0:01
hmm Adam curry
0:03
John C. Dvorak 7 2019 this is
your award
0:07
winning combination media
assassination
0:09
episode 1150 this is no agenda
enjoying
0:14
all the books on offer in my
city and
0:16
broadcasting live from the
frontier of
0:18
Austin Texas capital the drone
star
0:20
state in the morning everybody
0:21
hi Madame Giry from northern
Silicon
0:24
Valley where the Democrats all
say ok we
0:39
can all go home
0:40
you nailed it and that's our
show
0:44
ah very good very good I have
to admit I
0:49
I did double duty but really
shows for a
0:52
different activity last night
sex oh god
0:56
I wish no a second best thing I
went out
1:01
to dinner with the New York
former New
1:02
York banker oh good yeah
1:05
yeah it would which you know
it's like
1:07
really do you know what I do
you're
1:09
gonna take me out on a
Wednesday night
1:11
when you know the debates or
watches
1:13
debates at the bar debates no
not we
1:19
went late they did
1:21
oh really that you would
actually it
1:24
would have been a very Austin
thing but
1:25
he took me to a brand new
restaurant
1:28
okay yeah and let me tell you
this is
1:31
big outside money coming into
Austin you
1:34
look up commodore c om e dor
commodore
1:38
in austin this is i don't know
how much
1:42
they paid to build this
restaurant it is
1:45
cool cor yeah Commodore Austin
yes they
1:56
got some like celebrity guys I
guess and
1:58
some kind of well-known chef
it's a
2:00
Mexican restaurant but it has a
very
2:02
specific cook besides it being
you know
2:06
total kind of hipster place in
2:11
architecture I mean seriously
the way
2:12
they built this
2:13
you know cool you know they can
open up
2:16
the whole side of the
restaurant and
2:18
they've got these you know
beautiful
2:19
change it looks very steampunk
ish but
2:25
there's to be is just a big
brown
2:26
building or the one next to it
that's
2:29
the building it's the way it's
well it's
2:31
brown you see brick in the
front it's
2:34
brown
2:35
anyway giant they're uh they're
hook is
2:39
they serve bugs oh brother
2:43
how could how could I pass it
up of
2:47
course I did
2:48
I had the dance and the
grasshoppers
2:55
honestly it was disappointing
because
2:58
they have one cuz you know the
the girl
3:00
comes over she's like hey help
you with
3:03
anything so yeah what has the
3:04
grasshopper you know I don't
know that
3:09
I've went to one of the better
3:11
restaurants in Mexico City and
they had
3:12
bugs on the menu well it was
here's the
3:15
disappointment weird mold that
you get
3:17
off a corn but yes they they
serve that
3:20
as well
3:21
it's fungus I think well
whatever it is
3:24
it's really tasty it's very
tasty I was
3:28
disappointed I'm thinking I'm
gonna have
3:29
great me I'm gonna see a
grasshopper I'm
3:31
gonna have to crunch this thing
in my
3:32
teeth these were little baby
3:34
grasshoppers like they just
came out of
3:35
an incubator little preemies it
was just
3:38
a sprinkling on top now you
can't you
3:41
couldn't really try to take a
picture it
3:43
can't really tell if it's great
to know
3:45
maybe maybe was just you could
see it an
3:47
odd leg or two but it was a
good cover
3:54
for when it gets infested by
cockroaches
3:57
and then the ants were on the
dessert on
4:01
the ice cream so this charming
sprinkle
4:05
little dab which interestingly
the New
4:07
York banker turned his nose up
at that
4:10
he tried he would uh whereas I
tried him
4:14
and I thought hmm
4:15
peppery you know their peppery
yeah
4:23
so then you did double duty so
you came
4:25
back and watched the debates
after the
4:26
fact yeah I skimmed through it
yeah this
4:29
was I knew this wasn't gonna be
much and
4:32
yeah and although for me it was
kind of
4:34
interesting to see the the
audio the
4:38
technical issues they had I
really felt
4:40
bad while everyone's laughing
and if you
4:42
know and of course you get
their inner
4:45
tit in the wringer
4:46
I know it's I know this feeling
there's
4:48
a guy and he's pulling his hair
out and
4:51
they can't figure out why
they're
4:52
routing from the IFB from the
from the
4:55
from the control room is
routing through
4:58
to the floor and probably in
everyone
4:59
else's I have been and by the
way with
5:02
these new rigs I don't even
know I don't
5:04
know if I could even operate
when they
5:06
have this networking system I
already
5:08
know it there's a name for it
and
5:09
everybody uses it
5:11
I was the audio networking yeah
at all
5:12
it all runs through there's no
more
5:14
cables
5:15
no more cables no it's all
either net so
5:20
the the routing matrix is
completely
5:22
digitized and if it gets I mean
I this
5:25
is why I felt bad I couldn't
really sit
5:27
they were shot in a Freud
they're going
5:29
you suck even though I
understand why
5:33
people think it's funny but
from a
5:35
professional standpoint I feel
bad some
5:37
guys something happened and
I've been
5:39
there so many times on this
very show so
5:42
I'd you know I uh I did like
the memes
5:45
though I did Trump was tweeting
all
5:48
kinds of funny memes about and
of course
5:50
distract me from anything by
just you
5:52
know highlighting the audio
glitch but
5:57
everyone on stay almost
everyone on
6:00
stage they take themselves so
seriously
6:04
and especially MSNBC and Rachel
and and
6:08
chip Chuck chod cast the ghosts
of the
6:12
bachelors for participating and
6:14
democracy Wow please the stupid
little
6:18
dog and pony show it's not even
a debate
6:23
they can have ten people and
have a
6:25
debate have you ever heard that
you you
6:27
were a master debater weren't
you in in
6:30
school is always a master
debater I've
6:32
I masturbate the master view we
go no I
6:39
tried start with this you
nailed it
6:45
you dropped the ball you
unmailed it and
6:50
you went off of your merry way
with
6:52
Spacey Abrams what yes I
remember this
6:57
it was about a year or maybe
two years
7:00
ago yeah we don't know all the
talk are
7:03
you suck Astro as the guy the
go-to guy
7:06
no incorrect no incorrect
7:09
it was Pennebaker the professor
in
7:12
Austin when he was accusing me
and my
7:14
then future wife of having white
7:17
privilege and saying that the
Castro
7:19
brothers were going to be the
ones it
7:20
wasn't me it was from an Obot
dinner
7:23
well you brought it up that's
different
7:27
in fact Astro was the guy who
won you
7:30
think - oh I disagree I disagree
7:32
disagree all you want but every
if you
7:35
read anything today this
morning and if
7:37
you watch the thing with a
Democrat
7:39
perspective or you listen to
the kids
7:41
now I'm gonna play some clips
from the
7:44
teen panel can I just say one
thing
7:46
about Castro briefly last night
the only
7:49
thing the banker said the
former banker
7:51
said about the debates was well
this
7:53
should be Castro's last stand
he should
7:55
be out of there by now and I
have no
7:57
idea came out of the blue I
didn't
7:59
really ask him about anything he
8:00
pinpointed Castro as Castro's
got to go
8:03
and I'm just taking this intro
for what
8:06
it is elite circles etc he's
probably
8:09
anti Bank or something gonna
get in
8:13
anyway but he's not gonna go
after this
8:16
performance he would most
people saw him
8:19
as number one and flawless with
the
8:21
teens and what is this yeah
what is this
8:23
teens panel what's going on
with this
8:25
she put together a panel of
teens and
8:28
Millennials and they're not all
teens
8:30
and Muslim college students but
I'm
8:32
calling them teens because it
sounded
8:34
like give you an example of the
of the
8:39
teen pen here's a comment from
one of
8:41
the teeth one of the college
panelists
8:43
this is a guy with a probably an
8:45
inflamed a MIG deal
8:46
Trump hater I'm guessing
confused in
8:50
general and I want you to
listen to this
8:52
guy and tell me what he said
after after
8:55
he played this clip which is
teen panel
8:57
weird comments that go nowhere
clip I'm
9:00
also very interested in the
preventative
9:01
care model that a lot of the
Democratic
9:03
candidates that seem to suggest
an area
9:05
where we look at the root
causes of the
9:06
issue whether that is gun
control their
9:08
immigration or health care and
we
9:12
noticed that there's a lack of
economic
9:13
economic opportunity and
there's also a
9:17
lack of care services they're
9:18
implemented throughout ones
lifetime
9:19
that might result and use really
9:22
terrible social issues what was
I
9:28
supposed to understand that was
very
9:31
very difficult
9:31
it was just dropping in memes
and it was
9:34
like there was non-stop and he
never
9:36
really concluded anything it
was idiotic
9:38
but that but that was the group
this is
9:40
a bunch of young college kids
and he and
9:42
so I got a couple teachers to
here
9:44
they're talking about the
Spanish that
9:50
was initiated by Castro no Beto
no she
9:56
she ated by the bado
9:59
said oh well that's why I said
Beto in
10:02
the first in the first round of
10:05
questions which Bushmen had me
take some
10:07
notes on cuz there's a couple
things I
10:09
noticed one was amy klobuchar
when they
10:12
first turned the camera on her
she was
10:15
if you had a 4k TV and you
could had a
10:18
good upscaling she was shaking
like a
10:22
leaf well I thought Booker's
face was
10:24
pretty funny when bento started
doing
10:27
that Booker's face like you
know start
10:33
speaking Spanish and so then
Booker felt
10:36
he had to speak some Spanish
and of
10:38
course the only guy who could
really
10:39
speak perfect Spanish was
Castro and
10:43
then another one that really I
thought
10:45
was a pure fail was Tulsi this
is ask
10:48
the question right off the bat
her first
10:50
question was a very specific
question
10:53
and instead of even coming
close to
10:55
answering it she goes off on
her on her
10:58
creds on her a bio here her you
know her
11:03
background and how she went to
the war a
11:06
number of times and she's the
only aunt
11:07
their war candidate had nothing
to do
11:09
with it
11:09
so she was out and then the
other thing
11:12
I noticed the major thing I
noticed that
11:14
this again would be a NBC
staging there
11:18
were nobody was using apple
crates so
11:20
you you saw a a midget a dwarf
a big
11:25
tall dude I mean it was
horrible looking
11:29
you know it's interesting you
say that
11:31
as I've looked at the shot and
again it
11:33
was I didn't get home until
quarter to
11:34
ten as I looked at the shot I'm
like
11:36
what it something's wrong with
this and
11:38
I couldn't quite pinpoint it
but you
11:40
just you just nailed it they
they didn't
11:42
he equalized the candidates
they didn't
11:45
even know but a little bit a
little
11:49
something because you got a six
nine guy
11:51
there you got another tall dude
Tulsi is
11:55
pretty big so she held her own
but you
11:56
got a a pretty much a
borderline dwarf
11:59
with Klobuchar and then Warren
is a
12:02
diminutive she's a pretty woman
so they
12:05
needed to put them on a full
crate at
12:08
least by the way we're talking
as
12:09
television producers here not
as not as
12:12
hateful people this is how
television
12:15
producers talk yeah by the way I
12:22
disagree about Tulsi but we can
get to
12:25
that later after you're done
with one of
12:28
the losers but but so this is
the kids
12:31
talking about this about what
they
12:33
thought about them speaking
Spanish what
12:36
were some I roll moments cuz I
12:37
definitely saw some from you
guys Ariane
12:40
I saw a lot from you when Cory
Booker
12:42
was talking I saw a couple like
Oh God
12:45
from you guys so what were some
of those
12:47
things that you weren't so
thrilled
12:49
about when bado spoke Spanish
even like
12:52
actually I don't want to say I
didn't
12:54
like it but I think he like
caught some
12:55
people off-guard and you could
see even
12:56
some of the other candidates
were a
12:57
little shaken up by that so I
thought
12:59
that Booker's expression is
trending all
13:01
over yeah Twitter I think just
as the
13:04
Spanish speaking went on I
thought that
13:06
it was great when Bader did it
the first
13:07
time but then as it continued
on with
13:09
the multiple candidates I
thought
13:11
like especially with Booker it
kind of
13:12
felt like pandering for some
reason they
13:14
just didn't feel this genuine
coming
13:16
from him and I just feel like
any
13:17
moments that didn't feel as
genuine
13:19
coming from the candidates when
we
13:20
talked about like wait a minute
let me
13:21
ask you a question like is this
like a
13:22
white valley girl type like
girl who as
13:24
he was talking about pandering
like to
13:25
brown people she even allowed
to do that
13:26
doesn t of white privilege like
you said
13:27
okay Friday me I can't do it his
13:33
neighborhood repeatedly I'm in
kind of
13:35
the same fashion
13:38
typical typical I got a lot of
feedback
13:43
from the Millennials about this
they
13:44
thought it was they didn't like
it
13:46
didn't like any of it and I'm
surprised
13:48
I'm like how can you be so
racist just
13:52
using their words retaining I'm
sorry
14:01
retain debate team I'm sorry
yes I got
14:04
it how we often have to try to
balance
14:06
it to finding jobs or taking
care of the
14:08
environment and seeing what's
gonna
14:09
happen in the future
14:10
so Elizabeth kind of talked
about on the
14:12
Green Deal the green New Deal
kind of
14:14
helping those who are within
these and
14:16
just dying industries helping
them to
14:19
retrain and to newer industries
that way
14:21
they're not necessarily losing
their
14:23
jobs they are simply moving into
14:25
something else I would be able
to help
14:27
not only the economy but to be
able to
14:29
help the environment so that's
actually
14:31
a very interesting perspective
so I want
14:34
