and even some hiring
managers
2:34:31
themselves say they're
concerned about
2:34:33
these tools potential for bias
there is
2:34:36
issues like fairness
transparency and
2:34:39
accuracy so I can just see the
HR
2:34:43
departments going oh this is
perfect
2:34:46
I can also never get blamed
because the
2:34:48
computer hired that person so I
can
2:34:50
never have a shitty hire I can
yes
2:34:52
absolutely this is exactly what
I would
2:34:54
do yeah you got your ass
covered yep
2:34:56
it's what everybody else is
doing so
2:34:59
it's best practice to get your
ass fired
2:35:04
yeah yes oh you do best
practice and you
2:35:07
have a robot and then you blame
the
2:35:08
robot that's fantastic but
what's a
2:35:11
little more nefarious is what
they're
2:35:12
really doing and yeah I'd look
into some
2:35:14
of these companies about five
of them
2:35:16
now already who are doing this
so you
2:35:18
sit in front of your computer
laptop
2:35:20
webcam and this animated head is
2:35:24
interviewing you but of course
what
2:35:26
that's really doing and that's
why it
2:35:28
does things like it winks and
does that
2:35:30
it's looking for your reaction
it's do
2:35:33
you imagine me with my
Tourette's I mean
2:35:35
she would hang up in two
seconds like
2:35:37
I'm sorry you're not a good
candidate
2:35:38
we'll get rid of you my head
shaking all
2:35:40
over the place doesn't do that
much you
2:35:42
know that's you know it's shake
okay
2:35:46
well you do I mean I you and
rich but
2:35:49
what you can keep from
2:35:51
shaking I know that but then if
I was
2:35:53
doing that during job interview
I'd be
2:35:54
like working really hard not to
twitch
2:35:56
and then they'd be like yeah
that guy's
2:35:58
too uptight we can't hire it
well
2:36:00
there's that element I would
never win
2:36:03
oh geez but this is the
professor Teddy
2:36:06
K is laughing his ass off I'm
sure let's
2:36:09
just rely more on more
technology
2:36:11
that'll be great oh and while
you're at
2:36:13
it
2:36:13
finally the veil is lifted on
what
2:36:15
Amazon is going to do in
healthcare
2:36:18
punch light to your last
comment okay
2:36:21
let's rely on technology even
more and
2:36:24
more and more and then let's
shut down
2:36:26
the nuclear devices in France
so there's
2:36:29
no electricity you need
something work
2:36:36
on that as a punchline yeah
well is now
2:36:41
selling software that searches
patients
2:36:44
medical records for information
that
2:36:46
could help doctors in hospital
oh that's
2:36:49
according to The Wall Street
Journal the
2:36:51
journals parent company and Fox
News
2:36:52
parent company share common
ownership on
2:36:54
the searches not surprisingly
critics
2:36:56
say they're worried about
possible
2:36:58
privacy issues the Fox Business
Network
2:37:00
Jerry Willis reporting live
from the
2:37:02
floor of the New York Stock
Exchange hi
2:37:04
chef that's right so big market
2:37:06
opportunity here imagine 80% of
2:37:09
hospitals in America they are
digitizing
2:37:12
their records or they have
already
2:37:13
compared to 10% by 10 years ago
so big
2:37:17
opportunity there according to
some
2:37:18
market players that's a 7
billion dollar
2:37:21
market place already we see
Google we
2:37:23
see Apple getting into health
care that
2:37:26
represents a three point two
trillion
2:37:28
dollar opportunity and as you
know
2:37:31
health care is only growing
only getting
2:37:33
bigger as the population in
this country
2:37:35
ages I want to talk a little
bit about
2:37:38
privacy because that's
obviously a very
2:37:40
big concern Amazon of course a
company
2:37:42
that knows what you're doing at
home
2:37:44
because of its alexa apps knows
that why
2:37:46
are you shop because of
amazon.com its
2:37:49
retail concentration but what
we're
2:37:51
hearing from Amazon itself is
that
2:37:53
Amazon Web Services will not be
able to
2:37:55
access this information it will
be
2:37:57
encrypted the algorithms will
encrypt
2:37:59
the details the algorithm
2:38:02
will encrypt the details Oh
glad to hear
2:38:06
that the algorithms will
encrypt the
2:38:08
details and people will only be
able to
2:38:10
get at that information by
having a key
2:38:12
that allows them to unlock it
but as you
2:38:15
and that could imagine this is
very
2:38:17
difficult information to put on
software
2:38:18
because it's very technical
2:38:20
their own code for describing
some of
2:38:23
this stuff and they are
regulated here
2:38:26
by HIPAA which is a longtime
law in this
2:38:30
country that protects people's
privacy
2:38:33
so we're hearing from Amazon
this
