0:00
new Oliver wasn't staged atom
curry
0:03
John C. Dvorak Thursday
September 12
0:06
2019 this is your award-winning
chemo
0:08
nation media assassination
episode 11 72
0:11
but this is no agenda printing
0:14
homelessness in 3d and
broadcasting live
0:17
from opportunities on 33 in the
frontier
0:19
of Austin Texas to cap load the
drone
0:21
star state in the morning
everybody
0:23
hi madam Curie and from
northern Silicon
0:25
Valley where we feel so bad
about the
0:28
departure of John Bolton I
can't tell
0:30
you I'm Chauncey Dvorak ya
cryin over
0:38
that one
0:41
what took him so long
0:44
how'd he get there in the first
place
0:45
that's the thing no one can
there's
0:47
still unanswered question well
I think
0:49
there mmm it cannot be a
coincidence
0:52
that the Taliban banana cancels
or the
0:56
Trump cancels the Taliban after
they
0:58
blow something up and Bolton's
gone the
1:00
next day
1:01
you got to think that may be
connected
1:05
well it's definitely a
coincidence
1:12
sure so yeah that was some news
but I
1:16
found the news for me that I
wanted to
1:20
start with today and hopefully
everybody
1:23
paid attention because we laid
out in in
1:28
some detail on the previous
episode
1:29
exactly what was going on with
the vapor
1:32
wars big boars and women wait
who got to
1:36
jingling great wars and to the
tea
1:42
exactly as expected yeah and I
think I
1:48
even said pay attention because
you see
1:49
how it really works where the
media is
1:52
complicit and politicians are
complicit
1:54
and the president is complicit
and it's
1:57
all to get a couple of big
players a
2:00
solidified spot in the
marketplace that
2:03
crushes everybody else and this
is the
2:06
vapor Wars I'd late I think now
there is
2:10
there is important information
that
2:12
needs to be conveyed in
particular to
2:14
members of our audience because
I also
2:17
got a boots-on-the-ground
report from
2:18
Justin the drug dealer because
we have
2:21
different vaping technologies
that are
2:24
being conflated in particular
by the
2:26
mainstream let's start with the
number
2:29
one issue that I have with their
2:31
communication ecigs cigarettes
is
2:35
bullshit they use that term to
equate
2:39
vaping with cigarettes okay
there are no
2:43
e cigarettes anymore the thing
that
2:45
comes closest is the Joule
which is
2:48
called a Joule not an e-cig
it's called
2:50
a Joule it's a vape and there's
one
2:54
other you identify John woos or
2:56
something or
2:57
some of it you know I saw I saw
the ad
2:59
they have a shitty ad because I
can't
3:01
remember their name da I was
just gonna
3:05
say the same thing it's not a
shitty ad
3:07
by enemies it's a really well
produced
3:09
ad except for that one fact
it's kind of
3:12
I can't remember their name
whose vuz e
3:15
could that be it boosts I think
so it's
3:19
something else it starts with
an M I
3:20
believe and it's a cuter
devices cooler
3:24
looking little device than the
jewel no
3:26
it's the booze I think this
there's
3:28
always one of lose ya think
it's the
3:31
booze yeah yeah it's it's it's
the same
3:34
same idea vu se no well I'm
going to be
3:40
hold up my opinion on that
being the
3:42
name until I see the ad again
let me see
3:45
if I can remember it anyway
continue
3:47
alright so let me talk about
the three
3:49
basic vaping technologies first
there is
3:52
the sub ohm tank and this is a
baton in
3:56
int and the different sizes for
3:58
everything in general it's a
battery and
4:00
that can be a very large
battery and a
4:02
tank that holds the liquid and
in that
4:04
is the coil and it's called sub
ohm
4:07
because of the resistance of
the coil is
4:09
under 1 ohm and resistance and
with
4:12
that's the stuff that if you
jack it up
4:14
enough you can blow huge vape
clouds if
4:16
you're if you are experimental
and you
4:20
try other types of coils you
can short
4:22
the battery and kill yourself
so you
4:24
know most people go and blow
yeah most
4:27
people go for a pretty simple
system I
4:29
have the what do I use the
smock SM okay
4:33
Spock the stick v8 and and the
tank that
4:38
goes with it and those are I
would say
4:40
fairly safe then we have the
vape pen
4:45
for which you can at which is
very thin
4:47
looks like a pen that's just a
battery
4:49
and the controls to turn it on
or off or
4:51
store it and you will buy little
4:54
cartridges with vape liquid in
that or
4:57
you can get a very tiny tank
that you
5:00
can fill up yourself and that
we call it
5:03
a vape pen and then there's
also of
5:05
course the
5:07
the sticks that we the vapes
that we
5:09
talked about which is jewel and
the
5:13
booze and they have a little
cartridge
5:16
that is prefilled that you snap
right on
5:19
to the end because that thing is
5:20
essentially just a battery and
so it's
5:21
got the coil it's got a prefab
coil and
5:25
the and the juice in there then
we have
5:29
THC which is now there's many
ways
5:32
people do this and I'm not
going to get
5:34
into the more esoteric versions
of it
5:36
but you have the vape pen and
you can
5:38
buy a cartridge just like with
the
5:40
e-liquid only it has the THC in
it which
5:44
is then there's some additives
in there
5:48
which actually help and you'll
make it
5:50
vaporize and let me start with
that
5:53
because that is where there is
some
5:54
actual danger this is more
important
5:57
than this whole vaping bullshit
because
5:58
I'm sure I like to vape THC but
I became
6:01
very wary a while ago when I
started
6:04
coughing off a one I talked to
Justin
6:06
the drug deal I said this is no
good and
6:08
he really did a deep dive and
brought me
6:10
a report so what's the problem
is the
6:14
people who package and sell THC
vape
6:19
cartridges to the consumer with
pretty
6:22
colors and and often with you
know
6:24
things to attract children I'm
sure but
6:27
they're just taking a pre-made
mixture
6:30
which they buy from what they
believe is
6:32
a reputable source and they put
it in
6:34
there and you're even dank
there's a
6:36
whole bunch of these big known
names
6:38
that do this then you have the
6:39
manufacturing itself which is
not
6:43
inexpensive you know just to
build a lab
6:45
will cost years five hundred
thousand
6:46
2/4 3/4 of a million dollars
and you
6:51
have this combination of some
oils and
6:55
some other liquids that make it
vaporize
6:58
not unlike the liquid vape only
we've
7:03
seen a number of these
manufacturers
7:05
maybe one maybe more who
started putting
7:08
other shit in there such as the
vitamin
7:10
E acetate just to get it to be
more
7:13
liquid and to vaporize that is
where the
7:16
actual danger is you
7:18
want to be vaping that stuff it
can be
7:20
checked by anyone who has the
test
7:23
equipment which is just
chemical testing
7:26
so my drug dealer does that for
me but
7:29
if you if you are worried in
general the
7:34
liquid in your THC tank should
be not if
7:37
you tip it back and forth it
shouldn't
7:40
flow very quickly in fact it
should be
7:41
almost like syrup or kind of
like
7:43
molasses then you're probably
okay
7:45
so that's important because I
don't want
7:47
anyone dying from that shit and
we'll
7:49
hear that they may have found a
culprit
7:52
for these bogus manufactured
carts
7:54
because these guys just buy him
in China
7:56
off of Alibaba and put their
stuff in
7:58
there and the manufacturers
just think
8:00
they're getting the same thing
they
8:01
always do and if they don't
people die
8:03
bad now let's get to the vaping
thing
8:07
the whole mission was to get
state laws
8:10
in place with hundreds of
lobbyists to
8:14
have very lenient laws for
tobacco
8:17
flavored ie
8:19
the main business of jewell
tobacco
8:21
flavored vape products and to
push
8:24
everybody else out because they
wouldn't
8:27
be able to afford the FDA
testing
8:29
procedure for your more and
more popular
8:33
vape liquids which are wood
ones with
8:35
different flavors and fruity
and even
8:38
mint actually nor menthol it
got better
8:43
for them because of all this
conflation
8:46
of people dying and we don't
know what's
8:47
going on and saw scary
8:49
the FDA stepped in and created
a rule
8:52
above everybody else which is
absolutely
8:55
the best and they announced it
with the
8:58
president and the first lady
you could
9:00
not have asked for more if you
are the
9:02
big player in the vape industry
here's a
9:05
clip from the president in the
Oval
9:09
Office well they become very
rich
9:11
companies very fast and the
whole thing
9:13
with vaping is is they been very
9:17
profitable and I want companies
look you
9:20
know that I fight for
9:21
these very hard and I am what
companies
9:23
he fighting for prayers fight
that's why
9:26
I'm fighting with China that's
why I'm
9:28
fighting with other countries
if you
9:30
look at European Union and if
you look
9:32
at Japan and if you look at so
many
9:36
others including South Korea
and many
9:38
others were constantly dealing
with them
9:41
to make it good for our
companies
9:43
because I view it as jobs I
view it as
9:45
income for our country and jobs
vaping
9:49
has become a very big business
as I
9:51
understand it like a giant
business in a
9:53
very short period of time but
we can't
9:55
allow people to get sick and we
can't
9:57
have our youth be so effective
you see
10:00
this is where pisses me off
because
10:03
there's no evidence anyone got
sick from
10:05
an eliquid vape experience but
10:10
definitely from the THC and
here the
10:12
president's saying ah we don't
want the
10:13
kids to guess that's how the
first lady
10:15
got involved she's got a son
the people
10:22
were obsessing over this one
line on
10:23
Twitter instead of focusing on
that yeah
10:26
instead of focusing on what's
actually
10:28
happening now I gonna well it's
not
10:30
really his son the heads
exploded Oh
10:34
what is he saying can't allow
people to
10:36
get sick and we can't have our
youth be
10:39
so affected and I'm hearing it
and
10:41
that's how the first lady got
involved
10:42
and she's got a son together
that is a
10:47
beautiful young man and she
feels very
10:49
very strongly about it she's
seen it
10:52
we're both reading it a lot of
people
10:54
are reading it but people are
dying with
10:57
aping so we're looking at it
very
10:59
closely and you know if nothing
else
11:01
this is a conference that's
going to let
11:03
people know about it because
people are
11:04
gonna watch what we're saying
and
11:06
parents are gonna be a lot
tougher with
11:08
respect to their children a lot
of
11:10
people think vaping is
wonderful it's
11:11
great it's really not wonderful
that's
11:14
that's one thing I think we can
say
11:16
definitely commissioner it's
not a
11:18
wonderful thing it's big
problems we
11:21
have to find out the extent of
the
11:23
problem it's so new and so no
but we're
11:25
gonna find out and I hope that
parents
11:28
that you know they have
children and the
11:32
children are a certain age I
hope
11:33
they're going to be able to
make wise