to talk about this I'm sorry I
played
14:36
that clip I should play it
later I would
14:38
just retraining this was not
retaining
14:40
alright here's the final clip
from these
14:42
guys and this is what they
threw they
14:43
think well I got two clips from
them
14:46
okay this is the team panel
discussion
14:49
about the working class did you
get the
14:53
specifics on the economic
issues that we
14:55
talked about in our before in
the debate
14:57
that you were now or I mean
mayor de
15:00
Blasio specifically kept
talking about
15:01
how he wants to shift the
Democratic
15:03
Party back to being the party
of the
15:05
working class but never really
gave me
15:07
any you know specific policy
solutions
15:09
for it and the fact of the
matter is is
15:11
that blue-collar America is
happening in
15:12
Pennsylvania Ohio Wisconsin
Michigan
15:15
those key states at the
president won in
15:17
2016 because this message
resonated with
15:19
those kinds of voters
blue-collar
15:21
America isn't happening as much
in New
15:23
York City as it
15:24
some places like that and
places you
15:26
know like me at home in West
Virginia so
15:28
I felt like that you know a lot
of the
15:29
candidates sort of talked about
you know
15:31
Elizabeth Warren talked about
the poor
15:33
people but I felt like it was
more about
15:34
you know helping them as poor
people or
15:37
not getting them back on their
feet
15:38
finding jobs for them and
putting them
15:40
into careers where they can
support
15:42
their families again well
that's not
15:44
that I think that's valid
that's a good
15:46
point
15:46
that was a very good point all
that all
15:48
I ever hear is we'll give you
money
15:49
we'll fix your problems with
money don't
15:51
worry about anything systemic
we'll fix
15:53
it with money well some of
these young
15:55
Democrats may be thinking
otherwise and
15:57
I think they're these guys are
losing
15:59
and that's why they think the
Bernie
16:01
appeals so much so less years
there now
16:03
this is the finale clip this is
each one
16:05
of them saying who they thought
won the
16:08
debate
16:09
all right guys quick lightning
round who
16:11
won tonight in your eyes will
start with
16:13
Valentina and go this way
Julian Castro
16:16
for actually talking policy for
young
16:18
kosterow Castro for the same
reasons Wow
16:21
secretary Castro I think Warren
actually
16:25
did a good job but I do agree I
thought
16:27
Castro stood out as one of the
lesser
16:28
known candidates I was actually
very
16:31
surprised by mayor de Blasio's
ideas and
16:34
his messaging Wow
16:36
so Castro kind of stole the
spotlight
16:38
and de Blasio came out awesome
thanks
16:43
everybody thanks for coming
everybody
16:44
don't forget you don't forget
your goody
16:46
bag your tote bag your swag bag
on the
16:49
way out awesome boys and girls
yeah yeah
16:52
the fact that we even have to
somehow
16:55
have to have winners is dumb
it's
16:58
ludicrous the whole thing
there's no
17:01
winner and he puts his funds
and people
17:04
on a pensive I want to play
tulsi
17:06
gabbard because I've liked her
and this
17:08
is if there's any Democrat I've
liked
17:11
consistently on this show for
years it's
17:13
Tulsi Gabbard and you can call
her a
17:17
loser she's a loser in this no
there's
17:20
no winners as hold hands tell a
secret
17:24
list I think what she did with
the the
17:28
Ryan character was that Tim
Ryan Ted
17:31
Ryan Fred wine-red Ryan
17:35
I think she is she butts land
him good
17:37
I've been in Congress 17 years
and 12 of
17:40
those years I've sat on the
Armed
17:42
Services Committee they're the
Defense
17:44
Appropriations Committee or the
Armed
17:45
Services Committee and the
lesson that
17:47
I've learned over the years is
that you
17:50
have to stay engaged in these
situations
17:53
nobody likes it it's long it's
tedious
17:56
but right now we have so I
would say we
17:59
must be engaged in this we must
have our
18:01
state department engaged we
must have
18:03
our military engaged to the
state to the
18:04
extent they need to be getting
a drone
18:07
shot down for a hundred and
thirty
18:09
million dollars because the
president is
18:12
distracted that's a hundred and
thirty
18:15
million dollars that we could be
18:17
spending in places like
Youngstown Ohio
18:18
or Flint Michigan I'm gonna
give you 30
18:24
seconds actually to jump off
what he
18:25
said tell the parents of those
two
18:31
soldiers who were just killed in
18:33
Afghanistan well we just have
to be
18:34
engaged as a soldier I will
tell you
18:37
that answer is on what she just
did
18:40
there I think that's the most
powerful
18:42
statement she made as a soldier
I'm not
18:46
quite sure why Scott Adams
might have a
18:48
better idea but when she says
as a
18:50
soldier her just the way she
looked on
18:52
stage who she is
18:54
you go on your head kind of
goes if you
18:56
don't know who she is
18:57
like uh-oh a soldier and the
search data
19:01
and I want to finish this clip
show that
19:04
she was the most searched for
named
19:06
after the debate even during
some of the
19:09
debate like across the country
now it's
19:12
a google map so who the hell
knows you
19:14
know you can't trust anything
but we'll
19:16
just take it as a baseline and
I and I
19:18
think that for her overall
awareness if
19:20
you know the show's general
consensus is
19:23
she's raising her profile to
take over
19:26
amazing her own OHS gig I I
thought it
19:30
was good and to me this is a
she needs
19:32
to do that more often who were
just
19:34
killed and
19:35
be honest on what we just have
to be
19:36
engaged as a soldier I will
tell you
19:39
that answer is unacceptable we
have to
19:42
bring our troops home from
Afghanistan
19:44
we are in a place in
Afghanistan where
19:47
we have lost so many lives
we've spent
19:50
so much money money that's
coming out of
19:52
every one of our pockets money
that
19:53
should be going into
communities here at
19:56
home meeting the needs of the
people
19:58
here at home we are no better
off in
20:00
Afghanistan today than we were
when this
20:02
war began this is why it's so
important
20:05
to have a president
commander-in-chief
20:06
who knows the cost of war and
is ready
20:09
to do the job on day one I am
ready to
20:11
do that job when I walk into
the ocean
20:14
out the Ryan is in he had a
look on his
20:17
face man he's pissed off so he
does get
20:19
30 seconds you felt like she was
20:21
refining you get 30 she ate
that I hear
20:23
what you're saying thank you
child just
20:25
say I don't want to be engaged
20:27
I wish we were spending all
this money
20:28
in places that I've represented
that
20:31
have been completely forgotten
and we
20:32
were rebuilding but the reality
of it is
20:34
that the United States isn't
engaged the
20:37
Taliban will grow and they
won't have
20:40
bigger bolder terrorists we
have got to
20:44
have some present there is
there long
20:47
before we came in yeah
20:52
people wanting to Afghanistan
thinking
20:55
that we're going to somehow
squash this
20:57
Taliban I didn't wash them wash
them
21:01
when we weren't in there they
started
21:03
flying planes into our
buildings so I'm
21:06
just saying I thought that was
fantastic
21:23
that was good but anyone could
have done
21:25
that cuz the guy's full of shit
that guy
21:27
she's a soldier look so he goes
on with
21:32
ya the Taliban attack this ok
sure has
21:35
done nothing
21:36
it takes soldiers over there
bonehead
21:39
he's out he's out he's
eliminated
21:41
permanently for saying that
21:43
I like Tulsi I thought she
finally
21:46
brought a little bit of fire
she needs
21:48
to dialed up another hundred
percent and
21:51
she could go somewhere I'm not
going
21:53
anywhere in this election she
is going
21:55
into the Senate which is worse
we should
21:57
be a good spot this somebody's
got to
21:59
get rid of this other woman I
got a
22:00
route for somebody well you
should have
22:05
routed for your old pal
22:07
it's not my old pal Julian and
this and
22:11
I find from a from an American
22:13
perspective this this it truly
is this
22:16
all the Spanish speaking is is
truly I
22:21
mean why don't we just speak
some Somali
22:23
you know there's a whole bunch
of groups
22:25
we can talk to you why doesn't
everyone
22:26
just get the ax rosetta stone
and and
22:29
bone up on it I mean come on
you I find
22:34
it insulting I really do it's
just like
22:36
because you I know you're
talking to
22:38
you're talking to Americans
you're
22:39
talking to a legal immigrants
people who
22:42
are in America who are Mexican
Spanish
22:44
South American they speak and
understand
22:46
English exactly right that is
the reason
22:50
I don't see why it doesn't make
it even
22:53
more transparent the whole
point of of
22:55
letting as many illegals in as
possible
22:57
and then speaking in Spanish
yeah
23:00
get him to vote you and then
you can
23:02
kick him out afterwards this is
the
23:03
Kennedy there was a there was a
23:05
hilarious there's a hilarious
video on
23:07
No Agenda social calm of I
think it was
23:13
yeah I think Castro speaking
maybe was
23:15
Beto when during his thing and
there's
23:18
subtitles which say according
to the
23:21
model report no agenda show is
the best
23:24
podcast in the universe
23:26
I felt I felt pretty left out
and I
23:29
understand kind of what he's
saying what
23:31
they're saying when they do
this but no
23:33
this is just I mean I I could
not
23:37
imagine this happening in any
other
23:39
country people would be up in
arms
23:42
here's like oh oh you speak
Spanish but
23:44
I think most Americans are
actually
23:45
impressed Wow he speaks another
language
23:48
yeah that's odd yeah this is
strange
23:51
sound coming from his mouth
maybe
23:52
speaking in tongues but yeah in
23:55
combination with with
everything about
23:57
immigration then it's just it's
clear
23:59
what you're doing I mean and
that's one
24:01
way of viewing it but ah you
know I've
24:06
been rear-ended by by illegals
in Austin
24:10
with my truck that is I am
around they
24:15
speak English they really do
anyway so
24:23
I'm looking at some of the
tweets from
24:25
the Democrats and it's funny
how the
24:26
Democrats really come out and
they
24:28
really take you think they'd be
a little
24:30
show business Democrats I'm
talking
24:32
about that Hollywood elites
mm-hmm and
24:35
they come out they're just you
know
24:36
pretty blunt Seth MacFarland
24:39
candidates please stop yelling
we are
24:42
all on the same side what's the
point of
24:45
a debate then yeah exactly
what's the
24:51
point
24:53
Mia Farrow all the topic being
discussed
24:57
by these candidates are
important I feel
25:02
proud to be a Democrat little
flag the
25:08
banker was saying he said the
25:10
interesting take on he says
this is why
25:15
I said there's no reason to
watch it he
25:16
says what Trump had and what
Trump did
25:18
is he took the two issues that
no
25:20
Republican would take on at the
time
25:22
believe it or not it was
immigration in
25:24
China and he just because he
had those
25:27
two things which everyone knows
is
25:28
common sense everybody all
sides all
25:32
Americans and he just yelled
those over
25:35
and over again and forced
everybody into
25:37
it you'll recall the
immigration debate
25:38
was forced by Trump and that's
about
25:41
Trump takes credit for it he's
team it
25:43
reminds us of that
25:44
right before me no one's even
talking
25:47
about Justin now everybody's
talking
25:49
about how you that's how these
days a
25:53
political debate that's how you
get the
25:55
points is you've got to choose
something
25:57
that no one else really wants
to talk
25:59
about and then yell loudly over
26:00
everybody else that's what
Trump did he
26:02
took two main main issues and
and
26:07
therefore he was he was the
winner from
26:09
day one on that and just kept
hammering
26:11
and hammering and hammering and
everyone
26:12
sees the logic of it but
everyone's
26:14
afraid I was afraid well
there's also a
26:17
number of people who said I
don't
26:19
understand why they didn't go
after
26:20
Trump more even though they did
a little
26:22
bit jay inslee I said he said
something
26:25
that negative jay inslee by the
way it
26:27
was the guy standing next to
the right
26:29
of Tulsi yeah he's the governor
from
26:33
Washington State who's Oh
26:35
has a one-issue thing drum
pound which
26:38
is a climate change mm-hmm and
he he had
26:41
a shit-eating grin on his face
26:44
from the get-go and he just
kept it
26:46
plastered on there so when you
saw the
26:48
camera angle with Ruth Tulsi
yakking
26:51
about something or even anyone
down the
26:53
row and you saw it you didn't
kind of
26:56
nicked his face it gonna have
profile
26:58
but just the front and you
could see
27:01
this dumb smile he had on his
face I
27:03
thought it was like so I
mentioned this
27:04
to Mimi's no no that's that he
always
27:06
has a dumpster resting
bitchface this
27:11
stupid anyway I found the whole
thing to
27:14
be quite tedious no doubt it
was a
27:17
little tedious luckily it was
only two
27:19
hours only tonight's will be a
little
27:20
now who has the debate tonight
is that
27:22
is that CNN is it CNN that that
is
27:25
airing that tonight or is it
MSNBC I
27:27
think it has to be the same
people so
27:30
tonight we have Biden we have
Bernie we
27:34
have is Buddha judge on this
one tonight
27:37
or Z not is enough no he's on
the mayor
27:39
Pete is in trouble man I mean I
don't
27:42
know if you followed this the
shooting
27:43
in in his town and he's a
hamlet where
27:46
he is he is mayor so the only
only about
27:49
a hundred thousand people in
the town
27:50
and I actually have a little
report
27:53
about it but the the main thing
is every
27:55