2:38:35
afternoon Shep back to you
right so
2:38:37
Amazon of course has already
figured out
2:38:39
even a recent article in
motherboard
2:38:43
states that people who buy smart
2:38:44
speakers or as we like to say
on the
2:38:47
show talking tubes have pretty
much
2:38:48
given up on privacy like I know
but I
2:38:51
like the benefit of it this is
what edit
2:38:53
if it turning the lights on
with your
2:38:56
voice this is what Amazon's
strategy is
2:38:59
because I came across another
article
2:39:01
another service actually called
AWS
2:39:04
ground station and now I'm
starting to
2:39:06
see what they're really getting
into AWS
2:39:09
ground station towards Amazon
Web
2:39:11
Services Major Tom yes they are
2:39:14
collecting all data that is
transmitted
2:39:18
from cube SATs pocket cube Sun
cubes le
2:39:21
o--'s medium Earth orbit
geostationary
2:39:24
orbit satellites anything they
can get
2:39:26
their hands on
2:39:27
they are downloading that into
AWS
2:39:30
ground station and make a net
and then
2:39:34
while they're making it
available so
2:39:35
with streaming to capture
process and
2:39:38
store to process for image
analysis to
2:39:42
build and train different kinds
of
2:39:44
models analytics reporting
storage and I
2:39:47
think the you know if you
wanted to have
2:39:49
like I want to have some
process that
2:39:51
alerts me to a specific type of
event in
2:39:54
the world thatÃs at that
satellite data
2:39:55
could help me with like I don't
know
2:39:57
that hurricane I'll just make
something
2:39:59
up then it could you could set
up alerts
2:40:02
um you could do all kinds of
different
2:40:03
things with this and I think
that's kind
2:40:05
of their strategy moving
forward which I
2:40:07
this feels a lot better than
what Google
2:40:09
is doing because these guys do
charge
2:40:11
for everything they do they're
going to
2:40:13
have all this health data and
they'll
2:40:15
say well look
2:40:15
you know could be very
beneficial these
2:40:17
companies are working on things
and just
2:40:19
integrate oh you know what once
you
2:40:20
upload your 23andme data and
we've got
2:40:22
this we've got your your health
record
2:40:24
and if we just say it's okay
I'll unlock
2:40:27
it we'll anonymizer don't worry
your
2:40:28
there's no problem just trust
us and and
2:40:31
this is their business their
businesses
2:40:33
is go is really things gonna be
much
2:40:35
bigger than their shopping
business is
2:40:37
they are making available just
ways to
2:40:41
parse through any kind of data
that you
2:40:42
would want but really targeted
segments
2:40:45
which I think actually are
useful is it
2:40:48
a good idea that Amazon has it
all no
2:40:50
truly evil Corp but the
strategy I think
2:40:55
is phenomenally smart who needs
it no
2:41:00
well no one needs it but people
get
2:41:04
convinced and they get shoot
look 10
2:41:07
years ago we were all tent look
listen
2:41:10
hear me now believe me later
ten years
2:41:12
ago we were talking about how
eventually
2:41:15
you'd have GPS trackers in your
car it
2:41:17
will be tied into insurance and
you will
2:41:20
be able to do without it for a
while
2:41:21
until they mandate it and the
same is
2:41:25
going to be for health trackers
on your
2:41:26
wrist you just won't be able to
get
2:41:28
insurance if you don't do it we
talked
2:41:30
about this for a decade and now
it's
2:41:31
coming to fruition it's a
beautiful
2:41:33
thing our baby is being born
John
2:41:35
appreciate the beauty of the
gift
2:41:39
nothing to appreciate okay well
thanks
2:41:46
for that depressing news let's
see do I
2:41:50
have but I guess something
that's upbeat
2:41:52
okay do you ice cider now I'm
interested
2:41:56
in getting some it's somewhat
ice cider
2:42:00
ice cider no Canadiens make the
best ice
2:42:05
cider cider sales in the US have
2:42:07
increased nearly 500 percent
since 2011
2:42:10
and the number of cider e's has
grown
2:42:13
more than four times from one
hundred
2:42:15
eighty seven to eight hundred
and twenty
2:42:16
one cider product relies on
winters
2:42:19
natural cold to turn it into
liquid gold
2:42:21
and now the country's largest
cider
2:42:23
maker wants to take a bite out
of that
2:42:26
market
2:42:26
Adri
2:42:27
ideas traveled to Apple country
to see
2:42:29
how this seasonal specialty is
made
2:42:32
nestled in the Quebec
countryside is a
2:42:35
farm so picturesque it looks
like a
2:42:37
living postcard horses graze in
the
2:42:40
pasture as their owner and his
best
2:42:42
friend roamed the grounds but
despite
2:42:45
his tranquil surroundings
Christian