11:36
decisions maybe basically what
we're
11:38
saying today
11:39
okay so complete misinformation
blah
11:42
blah blah for sure
11:45
children and I'll just say
under 18
11:47
should not be vaping nicotine or
11:50
anything none of that is good
for you
11:52
and the developing body and and
11:53
marijuana isn't good for you
either if
11:56
your brain is still developing
but let's
11:58
see what is really going to
happen so we
12:00
have the Health and Human
Services
12:02
working together with the FDA
and here's
12:06
the actual announcement and
you'll see
12:08
what happens is the big guys
win the
12:10
thousands of little companies
who built
12:13
the industry with their eliquid
's will
12:16
be squashed today president
Trump
12:18
announced that the Food and Drug
12:19
Administration will be
finalizing
12:22
guidance that removes all
flavored
12:25
e-cigarettes from the
marketplace other
12:27
than tobacco flavor D
cigarettes why is
12:30
that important we are seeing an
absolute
12:32
surge in high school and middle
school
12:35
kids using these flavored
products mint
12:38
menthol fruit flavor alcohol
flavor
12:41
bubble-gum we've gotta stop it
we're
12:43
gonna have a whole generation of
12:44
children addicted to nicotine
and that's
12:46
just horrible and President
Trump as the
12:48
great public health leader that
he is is
12:49
gonna put a stop to it we're
gonna let
12:51
these tobacco flavor to be
cigarette
12:53
products remain on the market
until they
12:55
apply for FDA approval but
that's just
12:57
because adults may need them to
help
12:59
with stopping smoking
cigarettes or
13:01
cigars but if we see actions
that target
13:05
these products towards kids or
make them
13:06
available to kids or if we see
kids
13:08
start flowing into tobacco
flavor in
13:09
e-cigarettes we're coming after
that too
13:11
so under the guise of Oh kids
will start
13:15
vaping because they're
attracted to the
13:17
yummy flavors as far as I know
kids were
13:20
always attracted to smoking
things to
13:22
cigarettes and menthol and
whatever but
13:26
that's the cover because Jul
makes the
13:30
most popular tobacco products
oh by the
13:33
start of the new year all of
the or
13:36
actually will be probably about
nine
13:38
months all flavored liquids will
13:42
be banned unless you get an FDA
approval
13:47
which is exactly what these
small
13:49
companies can't afford
13:51
it'll cost up to a million
dollars per
13:54
flavor that you want to
introduce to the
13:57
market and of course we'll see
Joule
13:59
expanding their line from their
tobacco
14:02
flavored they'll bring back or
they
14:04
probably never even get rid of
their
14:05
menthol and they'll bring in
their own
14:07
and all the small guys are effed
14:10
in fact jewel left the vapor
Technology
14:14
Association over this dispute
then of
14:19
course the vapor the vapor
Technology
14:21
Association is pissed because
these guys
14:23
participated in screwing them
out of
14:26
existence what I have here I
have the
14:31
final
14:34
wait a minute that's not the
one I
14:36
wanted here's the MSS CNBC who
talked a
14:40
little bit about the huge
market in jest
14:43
of course the fact of the
matter is that
14:45
we did a study and there are
almost
14:48
14,000 vapor companies in the
United
14:50
States almost 12,000 dolls are
retailed
14:53
vape shops often times mom and
pop shops
14:55
and they sell a wide variety at
a
14:57
diverse product range of
flavored vapor
14:59
products to adult smokers you
take those
15:01
flavors off of the market
precipitously
15:03
and what will happen is those
shops will
15:05
shut down we're talking about a
total
15:08
economic impact of a hundred
and sixty
15:09
six thousand jobs 70,000 of
which are
15:12
direct retail jobs you take
those
15:14
products out of the market
there is no
15:15
business model for people just
selling a
15:17
stock of flavor and the real
harm here
15:21
is the fact that those
consumers that
15:22
are buying those products from
them will
15:24
have two options both bad and
worse the
15:27
first option is that they go
back to
15:29
smoking and that's not what
we're saying
15:30
it's what the FDA said an open
court in
15:33
June what they said in court
was that
15:35
dramatically and precipitously
removing
15:37
vapor products from the market
will lead
15:39
to an increase in smoking and
and the
15:43
worst case is that it leads to
more
15:44
black market problems because
that is
15:46
what the American consumers
have said
15:48
they will do they'll go to
smoking or go
15:50
back to the black market so
there's your
15:53
there's your situation and I
don't know
15:55
if the president is just
completely
15:57
uninformed and dumb I'm afraid
he
15:59
actually it hasn't in with
Altria and
16:02
someone lobbied and word got up
to him
16:05
like oh yes this is really
what's
16:07
happening people are really
dying but
16:09
they're not they're not dying
from the
16:11
e-liquid now long term I don't
know it's
16:14
only been around for ten years
so we
16:16
don't know the long-term health
effects
16:17
of vape liquid but for sure you
have to
16:21
be careful with your THC and
get it from
16:23
a reputable source who has
tested it
16:26
you
16:28
and that's what I got
16:32
you question then okay when was
vaping
16:35
technology and invented was it
patented
16:38
and when did the patent run out
and why
16:39
don't we hear about this
16:42
uh I don't know if that's a
great
16:45
question because I never said
it was a
16:47
great way to call it that um
it's a
16:53
question that's been on my mind
because
16:54
it seems to me that somebody
could have
16:56
cleaned up on this you know if
it was
16:58
patented well why wouldn't it
well
16:59
here's your smart here's here's
another
17:02
minor twist to the story every
single
17:05
vaporizer device comes from
China every
17:08
single one so I don't know who
if you
17:12
know who or if there's even a
patent I
17:14
have no idea may it may be very
very old
17:17
that the idea is not new
vaporizers are
17:21
not new but China makes
everything
17:24
that's just another interesting
little
17:26
ripple in this whole rig even
make our
17:29
own a little battery wad I
would think
17:33
Elon Musk came up with a safe
one but no
17:38
so yeah I think it's uh I think
it's
17:40
just Chinese have flooded the
market I
17:42
don't think it makes any
different no
17:44
one can make it cheaper I don't
think
17:45
there's any any companies here
that make
17:47
that could be wrong but I'll
find out if
17:49
if there's US made I'll buy
that I'll
17:51
use that they did find a
scapegoat thank
17:55
goodness in the illegal vape
making
17:57
business in the manufacturing
this is
18:00
people this is Wisconsin past
me in the
18:03
past is this one of the largest
drug
18:04
operations you've had in
Kenosha I don't
18:05
think it was but of this type
18:08
it's the largest we've ever had
and as
18:10
far as I know it's probably one
of the
18:12
largest in the country
18:13
they found 31200 vape
cartridges filled
18:21
already ready to be shipped out
each was
18:24
filled with one gram of THC
18:26
they found approximately 98
thousand
18:30
vape cartridges unfilled and
what they
18:32
would do is they would hire
people and
18:35
they would they would actually
pay them
18:37
in dollars an hour and they
would take
18:42
THC oil which is on the screen
here and
18:45
they would take a syringe and
they
18:46
inject it into the cartridges
they make
18:49
it sound really scary but the
problem is
18:51
these guys who is now known as
the vape
18:54
goat
18:55
was probably cutting it he was
cutting
18:57
it up with vitamin E trying to
you know
18:59
to dilute it make it work
better with
19:03
less THC make more money and
you just
19:06
can't be vaporizing chemicals
it's not a
19:10
good idea
19:11
you know glycerin all right you
know we
19:13
have that in a lot of stuff in
your in
19:15
your birthday cake but you know
vitamin
19:18
E that was never part of the
original
19:19
formula so that's what we
really have to
19:22
be careful about and all this is
19:24
squashing and an entire
industry will be
19:26
gone gone in a year
19:30
very disappointing
19:33
you're actually disappointed
yeah I'm
19:35
very disappointed in my
government and
19:37
I'd see the president like
that's fu man
19:40
get a fucking clue
19:43
or get a clue even I get a get
a clue
19:46
yeah it said find that extremely
19:49
disappointing and and the worst
part is
19:52
the mainstream media shocked and
19:54
dismayed no I predicted it what
are you
19:57
talking about
19:57
hi I didn't imagine it would
come
20:00
through why are you even
bringing up
20:01
that it that you're
disappointing the
20:03
present when you already
predicted this
20:04
behavior I'm disappointing okay
20:07
you should have been
pre-decided I think
20:09
I was pre disappointed but I
did I
20:12
wasn't prepared for the actual
letdown
20:14
of it all but it's fun to watch
the m5m
20:19
collude and conflate all these
different
20:22
stories into scaring everybody
I'm going
20:24
along with the program I have
to stop
20:28
you now you used the word
conflate way
20:31
too often in this report no I
actually
20:34
the reason I did it is because
the
20:37
previous report I said conflate
and I
20:39
said no that's not the word and
I went
20:41
back and looked it up and
decided to use
20:43
it for the report I've used it
twice but
20:45
thanks what about fucking me no
no three
20:48
okay four all right fine I'm
just
20:51
telling you yeah you're
supposed to
20:52
report these things yes
20:55
okay I got it
20:58
I think that summarizes the
whole thing
21:01
is ever that there's still
missing
21:04
patent and also I think it
might be
21:07
interesting to know how this
who started
21:09
this craze in the first place
which
21:11
craze the vape craze yeah on
that that
21:14
is an interesting question I
don't know
21:16
but it's--but 10 years I know
but
21:18
someone someone is ground zero
of this
21:24
yeah someone somewhere just
gets no
21:27
credit yeah it's probably some
hipster
21:32
with a man bun so yeah we may
not want
21:34
to find the answer to that it
probably
21:37
is some hipster with a man bun
as a
21:39
matter of fact the next big
piece of
21:44
news would undoubtedly be brexit
21:48
Wow what's news about brexit oh
well we
21:52
got a whole bunch of fun things
21:53
happening I mean you know of
course now
21:56
the the Parliament is in
prorogue so
22:00
they have been suspended
22:03
well actually here's the BBC
who have a
22:05
little recap of what happened
this week
22:08
in brexit it's been a long and
often
22:10
dramatic parliamentary session
and as it
22:13
came to an end it was a long and
22:15
dramatic night as a ceremony for
22:19
corrugation got underway a
group of MPs
22:21
staged a protest around the
Speaker's
22:24
chair holding up signs saying
22:29
do you want to make the point
that this
22:33
is not a standard or normal
corrugation
22:40
require any assistance and from
you mr.