single time they have video and
audio or
27:58
anything from Mayor Pete in this
27:59
situation he has his head bowed
down he
28:03
can't really talk he's almost
like he's
28:05
been like he's been gut-punched
and and
28:08
I well if you'd listen to this
clip I
28:10
have my reasoning as to why he
feels so
28:13
downtrodden we have tried but
not
28:15
succeeded to increase diversity
in the
28:17
police department and we need
help at
28:20
home in South Bend Indiana
Buddha judge
28:22
was confronted by accusations
of bias in
28:25
his city's police force got
racism aside
28:28
ago police departments how we
supposed
28:30
assessments
28:31
I am raising a seven-year-old
grandson
28:33
that when he sees the police he
is
28:36
afraid that is not what's
supposed to
28:38
happen racial tensions flared
last week
28:41
after a white South Bend police
officer
28:44
shot and killed a black man who
was
28:46
allegedly holding a knife
28:49
the officer was wearing a body
camera
28:51
but it was not turned on if
anyone who
28:55
is on patrol is shown to be a
racist or
28:58
to do something racist in a way
that is
29:06
substantiative that is their
last day on
29:09
the street wrong answer mayor
Pete Buda
29:14
judge dropped off the campaign
trail
29:15
after the shooting last week I
just
29:18
think it's my job I don't know
if it's
29:22
smarter
29:24
I don't know if it's strategic
or not
29:30
yeah he's actually upset that
he's out
29:32
of the race I mean that's
really what
29:34
he's upset about I'm just gonna
call it
29:36
he doesn't give a crap I don't
think he
29:38
seems like a very ineffective
leader
29:40
yeah well he I'm gonna call you
could
29:43
call that out you're right but
he never
29:46
was in the race to any extent
accepted
29:49
novelty novelty act yes one of
the spook
29:53
novelties spook novelty he's
not in the
29:57
race for president anyway he
wants to
30:00
move up to the State House or
this
30:02
government governor or senator
it's just
30:04
like tulsi there were these
people and I
30:07
don't know how many of them are
running
30:08
that are on this who I put in
this
30:10
category those two for sure
they're just
30:13
running to raise their public
profile
30:15
get some free airtime and then
run for
30:17
Senate or something else it
does that of
30:20
all the candidates is there a
single
30:22
black American I think Booker
is hmm
30:28
he's brown but is he is he a
Joss or is
30:33
he say Dawson hmm I'm not so
sure I'll
30:35
have to look into it I'd be
surprised if
30:37
he was it well tonight should
be just as
30:43
dumb honest no no today I'll be
better I
30:46
think it'll be great cuz they
got you're
30:48
gonna have to deal with Bernie
sorry
30:53
really what's that one to play
a little
30:55
jingle about Bernie and an oldie
31:03
[Music]
31:13
[Music]
31:15
Bernie's got a big black
problem oh yes
31:20
he does he's got a huge black
problem I
31:23
have a clip yeah that's why
he'll never
31:24
that's why he can't can't win
now I got
31:28
another bunch of panelists that
came up
31:30
on NBC that talked about the
debates and
31:32
I kind of concentrate on NBC
because
31:34
they gave the debates they had
people
31:36
backstage they had the whole
thing going
31:37
on and there was I've got three
clips
31:41
one of them is the most
important one I
31:43
think which because they read
they
31:45
introduced or one of the
panelists
31:47
introduced this term which was
actually
31:50
brought up by I can't remember
which of
31:53
the guys up there
31:54
oh I know exactly what you're
talking
31:56
about but the term is repress
justice it
32:02
was beautiful and I will do it
was one
32:04
of the panelists that's rude
out there I
32:06
was Amy or son who was the dude
it was a
32:09
dude it was it was de Blasio
yeah a
32:13
troll room might know yeah I
think it
32:15
was de Blasio whatever was just
a little
32:17
discussion of it the hosts a
post-show
32:21
discussion yeah post show it is
also
32:24
related to making sure that you
can
32:26
raise your family in a safe
community
32:27
that you have access to health
care
32:29
throughout that child's life
and your
32:31
own life and that they can rise
up the
32:33
socio-economic ladder so it's a
more
32:35
holistic approach and that was
a radical
32:38
moment to say reproductive
justice
32:39
innovating yes and I think I
mean
32:42
Hillary Clinton did talk about
32:43
reproductive justice in the 2016
32:46
campaign breach to Planned
Parenthood
32:47
but I cannot recall her saying
those
32:50
words and it to be and that's
the big
32:52
moment so what did you think
Jackie I
32:53
mean did you feel like the
issue the
32:56
women's rights and and the
issue around
32:57
abortion was adequately
addressed by the
32:59
candidates yeah I do and I
really did
33:02
appreciate Amy Klobuchar zinger
but yeah
33:04
Ainsley you are
33:07
they're bands with you but I
perhaps a
33:11
little bit so if you did make a
pretty
33:13
bold man not he was only
accurate in
33:16
saying that yeah he was the
only person
33:18
to predict abortion rights and
which you
33:20
don't meanwhile there are there
were
33:22
three female candidates on the
stage you
33:23
have also pretty much dedicated
videos
33:25
really one in the same
legislation
33:27
yeah but what I'm actually
really
33:29
curious is to see Joe Biden
answer that
33:31
question tomorrow and I was
actually
33:32
pretty surprised that Biden's
name
33:33
didn't come up during that
conversation
33:34
because he is the one candidate
who has
33:36
been a bit behind the curve
especially
33:38
in the conversation of
reproductive
33:40
justice because he hasn't
seemed to
33:42
understand that a lot of the
issues
33:44
around reproductive justice
33:46
disproportionately affects
women of
33:48
color and he's kind of the
Heidemann
33:50
exactly and you know there was
that
33:51
reporting that his top female
advisors
33:54
had to educate him on why it was
33:56
important for him to change his
mind and
33:58
flip-flop on the Hyde Amendment
because
34:00
it disproportionately affect
communities
34:02
of color and I'm so happy to
hear these
34:04
white women talking about
reproductive
34:06
justice as I read from the
Wikipedia on
34:09
the subject reproductive
justice is the
34:12
human right to maintain
personal bodily
34:15
autonomy have children not have
children
34:19
and parent the children we have
in safe
34:22
and sustainable communities and
this is
34:25
according to sister song women
of color
34:27
reproductive justice collective
the
34:30
first organization founded to
build a
34:32
reproductive justice movement
and let's
34:37
see yeah this is a a all done
by black
34:42
women they've set this up and
they and
34:46
doesn't sound exactly the way
they are
34:48
talking about it the white
women I hear
34:50
hear well it's gonna morph
because you
34:54
know we've talked about this on
the show
34:56
and people should realize that
we see
34:58
the the difference and it's not
my eye
35:02
it was somebody else who
brought this up
35:04
and years ago and it says they
did you
35:06
realize this is what it's all
about the
35:08
Democrats are for I have two
themes
35:11
justice so the drop the word
justice on
35:14
anything it's great justice and
equality
35:16
and the Republicans are freedom
and
35:18
liberty
35:19
and so you'll see in their
literature
35:21
either side you'll find a lot of
35:23
references to freedom and
liberty on the
35:26
Republican side or the
conservative side
35:27
you'll see a lot of references
to
35:29
justice and equality to the
point which
35:32
is a problem for the Democrats
because
35:34
equality leads to
egalitarianism which
35:38
leads to situations like they
have in
35:40
Sweden where people don't
understand
35:42
that not everybody is in the
Galit area
35:44
and you bring in a bunch of
outsiders
35:46
who don't believe in this sort
of thing
35:47
and yet you have all kinds of
issues and
35:50
egalitarianism is a serious
problem
35:52
generally speaking just this is
what it
35:55
is freedom and liberty is kind
of both
35:58
kind of variations of the same
theme
36:00
well as you just heard that
term the way
36:02
it was used reproductive
justice could
36:04
you sum it up in one sentence
what that
36:06
is I mean I have it here so I'm
curious
36:07
what you think just having
heard that
36:09
what do you think that means
36:10
reproductive justice what is
that
36:12
definition I think it means
freedom -
36:15
did you raise kids the way you
want
36:17
reproductive justice focuses on
abortion
36:21
access rather than abortion
rights
36:24
asserting that the legal right
to
36:26
abortion is meaningless for
women who
36:28
cannot access it due to cost
distance or
36:31
other obstacles so no one's
using it
36:34
right they just throw and
throwing it
36:35
around yeah well you're right
if that's
36:37
the case because if it's just an
36:39
abortion issue there's again
though I'd
36:42
the Democrats do this they take
the word
36:44
justice and they drop it here
and they
36:46
drop it there and then when
they do I
36:47
was oh and they all get worked
up about
36:52
it and this is another example
of that
36:54
but it's gonna be in the pin
play it's
36:56
in now in play yes and I
believe it will
36:59
become in play during the
presidential
37:02
the Republicans and one of the
reasons I
37:05
think we like to do this show
and have a
37:06
lot we have a lot of Republican
37:08
listeners or conservatives is
that they
37:11
won't get caught off guard I
think a lot
37:14
of Republicans and chris
surfaces will
37:16
get caught off guard when they
it's a
37:18
strong term it's a great word
that given
37:21
just just just put justice yeah
it's
37:23
just to put the word justice
anywhere
37:25
that podcasts justice people
37:29
that's what we need Podcast
justice and
37:32
when you hear that you're like
shit I
37:34
can't refute that podcasters
need
37:36
justice you know what it means
who cares
37:38
who cares podcasters need
justice here's
37:45
another thing a little bit more
about I
37:46
think that was reproductive
justice
37:48
because once you play the Joe
Biden
37:51
apologizing clip these are my
personal
37:53
beliefs but I recognize what
the rest of
37:55
the country was out of me and I
need to
37:57
try to meet the country where
they are
37:58
and I think Joe Biden needs to
sort of
38:01
articulate that tomorrow but
how do you
38:03
do that stylistically so that
you still
38:05
convey those are why I'm not a
president
38:09
it's difficult for Joe Biden
you can say
38:12
look I'm a Catholic this is
what I
38:13
believe there are many rule at
70 plus
38:15
percent of Americans consider
themselves
38:17
as Christians so he's not alone
a lot of
38:19
people have that belief however
I do
38:21
understand the importance of
women's
38:23
reproductive rights and I want
to make
38:25
sure and I'm on the side of
women simple
38:27
right but there is a because
when you
38:31
apologize once then when does
your bite
38:33
and sort apologizing for
everything I
38:35
need a he'll do no justice do
you think
38:41
that's the trick when you have
a long
38:43
record it's like when you have
this you
38:44
know decades-long record you're
gonna
38:46
have a lot to explain and I
think that
38:48
you know the crime bill is
another thing
38:49
that's going to come up it came
up for
38:51
Hillary Clinton even though she
wasn't
38:52
in office but Joe Biden wrote
that crime
38:54
bill and know there's a lot of
black
38:55
people in prison as a result
and so he's
38:57
going to have to speak to that
38:58
constituency and explain you
know right
39:01
I didn't see these for these
39:03
circumstances I didn't foresee
it the
39:04
evolution you know yeah that's
not gonna
39:06
work
39:07
oh it's gonna fall for the
night I
39:09
didn't know how I didn't know
that what
39:12
the policy Woodrow no I'm sorry
I think
39:15
that he's got the same black
problem
39:17
that Bernie has well this is
bringing in
39:21
Camelot Harris by the way but
this is an
39:24
irony mmm kamilly Harris is not
39:26
respected by blacks generally
speaking
39:29
no aide does black so and but
Bernie
39:33
doesn't I'm not burn actually
Bernie and
39:35
Biden neither one of them know
this they
39:37
don't get have a clue I mean
well let
39:41
this be
39:41
allow me to play a clip about
Bernie
39:45
from Antonio more from a das
what up
39:48
y'all this is Antonio Moore
coming to
39:50
you from Tonka trucks coming to
you
39:51
briefly with a quick hit
because I got
39:53
no notification that Bernie
Sanders is
39:55
talking about forgiving all the
student
39:57
did well on one hand you can
see that
39:58
it's totally commendable if you
don't
40:00
give it context you don't
understand
40:01
that this is the same man that
has
40:03
talked about not giving cash
payment for
40:05
reparations that talks about
the cost of
40:08
reparations I understand that
student
40:09
debt is for giving them one and
a half
40:11
trillion dollars in debt and
primarily
40:13
will go to white folks because
of the
40:15
amount of them to go to college
versus
40:17
us fundamentally my belief is
that even
40:19
as somebody who has six figures
and
40:21
student debt that you don't
forgive that
40:22
debt until you until you make
your debts
40:24
whole that regarding
reparations don't
40:26
give black families reparations
to white
40:29
middle class and white
upper-class
40:30
families that took on student
debt it
40:32
just doesn't work that way I
say to you
40:34
today what I believe should
happen is
40:36
that Bernie Sanders should come
out in
40:38
support of reparations first
that Bernie
40:40
Sanders should commit to a ten
trillion
40:42
dollar reparations plan to be
paid over
40:44
ten years a trillion a year
only to $1
40:47
American descendants of slavery
to make
40:49
these families whole and should