2:42:47
Barta muff is no ordinary
farmer he's a
2:42:50
disrupter credited for reviving
Canada's
2:42:53
Apple industry it takes a
village he did
2:42:59
it three decades ago when he
invented
2:43:00
ice cider an alcoholic Apple
drink akin
2:43:04
to desert wine it takes
advantage of
2:43:06
something Canada has in
abundance the
2:43:09
cold no I pick Apple when there
is -
2:43:13
then since she's in the Apple
instead of
2:43:16
picking apples in the fall he
waits
2:43:18
until they freeze in the winter
when the
2:43:21
apple sugar Peaks he was
inspired by a
2:43:23
popular drink called ice wine
which is
2:43:26
made from frozen grapes John
you've hit
2:43:29
upon something very big here
this is an
2:43:34
exit strategy this is I'm sure
2:43:39
Millennials love this whole
idea Oh ice
2:43:43
cider can you imagine Curry
Dvorak buy
2:43:48
cider you know we're like the
two
2:43:50
geezers who really know what
we're doing
2:43:52
we can come on because your
Apple
2:43:53
experts yes we're Apple experts
we
2:43:55
understand everything about
apples about
2:43:57
wine we understand that and I
think the
2:44:00
Millennials would go crazy for
this
2:44:02
stuff I think they're already
going
2:44:04
crazy for it well let's look
into white
2:44:07
labeling some stuff okay
2:44:10
hey you can contact us you can
contact
2:44:12
us Adam and curry comm John I'm
sorry
2:44:16
Joan at Dvorak
2:44:19
and that is your deconstruction
for
2:44:21
today everybody I'm gonna go
back to
2:44:22
driver update he'll figure out
what's
2:44:24
going on with the machine but
hopefully
2:44:26
everything will work
2:44:27
keep your backup recordings if
you're
2:44:29
listening live on No Agenda
Stream comm
2:44:31
just in case
2:44:33
and we'll be back on Sunday
I'll be
2:44:37
coming to you from Chicago
2:44:39
might have a travel story or
two you
2:44:42
never know until then keep it
real y'all
2:44:45
coming to you from downtown
Austin Texas
2:44:47
capital the drone star states
FEMA
2:44:49
region number six on the
governmental
2:44:51
maps in the five by nine clue
do in the
2:44:53
still common-law condo in the
morning
2:44:55
everybody
2:44:56
I'm Adam curry infra northern
Silicon
2:44:58
Valley by the way we missed
this effort
2:45:00
today seat vorak we return on
Sunday
2:45:04
right here on no agenda until
then
2:45:10
[Music]
2:45:27
read commercial enjoy want to
take a
2:45:30
quick break to thank the
sponsors of
2:45:32
this week's episode of starting
with
2:45:35
powder cricket powder laborers
take a
2:45:46
quick break about that
2:45:52
[Music]
2:46:15
cricket powder like me you know
2:46:40
cognitively crackers there's no
powder
2:46:46
yummy
2:46:47
maybe cricket how read
commercial the
2:46:52
future
2:46:53
[Music]
2:47:02
[Music]
2:47:28
some reckless speculation here
so I'm
2:47:31
all in favor of that friends
doing
2:47:34
things to put you in this
position that
2:47:37
you are now in correct
journalism dead
2:47:41
The Guardian that's in the UK
claims
2:47:43
tall Paul secretly met with
Assange at
2:47:47
the Ecuadorian embassy Roger
2:47:49
calls me three times we have
three times
2:47:51
we have a discussion the mana
fort was
2:47:53
going in there to get restaurant
2:47:55
recommendations for a great
night out in
2:47:57
London it's very dishonest
corrupt is
2:48:00
interesting it depends on either
2:48:02
because Roger wanted to explain
this
2:48:04
tweet-tweet settles and to
gauge what
2:48:08
he's up to because he's too so
many
2:48:11
things for so many years
government is
2:48:14
getting hand-in-hand with
someone the
2:48:16
government also believes to be
a liar
2:48:18
and a criminal I mean I haven't
been a
2:48:21
lobbyist in Washington 25 20
years
2:48:24
probably that I have no
intention of
2:48:25
going back to that man afford
his lied
2:48:27
so many times throughout his
career that
2:48:29
perhaps he's lost track of it
that you
2:48:34
better have betrayed the
country or else
2:48:36
someone owes you a big apology
2:48:37
WikiLeaks dumped this triangle
is
2:48:40
spinning very slowly this is
what we
2:48:42
call the signature plans to
more dump
2:48:49
stumps of if the media is not
gonna do
2:48:51
their job there are gonna be
more wiki
2:48:53
leaks in the future why I
certainly hope
2:48:55
so
2:48:58
- no agenda they give us as we
kept her
2:49:02
we donate - with no agenda
2:49:05
it's the show that's really
unique
2:49:09
donate - no attend our list the
Tron and
2:49:13
Adam speak Dorne - no agenda
2:49:18
science is turning into a clean
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2:49:29
ranked dot org slash
2:49:31
inane