22:43
Stevenson you wouldn't have the
foggiest
22:45
idea where to start in seeking
to
22:47
counsel me on this table I
require no
22:50
response from you
22:55
and then there were cries of
shame
22:57
directed at conservative MPs as
they
23:00
left the chamber
23:06
it all followed a fiery debate
in the
23:09
Commons where MPs again
rejected the
23:12
idea of a snap election in
mid-october
23:14
and Boris Johnson again
reiterated that
23:18
he has no intention of delaying
brexit
23:21
this government will not deny
brexit any
23:24
further we will not allow the
emphatic
23:26
verdict of the referendum to be
slowly
23:29
suffocated by
23:34
while the opposition run from
their duty
23:37
to answer to those who put us
here they
23:40
cannot hide forever
23:46
commander when welcome when the
people
23:48
will finally get their chance
to deliver
23:51
their verdict mr. speaker say
what I'm
23:58
just saying his keys he is well
just
24:01
play the whole thing but it
seems that
24:02
he right there either said
there's gonna
24:05
be a people's vote or there's
gonna be a
24:07
new election he's saying the
verdict was
24:32
to leave and they will get
their chant
24:37
he'd finally they'll get the
chance to
24:38
decide who was good and bad I
think
24:40
that's his his way of saying we
are
24:42
gonna have an election but Boris
24:44
Johnson's being attacked on two
fronts
24:47
one is the legality of the
prorogue
24:50
which we discussed and there's
been kind
24:53
of floating out there that he
could be
24:54
arrested because it's illegal
and in
24:57
essence what he did is he lied
he lied
24:59
to the Queen did you lie to the
Queen
25:02
when you advised her to Peru to
suspend
25:05
Parliament absolutely not
25:07
and that an indeed as I say
that the
25:10
High Court in in England
plainly agrees
25:13
with us but the Supreme Court
will have
25:16
to decide we need a Queen's
Speech we
25:17
need to get on and do all sorts
of
25:18
things so I'm not sure where
that is but
25:21
the latest and this is almost
like you
25:25
know anti-trump Ian's stuff
what they're
25:26
doing now they've they figured
out how
25:28
to bring Boris Johnson down
everybody
25:31
they've here's here's the story
JA Boris
25:34
Johnson's backers so his his
campaign
25:38
funders and people who support
his
25:39
mission are all making hundreds
of
25:42
millions on shorting the market
and it's
25:45
clearly collusion
25:47
so the BBC interviewed one of
these
25:49
donors Crispin O'Day who has
already
25:54
made 220 million pounds from
shorting
25:57
the markets I don't know
exactly what
25:59
he was shorting but he's
shorting and
26:01
hurting the markets sorry time
26:03
expression matino hora in Boca
the
26:07
morning has gold in its mass
and never
26:10
has one felt so much that that
idea as
26:16
this morning really I discover
Crispin
26:19
has two reasons to be cheerful
brexit
26:21
and bonds overnight he's made
two
26:24
hundred and twenty million quid
betting
26:26
markets will collapse as his
campaign
26:29
succeeds I still think tomorrow
they're
26:32
gonna take it all away from you
me
26:33
that's because I've lived for
too long
26:35
in the the yer a world he might
have
26:39
been up all night but he there
I'm
26:42
feeling fresh as a daisy they
got the
26:47
perfect guy with the evil laugh
well
26:53
that's not very clear on what
this guy
26:55
did I mean he's obviously
playing that I
26:57
mean the only thing the only
thing that
27:00
I can see somebody like that
can make
27:02
that much money overnight is
playing
27:03
currency well you could play
you beat
27:06
this bullcrap the report said
bonds
27:10
which is possible is fine well
the
27:14
shorting bonds I'm just telling
you what
27:17
the report what world are bonds
shorter
27:20
bonds going down I'm just
telling you
27:22
what the reporting is what the
reporting
27:24
saying reporting is saying
there should
27:26
that Boris Johnson's backers
have been
27:30
shorting the market and and
they know
27:32
exactly what Bo Joe's gonna do
and so
27:34
they're just cleaning up it's
all of its
27:37
bullcrap they're just making
stuff up to
27:40
make Boris Johnson look bad
which is
27:41
what you do but what really
came out to
27:44
the forefront this week was
operation
27:47
yellow hammer and we talked
about yellow
27:50
hammer in January as the secret
plan for
27:55
what the UK will do in the
worst case No
27:57
Deal brexit scenario it was
kind of
28:01
laughed at as off was this and
it
28:03
doesn't exist it's not real now
it's out
28:05
in the open now it turns out to
be real
28:07
the British government's worst
case
28:09
brexit scenarios makes for a
bleak
28:12
potential panic buying and
public
28:15
disorder the no deal departure
could
28:17
means the veer disruption to
cross
28:19
channel reef problems for fuel
medical
28:22
and fresh food supplies and
protests and
28:24
counter protests across the
country
28:27
operation yellow hammer was
published on
28:29
Wednesday after a request from
lawmakers
28:31
prepared on August the second
it says
28:34
public and business readiness
for a No
28:36
Deal outcome would likely be
low the
28:39
document states lorries could
have to
28:40
wait up to two and a half days
to cross
28:43
the English Channel and British
citizens
28:45
could face more immigration
checks that
28:47
EU border posts disruption
could last a
28:50
possible three months
information
28:52
sharing between police and
security
28:54
services would also be affected
28:57
documentation yellowhammer
first came to
28:59
light in the Sunday Times
newspaper on
29:01
August the 18th Michael Gove
minister in
29:04
charge of No Deal preparations
said then
29:06
that the document was not
up-to-date
29:08
despite handing the information
over on
29:11
Wednesday he refused to do the
same with
29:13
advice from government advisers
about
29:15
suspending Parliament
29:19
so that's just a big fracas I
was also
29:23
yeah it's like
29:25
one thing in there there's no
police
29:27
won't be able to talk to each
other
29:28
because of this oh yeah yes the
the net
29:31
what's the internet gonna go
down they
29:33
all the power green oh no this
is can't
29:36
bring any power over all right
well I'm
29:40
gonna take you there this is
part of
29:42
black vulture see see black we
have
29:46
yellow hammer and black vulture
these
29:48
Brits man they're nuts in
Parliament so
29:51
black vulture is showing all
these
29:52
things that the that will
happen but
29:55
also what the EU was planning
so when we
29:58
talk about the police not being
able to
29:59
communicate that's because of
the
30:01
technology they're using these
digital
30:03
radios and gosh I guess the EU
controls
30:06
the frequencies or something of
that
30:08
nature and then we had Lord
James of
30:11
Blackheath who's kind of a
backbencher
30:13
blowhard although he talks
softly and he
30:16
threw the bombshell down in
Parliament
30:19
saying well let me just tell
you you
30:21
know we better get out because
if we
30:23
don't you know the European
army is
30:25
gonna take over
30:26
we have this wonderful paper
called the
30:28
yellow hammer which tells us
all the
30:29
dreadful things which will
happen if we
30:30
do go no go now my secretary
has got an
30:33
alternative list which I have
compiled
30:35
it called the black vulture
which is my
30:37
list of the things which they
don't know
30:39
about which will happen if we
don't go
30:40
no no deal and the first of
those has if
30:43
it creates for the crowd but
the second
30:46
will somebody please tell us
the truth
30:48
about the European defence
Union is it
30:52
by far the biggest issue facing
the
30:54
British public and they know
nothing
30:55
about it officially can we
please have a
30:57
proper account of what it
entails is it
31:00
really true that the government
has
31:02
entered into private agreements
with the
31:04
European community that they
will on
31:06
completion of remain or
whatever it is
31:09
to be transferred to the
European Union
31:12
in Brussels the entire control
of our
31:14
entire fighting forces
including all
31:16
very quickly
31:18
you may you may just my lords
but it has
31:22
been done and you must check it
out it
31:24
is too important to ignore we
must know
31:27
the truth of this we must have
clear for
31:29
the whole public to know I it
is true
31:32
and I think we should be taught
I have
31:34
understanding that it is
intended that
31:36
the oath of every serving
member of our
31:39
forces will be canceled and
they will be
31:41
required to undertake a new of
loyalty
31:44
to Brussels and we have had in
recent
31:48
months I understand a series of
a series
31:52
of people sent from our armed
forces to
31:56
create and install the command
and
31:59
control centers to be used for
the
32:01
controller back to that we have
been
32:03
ceased to have any control over
their
32:06
use application or deployment
so a lot
32:09
of fear mongering going on like
that one
32:12
yeah I decided black vulture
and by the
32:16
way long term whatever he said
is is
32:22
totally it has to be true
because that's
32:24
the way this thing is set up to
go even
32:27
though we promise no European
army well
32:31
we are well you and I have both
32:33
documented many a moment when
they're
32:35
talking about European armies
because of
32:37
well you can't trust the United
States
32:39
you know NATO and all the rest
so that
32:42
they're already headed that way
yeah and
32:44
and
32:47
and it at some point it would
be one
32:49
unified European army and the
band of
32:52
Brits will be part of it if
they remain
32:55
which they will well here's
here's a
32:59
thought that I had and it it
explains a
33:03
few things that we've discussed
33:04
previously so the UK they held
it
33:07
actually I have the I have the
compa
33:10
Lodge of the referendum just
here all of
33:12
the politicians all the Talking
Heads
33:15
from the beginning of this
saying up
33:17
it's it's gonna be a referendum
it's one
33:19
referendum we're not gonna do a
second
33:21
one it said whatever the people