40:50
guarantee an apology for
slavery if he
40:52
does become president after
that one and
40:55
a half trillion dollars student
loan
40:56
forgiveness plan which I'll be
in full
40:58
support of
41:00
so you know he Elizabeth Warren
Kamala
41:05
Harris and does Biden support
the the
41:07
cancelling of student debt yet
is he um
41:09
is he on the the debt train or
has he
41:11
done no he has not actually and
I could
41:14
be wrong but as far as I know
he's not
41:16
and I don't think he will and
by the way
41:19
this is the one of the main
figures of
41:22
the American descendants of
slavery he
41:24
what he's doing is YouTube from
his car
41:26
and I and I said they sent a
message out
41:29
said you know you really should
get on a
41:31
stage it's not gonna get
attention doing
41:35
youtubes from your car that is
not how
41:37
you get a move any tips from
their car
41:39
not how you get a movement going
41:41
so that doesn't matter they
don't need
41:45
him got everybody else you know
the
41:47
student debt cancellation is
beautiful
41:49
they're all the kids love it oh
the kids
41:53
except for the kids who chose
not to go
41:55
to college he was saying whoa
where are
41:58
the kids who paid off their
student
42:00
debts mm-hmm they're not gonna
be too
42:03
pleased with this that's the
problem
42:05
with this kind of you know
Jubilee or
42:08
any kind of dead holiday it's
like wait
42:11
a minute
42:12
so I should have just been a
you know as
42:14
a slouch and never paid
anything and I'd
42:15
be home free that's what you're
saying
42:17
you're encouraging that that's
why it
42:19
doesn't work well here's what
was
42:22
interesting last night my
dinner with
42:24
the former New York banker he
schooled
42:27
me on mmm tea which I know
you've been
42:30
looking into which is this
modern
42:31
monetary theory yeah and the
idea is you
42:35
can print a hell of a lot more
money
42:37
right as than we're doing right
now
42:39
because it doesn't matter and
he made a
42:42
very compelling argument which
I can't
42:44
really he compared it to Japan
really he
42:47
says look you know what he
called a
42:49
liquidity trap he says it turns
out and
42:51
he and he knows I mean he was
in the
42:53
sovereign wealth sector so he
know he
42:55
knows a lot about global
economics he
42:57
said we can print trillions
more it does
42:59
not matter and no matter how I
parade he
43:04
had an answer and I know you've
looked
43:06
into it and you know it seems
43:10
that unlike what everyone from
the the
43:14
Austrian School of Economics
thinks that
43:17
it does indeed work and that we
can we
43:19
could fund the debt
cancellation we
43:22
could put in another 30
trillion into
43:24
green new deal we could do some
43:26
reparations we could do
anything we want
43:28
because it does not matter your
take
43:30
John C Dvorak well I think
people are
43:33
looking at this are about modern
43:36
monetary theory they're looking
at it
43:38
from the wrong perspective
first of all
43:40
it's not about how much money
is in
43:42
circulation or anything like
that it's
43:44
about income inequality and if
you
43:47
listen to the people that
promote this
43:50
idea and you can just draw in
he's right
43:52
it doesn't matter I don't think
it does
43:53
either and it's not gonna
matter when it
43:55
comes to when it comes to the
fact that
43:59
there's an income in fact it
may worsen
44:01
income inequality based on the
economic
44:06
cycle and based on what the and
this
44:09
woman I think her name is slot
can or
44:11
something like that and she is
the
44:12
economic policy person for
Bernie and
44:15
she's one of the big promoters
of MMT
44:17
and she made this comment once
and
44:19
that's was stuck with me and
when she
44:21
soon she said it I said well
wait a
44:23
minute oh I thought it was just
a dog
44:25
whistle comment but it to use
that term
44:28
but then I realized it's not
she said
44:31
income inequality was lessening
it was
44:35
getting better it was getting
better and
44:37
better and better until 1980
that's the
44:40
dog whistle 1980 is a code word
for
44:42
Reagan trickle-down
trickle-down Reagan
44:46
and the Republicans got in and
then the
44:48
then the income inequality got
worse and
44:51
worse and then if you look at
the cycles
44:53
apparently it was worsening
just before
44:55
the depression which is the
giveaway in
44:57
1929 income inequality or night
28 it
45:01
was horrible and then the
depression
45:03
came 1980 is the end of another
45:06
depression that took place in
the 70s in
45:09
other words these folks their
whole
45:12
orientation I have a
presentation I
45:14
could write up their whole
orientation
45:16
yes put us into an economics
tailspin
45:20
sink the economy so everybody's
broke
45:24
then you have no income
inequality it's
45:26
all evened out and I'm reminded
of that
45:29
one of the Koch brothers I
think it was
45:32
David it had a special on him
on one of
45:34
these networks and he said we
were
45:35
almost a bankrupt company in
the 1970s
45:38
everybody in the 1970s was
going broke
45:41
there was no wealth whatsoever
I went
45:44
through it and it was that's
when income
45:47
inequality Joe starts to shrink
course
45:50
it does because everybody's
broke and
45:52
then 1980 comes along and says
45:54
prosperity starts to grow and
grow and
45:56
grow income inequality starts
to grow
45:59
and grow and that's just gonna
always be
46:02
the case so unless you want to
put us in
46:04
a perpetual depression where
everybody's
46:07
broke right but it's the
Democrats who
46:11
are who are saying this so
you'd expect
46:13
them the more socialist
individuals of
46:16
our society to want everyone to
be
46:18
depressed and broke and maybe
they want
46:20
that but they do but boy they
want us
46:23
all to be broke but what
they're saying
46:25
is the opposite will have the
opposite
46:26
effect well they're wrong it
didn't
46:32
matter what I said he had an
answer
46:34
that's kind of his MO sometimes
anyway
46:36
you met him but the one thing
we did
46:40
agree on was how awful the
removal of
46:45
the ordinance rules in Austin
is that
46:48
now people can pitch tents on
the
46:50
sidewalk but here's here's what
he added
46:54
to it he said although it's
horrible and
46:55
and it turns out that our
governor
46:58
Abbott he tweeted out that he
was going
47:01
to oh he was going to make some
laws to
47:03
stop this is it we can't have
this if
47:04
any if any Texas city thinks
they can do
47:06
that we're gonna write
legislation to
47:08
stop it
47:09
the banker said actually having
homeless
47:14
living on the street or the
unhoused
47:16
is a sign of great wealth of
great
47:20
wealth of the society because
we are so
47:24
wealthy but let's just say
California
47:25
but we'll add Austin to the mix
so
47:28
crushed prosperous then we
don't care if
47:30
people are poop on the streets
poop what
47:34
you want everything's great
47:36
so we're say so his theory is
that that
47:39
that is a sign of great
prosperity
47:43
prosperity yes decadence yes
exactly
47:46
which is so decadent that you
don't give
47:49
a crap yes homeless Tramp this
pathetic
47:58
soul poops in front of us I
think it is
48:04
the term that what is the term
we're so
48:08
wealthy we don't give a shit I
think I
48:11
think that's what it comes down
to you
48:13
can do one on the street and he
has a
48:15
point look at California
actually hit
48:18
one there I thought it was out
of the
48:20
park as I stopped the
conversation I got
48:22
to write this down I can't
believe you
48:23
just said that and even though
we don't
48:26
like it it truly shows you in a
latest
48:29
very wealthy society maybe
equitable to
48:35
the Romans or maybe the Weimar
Republic
48:38
had a lot of this stuff going
on before
48:39
every well that's crazy it's
some solid
48:43
examples in San Francisco the
poop map
48:46
and all the rest began after
Twitter
48:48
Jack Dorsey and the folks on
theirs they
48:52
had a bunch of porta-potties
near not in
48:55
front not on the street but
near the
48:57
Twitter headquarters in San
Francisco
48:59
yes and it was and it was this
oh we
49:02
can't have these porta-potties
it just
49:04
it makes a bunch of homeless
around them
49:08
and they get in line and have
to poop
49:09
there I'd rather I'd rather not
see the
49:11
porta-potties that's just a
little bit
49:13
too much for me so just get rid
of those
49:15
get rid of those ugly things
and let the
49:18
homeless go somewhere else well
the sad
49:22
part of it all is the only
solutions
49:24
that they'll throw out there
cavalierly
49:26
is we need affordable housing
which is
49:29
just more money for them I own
that
49:32
piece that's put some
affordable housing
49:34
on that yeah this is a good
idea and it
49:37
jacks up the rents everywhere
moves
49:38
people out gentrified yeah I I
can't I
49:41
cannot get a witness
49:42
I'm loving this idea of the
argument
49:45
that's just rich decadent
elites that
49:48
don't care if anybody's dying
it for
49:52
Louise was that a dead man you
stepped
49:55
over oh my is he breathing
49:59
well you kick him for me Bruce
and find
50:03
out blew my mind with that
what's going
50:13
on because that's what we're
seeing yeah
50:15
it Lamborghini dealer and then
there's a
50:18
guy pooping I mean come on and
and and
50:20
the wealth is gone to our heads
50:22
it's gone to our heads because
the
50:26
people who aren't super rich
and don't
50:28
mind this you know feel kind of
50:30
powerless yeah I'm doing okay
let me
50:33
just not rock the boat here I'm
just
50:35
gonna I'll just step over it I'm
50:39
fortunate I've got privilege
and by the
50:42
way most people pooping on the
streets
50:44
of Austin or white just so you
know how
50:49
about just during the debates
was there
50:51
any green New Deal crap cuz I
got a
50:52
couple clips from from Europe
that I
50:54
want to share and I didn't pick
anything
50:56
up particularly I mean they
didn't
50:59
really get into it they were
mostly I
51:02
don't know
51:03
I think there'll be something
tonight
51:07
but they didn't get into it too
much I
51:09
mean the guy who would have
gotten into
51:10
it was Inslee cuz he's pretty
much oh
51:12
shoot I just have an idea I'm
sorry I
51:14
just want to go back to the
homelessness
51:15
thing
51:16
let's just take it for true
that this is
51:19
the incredible wealth and what
would
51:22
over some of the terms we used
in
51:25
decades
51:25
decadence now the pooping on
streets
51:27
yeah decadence this you know
what this
51:29
calls for this calls for a
reality show
51:31
you know lifting someone from
the street
51:34
you know we would this the
51:39
no I mean it's like your town
could be
51:42
next week story what yeah
Pygmalion you
51:45
know not my favorite lady you
get
51:47
somebody's just trading places
trading
51:50
places
51:50
trading places that's it that's
it all
51:52
right so so yeah so there
wasn't a lot
51:54
of green New Deal is what I'm
what I'm
51:56
hearing I didn't I didn't see
any
51:58
actually in my scan a couple of
climate
52:00
changes maybe but nothing
substantial
52:03
because it wasn't you know cozy
yeah
52:06
well didn't get I mean there's
still
52:09
there's still this but gets me
there's a
52:12
large group of Democrats that
are
52:14
bitching and moaning about
defect and
52:16
they didn't want to bring it up
I think
52:17
because they're worried about
getting
52:18
tossed because they're not
supposed to
52:20
discuss climate change as it as
a debate
52:23
they don't want to debate
climate change
52:25
of course there's a bunch of
Democrats
52:26
that want to actually have one
of the
52:28
debates just be about climate
change and
52:30
I'm thinking to myself who what
what
52:34
would that be like everybody
and the
52:36
Democrat Party is in on the
whole idea
52:39
that we're gonna all die in 12
years and
52:42
so there wouldn't be much of a
debate
52:44
there's just be a lot of
agreement in
52:46
the head nodding exactly well
over in
52:49
the UK there's there's a big
push once
52:52
again this is all on the
backdrop of the
52:53
g20 which we'll talk about
which is
52:55
taking place this weekend but
Sky News
52:57
really stuck it to the British
people
53:00
with this little expose and a
new term
53:02
or a term that is being
rejuvenated was
53:06
introduced to the lexicon in
the 18th
53:09
century the Industrial
Revolution
53:10
kick-started economic growth
and modern
53:13
capitalism but only at the cost
of
53:15
pumping out millions of tons of
carbon
53:18
into the atmosphere as the
years ticked
53:21
on by from iron and steel
production to
53:25
coal and steam power plants and
53:28
factories and for centuries
Britain was
53:32
the only name in the game the
world's
53:33
economic engine the world's
richest
53:36
economy and by far the world's
biggest
53:39
polluter but just look at what
happens
53:42
at the start of the 20th
century America
53:44
finally begins to overtake us
53:47
but these ever-increasing bars
tell
53:50
another story the richer we've
got the
53:54
more we've polluted and it all
comes
53:57
back to the fact that we never
put a
53:58
price on waste until now
because we're
54:02
scientists predicting a climate
54:04
catastrophe and with China
pumping ever
54:06
more pollution into the
atmosphere the
54:10
greatest challenge of the next
century
54:12
is going to be managing this
carbon debt
54:15
the debt that Britain started
alright
54:21
Britain it's your fault first
of all so
54:24
we're looking at you second
climate debt
54:27
I like this this could be now
this is a
54:32
financial instrument now
they've finally
54:34
done it you could be born and
the
54:37
government could place a
climate debt on
54:39
your head and you would have to
work
54:43
that off during your life you
would have
54:46
to do things to remove your
climate debt
54:51
have you heard this term I
think I might
54:56
have heard it along with
climate justice
54:59
using that term again as kind
of a their
55:04
fishing looks like they're
fishing I got
55:06
a these terms and they're
throwing about
55:09
to see what happens
55:10
that may have but if it would
have been
55:13
a while back so they're shaming
the
55:15
British people into into this
climate
55:19
debt corner and with that comes
an open
55:22
letter from yes an open letter
from
55:26
investors with 34 trillion
dollars worth
55:30
of assets just ready to invest
Europe is
55:33
braced for a record-breaking
heat wave
55:36
temperatures forecast to hit 40
degrees
55:38
Celsius across much of the
continent for
55:41
many it's yet another sign of
global
55:44
warming now some of the world's
top
55:46
investors are joining calls for
action
55:48
money managers responsible for
34
55:51
trillion dollars in assets have
signed a
55:53
joint letter demanding change
55:56
they account for nearly half
the world's
55:58
invested capital signatories
include
56:00
legal and general investment
management
56:03
and CalPERS California's Public
56:05
Employees Retirement Fund but
the
56:08
world's two biggest asset
managers are
56:10
missing from the list Blackrock
and
56:12
Vanguard wouldn't give specific
reasons
56:15
for not signing now the letter
comes
56:17
days before a g20 summit in
Japan the
56:21
investors call on governments
to work
56:22
with them on action against
climate
56:25
change they support the Paris
agreement
56:27
on global warming struck in
2015 it
56:31
calls on governments to keep
average
56:32
temperature rises to less than
two
56:34
degrees above pre-industrial
levels yet
56:37
the world is on track for an
average
56:39
increase of at least three
degrees by
56:41
the end of the century in
Europe right
56:44
now it feels a whole lot hotter
than
56:46
that so the way I read this
open letter
56:49
is these are government quasi
government
56:54
investors it's not Blackrock and
56:57
Vanguard is not the commercial
guys
56:58
they're not stupid I'm not
putting my
57:00
money in that but the California
57:03
government employees is pension
fund
57:06
what was it
57:07
yeppers CalPERS yeah that's
that's
57:11
that's what that's like
government
57:13
almost isn't it no it's a big
giant if
57:17
you work for the state or
regional
57:19
governments a lot of cities I
think even
57:21
the money goes in the CalPERS
as a it's
57:24
like a it's like a retirement
system
57:26
right but they so they want to
put your
57:28
retirement money at risk in this
57:31
cockamamie climate to the
change in
57:34
California and they're suckers
make it
57:39
point that I wanted just I
don't like I
57:44
don't like the Bill Gates thing
where
57:48
you make a bunch of rich guys
pledge not
57:51
well the Warren Buffett pledge
the
57:54
Warren Buffett pledge this is a
you know
57:56
I don't like I never liked it I
really
57:58
disliked Grover Norquist and he
had this
58:01
piece of paper he made
Republicans
58:03
conservative side during I
think it was
58:05
some during Bush's
administration and it
58:08
tax pleasure you never raise
taxes and
58:11
you you write this you sign
this pledge
58:13
I don't like people signing
these
58:16
pledges I don't like
organization
58:18
signing him I think it's like
your why
58:21
are you doing it yo don't you
have you
58:24
no control over your own future
your own
58:25
I mean why am i so what would I
be
58:27
shamed in the same worth to
bugger wish
58:30
worth 10 billion and I'm now
gonna be
58:33
shamed into signing away five
billion of
58:36
this oh that's easy one
58:38
it's dumb I know but this is
missing to
58:42
do with Mars first of all I
didn't
58:45
realize that for example I do
remember
58:47
when Ted Turner pledged like
you know a
58:50
billion dollars to some
university or
58:52
something and then he just
reneged you
58:54
if you get worth 10 billion
dollars you
58:56
can sign anything you want and
just say
58:58
screw you and don't do it and
which but
59:01
then again not just that's
that's not
59:03
what's happening that what's
happening
59:05
with those guys is different
you know
59:07
very wealthy people I mean
really
59:08
wealthy people I know very
wealthy
59:11
people and people with so much
wealth
59:14
who can and have purchased
anything they
59:17
want any kind of love but they
can't get
59:20
respect from the people so it's
a virtue
59:23
signal they want to be like
please like
59:27
I don't care how much money I
have to
59:29
pledge just like me I don't
want people
59:32
to look at me sideways please
like me
59:34
yeah I understand that's
probably
59:36
exactly what it is but the but
that's
59:38
not my point my point is that
nobody
59:41
should be signing pledges like
this and
59:44
especially government employees
who are
59:47
sighted who signed that Grover
Norquist
59:48
thing if I get a representative
and
59:52
working for me and the state
senator or
59:55
whatever I want him to be
beholding to
59:59
the public that voted him him I
don't
1:00:01
want him being beholden to some
guy
1:00:04
Grover Norquist I think it's
like wait
1:00:08
what are you pledging to this
guy for
1:00:10
you're working for me right no
argument
1:00:14
there
1:00:16
the final thing on the New York
banker
1:00:19
he has and he said ah you know
1:00:22
he's Brits some article which
he sent to
1:00:24
me which I haven't read yet
about to
1:00:26
grid calculations and it turns
out that
1:00:28
you really don't need that much
gas to
1:00:33
pick up the slack on wind and
solar is
1:00:35
all these grid calculations and
turns
1:00:37
out it really works and you
don't need
1:00:38
unlike that sounds like
bullcrap and he
1:00:41
just was going on and on and
then we got
1:00:43
into an argument he said well
as you
1:00:45
know DC power is much more
efficient to
1:00:47
transmit I'm like stop what now
please
1:00:52
tell me that's wrong I mean I
just can't
1:00:55
I mean no DC power is not more
efficient
1:00:59
to transmit over lines is it DC
power is
1:01:04
more efficient in a lot of
things we're
1:01:06
short opinion you're high so if
1:01:08
long-range transmission is one
of them I
1:01:11
don't believe it is no that
can't be
1:01:13
Tesla and Edison fought about
yes and
1:01:18
they had to do with
transmission I
1:01:19
believe in the end of the at
the end of
1:01:22
the day mm-hmm yeah I'll see
you that
1:01:26
article we got we got to
deconstruct
1:01:28
this because all of a sudden
he's all in
1:01:29
on wind and solar works like
and you
1:01:31
know that means someone else in
the in
1:01:34
the elite circles is thinking
it he's
1:01:37
never gonna take me out to
dinner after
1:01:38
he hears this sure you will
you're wrong
1:01:42
wrong again curry and with that
I would
1:01:46
like to thank you for your
courage in
1:01:48
the morning to you the man in
the in the
1:02:01
morning to the trolls in the
troll room
1:02:03
that's to be found and open and
1:02:05
available for everybody and no
agendas
1:02:07
dream.com it's not just our
show we do
1:02:10
it live on Sundays and
Thursdays and you
1:02:12
can troll along and make really
funny
1:02:14
one-liners and virtue signal do
anything
1:02:16
you want there go ahead and
bring it
1:02:19
while you're listening to the
live
1:02:21
stream but you can do it 24/7
because
1:02:24
there's always cool shows there
are
1:02:26
different opinions different
topics it
1:02:28
is running 24 hours a day no
agenda
1:02:31
stream comm also in the morning
a
1:02:34
two-hour artiste for
1:02:36
episode 11 49 the title of that
was
1:02:38
couple of reds and this was
created by
1:02:41
Mike Riley we had a number of
choices we
1:02:45
we selected the I guess I'd
made a
1:02:48
comment that Robert DeNiro in
that Trump
1:02:51
hate video looked like
something the cat
1:02:52
had puked up like a hairball
yes they
1:02:58
made a piece of art with it
look like a
1:03:00
cat a giant cat that just puked
out
1:03:02
Robert De Niro and we can every
kind of
1:03:05
liked it it was good looking
back at the
1:03:13
ghettos and art for the
newsletter
1:03:16
mm-hmm and I realize that we
haven't
1:03:19
heard from Thorin one of our
most long
1:03:22
time yes yes you're right I
think he's
1:03:25
overboard could be it could be
I'll tell
1:03:29
you so I'm gonna start finding
I'm gonna
1:03:30
see other ones that I've
noticed that it
1:03:32
just kind of went overboard or
there
1:03:35
stopped producing or they just
gave up
1:03:37
so it's already had a lot of
hits and it
1:03:39
was like but he just stopped I
was I was
1:03:43
out in the front yard yesterday
and my
1:03:45
neighbor Steve comes over now
as you
1:03:47
know we moved into this
beautiful little
1:03:49
area small little cul-de-sac
and I'm not
1:03:52
walking around at any for any
reason in
1:03:55
Austin going yeah I got a
podcast you
1:03:57
should listen you know it's
like I don't
1:04:01
know what people are thinking
that yeah
1:04:03
but you know we plan to live
here for a
1:04:05
long time and I want people to
you know
1:04:07
you listen you listen to our
show for 15
1:04:10
minutes you know it's some
people may
1:04:13
get the wrong impression
1:04:15
so I'd never mention anything
Steve
1:04:18
comes over he says hey I was the
1:04:19
honeymoon
1:04:20
Steve's a Vietnam vet he's I
think he's
1:04:24
probably around 70 in his 70s
1:04:26
retired and if that was your
honeymoon
1:04:29
yes grace a well you know I got
to tell
1:04:32
you what I'm a douche bag what
yeah I'm
1:04:37
a douche bag I've been
listening to your
1:04:39
show
1:04:40
all right okay I really like it
1:04:44
he says I don't like Trump says
I want
1:04:46
America to win so the lot of
people hate
1:04:48
Trump but that was funny
1:04:50
you guys are good Wow how about
that Wow
1:04:54
the next-door neighbor yeah
thank
1:04:57
goodness
1:04:58
Christie I think Steve's kinda
drop or
1:05:00
he's the guy growing pot no yes
to all
1:05:04
of those no the cops
1:05:06
I hadn't approached the cop yet
she
1:05:08
she's cool
1:05:09
there's an Austin couple for
you a
1:05:11
police officer and a
heavy-metal drummer
1:05:14
it doesn't get much better than
that
1:05:16
anyway so the heavy metal
drummers the
1:05:19
guy out came up to you know
steve is the
1:05:21
veteran is the Vietnam vet from
the from
1:05:24
the other side next-door
neighbor I'm
1:05:27
sorry Daisy and next door he's
on the
1:05:29
other side well wait but you
got a cop
1:05:33
in the heavy-metal drummer
they're
1:05:34
living together yes that's the
couple uh
1:05:36
no this is what confused me
yeah I know
1:05:39
that that's one side and the
other side
1:05:40
is the he lives with not his
partner but
1:05:44
his friend and that's also a
vet he's a
1:05:46
Iraq Iraq war vet so I think
they're
1:05:50
just they just shared the house
badly
1:05:53
but everything about Steve
didn't tell
1:05:55
me that he was gonna you know
hear
1:05:57
anything anything about Trump
and liked
1:05:59
it so I don't mention these
things to
1:06:02
people so either they go old
1:06:04
unreconstructed hippy Democrat
possibly
1:06:08
yeah but not an anti I mean he
went to
1:06:11
war for us he served the
country so he's
1:06:13
not not that much of a hippie
Democrat
1:06:16
but he's anything other than my
neighbor
1:06:19
a nice guy then he's a douche
bag is it
1:06:21
now Steve you're the emergency
contact
1:06:24
anything happening here you're
not a
1:06:27
douche bag ever there you go
welcome to
1:06:31
the sweet tale yes thank you Oh
can you
1:06:36
talk just a split second longer
so I can
1:06:38
go get the paperwork okay yes
and I'm
1:06:43
kind of all
1:06:46
[Music]
1:06:47
the banker didn't have that
much else to
1:06:49
say but yeah
1:06:54
peppery that's all I can all I
can
1:06:56
remember peppery is what I was
I came to
1:07:00
the I came to the to the
meeting today
1:07:02
with all my stuff in order you
know I'm
1:07:03
you know you could you know
bruise can
1:07:07
fill alright here we go
1:07:09
so let's go with our number one
guy
1:07:12
today sir not I sir animus
1:07:15
oh he's not a bot dog Bo he's
every
1:07:18
month he comes in sir on
innocent dog
1:07:20
patrin lower slovakia everybody
bow via
1:07:23
two one $1,200 and two one two
dollars
1:07:26
this is what - OH - Lee crap
now again
1:07:30
we have no idea what the what
the
1:07:32
meaning is of this he says did
he send
1:07:34
you a note with it of course oh
oh we
1:07:37
love his no long one we love
his nose
1:07:41
thank you - and the many
producers that
1:07:44
make this show the best podcast
in the
1:07:46
universe by mailing rather than
emailing
1:07:49
I'm avoiding AI flagging this
statement
1:07:52
as hate speech after all it
claims all
1:07:57
other podcasts are inferior
yeah that is
1:08:01
hate speech is true it's hate
speech
1:08:03
it's true on a recent show you
discussed
1:08:07
offering naming rights for
Adams new
1:08:09
studio look at here we go this
is what
1:08:11
he's about to give you a
lecture on oh
1:08:14
here we go
1:08:15
naming rights are a complicated
matter
1:08:17
can the name be offensive can
it be
1:08:21
commercial sponsored by a firm
with its
1:08:24
baggage how long does it
continue a show
1:08:27
a week a month the quarter what
if two
1:08:29
sponsors want the same show for
their
1:08:31
anniversary birthday or other
special
1:08:33
day what is the minimum price
for naming
1:08:36
should it be more than a
knighting more
1:08:39
or less an executive producer
ship after
1:08:42
reflecting on these issues and
on animus
1:08:45
commiserating that dog's dog
waste
1:08:48
homelessness scooters and
millennials
1:08:51
drove him from the town center
naming
1:08:53
rights seem superfluous it
sounds like
1:08:56