say it's
33:23
go there will be no second
referendum
33:26
the second referendum argument
simply
33:28
doesn't hold water no I don't
think we
33:30
need a second referendum
33:37
there's no second book we will
not be
33:39
taking a decision like this
again in our
33:42
lifetime this is a once in a
generation
33:45
vote once in a generation
choice the
33:48
once in a lifetime decision
there once
33:51
ever chance or once-and-for-all
decision
33:54
a one-off choice between
staying in or
33:57
leaving completely they won't
be another
33:59
referendum on Europe this is it
if with
34:03
budgets like to quit then we're
out for
34:05
good there's no going back you
vote to
34:07
leave we're out that's it
34:10
we're going whatever the
British people
34:12
decide we work together
constructively
34:14
to make that happen I don't
think it
34:17
would be right for Parma to try
and
34:18
unravel the decision that the
public
34:20
have made the British Parliament
34:21
Parliament should deliver what
is
34:23
required of that decision of
the beach
34:25
people we would have to accept
the will
34:27
of the public whatever the
result is we
34:30
have to respect it labour
accepts and
34:32
respects the results of the
referendum
34:34
have we've got to accept result
yes on
34:36
Parliament should respect that
34:38
referendum result which said
that all
34:39
the way through we respect the
decision
34:41
of the British people
34:42
we respect the votes of the
referendum
34:45
and we have to accept the
decision of
34:47
the referendum one genuinely
accept the
34:50
results the Labour Party
accepts that we
34:52
are leaving the European Union
Britain
34:54
is leaving the EU we're leaving
the
34:56
European Union we live in the
European
34:58
Union we're leaving the
European Britain
34:59
is leaving the European Union
yes when
35:02
even the European Union we are
leaving
35:04
European Union will leave the
EU in
35:07
March 2019 so of course March
came and
35:15
went and the will of the people
has not
35:17
been done it has not been
executed
35:19
everybody was clear you heard
it right
35:21
there one vote that's it in or
out
35:24
winner take all we're good to
go your
35:27
democracy in action and
Parliament who
35:30
represents the people have not
done this
35:33
that's because they don't want
to do it
35:35
but there's something that
really stands
35:36
out like a sore thumb with that
35:38
clip-clip osh which is the new
mean that
35:43
keeps floating around well when
people
35:45
voted to leave they were voting
to leave
35:48
with a deal No yeah that's
that's what
35:52
they're trying to weasel in
there's zero
35:55
evidence of that I don't
remember it at
35:57
the time and now they keep
saying well
35:59
people voted to leave but they
voted to
36:02
leave with no they didn't they
would
36:04
just what you said if it that
one guys
36:06
just says something like we're
yeah
36:08
we're vote leave we're out
that's what
36:11
they voted for they voted to
just get
36:13
out they didn't vote for a deal
they
36:15
voted to get out now here's the
36:16
difference between the United
Kingdom
36:18
who have as they themselves say
an
36:20
unwritten Constitution a BBC
repeats it
36:24
everybody says an unwritten
Constitution
36:26
and the United States that has a
36:28
constitution in our preamble we
have an
36:31
important part governments are
36:33
instituted among men deriving
their just
36:35
powers from the consent of the
governed
36:37
that whenever any form of
government
36:39
becomes destructive of these
ends it is
36:42
the right of the people to
alter or to
36:44
abolish it and to institute new
36:46
government laying its
foundation on such
36:49
principles and organizing its
powers in
36:51
such form as to them shall seem
most
36:53
likely to effect their safety
and have
36:55
penis this is why we have the
first
36:58
amendment because you're
allowed to
36:59
stand up and say screw you we
should
37:02
take you guys down if that
doesn't work
37:05
and this is where we really
differ
37:07
because the unwritten
Constitution of
37:09
the United Kingdom lets you
talk a big
37:11
game but if that doesn't work
we have
37:14
the Second Amendment and this
if this
37:16
what's happening in the United
States it
37:19
wouldn't happen the vote would
be a vote
37:21
and we be done and we'd be gone
because
37:23
the politicians would be afraid
of the
37:26
amount of guns pointing at them
if we
37:28
did not do the will of the
people this
37:32
is this is the exact reason why
the
37:35
threat has to be there because
they're
37:37
not gonna go you and I know it
they're
37:39
never going to leave then the
European
37:41
army I'm sure will take over
the British
37:43
army or whatever you know dad's
army
37:46
so this is this is your reason
right
37:48
here so scoff all you want
Brits with
37:51
your knife crime but just the
threat of
37:53
Americans having enough guns to
take out
37:55
every politician and form our
new
37:58
government makes them do what
we want
38:00
them to ultimately well except
with
38:04
vapes I don't think it's quite
such an
38:08
issue as remaining in the
European Union
38:12
whether you can vapor a flavour
or not
38:14
but okay they should be careful
38:18
get some well you're on a roll
here with
38:20
this you just a second time and
within I
38:24
think two or three shows that
you have
38:25
gone on this the reason for the
Second
38:28
Amendment rant aimed mostly at
the Brits
38:31
because it's a perfect example
well it
38:34
is a very good example I'm not
gonna
38:36
argue it but it's interesting
that you
38:38
something has triggered this in
you
38:42
this has something to do with
the Brits
38:45
yes because I live there I know
how the
38:48
British people think and they
are
38:49
outraged even the ones that
want to stay
38:53
I just can't believe that that
what
38:56
their what their
representatives are
38:57
doing and
39:01
what do they have tire irons
pitchforks
39:04
you know vape vape sticks what
what if
39:07
they kind of take to this
through what
39:09
are they gonna go to
Westminster with
39:11
nothing nothing well luckily
there's one
39:13
guy one guy you can always
count on the
39:16
common man of the British
people to say
39:19
it like it is and that's Ringo
Starr the
39:22
people voted and you know they
have to
39:26
get on with it not certainly
it's like
39:27
oh well we don't like that vote
and what
39:31
do you mean you don't like that
but do
39:33
you add the boat this is what
one let's
39:35
get on with it would you have
voted that
39:37
way will you voted for
breakfast yet I
39:38
would have already to get out
but don't
39:41
tell Bob Geldof why did you
vote that
39:44
way Ringo because I think it's
true I
39:47
think it's a great move I think
you know
39:49
to be in control of your own
country
39:51
here's a good move and I think
a lot of
39:54
the Brits think like Ringo
Ringo is the
39:57
common man yeah in common
40:00
multi-millionaire to be in
control of
40:03
your own country's a good idea
is that
40:06
like this great thought for the
day what
40:12
were you guys doing before this
dude the
40:15
only song he wrote was when I'm
64 so
40:17
give him a break okay he's not
already
40:19
way over 64 he's not the master
of crows
40:24
he's just uh octopus's garden
yeah that
40:27
was kind of good
40:29
yeah so is it a my trigger yeah
because
40:32
it's obvious that what is it
yeah you
40:35
listen to what what's going on
like
40:37
every single politician take
away the
40:40
guns buyback how's that working
out for
40:43
Australia you know this no no
and it's
40:48
not it should be magical
politician on
40:52
the Democrat side of the ledger
yes well
40:55
yes be specific here well
they're the
40:57
one number of Republicans that
are all
40:59
in with the Democrats on that
issue is
41:02
extremely it's like a couple of
people
41:04
it shouldn't be Republican
right but
41:07
that's the conversation right
now
41:08
oh yeah and you know and and it
devolves
41:13
into it should be for sport for
hunting
41:17
you don't need you need to take
out
41:19
twenty politicians you need a
big
41:21
magazine but let's not bullshit
about it
41:25
let's just this it's in the
Constitution
41:27
it says it right there this is
why we
41:29
have it and we like shooting
stuff in
41:33
general like blowing stuff up
we've got
41:36
a big country good space to
blow stuff
41:38
up yeah you go out to the
Arizona
41:40
deserts and you can just shoot
all you
41:42
want if you nobody even hear
the bullets
41:44
and the sounds of the gun yeah
so I
41:47
think you know we can't have
the same
41:49
stupid conversation and
everyone else is
41:51
having you know we already have
41:58
background checks
42:03
that's probably yes they're
nice maybe
42:06
not carry and common sense gun
laws
42:10
that's another one of my
favorites it's
42:14
common sense you don't need that
42:16
scary-looking thing well now
you know
42:19
why because if the Brits had
guns this
42:21
would not be the situation
42:24
that's just simplest way to
explain it
42:27
yeah but it'd have to be a law
yeah you
42:29
can't just give them guns now I
mean the
42:32
problem is if you don't have if
you're
42:33
raised with that with the
goodness kind
42:36
of suppressed notion about a gun
42:40
ownership and it's been there
for
42:42
hundreds of years
42:44
yeah and it's beaten into you
if you all
42:46
of a sudden cut that loose and
gave her
42:48
when guns they'd be shooting
the place
42:51
up they'd be going nuts yeah
this would
42:53
be entertaining it would be
great for
42:56
the show but so there's this
thing
43:00
they're stuck yeah I don't see
a friend
43:03
of mine in London the other
night over
43:04
every tie was on skype because
he's
43:05
doing this is another writer
and he's
43:07
doing a story and I was asking
him about
43:09
what he thought about all this
and he I
43:11
said do you think is his John's
gonna
43:13
get us out on the 31st or would
it the
43:16
biggest 31st it's no chance no
no no way
43:20
and the Brits will just go oh
good I can
43:28