the end of Austin
1:08:59
all right so this is now the
blower
1:09:03
slobo via studio that's what
I'm naming
1:09:07
it from now on
1:09:08
lower slobozia I think we kind
of Nix
1:09:12
the whole idea of of the naming
rights
1:09:14
it was a fun thought for a
moment but I
1:09:16
see nothing but hurdles and
tracks
1:09:18
really not interested yeah his
point is
1:09:21
it's well made let's use the
word it's
1:09:24
problematic problematic indeed
Adam we
1:09:28
want people to to value what we
do and
1:09:31
send us value for that not for
some
1:09:33
advertising hustle we'd rather
be poor I
1:09:36
would at least I can't speak
for you
1:09:38
yeah well anonymous comes in
next at six
1:09:42
six 6.66 so we actually have two
1:09:45
Anonymous's in a row anonymous
viking of
1:09:48
the Pacific Northwest I don't
remember
1:09:52
that this together with my
January to
1:09:54
31st 2018 donation of 350
completes my
1:09:57
knighthood I want to be known
as the
1:09:59
Viking of the Pacific Northwest
Dvorak's
1:10:01
excellent contrasting of Amy
Goodman's
1:10:04
domestic violence report the
public
1:10:07
records and Adams nuptials as
well as
1:10:09
double thirty-three followers
on no
1:10:11
agenda social make me realize
as time
1:10:14
for a knighthood hmm I like
cider and
1:10:17
slid Oh which is the Icelandic
sheep
1:10:20
head at the round table let me
add that
1:10:24
to me put in an order right now
cider
1:10:26
and spit okay
1:10:30
travel Karma for the Baron of
Henderson
1:10:33
Nevada and a big audience Karma
for the
1:10:35
upcoming Salem Oregon Meetup
hmm be
1:10:40
going to go to okay so we have
some
1:10:44
travel an audience panel I got
it for
1:10:48
you've got karma thank you very
much for
1:10:52
your courage see you at the a
at the
1:10:53
round table for the ceremony
later on
1:10:55
today calenus store 33333
1:11:00
ITM folks working on our asses
working
1:11:03
our asses off here at the farm
and
1:11:04
always looking forward to your
next
1:11:05
episode keeps us going you ham
pin beer
1:11:10
is all we need
1:11:12
Kalen team at lavender blossoms
no
1:11:15
jingles - please play drone
again at the
1:11:17
end of the show million thanks
yes well
1:11:20
I'm going to have a lot for end
of show
1:11:23
so I will play that and a quick
hit for
1:11:24
you now with the karma J sir
Jeff Roe of
1:11:40
the rock wall $250
1:11:43
hi John and Adam I just
realized I
1:11:45
haven't donated since attending
1:11:46
knighthood back attaining
knighthood
1:11:48
back in December shame on me I
hope this
1:11:50
donation will help with the
sluggish
1:11:52
time June as a cybersecurity
manager I
1:11:56
love your debunking of the
media's
1:11:58
manipulation of hacking
glitches and
1:11:59
whatnot and such I'm sure that
election
1:12:04
cycle will give you plenty of
1:12:05
opportunities to tear down
1:12:06
misinformation in that regard
yes mm-hmm
1:12:09
will this is one of our special
1:12:11
specialities congrats to Adam
and the
1:12:15
keeper and I wish them eternity
of
1:12:17
happiness as for jingles if you
can
1:12:18
please throw a Manning money
shot just
1:12:22
send your cash thanks think of
the
1:12:24
children and a little girl yay
on my way
1:12:26
to help me remember to donate
mint more
1:12:29
often for the children thanks
Riley do
1:12:32
what Sir Geoffrey of the
rockwool of
1:12:35
money shop that's a money shot
cannon
1:12:40
conway is a money shot changer
cash
1:12:46
[Music]
1:12:54
you've got karma and thank you
very much
1:12:59
Callister
1:13:00
that mean sir jefra - jeff of
the rock
1:13:03
wall oh we have Andrew Jones
baron of
1:13:07
the Americas Mountain mm-hmm
1:13:10
two three four five six he
wrote in a
1:13:12
card he had a card nice nice
very pretty
1:13:15
car with some ponies on it from
blazes a
1:13:19
photo byte Eileen Scahill
fine-art New
1:13:25
Mexico okay
1:13:26
Jeb and Alan another me I've
been my
1:13:30
Protectorate is long overdue so
I'm
1:13:33
organizing when the details who
all
1:13:34
producer slaves donors boners
and most
1:13:37
assuredly the esteemed
assemblage of the
1:13:39
round table where phantom
Canyon brewpub
1:13:42
Colorado Springs Colorado
1:13:43
when tonight July 19th 2019 6
to 9 p.m.
1:13:47
mutton unlikely Mead probable
further
1:13:51
information at No Agenda
meetups calm
1:13:54
napping for Humanity now more
than ever
1:13:57
M Andruw Jones Baron of
America's
1:14:00
mountain out I like the short
hand it's
1:14:05
on the list we will add it to
our meetup
1:14:07
rundown and thank you for your
courage
1:14:09
and for your support
1:14:14
[Music]
1:14:15
did he want a karma you've got
karma
1:14:23
that will be a meet-up
1:14:26
get it meet meet up need up
alright that
1:14:31
concludes our group of
associate and
1:14:33
executive producers for show
1:14:36
11:50 thank them all for making
this
1:14:39
show possible
1:14:39
i need's if you receive a full
credit
1:14:42
for your support in this regard
say if
1:14:45
you're an executive producer or
socially
1:14:47
executive producer please
accept this
1:14:49
take it with you put it places
that
1:14:52
people can see when you display
this it
1:14:54
gets your chicks and dudes
sometimes
1:14:58
it's a useful thing I'm telling
you
1:15:00
thank you so much for
supporting the
1:15:03
work and will be thanking more
people in
1:15:04
our second segment and of
course we'll
1:15:06
be back on Sunday with another
show
1:15:08
which you can support by going
to
1:15:09
Vollrath
1:15:10
org slash and a we break it
down for you
1:15:14
twice a week on Thursdays you
need to
1:15:17
propagate our formula is this
we go out
1:15:20
we hit people in the mouth
1:15:26
[Music]
1:15:34
before we move on I been
meaning to ask
1:15:38
you something for several weeks
keep
1:15:40
forgetting finally wrote it
down in my
1:15:41
show prep do you by any chance
have a
1:15:46
video of our vows from the
wedding as
1:15:49
you posited at the time ah uh
yeah
1:15:55
somewhere you have because you
told me
1:15:58
you had the full ceremony I do
could you
1:16:02
please get that to us okay
thank you I I
1:16:06
was worried because I heard
that you
1:16:08
were taking pictures but you
got home
1:16:10
and all you had was a whole
bunch of
1:16:12
videos of like a second because
you had
1:16:14
left it on the video setting
and I was
1:16:17
worried that maybe you just had
one
1:16:18
picture of the ceremony and no
video I
1:16:21
will go look okay I took the
whole video
1:16:25
I've done this before I've only
met you
1:16:28
a complete video it takes you
know 20
1:16:30
minutes wherever it was yeah I
don't
1:16:32
mind doing it and I do have it
and
1:16:35
whether I don't know about the
1:16:37
audibility of the vows but I
think most
1:16:39
of it should be in there
because it was
1:16:40
pretty quiet no well thank you
it's
1:16:43
appreciated yeah I should put
that aside
1:16:46
yeah what happens I have this
problem
1:16:48
because I'm like a when it
there's
1:16:50
certain things I have a bad
habit how
1:16:53
did you start collecting stuff
so I'm
1:16:54
flicking photos I've never
noticed this
1:16:56
really and so you end up with
these the
1:16:59
terabytes of photos and there's
just
1:17:01
like all these photos so then
you can
1:17:04
they're not cattle or log
that's the
1:17:05
real you know what you need you
need a
1:17:06
Deadman switch you know when
when you
1:17:09
keel over and it's all done just
1:17:11
terabytes if shit gets released
just to
1:17:14
shoot it all out into the ether
just put
1:17:16
your ring put it all on I FPS
so it's
1:17:18
there forever can never go away
and be
1:17:20
fantastic yeah may be beautiful
so
1:17:24
anyways who I delve into the
thing into
1:17:27
the pile things jump into a
pile hmm and
1:17:29
then holy wow wow that was a
great photo
1:17:36
anyway okay before it gets
erased
1:17:41
accidentally save a couple of
things so
1:17:45
good news in the Queen's it
looks like
1:17:48
that
1:17:48
nutcase not Kissin that kiss
she's not
1:17:51
in that case she's just an
extreme
1:17:52
justice Democrat type and she
is going
1:17:57
to you know do what every what
they do
1:17:59
in these other towns they're
gonna you
1:18:01
know crackdown on the police
and make
1:18:04
sure that they did they're
nicer and let
1:18:06
people poop in the streets and
just who
1:18:09
cares about who are you talking
about or
1:18:12
shoplifting Caban the justice
woman in
1:18:17
navy she's apparently one is
from
1:18:19
winning here pledge city
tiffany Caban
1:18:22
appears poised for victory in
the
1:18:24
queen's district attorney race
Caban a
1:18:26
31 year old queer latina public
defender
1:18:30
would become the first woman to
hold the
1:18:31
post she run on ending cash bail
1:18:34
stopping the prosecution of
low-level
1:18:36
offenses decriminalizing sex
work and
1:18:38
going after bad landlords cops
and
1:18:40
Immigration and Customs
Enforcement
1:18:42
Timothy Cobb on claimed victory
last
1:18:45
night in Queens well this is
interesting
1:18:47
she is one of the soul sisters
I mean
1:18:51
the Soros sisters I should say
and I'd
1:18:54
learned this from my buddy Moe
that
1:18:57
Soros in particular I know
there he is
1:18:59
the big evil Soros but it's not
a secret
1:19:02
that he is sponsoring black
female
1:19:05
district attorneys all over the
country
1:19:07
and I'm not quite sure why
other than
1:19:10
social justice seems to be
written all
1:19:12
over them I think he also
helped get the
1:19:15
Chicago da in place well
1:19:21
these people and they're not
just her or
1:19:25
black district attorneys but
there's a
1:19:26
bunch of other ones there all
these
1:19:27
Justice style I mean as the
Seattle's
1:19:29
got one we have one in San
Francisco
1:19:32
Camilla Harris actually comes
from that
1:19:33
whole school also a soro system
and
1:19:38
unless you're doing it to to
lower the
1:19:43
price of real estate in an area
there's
1:19:46
really no other reason that I
can think
1:19:48
of because real estate prices
in Queens
1:19:52
is which is a huge place mm-hmm
1:19:55
is going up maybe it's time to
reverse
1:19:59
the trend and turn the queens
into a
1:20:01
shithole well I guess my point
is that's
1:20:04
what's gonna happen by the way
it's
1:20:06
broader than that that's that's
my point
1:20:08
it's like weed maybe turning a
lot of
1:20:09
places into a shithole well but
it seems
1:20:13
like these DA's are chosen and
sponsored
1:20:16
for their you know obvious
social
1:20:19
justice warrior qualities yes
absolutely
1:20:24
it's a great experiment sort of
this how
1:20:28
old is Soros he's like 80 80
somebody
1:20:30
maybe something yeah well being
a lizard
1:20:33
he'll probably go to be about
110 he's
1:20:35
gonna look so good when he
finally
1:20:37
changes his skin he sheds that
old that
1:20:40
old crusty version looks like
yummy it's
1:20:47
still closed because cats is
the one who
1:20:49
should have won mm-hmm the
borough
1:20:50
president but I think these are
also
1:20:52
rigged somehow yeah whenever
you hear
1:20:56
the name Soros you can kind of
think so
1:20:59
yeah what they need is they
need some of
1:21:02
that rigging for the women over
in the
1:21:04
EU you know it's I think they
try again
1:21:07
to to vote on their new leader
of the
1:21:11
Starfleet Command to replace
Juncker the
1:21:13
drunker in the EU Commission
right and
1:21:16
so it's all about gender
balance now oh
1:21:19
yeah you think it's just here
in merica
1:21:21
that we have all this crazy
stuff going
1:21:23
on no gender balance that's
what they're
1:21:26
looking for the European Union
has a
1:21:28
gender gap problem
1:21:29
three most powerful
institutions have
1:21:32
ever been led by a woman
1:21:33
including the Commission
Council of
1:21:36
national leaders and the
European
1:21:37
Central Bank but now those
posts plus
1:21:40
the top diplomat job are up for
grabs
1:21:42
providing an opportunity to
break up the
1:21:45
boys club see I think it's high
time we
1:21:47
never had a female Commission
president
1:21:49
we're totally lacking down to
equality I
1:21:51
mean even in the European
Parliament if
1:21:53
we want to represent Europeans
we cannot
1:21:56
ignore half of the population
of the
1:21:59
European Union and it seems the
boys are
1:22:01
at least making the right now
oh I love
1:22:04
them they'd love how this
report instead
1:22:06
of men owner of the boys club
the boys
1:22:08
really do you imagine if that
report was
1:22:11
reversed I mean I hate doing
that but
1:22:13
jeez I mean come on we cannot
ignore
1:22:15
half of the population of the
European
1:22:18
Union and it seems the boys are
at least
1:22:20
making the right noises it's
important
1:22:31
for me to have a gender balance
on these
1:22:33
nominations that we have two
men and two
1:22:35
women position that if the
Commission
1:22:40
president currently held by
jean-claude
1:22:42
Juncker denmark's Margaret
vestroia is
1:22:44
in the mix currently she's the
bloc's
1:22:47
top competition official and
has made a
1:22:49
name for herself for taking on
the likes
1:22:51
of Google and Apple other
candidates
1:22:53
include head of the World Bank
1:22:54
crystalline oogie oogie ver and
Spanish
1:22:57
economy Minister Nadia Calvino
but most
1:22:59
names being touted and men as
the
1:23:01
leadership reflects domestic
politics
1:23:03
across the block despite growing
1:23:04
pressure for gender diversity
men
1:23:07
dominate the makeup of most EU
1:23:08
institutions of the bloc's 28
state
1:23:11
leaders just four are women and
the gap
1:23:14
is particularly glaring of the
ECB we're
1:23:16
just two women sit on its 25
member
1:23:18
council also fixing the gender
gap it's
1:23:21
just one factor of many in the
race any
1:23:23
deals must balance the
interests of
1:23:25
states in Parliament big
countries and
1:23:27
small Europe's north south east
and west
1:23:30
and political parties EU
institutions
1:23:33
are also not only more male
than the
1:23:35
election
1:23:36
they're white zetsu minorities
make up a
1:23:39
tiny population but just 5% of
income
1:23:42
and you'll makers know it's
gonna be so
1:23:44
fun to watch this I think that
mark
1:23:48
Margaret for starters she's
she's
1:23:51
interesting she would work yeah
1:23:55
and now a United States though
she's
1:23:57
into one of the four women
leaders in
1:24:00
the European Union's Angela
Merkel
1:24:02
second time now she's got the
shakes
1:24:04
while standing in public did
you see
1:24:07
this video no I did not
1:24:09
so it happened a week ago the
first time
1:24:11
and she was in Ukraine when she
started
1:24:15
shaking uncontrollably and it
was oh no
1:24:17
and she was dehydrated okay now
she's on
1:24:20
stage and starts happening
again one of
1:24:23
her her minions walks up hands
her a
1:24:26
glass of water she reaches out
because
1:24:29
she sees someone come and she
goes to
1:24:31
grab she's no no you know I I
guess you
1:24:33
don't want to see him weak or
something
1:24:35
but yeah and she's just the
whole
1:24:36
trembling with her legs the
same thing
1:24:38
and and said oh no no just
nothing to
1:24:42
see here no problem it's
diabetic think
1:24:45
something's going on and you
know why
1:24:48
can't she just be honest it's
it's not
1:24:51
dehydration all the time and if
it's
1:24:54
dehydration here is that D
hydron you
1:24:57
refuse the water that someone
brings to
1:24:59
you it was that it's
embarrassing maybe
1:25:02
she's got the DTS
1:25:04
what's the DTS there's an old
phrase a
1:25:08
few people out there I know
what I meant
1:25:11
delirium tremens that you have
when
1:25:13
you're coming if you're alcohol
addict
1:25:14
or even a heroin addict would
be DTS oh
1:25:17
so she's a maybe some sort of a
she's
1:25:20
addicted to she's an alcoholic
or a drug
1:25:22
addict and she's trying to get
off it
1:25:24
and you got the shakes and
she's seeing
1:25:27
the mice coming out of the
walls and God
1:25:28
knows what else is going on
mm-hmm
1:25:30
it doesn't sound good
1:25:33
so there's a lot of Technology
stuff we
1:25:37
can talk about oh maybe you
just do this
1:25:39
a Jean Carol for a moment in
the Trump
1:25:41
rotation Department oh yeah if
you want
1:25:45
yeah why not it was it was kind
of funny
1:25:51
so II Jean Carol is promoting a
book
1:25:55
that's that's the only way you
can see
1:25:57
it and yeah and CNN fell for it
she has
1:26:02
written about her sexual trysts
1:26:05
I believe it that's a main
subject of
1:26:07
repose you might as well be Wilt
1:26:09
Chamberlain she makes it sound
like
1:26:10
she's screw had affairs or
either he had
1:26:13
affairs with everybody or she
was hit on
1:26:16
by pretty much every major
person you've
1:26:19
ever heard of in your life
1:26:20
yes and so the headline is I
was raped
1:26:24
by Trump but that's not her
words in
1:26:26
fact she isn't even like the
word rape
1:26:28
she thinks it has different
connotations
1:26:30
I think she's a pathological
liar she
1:26:33
may be a very good writer but
she's
1:26:35
definitely just full of it and
I think
1:26:39
that this may have been a thing
is any
1:26:41
doubt about that I think she
may have
1:26:42
had her own fantasy and whether
it
1:26:45
happened or whether she wrote
about it
1:26:47
but she's promoting a book and
they all
1:26:49
fell for it everybody has CNN
number one
1:26:52
on every single show they want
to
1:26:54
believe these things really do
is so
1:26:57
want to just please give it to
me and of
1:27:00
course that it did not end well
for
1:27:01
Anderson Cooper you don't feel
like a
1:27:03
victim
1:27:03
I was not thrown on the ground
and
1:27:05
ravish which raped carries even
that
1:27:08
even saying I was not thrown on
the
1:27:10
ground and ravish ravishing is
not the
1:27:12
same as being brutally raped or
raped
1:27:16
ravishing is the way I
understand that
1:27:18
the word is more a term of
extreme
1:27:21
passion but you know just to
show you
1:27:23
right off the bat this woman is
not
1:27:25
thinking what we Anderson
poopers
1:27:26
thinking you don't feel like a
victim I
1:27:28
was not thrown on the ground
and ravish
1:27:30
which the word raped carry so
many
1:27:32
sexual connotations this was
not so this
1:27:36
was not sexual this just it
hurt it just
1:27:40
what it just you know I think
most
1:27:42
people think of rape and what
poopers
1:27:44
trying to say is it's
1:27:45
opposed to her don't you know
that just
1:27:47
what it just you know I think
most
1:27:49
people think of written as a I
mean it
1:27:51
is a violent assault it is not
I think
1:27:53
most people think of rape as
being sexy
1:28:06
as a I mean it is a violent
assault it
1:28:09
is not I think most people
think of rape
1:28:11
as being sexy let's take a
short break
1:28:15
and the fantasies
1:28:17
we've quite frankly if you can
stick
1:28:20
around we'll talk more on the
other side
1:28:21
you're fascinating to talk to
you can
1:28:28
just hear the control-room
flipping out
1:28:30
here I'll tell you exactly
where they
1:28:32
start freaking out from it is a
violent
1:28:34
assault I think most people
think of
1:28:36
rape as being sexy to talk to
now okay
1:28:52
we haven't done this for a
while but I
1:28:54
am going to give you a clip of
the day
1:28:55
for that it gets better
1:29:05
this is here she is on the joy
read show
1:29:09
basically telling her story so
he goes
1:29:11
like this towards the dressing
room and
1:29:13
the odd thing is the dressing
room door
1:29:15
was open and Burgdorf says you
know and
1:29:18
on the counter were these fancy
lingerie
1:29:20
boxes as they used to have back
in the
1:29:22
90s down so I walked in right
and phone
1:29:25
and he shut the door and bang
against
1:29:28
the wall so immediately upon
walking
1:29:31
into that dress riot act
against the
1:29:33
wall right against the wall
many people
1:29:36
and you should have been
included in
1:29:37
this thought this sounded
vaguely
1:29:40
familiar this scenario this
yeah this
1:29:44
plot and if you are a
law-and-order fan
1:29:48
a Special Victims Unit you
might have
1:29:50
thought this did anyone want to
roleplay
1:29:53
a rape with you in a public
place yes
1:29:56
there was one
1:29:58
a bit plain and it was not her
fantasy
1:30:00
it was mine okay yeah uh uh
roleplay
1:30:05
took place in the dressing room
1:30:07
Bergdorf's while she was trying
on
1:30:10
lingerie I would burst in oh
wow she's
1:30:15
written for a lot of TV stuff
so I
1:30:17
wonder if if that just kind of
crept in
1:30:22
but at some point some writers
seem to
1:30:24
lose contact with reality
mm-hmm and
1:30:27
their writing and the I mean
Woody Allen
1:30:29
has done a couple of movies
about this
1:30:31
phenomenon and it's like the
player the
1:30:35
people the stories that you
write about
1:30:37
be you know as you think they
actually
1:30:38
happened and because they're so
graphic
1:30:41
and I don't know I mean I
thought when I
1:30:44
first read her piece there was
all
1:30:46
jacked up about the day
excerpted part
1:30:49
of her book and put it in
Vanity mean
1:30:51
the whole piece is just filled
with how
1:30:53
she's you know having sex when
she's
1:30:55
eight years old and just all
kinds of so
1:30:58
everybody wants to have her yes
yeah no
1:31:03
she's yeah it was pretty funny
and it
1:31:05
was a pretty obvious it was and
if you
1:31:08
listen to the interview with
her and
1:31:09
Anderson you hear it can't you
hear the
1:31:12
kind of a almost borderline
craziness
1:31:15
it's kind of soothing yeah yeah
you're
1:31:19
fascinating to talk to your
sexuality
1:31:22
it's in your DNA and but they
say most
1:31:29
people think rape is sexy okay
lady
1:31:34
already it's just it's it is no
that's
1:31:40
our media anything anything to
bring
1:31:44
them down we'll bring them down
1:31:47
go to Trump rotation calm if
you'd like
1:31:50
to see what could possibly be
next on
1:31:52
the menu as we will spin the
wheel of
1:31:55
accusations
1:31:56
it's all in there that's true
it's all
1:31:58
in I have not been able to add
a new one
1:32:00
for I'd probably three four or
five
1:32:02
months mhm I think that I think
it's
1:32:04
solid right now and I've
numbered them
1:32:05
so now you just go by the number
1:32:08
is a yes so there's a number of
1:32:10
Technology things going on
there was a
1:32:11
hearing which was underplayed
downplayed
1:32:15
was not really promoted I
didn't I found
1:32:18
out about it just by someone
mentioned
1:32:20
it on No Agenda social calm
while it was
1:32:23
taking place this is you know
this the
1:32:26
Senate had a was it technology
or what
1:32:32
are they called algorithms
technology
1:32:35
companies and algorithms Senate
hearing
1:32:38
which was you know c-span three
so not
1:32:42
even available for most people
then we
1:32:44
also had and I'm gonna see if I
can find
1:32:47
an order here we had the
project Veritas
1:32:50
Google insider tech maybe we'll
start
1:32:54
well actually maybe we'll start
with now
1:32:56
is a good one yeah and I do
have some
1:32:59
comments about that but I'd
like to
1:33:00
start with something that I
came across
1:33:02
which gives you a pretty good
idea of
1:33:05
how Google specifically Google
really
1:33:08
works and portland portland
oregon is
1:33:12
has signed up to google's
sidewalk labs
1:33:18
project we may have talked
about this in
1:33:21
the past maybe the idea is they
they
1:33:25
take a city or a portion of the
city and
1:33:27
they track everything everybody
oh it's
1:33:30
all connected
1:33:31
already we talked about this
years ago I
1:33:33
think Toronto is their first
target yeah
1:33:36
but now it's Portland yeah and
and the
1:33:40
idea is they're selling this
service the
1:33:42
Google sidewalk labs and in
that is a
1:33:46
program called replicas and
they use it
1:33:49
for city planners so you can
understand
1:33:52
how traffic flows and you know
other
1:33:55
things for planning for
planning for
1:33:57
planning in the city but I and
I cut
1:34:00
this they have a video and it's
about
1:34:01
four minutes to cut it down to
under two
1:34:03
it's if you listen to this in
the
1:34:05
context of what they're doing
with us
1:34:07
all the time and how they track
what we
1:34:10
do it becomes a little clearer
as to
1:34:12
exactly how beautiful this
business
1:34:15
model of Google's is and as
I've always
1:34:17
said it always comes down to
location
1:34:20
that is the
1:34:22
the keyhole date a bit the
keyhole
1:34:23
system that they acquired early
on when
1:34:25
they were funded by in-q-tel
the CIA's a
1:34:28
venture capital firm this was
very
1:34:31
intentional this is a true
surveillance
1:34:35
system the whole company is
built around
1:34:36
your location and when you add
any
1:34:39
little thing to your location
you're
1:34:41
able to do quite a lot and just
listen
1:34:43
to how they speak about this in
the
1:34:45
context of the sidewalk labs
project and
1:34:47
just think about it in the
context of
1:34:49
advertising to you or any kind
of
1:34:51
behavioral modification which
is what
1:34:53
advertising is replica is made
up of two
1:34:56
parts a replica activity table
a data
1:34:59
base representing all the trips
and
1:35:01
activities by people in an area
and
1:35:03
explore an easy-to-use
interface for
1:35:06
querying the data and creating
maps and
1:35:08
charts first let's look at how
a replica
1:35:12
activity table is created we
use cell
1:35:14
phone location data covering a
small
1:35:16
percentage of the population to
learn
1:35:18
about travel patterns and
create a
1:35:20
travel behavior model basically
a set of
1:35:23
rules that represent how a
person makes
1:35:26
choices on where when why and
how to
1:35:29
travel the location data is
collected by
1:35:32
third party mobile apps with all
1:35:34
identifying information like
names and
1:35:36
phone numbers remove now mind
you for
1:35:39
the sidewalk labs project they
remove
1:35:42
all that information but google
has it
1:35:44
really we use aggregate census
1:35:47
information and other sources
to create
1:35:50
what planners call a synthetic
1:35:51
population this is a virtual
population
1:35:54
that is statistically
representative of
1:35:57
the real population if 300
people live
1:36:00
on your block you'll find 300
people
1:36:02
living on your block and
replicas and
1:36:04
you know this is exactly what
Google is
1:36:08
doing you know that at my
address
1:36:09
there's a replica a replica of
me a
1:36:12
digital me inside the Google's
the
1:36:14
people live on your block
you'll find
1:36:17
300 people living on your block
and
1:36:18
replica but you won't be able to
1:36:20
identify any individual we then
give
1:36:23
each person in the virtual
population a
1:36:26
travel behavior model based on
where
1:36:28
they live work and some other
factors
1:36:30
finally we use computer
simulation to
1:36:33
generate a week of
1:36:35
trips and activities for each
person
1:36:37
let's dive in and take a look
at one
1:36:39
person in the virtual
population as an
1:36:41
example in there now remember
this is
1:36:43
now one person it's replicas of
you they
1:36:46
know it's you they have your
name to
1:36:47
have you email your phone your
address
1:36:49
and they know who you are
1:36:50
a replica activity table we can
see this
1:36:53
person is in a household of one
adult
1:36:55
and two kids she lives in the
suburbs
1:36:58
and owns a car we can see in
the data
1:37:01
that she drives to work
downtown leaving
1:37:03
home around 8:00 a.m. stopping
off at a
1:37:06
coffee shop on the way in the
afternoon
1:37:08
she leaves work at 4:00 p.m.