hear him if they give up people
just
43:30
give up at a certain point and
then you
43:32
know forget about it
43:35
sad well more importantly in
another sub
43:42
segment uh insofar as climates
concerned
43:46
you know Greta was on the
Democracy Now
43:51
show and there's a couple of
items in
43:52
cat to two short clips
43:54
Greta Thun Berg the autistic
now climate
43:58
change protest or yeah can you
what you
44:02
pronounce your name Greta
Sundberg it's
44:04
moon Berg tune burst
44:06
I think it's tune Berg you want
to hear
44:09
how it's pronounced I'd love to
hear how
44:12
it's pronounced yes wait let's
hear her
44:14
tell us how to pronounce it
pronounced
44:18
Sundberg okay so why don't we
start at
44:22
the beginning there's a great
44:24
controversy and it's how you
pronounce
44:26
your name can you say your full
name for
44:29
us and that's the Swedish
version okay I
44:37
got it I can do is I'm sorry I
didn't do
44:39
the accent okay give it to us
let's
44:43
compare let's go no there's no
G in
44:45
there yes she does she swallows
the G
44:48
did you make so why don't we
start at
44:52
the beginning there's a great
44:53
controversy and it's how you
pronounce
44:56
your name can you say your full
name for
44:59
us and that's the Swedish
version and
45:06
yes you come to the United
States people
45:08
are calling you by different
names can
45:11
you hum Berg I mean but I think
it's
45:20
funny that everyone pronounces
it
45:22
differently differently so that
it's
45:24
just I don't mind anyone
pronouncing it
45:27
wrong there's no wrong way to
pronounce
45:30
it everyone pronounces it in
their own
45:32
way so say again how you were
born what
45:35
your parents called you Wow the
45:41
derivative stuff on democracy
now did
45:43
they get into any conversation
about how
45:47
she's been abused
45:48
since she's for the past five
years by
45:50
her parents Santeria world it
turns out
45:53
it doesn't even seem like her
parents
45:55
were really the the base
abusers because
45:58
they were somewhat responsible
they
46:00
stood they do have this
discussion I
46:02
didn't pick up I didn't pick up
any and
46:04
the good climate changed I just
was
46:07
trying to draw other things out
of this
46:08
this interview and this one is
her on
46:12
her she became a depressive
when she was
46:14
eight because because of
climate change
46:17
because she started reading and
nobody
46:20
was guiding her so instead of
giving her
46:22
any skeptical you know no they
probably
46:24
were encouraging her oh yes
46:26
no II that's horrible you're
going to
46:28
die it yes Trump's will this
but it
46:30
turns out that her parents
weren't all
46:32
in and she got depressed but
listen this
46:35
is her it's AG long clip it's
two
46:38
minutes and but it is
fascinating
46:41
because this poor girl at eight
at the
46:44
age of eight who has Asperger's
and
46:46
discusses it Bill Gates has a
very
46:49
similar ailment so it doesn't
really
46:51
hurt their ability to focus
that's for
46:54
sure in fact it enhances it and
so she
46:57
is so she's a focused little
girl and
46:59
she went into a deep depression
and it
47:01
lasts over a year and this was
his
47:03
eighth it's really a disgusting
47:07
sad but in some ways disgusting
story he
47:10
went through a crisis in that
period
47:12
after you were eight years old
can you
47:14
talk about what you went
through yeah it
47:16
was after that I sort of caught
up with
47:20
reading about it and I
understood and
47:25
that made me very depressed of
course
47:28
and when when you are the only
one who
47:32
really reacts about this crisis
and
47:36
everyone else seems to just
okay it's
47:40
very important but I am too
busy with my
47:43
life and I just thought that it
was very
47:47
strange that no one else was
behaving
47:50
in in the logical way and so I
more with
47:55
that logical way have been to do
47:58
something your concept zone and
to
48:02
realize that okay we cannot
continue
48:05
like we have done now we need
to do
48:07
something drastically and I and
I'm
48:09
going to do everything I can do
to help
48:12
to push in the right direction
and but
48:16
no one seemed to do that my
parents were
48:18
just like continuing like
before my
48:20
classmates every one of my
relatives I
48:24
mean no one was no one seemed
to care
48:29
about these issues except me
and that
48:32
was a strange feeling and so
you just
48:37
send it into a depression yes
it was of
48:41
course caused by many reasons
but that
48:44
was I think the biggest reason
to it
48:47
because I just thought that's
everything
48:51
is just so wrong and everything
is so
48:53
strange and everything is so
sad and why
48:57
isn't anyone doing anything
about this
48:59
and so then I fell into a
depression and
49:03
[Music]
49:05
it lasted for maybe a year or
something
49:10
and then I you stop talking
yeah I
49:14
stopped because I have
selective mutism
49:21
or at least had they said if
sometimes
49:24
grows away that I only spoke to
some
49:28
people might teach you for
instance my
49:30
parents some members of my
family and so
49:35
on and I stopped eating almost
entirely
49:41
I only it was a lot of weights
because I
49:47
was just so depressed nothing
seemed to
49:49
matter anymore well I'm
actually glad
49:51
they showed this and I hope
parents
49:52
watch this and got a clue
nobody watched
49:58
it to get a clue this is what
they
50:00
always I know it is audience
cuz all
50:02
that's that poor woman
50:04
we do more about climate change
no
50:06
deport the poor child got the
press
50:09
because of all the the climate
change
50:12
talk you say that nice I'd say
that yeah
50:16
but that's not the way the
anyone else
50:19
is gonna see it
50:21
well maybe there's a few people
who
50:22
listen to our podcast phew well
IKEA
50:26
season I hope so this out you
know I
50:30
don't want to say we're
outliers but I
50:32
mean the way they were playing
it has
50:34
destroyed this poor girl you
know she's
50:36
client would he do something
but climate
50:38
change you wouldn't have gotten
50:39
depressed that's the way I'm
imagining
50:42
them looking at it from that
perspective
50:45
yeah anyway so she was on there
doing
50:52
her thing she says she has
selective
50:53
mutism that's really what we
talked
50:56
about that on the Scott Adams
interview
50:58
when he was having his problem
with oh
51:00
she had mutism too but and it
was like
51:04
it was also selective I don't
recall it
51:06
the term though selective
mutism well he
51:08
never used the term selective
mutism I
51:10
never heard the term that term
until she
51:12
said it but it was the same
thing where
51:14
you can talk this guy could
talk fine
51:17
talk to anybody I think there's
maybe a
51:24
couple people he could talk to
but he
51:26
couldn't talk to anybody else
and that's
51:27
what this would happen to her
she
51:29
couldn't talk to anybody
certain people
51:32
I mean I thought I could I could
51:34
continue until deep in my night
in my
51:35
90s doing podcasting of what
could
51:37
really stop me but hey what if
I develop
51:39
selective mutism it's possible
that
51:42
would be horrible happen to
anybody well
51:45
it depends on your perspective
would it
51:46
be horrible or not well it's
not great
51:48
as a podcaster
51:50
yeah probably I'm guessing no
although
51:54
although talking a parent can
be with
51:57
selective eaters you can talk
to nobody
51:59
and from what I can tell most
podcasts
52:02
really talk to nobody so I
think you
52:04
should still be relaxed yeah
that's
52:09
right I have far fewer tics
when doing
52:11
the show all by myself
52:12
because you know I'm talking to
nobody
52:15
oh well there you go
52:19
but selective mutism I have I
have the
52:21
latest chant from the extinction
52:24
rebellion crowd they have a new
is it a
52:26
new chance I believe it is
52:34
altogether no planet well that's
52:40
interesting because I was
hearing it
52:42
wrong
52:42
what do you think they were so
is
52:44
hearing something something
there's no
52:46
two terms I thought it was some
anti try
52:48
goodness if you play it again
and listen
52:51
for it no to term okay I really
don't
53:03
hear no two terms
53:05
no two chirps there's a no
future yeah
53:13
but it's like business to turn
whoever
53:15
miked that chant needs to be
arrested oh
53:18
it was just the thigh bone video
53:21
swooping across a bunch of
people that's
53:23
all it was
53:24
oh I went I did maybe say that
I could
53:27
do that quickly I went to the
community
53:30
first village here in Austin
who are
53:33
solving the unhoused problem in
their
53:35
own unique and incredibly
successful way
53:38
no gay little update first of
all the
53:40
the guy who started this Allen
Graham
53:42
has a podcast and I'd listened
to a
53:44
couple episodes he started this
I think
53:47
about 11 years ago and so he
took me on
53:51
it to I went to insist it's
south it's
53:54
past the airport a little bit
it's a I
53:56
think they have 250 people
renting tiny
53:59
homes a variety of different
types of
54:01
dwellings ranging from 275
dollars a
54:04
month to $500 a month and the
275
54:08
there's communal bathrooms and
cooking
54:10
etc at the 500 it's like almost
like an
54:13
RV pretty much so you have
everything on
54:15
board and two people per per
house or
54:19
proced rupture but he took me
on the on
54:22
the tour and uh what was most
54:25
interesting I think for the
show is that
54:28
the concept for what they're
doing
54:31
community first the community
first
54:33
village is based on a book
called
54:36
chasing well not really the
book but on
54:39
experiments that were detailed
in
54:41
chasing the screen
54:43
and then I didn't I think I
think I
54:46
recognized that the title of
the book
54:48
but then when he said the
author is
54:49
Johann Hari then it hit me like
ah of
54:52
course Johann Hari is the guy
who wrote
54:55
connections that we talked about
54:57
extensively which is also you
know part
55:00
of that outgrowth is our
meetups how
55:01