and heads
1:37:11
to the grocery store sweet
sweet gig she
1:37:14
gets home at 5:00 a replica
activity
1:37:16
table is made up of millions of
virtual
1:37:19
people each with their own home
work or
1:37:22
school and a full week of trips
and
1:37:25
activities these movements are
faithful
1:37:27
to real-world activities but not
1:37:29
traceable to actual people or
specific
1:37:32
trips so they just have to keep
saying
1:37:33
that so you're not creeped out
as a city
1:37:35
planner but this is exactly
what Google
1:37:37
does for their advertising
clients for
1:37:40
for anyone who wants to do
business with
1:37:41
Google that's what they do they
have a
1:37:43
replica of you this folds into
the first
1:37:48
and only piece that I want to
play from
1:37:50
this Senate hearing and the guy
I have
1:37:57
is Tristan or Tristan Tristan
Harris he
1:38:01
is from the Center for Humane
Technology
1:38:03
I haven't looked him up but ok
1:38:05
think-tanks I'm something in
there I
1:38:06
don't know who's funding it but
he talks
1:38:09
about the concept of persuasive
1:38:11
technology and after you've you
know
1:38:12
heard what you just did about
how Google
1:38:14
puts it all together
1:38:16
it gives good context for him
explaining
1:38:18
what is what Google's business
model is
1:38:22
and how they're using it and if
it's
1:38:25
good or not everything you said
it's sad
1:38:28
to me because it's happening
not by
1:38:29
accident but by design
1:38:30
because the business model is
to keep
1:38:34
people engaged which in other
words this
1:38:36
hearing is about persuasive
technology
1:38:38
and persuasion is about an
invisible
1:38:41
asymmetry of power when I was a
kid I
1:38:43
was a magician and magic
teaches you
1:38:46
that you know you can have
1:38:48
asymmetric power without the
other
1:38:49
person realizing it you can
masquerade
1:38:52
to have asymmetric power while
looking
1:38:54
like you have an equal
relationship you
1:38:55
say pick a card any card
1:38:57
while meanwhile you know
exactly how to
1:38:59
get that person to pick the
card that
1:39:00
you want and essentially what
we're
1:39:02
experiencing with technology is
an
1:39:04
increasing asymmetry of power
that's
1:39:06
been masquerading itself as a
equal or
1:39:08
contractual relationship where
the
1:39:09
responsibility is on us yeah I
like that
1:39:12
and by the way fuel feed jumpin
whenever
1:39:14
you want John I'd like what
he's saying
1:39:15
I like it too I think it's
really it's
1:39:18
really absurd yeah it's a good
1:39:20
observation yeah because
because we all
1:39:22
think it's fair and it's an
equal
1:39:24
relationship we have with these
1:39:25
companies but it's not in the
race for
1:39:27
attention because there's only
so much
1:39:29
attention companies have to get
more of
1:39:31
it by being more and more
aggressive I
1:39:33
call it the race to the bottom
of the
1:39:34
brainstem so it starts with
techniques
1:39:36
like pull-to-refresh
1:39:37
so you pull to refresh your
newsfeed
1:39:39
that operates like a slot
machine it has
1:39:41
the same kind of addictive
qualities
1:39:42
that keep people in Las Vegas
hooked to
1:39:45
the slot machine other examples
are
1:39:47
removing stopping cues so if I
take the
1:39:49
bottom out of this glass and I
keep
1:39:52
refilling the water or the wine
you
1:39:53
won't know when to stop
drinking so
1:39:55
that's what happens with
infinitely
1:39:56
scrolling feeds we naturally
remove the
1:39:58
stopping hues and this is what
keeps
1:39:59
people scrolling but the race
for
1:40:01
attention has to get more and
more
1:40:03
aggressive and so it's not
enough just
1:40:05
to get your behavior and
predict what
1:40:06
will take your behavior we have
to
1:40:08
predict how to keep you hooked
in a
1:40:10
different way and so it crawled
deeper
1:40:12
down the brainstem into our
social
1:40:14
validation so that was the
introduction
1:40:15
of likes and followers how many
1:40:18
followers do I have and that
got every
1:40:20
it was much cheaper too instead
of
1:40:22
getting your attention to get
you
1:40:23
addicted to getting attention
from other
1:40:25
people and this has created the
kind of
1:40:27
mass narcissism and mass
cultural thing
1:40:29
that's happening with with
young people
1:40:31
especially today and he's
nailing it so
1:40:34
we had that part we tapped into
your
1:40:37
narcissistic side which is
still going
1:40:39
on because you can have your
video
1:40:41
anywhere you want it you can
have it on
1:40:43
YouTube but the narcissist in
you says
1:40:47
well if I get kicked off
YouTube then I
1:40:49
might as well be dead because
no one's
1:40:51
watching like everyone deserves
to be a
1:40:53
superstar Andy Warhol was right
and the
1:40:56
race for attention it's not
enough just
1:40:57
to get people addicted to
attention then
1:40:59
the race has to migrate to AI
1:41:01
who can build a better
predictive model
1:41:03
of your behavior and so if you
give an
1:41:05
example of YouTube so there you
are
1:41:07
you're about to hit play on a
YouTube
1:41:08
video and you hit play and then
you
1:41:10
think you're gonna watch this
one video
1:41:11
and then you wake up two hours
later and
1:41:13
say oh my god what just
happened and the
1:41:15
answer is because you had a
1:41:16
supercomputer pointed at your
brain and
1:41:18
at the moment you hit play it
wakes up
1:41:20
an avatar voodoo doll like
version of
1:41:22
you inside of a Google server
and that
1:41:24
avatar based on all the clicks
and likes
1:41:27
and everything you never made
those are
1:41:28
like your hair clippings and
toenail
1:41:30
clippings and nail filings that
make the
1:41:32
avatar look and act more and
more like
1:41:33
you so that inside of a Google
server
1:41:35
they can simulate more and more
1:41:37
possibilities if I pick you at
this
1:41:39
video for freaky with this
video how
1:41:41
long would you stay and the
business
1:41:42
model is simply what maximizes
watch
1:41:44
time this leads to the kind of
1:41:46
algorithmic extremism that
you've
1:41:48
pointed out and this is what's
caused
1:41:50
70% of YouTube's traffic now
and be
1:41:52
driven by recommendations not
by human
1:41:54
choice but by the machines and
this is
1:41:57
where it gets interesting
because that
1:41:59
they've obviously figured this
out the
1:42:01
recommendations if you see this
deep
1:42:02
platforming stuff that's going
on it's
1:42:05
all about taking people off
1:42:06
recommendations not being
recommended
1:42:08
because what they don't really
know how
1:42:10
to do yet is to truly modify
your
1:42:12
behavior if you're a
conservative and
1:42:15
you're looking for conservative
talk and
1:42:17
conservative outrage you're
going to be
1:42:19
drawn to it that's just how the
system
1:42:21
works they have no way to push
you
1:42:23
towards anything else which is
probably
1:42:25
why they need to quarantine
this type of
1:42:28
stuff and it's a race between
Facebook's
1:42:30
voodoo doll' where you flick
your finger
1:42:32
can they predict what to show
you next
1:42:34
and Google's views all and
these are
1:42:36
abstract metaphors that apply
to the
1:42:37
whole tech industry where it's
a race
1:42:39
between who can better predict
your
1:42:40
behavior Facebook has something
called
1:42:42
loyalty prediction where they
can
1:42:44
actually predict to an
advertiser when
1:42:46
you're about to become disloyal
to a
1:42:48
brand so if you're a mother and
you take
1:42:51
Pampers diapers they can tell
pampers
1:42:53
hey this user is about to become
1:42:55
disloyal to this brand so in
other words
1:42:57
they can predict things about
us that we
1:42:59
don't know about our own selves
I were
1:43:01
you aware of this this
capability I
1:43:03
never heard of this before
that's new to
1:43:06
me and if that's true that's
very
1:43:07
powerful stuff and I would be
curious to
1:43:11
know how they do it but and
that's a new
1:43:13
level of asymmetric power
1:43:15
and we have a name for this
asymmetric
1:43:17
relationship which is a
fiduciary
1:43:18
relationship or a duty of care
1:43:19
relationship the same standard
we apply
1:43:21
to doctors to priests to
lawyers imagine
1:43:25
a world in which priests only
make their
1:43:27
money by selling access to the
1:43:29
confession booth to someone
else except
1:43:31
in this case Facebook listens
to two
1:43:32
billion people's confessions
has a
1:43:34
supercomputer next to them and
is
1:43:36
calculating and predicting
confessions
1:43:38
you're going to make before you
know
1:43:39
you're going to make them and
that's
1:43:41
what's causing all this havoc
this
1:43:42
affects everyone even if you
don't use
1:43:44
these products you still send
your kids
1:43:46
to a school where other people
believing
1:43:48
that anti-vaccine conspiracy
theories
1:43:50
causes impact for your life or
other
1:43:52
people voting in der elections
and when
1:43:54
Marc Andreessen said software
is going
1:43:56
to eat the world what he meant
by that
1:43:58
was that software can do every
part of
1:44:01
society more efficiently than
non suffer
1:44:03
right because it's just adding
1:44:05
efficiencies right and so we're
going to
1:44:06
allow software to eat up our
elections
1:44:08
we're gonna allow it to eat up
our media
1:44:10
our taxi our transportation and
the
1:44:13
problem was that software was
eating the
1:44:15
world without taking
responsibility for
1:44:16
it
1:44:16
we used to have rules and
standards
1:44:18
around Saturday morning
cartoons and
1:44:20
when YouTube gobbles up that
part of
1:44:22
society it just takes away all
of those
1:44:24
protections so that's a long
background
1:44:26
err but I think it really
explains
1:44:29
extremely well what these
companies are
1:44:31
doing and that it truly is about
1:44:33
business for them and I'm just
going to
1:44:36
push back a little bit again
with the
1:44:39
most recent removal of videos d
1:44:42
platforming quarantine 'old
subreddit
1:44:46
unread all these things people
are so
1:44:48
convinced that these companies
are only
1:44:50
trying to kill conservative
thinking and
1:44:54
conservative thought you're
missing the
1:44:56
big picture and that big
picture still
1:44:59
comes down to money it's all
about that
1:45:03
they do if if conservatism is
seen as
1:45:06
toxic then it's got to go but
they they
1:45:09
have no way to to change your
direction
1:45:12
not yet at least
1:45:13
they have not algorithms there
AI can
1:45:16
amplify what you like but it
can't
1:45:18
change your behavior yet
they're really
1:45:20
trying to get that and they're
not
1:45:22
sincere about going after hate
1:45:25
they really aren't here's proof
there's
1:45:27
a startling revelation at a
House
1:45:28
Homeland Security Committee
hearing
1:45:30
Democratic congressman max Rose
of New
1:45:32
York got executives from
Facebook Google
1:45:34
and Twitter to admit that none
of them
1:45:36
have full-time employees to
monitor
1:45:38
terrorist propaganda and hate
speech you
1:45:41
all cannot get your act
together enough
1:45:43
to dedicate enough resources to
put
1:45:48
full-time staff under a
building dealing
1:45:51
with this problem it I think it
speaks
1:45:54
to the ways in which we're
addressing
1:45:57
this with this technocratic
libertarian
1:46:01
elitism and all the while
people are
1:46:06
being killed now that came
during a
1:46:09
discussion about the tech
companies
1:46:11
failure to take down live video
of the
1:46:13
March mosque attacks in New
Zealand so
1:46:15
they're not really sincere
about it they
1:46:19
just don't they don't really
care they
1:46:21
only care about what
advertisers are
1:46:23
interested in and and it's
definitely
1:46:25
goes for Google with their
search
1:46:27
results they don't want people
turned
1:46:29
off and pissed off and turned
away but
1:46:31
for some reason they've
convinced
1:46:33
everybody that they're out to
get you
1:46:35
and it's kind of pissing me off
1:46:37
certainly from No Agenda people
you
1:46:39
should know better and then you
get this
1:46:41
project Veritas or it looks
like the
1:46:43
biggest red herring in the
world with a
1:46:46
whistleblower who's on a
vocoder are you
1:46:49
kidding me that's not a
whistleblower
1:46:52
that's a dude in the dark with
a vocoder
1:46:55
we don't know who this person
is we
1:46:57
don't know what we don't have a
name
1:46:58
that's chicken shit and it end
dramatic
1:47:02
music and and facts that you can
1:47:04