important it is to have human
55:03
face-to-face contact that we
played a
55:05
couple clips back back then and
what
55:08
Hari details in his book that
was
55:10
researched from the 70s where
they threw
55:12
a rat into a cage with food
water and
55:15
cocaine and within 60 days the
rat was
55:19
coked out and died they same
cage except
55:22
they built a couple tunnels and
had a
55:24
few structures and they put
more than
55:26
one rat in there and after 60
days they
55:29
were flourishing there were
baby rats
55:31
coming now five percent of the
coke had
55:33
been used because the rats did
like the
55:35
coke but they were not dying
they were
55:38
in fact they were flourishing
and so he
55:41
used one example he says if
you're
55:43
downtown and John over here
walks out of
55:46
his house in the morning
without his
55:47
pants on this dick is hanging
out I'm
55:49
using his words then what you do
55:52
downtown Austin as you call the
cops and
55:54
have him picked up and he goes
through a
55:55
whole process and it's not
necessarily a
55:58
positive thing it may not have a
56:00
positive outcome but in the
community
56:03
first village he walks outside
and his
56:05
thing is hanging out and the
neighbors
56:07
will come over and say hey
ma'am you
56:09
know you put your pants on this
is not
56:11
OK and he'll probably go oh
shoot I put
56:12
the pants on and let's go talk
to
56:14
somebody and just make sure
you're okay
56:16
and the according to him
because we talk
56:20
a lot about drugs the number
one reason
56:22
people become homeless is loss
of family
56:25
which I think you could also
substitute
56:27
for loss of community and the
success
56:30
rate they have and these are
people who
56:32
are referred by multiple
organizations
56:35
in Austin from the arch the
first step
56:37
Caritas if you have social
security if
56:42
you have disability that's
typically
56:44
enough to actually pay for your
rent you
56:45
have to have some kind of
sustainable
56:47
income to pay your basic rent
and if you
56:50
don't have a job there's
multiple jobs
56:52
on-site and they're now
expanding to 500
56:55
more
56:56
capacity for 500 more people so
it'll be
57:00
a total of you know about 700
people in
57:02
this village where people are
57:04
functioning they're going into
Austin to
57:06
work they have a community
there's no
57:08
trash people do drugs in their
homes
57:11
they don't do crazy stuff they
don't run
57:13
around like nut jobs typically
they have
57:16
you know car detailing service
of course
57:19
they got hand handicrafts etc
and they
57:21
do it all on six million
dollars a year
57:24
yeah that's all that this
organization
57:26
needs to keep running okay they
get
57:29
nothing from the city nothing
from the
57:30
state they do it all themselves
and I
57:32
know I saw it working it seems
to be
57:34
really a really good program
and they
57:38
had the one of the first tiny
homes that
57:40
was 3d printed on premises so I
took a
57:42
look at that I was kind of cool
how's it
57:44
look it's well it looks like
play-doh
57:47
you know if you were to guess
what it
57:50
looks like when they're making
it the
57:53
thing is they're not cost the
cost
57:54
effective yet so it's just too
expensive
57:57
you know they put a tiny house
down from
57:59
wood boom it's done this you
got to put
58:01
down a big concrete slab and
that's
58:03
really expensive you still have
to put
58:05
the roof on and there's no
three print
58:08
3d printing the roof but now
maybe maybe
58:13
I'll that I'll get cheaper over
time but
58:14
there's just building little
tiny homes
58:15
and it's working
58:17
how many places does he have
58:21
yet right now for 250 people so
there's
58:24
over a hundred homes or 100
tiny homes
58:26
and phase 2 adds an additional
250 or
58:30
300 I think homes can they
scale up to
58:34
40,000 people which is what we
have over
58:37
in the San Francisco area now I
asked
58:38
him about that and he said
we're never
58:40
gonna go you we're never going
to leave
58:43
Austin do anything outside of
Austin but
58:45
they do monthly symposia now
seminars
58:49
and they give the whole
blueprint the
58:51
exactly how you can replicate
this and
58:53
and those symposia czar full
and people
58:57
are trying to replicate this
all over
58:59
the world now trying to create
this kind
59:00
of village so there was a very
59:07
interesting to see a different
take on
59:09
what causes homelessness and
how to
59:13
solve it by providing community
and it's
59:16
it's not it's like I got an
email from
59:18
some guy you guys are full of
shit with
59:20
you we did how were you
complaining
59:23
about them building houses
affordable
59:25
housing you know this is all
part of the
59:26
housing first that's the the
that is the
59:29
California theory that that
you're going
59:31
on it was invented in
California and
59:35
that's they even has a wiki
page housing
59:38
first is relatively recent
innovation
59:40
and what I want to say solution
but
59:42
they'll call it innovation in
human
59:43
service programs and social
policy
59:45
regarding treatment of people
who are
59:47
homeless and is an alternative
to a
59:49
system of emergency shelter
transitional
59:51
housing progressions as their
concept
59:56
isn't this I think is what
Austin is
59:57
following rather than moving
homeless
1:00:00
individuals through different
levels of
1:00:02
housing whereby each level
moves them
1:00:04
closer to independent housing
housing
1:00:07
first moves the homeless
individual or
1:00:09
household immediately from the
streets
1:00:11
or homeless shelters into their
own
1:00:13
accommodation but this just
it's proven
1:00:16
it just doesn't work this is
1:00:17
California's system housing
first
1:00:21
and Austin is following that
nicely
1:00:23
except for you know I guess
community
1:00:26
first village is probably
taking up 15%
1:00:30
of the homeless population
maybe they'll
1:00:33
get to 25 or 30 but the Austin
is
1:00:37
spending tens of millions and
the wine
1:00:39
that you know that's gonna
spend 8
1:00:40
million on a shelter you could
fund the
1:00:43
whole village for a year
1:00:48
well you sound like you should
be the PR
1:00:50
guy for this guy well it's a
non-profit
1:00:52
they need some help yeah we'll
help um
1:00:55
yeah well I'm going to MLS org
mobile
1:00:58
loaves and fishes and it is
1:01:00
religious-based although there
was no
1:01:02
pushing that I saw or witnessed
which
1:01:06
some glitches are we talking
about I
1:01:09
don't know the whole thing is a
is a
1:01:11
ministry so I don't know I
didn't ask I
1:01:15
wasn't interested listen I
would ask cuz
1:01:17
there's always some tax angle
well it's
1:01:20
a non-profit so that their tax
angle is
1:01:22
there you know if they publish
a 990 I
1:01:25
look at all that they do about
eight
1:01:26
hundred nine hundred thousand a
year in
1:01:28
rent now from their from their
residence
1:01:33
and they didn't have a whole
Medical
1:01:35
Center with sixteen people
full-time on
1:01:38
staff it's fantastic solutions
are there
1:01:42
but you know it's not invented
in City
1:01:44
Council
1:01:46
not what the Californians are
doing so
1:01:48
it could never be right yeah
although we
1:01:51
do is the best you guys got it
nailed
1:01:54
for sure
1:01:57
tent city
1:02:00
yeah that's a community it is
but you
1:02:05
need to have community members
who are
1:02:08
not in exactly the same boat
1:02:13
but yes this is why you see
people
1:02:15
congregate and create their own
1:02:17
community and their community
sadly as a
1:02:19
community of typically drugs
1:02:21
yeah there's share needles yeah
so you
1:02:25
need to understand the
community aspect
1:02:27
and put them in a better
situation
1:02:31
well this is your exit strategy
3d
1:02:37
printing and homes for the
homeless
1:02:38
everybody I'm retired
1:02:40
see ya sayonara I have a
feeling that's
1:02:43
not going to work
1:02:47
all right well then maybe with
that
1:02:50
since you didn't jump in with
anything I
1:02:52
can last for a little I say let
me jump
1:02:55
kind of befuddled to jump in
with
1:02:57
anything here what am i doing
up this
1:03:00
pad a little bit with a jump in
1:03:06
now I'd like to thank you for
your
1:03:11
courage and say in the morning
to you
1:03:12
the man who put the see and
community
1:03:14
John well in the morning to you
mr. Adam
1:03:19
Kerr also in the morning I'll
ships to
1:03:21
see boots on the ground feet in
the air
1:03:22
stops in the water and all the
Dames the
1:03:24
night's up in the morning to
art roles
1:03:26
in our No Agenda stream control
room
1:03:30
where you're always there
hanging out
1:03:32
how many trolls do we have here
today
1:03:34
let me have a quick look low
count 921
1:03:38
hmm did everyone retweet that
we were
1:03:40
live that's where you can
always listen
1:03:42
to our show live many shows
live in fact
1:03:46
right before our show there's
need
1:03:47
arunoda is a great priest
stream this
1:03:49
morning so that no agenda
stream comm is
1:03:51
where you want to check that
out and
1:03:53
also in the morning to comic
strip
1:03:56
bloggers who did a piece of
artwork that
1:03:59
was perhaps the mote ly
simplest we've
1:04:02
seen with such an enormous
explosive
1:04:06
laughter effect and this of
course was
1:04:09
the Milania Sharpie enhancement
1:04:15
that we use for our album art
on episode
1:04:17
11 71
1:04:21
yes it was the again comic strip
1:04:25
bloggers came in with
simplicity yes to
1:04:28
win the day it's it was it was
so simple
1:04:32
because we had we had some
pretty
1:04:34
intricate pieces of art 471 we
had so
1:04:39
you had some vaping stuff was
it was
1:04:41
anything that we did we also
did we look
1:04:44
at anything else that we liked
1:04:46
do you recall yeah there was
one piece
1:04:48
that I thought was headed it
what was
1:04:51
that no I'm looking at it now
Oh Darrin
1:04:55
O'Neal had the disciples that
was okay
1:04:58
uh it was it was really it was
good and
1:05:03
we just looked that we both
looked at it
1:05:04
and just cracked up and when
you have an
1:05:06
explosive laughter right off
the bat
1:05:08
it's got to be the one now yeah
well
1:05:11
sure a lot better than explosive
1:05:13
diarrhea we we did
1:05:17
to have a slight conflict
having the
1:05:21
first lady as the artwork
prominently
1:05:25
showing her bosom and then
calling the
1:05:27
episode slutty vegan yes it was
a
1:05:33
consideration but then we went
a screw
1:05:36
it we might as well go for it I
think
1:05:37
people it was we had to use the
art and
1:05:40
we had to use the title some
reason yes
1:05:42
there was no better title
that's for
1:05:44
sure
1:05:45
and saying alright that that
piece
1:05:47
really stood out and really
want to
1:05:49
thank comics for bloggers for
that
1:05:51
because it just nailed it
finally that
1:05:53
Apple pencil came in handy
happy to hear
1:05:56
that no agenda our generator
dot-com is
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where you can upload your
artwork for
1:06:00
consideration as album artwork
for the
1:06:03
current show it's a tough
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people are doing these while we
talk on
1:06:08
the show it's it's incredible
what our
1:06:10
artists do and you can see all
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calm and
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we thank all of them for their
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and their art artistry and we
also like
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to thank our producers that
particularly
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ones who help us in financial
manner and
1:06:26
we do our associates associate
executive
1:06:28
producers and the executive
producers up
1:06:30
front and we have a couple for
today I
1:06:32
think even better we have to do
is do
1:06:34
right we have two associates two
1:06:36
executives so it's a Sur otaku
Baron of
1:06:39
the North East Texas and Red
River
1:06:42
Valley from Louis Lewisville
Texas 911
1:06:47
911 guy the palindrome I
offered this
1:06:51
palindrome movie I mean we had
90 119
1:06:54
was a palindrome week we've got
911
1:06:57
which was yesterday which was a
18 years
1:07:01
since 9/11 and and it's the only
1:07:05
palindrome in the whole series
of 9/11
1:07:08
celebrations nine one one one
nine and
1:07:11
II and so I offered it up see
if anyone
1:07:14
would take it and he did and
I'm glad he
1:07:16
did because I
1:07:18
[Music]
1:07:20
you might as well play that
while we're
1:07:22
at it and he he's our top guy
when a
1:07:27
couple of vices last barbecue
1:07:29
competition Bank on Labor Day
here's a
1:07:31
donation to remember September
11th oh
1:07:33
well it's a drunk donation so I
can't
1:07:35
remember much more what I
wanted to say
1:07:37
but I just wanted to make sure
that
1:07:39
people remember the date oh by
the way
1:07:41
can you give me some jcd mac
and cheese
1:07:44
karma to round this out some
sir otaku
1:07:47
baron of North East Texas in
the Red
1:07:49
River Valley 73 from kilo 5
Victor Zulu
1:07:52
and for those of you who don't
know the
1:07:55
phonetic alphabet but John that
is K v
1:07:59
VV yes 33 kilo 5 alpha Charlie
Charlie
1:08:10
where did that come from hold on
1:08:14
[Music]
1:08:16
that's interesting hmm
sometimes I start
1:08:21
to lose clips for some reason
well Mack
1:08:25
and chief cheap cheddar
macaroni melted
1:08:27
together why the hell can't I
find that
1:08:29
you erased it no no no no no no
I'm
1:08:33
sleepwalk I mean everybody
tells me this
1:08:35
oh how about this one yes this
is it my
1:08:43
goodness I feel like a fool
today found
1:09:03
it was that was a variation yes
Joel
1:09:08
Tucker meanwhile comes in from
Largo
1:09:10
Florida not Key Largo 33333
1:09:15
a happy late birthday Adam I do
have a
1:09:18
93 birthday but as well wishes
come late
1:09:21
because it's what douche bags
do you
1:09:24
know he's not on the birthday
list he
1:09:26
didn't ask to be on it but ya
know if
1:09:28
you want to put him on the
birthday list
1:09:29
well you asked for a D do so
let's do
1:09:31
that for sure
1:09:33
[Music]
1:09:36
please play China is asshole
1:09:40
followed by that's true and if
it's not
1:09:43
too much some goat Karma thank
you both
1:09:46
okay so it was Joe or Joel
Tucker Joel
1:09:49
Tucker okay
1:09:54
you've got karma this time we
try to get
1:10:02
our loot the visa to China
you're going
1:10:06
at the top in front of the line
it's
1:10:07
time to flip through somebody
go China
1:10:10
what what is this China a whole
a whole
1:10:13
that's all that's all what is
that what
1:10:17
is this whoa I'm sorry I'm just
saying
1:10:21
this is what you're gonna get
harassed
1:10:23
mark Mik Minh in Lexington
Massachusetts
1:10:28
203 33 becomes a for social
executive
1:10:32
producer longtime boner
1:10:33
please deduce me and give me
some jobs
1:10:35
karma as I just lost my job
1:10:37
no thanks a lot for the sanity
oh well
1:10:40
we hope this helps
1:10:42
[Music]
1:10:51
[Music]
1:10:54
Brian Calderon 202 be our last
associate
1:10:59
executive producer in this
short list
1:11:00
today while clearing out the
house I
1:11:02
stumbled upon a box filled with
stuff
1:11:04
from grammar school through her
junior
1:11:06
high and what did I find from
1998 to 99
1:11:10
I was introduced into the
Feinstein or
1:11:13
Feinstein 33 plus Club huh
that's
1:11:17
interesting
1:11:18
I can't make this up pick
attack he has
1:11:21
a pic attached some writing hey
Dad Eric
1:11:24
sent them together in the email
yeah
1:11:25
yeah it's a sign from the above
to help
1:11:29
produce this episode of the
show I'm so
1:11:31
appreciative of last time I
donated I
1:11:34
asked for in ICU karma and it
worked
1:11:38
NICU the sunday show my son was
allowed
1:11:41
to come home that following
Monday not
1:11:42
only to straddling both
dimensions help
1:11:44
in raising a toddler and
dealing with
1:11:46
other insane millennial parents
but it
1:11:49
aids me and my freelance work
as a
1:11:51
copywriter marketer seriously
you both
1:11:54
helped me figure out just how
much
1:11:56
amygdala Juice needs to be
peppered in
1:11:58
to copy this time I'd like some
jobs
1:12:01
karma Nancy please jingle
request China
1:12:06
is ask
1:12:07
and that's true Oh same combo
yeah of
1:12:12
course huh
1:12:13
random numbers that's how the
craps
1:12:18
table works
1:12:18
a jingle request China's
asshole that's
1:12:21
true shoutout
1:12:22
producer Christine who I hit in
the
1:12:24
mouth as as and is the inventor
of the
1:12:27
No Agenda invisible hat yes
drone hat is
1:12:34
flying
1:12:38
great invention jobs jobs jobs
and job
1:12:50
and that's it that's our list
of our
1:12:54
four well-wishers and producers
for show
1:12:57
1172 tidy and balanced lists
and we
1:13:02
appreciate that this is our
value for
1:13:04
value system that's how it
works where
1:13:07
we do a show we ask you was it
worth to
1:13:12
you then wait could you spend
your time
1:13:13
in a different way or how have
you
1:13:15
ballad your time in other
situations
1:13:17
particularly comes to
entertainment and
1:13:18
news products and this is what
people
1:13:22
come up with and it warms my
heart and I
1:13:24
can't wait to thank more people
in our
1:13:25
second donation segment but
these four
1:13:28
have to have an executive
producer title
1:13:31
and associate executive
producer title
1:13:33
which you can use anywhere
credits are
1:13:34
recognized they are important
and they
1:13:36
are real and you can support us
for the
1:13:39
next show which will be on
Sunday please
1:13:41
remember us at Dvorak org slash
and now
1:13:46
you can go I don't tell
everybody
1:13:47
exactly what's going on with
the fake
1:13:49
wars our formula is this we go
out we
1:13:53
hit people in the mouth
1:13:56
[Applause]
1:14:05
[Music]
1:14:11
so I managed to step over on
your beat
1:14:14
oh you weren't wait um wait
sealed
1:14:18
indictments yeah no she thought
about
1:14:21
not to seal that that's still
yours
1:14:24
sealed indictments no I went to
CNN oh
1:14:28
my goodness I I will admit I've
been
1:14:31
watching more CNN these days
than MSNBC
1:14:34
a CNN still kind of pretends
MSNBC so
1:14:39
how do they pretend Adam erin
burnett
1:14:41
well i'm sure during the day or
erin
1:14:43
burnett is she could be on
MSNBC she has
1:14:46
so much hate and she makes
stuff up she
1:14:49
doesn't just tell it give us
the news
1:14:51
she she embellishes it with
what the
1:14:54
person is thinking and all this
crazy
1:14:56
stuff which is just so full of
and
1:14:59
beyond any sort of journalism I
have
1:15:01
five clip you all right first
of all
1:15:05
let's start with and I went in
there to
1:15:07
there's actually really three
clips
1:15:09
because there's this one
standalone clip
1:15:11
and the other ones are related
but did
1:15:15
you first of all this got me
right off
1:15:16
the bat which is this is her
discussing
1:15:19
the firing of John Bolton and
this is
1:15:21
the clip called blindsides
Bolton
1:15:25
yo sorry hold on here we go
front
1:15:28
tonight
1:15:28
it was personal we are learning
more
1:15:30
this hour about the bitter
breakup
1:15:32
between Trump and Boulder the
source
1:15:34
tells CNN that President Trump
turned on
1:15:36
his now former national
security adviser
1:15:39
he thought Bolton made him look
bad this
1:15:42
week Trump wanted to humiliate
Bolton in
1:15:44
exchange
1:15:45
there's molten at the White
House a 44
1:15:48
a.m. this morning work as usual
taking a
1:15:50
phone call outside he then went
in and
1:15:52
led a meeting with top
administration
1:15:54
officials and then BOOM BOOM the
1:15:58
operative part of that tweet
quote I
1:15:59
informed John Bolton last night
that his
1:16:02
services are no longer needed
at the
1:16:03
White House well that's not
Bolton's
1:16:06
version now sources tell CNN
Trump was
1:16:08
livid the sources seems to be
the source
1:16:10
so story about how Bolton told
Trump
1:16:13
that hosting the Taliban at
Camp David
1:16:14
was a bad idea now Trump of
course was
1:16:17
resoundingly slammed for that
summit
1:16:19
9/11 anniversary he felt Bolton
was the
1:16:22
one who made him look bad
tonight Bolton
1:16:24
is fighting back no so the
president
1:16:26
says he's the one who fired
Bolton when
1:16:27
he did it last night Bolton
saying no
1:16:29
way he resigned quote I offered
to
1:16:31
resign last night and President
Trump
1:16:33
said let's talk about it
tomorrow Trump
1:16:35
wanted public embarrassment for
Bolton
1:16:37
he let him come to work and
take that
1:16:39
call and be on camera a press
contain I
1:16:41
think Bolton was going to
appear at a
1:16:43
briefing with the Secretary of
State
1:16:45
Mike Pompeo and Treasury
Secretary Steve
1:16:47
Nugent who were also blindsided
by Trump
1:16:50
Smith on the guidance to be
here so for
1:16:54
YouTube decided by what
occurred today
1:16:57
that he's no longer with the
1:16:58
administration was adduced to
you today
1:17:00
because last night I'm never
surprised
1:17:09
it was quite astounding to see
the
1:17:13
mainstream's defense of Bolton
and to to
1:17:18
just much micro focus on on by
being
1:17:23
fired I mean these people never
been
1:17:25
fired before well here's the
other thing
1:17:28
this the report took away she
does it
1:17:30
cuz she's making stuff up she's
talking
1:17:32
about how somebody had to
humiliate him
1:17:34
you know no sources sources
told me
1:17:36
sources sources and then she
says they
1:17:38
were blindsided and then they
would then
1:17:39
they cut to a clip where a
reporter asks
1:17:42
as they were blindsided and
after
1:17:45
Burnett asserts that they were
1:17:48
blindsided and then they asked
if
1:17:51
they're blindsided and neither
one of
1:17:52
them said they were blindsided
so this
1:17:54
was a switchback this is
bullcrap
1:17:56
they never said they were
blindsided
1:17:57
they said well nothing
surprises and
1:18:00
then they cracked up and
laughed about I
1:18:03
think it was hilarious and that
no one's
1:18:05
bowled David they were
blindsided they
1:18:08
didn't look like they were not
perked
1:18:11
blindsighted people know anyway
so but
1:18:15
let's go away I do have this
blind size
1:18:17
bolt and clip - after okay this
is the
1:18:20
second part of this clip so I
guess an
1:18:21
extra clip sorry this is the
follow-up -
1:18:24
after that we watch these guys
laugh all
1:18:27
the falling the falling they're
1:18:29
guffawing and they're laughing
and
1:18:31
Burnett comes back on and says
listen to
1:18:34
what her interpretation of this
is so we
1:18:36
maybe listen just to the end
again of
1:18:39
the the question about being
obliged she
1:18:42
had this really good idea here
we go to
1:18:46
be here so for you
1:18:50
that he's no longer with the
1:18:51
administration was it news to
you today
1:18:53
because last night you were
spoken here
1:18:55
I'm never surprised I think
about what
1:19:03
Trump thinks hearing that I
mean look at
1:19:05
their faces again
1:19:06
yeah decided freeze it they get
it they
1:19:10
work for a person whose sudden
rage and
1:19:12
focused on personal slights
means that
1:19:14
nothing is normal and nothing
can
1:19:16
surprise them one source close
to the
1:19:18
administration telling CNN
today after
1:19:22
the president's well whatever
word you'd
1:19:24
like to use resignation firing
it's a
1:19:27
real snake pit run by a neurotic
1:19:28
president who is hard to manage
and who
1:19:30
brings out the worst
sensibilities and
1:19:31
people this is sedition but it
wasn't
1:19:42
that which is one example of
what
1:19:44
they're doing that here's
another one
1:19:45
yeah so CNN this is CNN
boosting Liz
1:19:48
Warren crowd and or in this
case a new
1:19:51
clip is CNN boosting this
warrant crowd
1:19:53
sighs this is another where
they started
1:19:55
obsessing over I mean they have
Trump
1:19:58
dead to rights on some of this
stuff and
1:20:00
they could easily they could
use that
1:20:02
against them but instead they go
1:20:03
overboard and they make a big
scene and
1:20:06
then they embarrassed
themselves in a
1:20:08
very peculiar way and I want to
see if I
1:20:10
can ask you to try to find it
but you
1:20:13
probably won't be alert for it
but
1:20:15
there's a moment in this in
these two in
1:20:18
this two clip set that these
people
1:20:21
should be ashamed of themselves
but
1:20:22
let's play CNN boosting Liz
Warren crowd
1:20:26
sighs Elizabeth Warren getting
ready to
1:20:27
speak to a big crowd in Texas
you see
1:20:30
that live there it is a red
state that
1:20:32
she wants to put into play and
you know
1:20:34
when you look at all those
people
1:20:35
gathering she's not yet on
stage it does
1:20:38
bring to mind something
interesting some
1:20:40
of her crowds lately have even
exceeded
1:20:42
some of trumps bragged about
crowd sizes
1:20:45
so he's bragged about crowds
recently
1:20:46
and then she's pulled a crowd
even
1:20:48
bigger i'll find now keith
Boykin former
1:20:50
Clinton White House aide and
Scott
1:20:51
Jennings former special
assistant to
1:20:52
President George W Bush so
Keith you
1:20:54
know as we look at that crowd
here we'll
1:20:55
put him back up there waiting
for she's
1:20:57
rising in the polls her crowd
tonight
1:21:00
wherever she is
1:21:02
a by far her crowds overall are
the
1:21:04
biggest in the Democratic field
and as I
1:21:06
point out rivaling Trump's in
some cases
1:21:08
if it's a sign he should be
worried was
1:21:10
it in this book yeah I would
say I would
1:21:14
say she's rising in the polls
is what I
1:21:16
heard
1:21:19
her crowd size was the biggest
in the
1:21:21
Democratic field bulls
1:21:23
oh no that's got to be Bernie
Bernie's
1:21:26
always been the biggest they
won't
1:21:28
mention his crowd size because
they're
1:21:30
they don't want Bernie but
women don't
1:21:33
talk about size John don't you
know that
1:21:37
so they'll talk about size if
it's
1:21:39
Elizabeth Warren sighs oh but
Bernie you
1:21:42
know the biggest crunch so she
puts in
1:21:43
this bogus meme that oh the
biggest
1:21:47
crowd sighs and the democrat
party she's
1:21:49
getting her rising in the polls
1:21:51
she is rising in the polls
ended by one
1:21:53
two notches she's not jumping
up in the
1:21:56
polls okay she went up a point
but this
1:22:01
really galled me because again
this is a
1:22:04
poor reporting you can't say
that when
1:22:07
and they completely ignore
Bernie's
1:22:09
crowd sizes which in many cases
have
1:22:12
always exceeded Trump's crowd
sizes
1:22:15
that's why Trump never brings
it up in
1:22:17
fact did I not see Trump moved
his north
1:22:19
carolina venue and i don't know
what
1:22:23
happened but he was a lot less
Boesky
1:22:25
about it and it seemed to be a
much
1:22:27
smaller venue than I expected
when I
1:22:29
watched some of his just a
little bit
1:22:31
actually now it did have the
effect he
1:22:35
wanted because the special
election
1:22:37
there in both elections
Republicans won
1:22:39
but yeah crowd in fact I gotta
tell you
1:22:42
I think Trump's rallies are I
mean
1:22:45
they're no longer really TV
interesting
1:22:47
for TV because it hasn't come
up with
1:22:50
any good new material
1:22:52
yeah his materials stale it's
very
1:22:55
follow up on the truck on the
boosting
1:22:57
Liz Warren crowd CNN boosting
was Warren
1:23:00
crowd - these crowds are
getting the
1:23:02
attention of President Trump
they are
1:23:03
and they're and they're they're
working
1:23:05
him listen I have clouds that
are many
1:23:07
times what her crowds are
nobody ever
1:23:09
talks about him nobody wants to
talk
1:23:11
about him with her the other
day they
1:23:13
say she at 15 if you really
count them
1:23:15
up it looked like about eight
or nine
1:23:16
and the biggest story was her
crowds
1:23:19
that's like a small crowd from
me yes
1:23:23
when I hear something like that
I want
1:23:25
to laugh and then I realize
this is the
1:23:26
reality of the world we live in
1:23:28
okay in the under estimating
her as a
1:23:31
challenger it's actually his
sort of
1:23:33
obsession there as as strange
as that
1:23:35
was proof that he is not under
1:23:37
estimating her
1:23:38
well I think he's probably
watches more
1:23:41
news coverage of this primary
than any
1:23:43
of the three of us sitting here
and so
1:23:45
when he sees news coverage it
says
1:23:46
somebody's getting big crowds
1:23:48
obviously that perks up his
ears look I
1:23:51
think they're gonna run against
her if
1:23:52
she's the nominee the same way
they run
1:23:54
against any of them you know
they're all
1:23:55
basically coming out for the
same kind
1:23:57
of programming across you know
economic
1:24:01
immigration national security
issues and
1:24:03
so I think they'll end up
treating her
1:24:04
the exact same way and try to
make it a
1:24:07
real choice instead of a
referendum on
1:24:09
him do you want a more
left-leaning
1:24:11
socialist country or do you
want more
1:24:13
you know free-market you know
type of
1:24:15
programming that I'm offering
may try to
1:24:19
do that but he's gonna be
yelling about
1:24:20
Pocahontas and crowds now the
worst of
1:24:27
the group is the what is the
last one
1:24:29
and this is about their touch
she's got
1:24:33
some guy on who's a pollster or
is not
1:24:35
upholstery yeah I guess he's
one of
1:24:37
these strategies pollster I
don't know
1:24:39
but he's talking about the
approval
1:24:42
ratings of the president which
are 40
1:24:45
they've always been pretty
pretty there
1:24:47
was no good yeah but the
approval rating
1:24:50
of the president is discussed
in a way
1:24:53
that I this is really has to be
look
1:24:56
deconstructed and to see how
bad CNN
1:25:00
isn't and really all right
question
1:25:03
before we get into their
question before
1:25:05
we get into it so we have the
polls and
1:25:08
then we have approval ratings
which are
1:25:12
either are they deduced from
polls or is
1:25:15
a different type of poll I mean
it's all
1:25:17
bullshit we know because the
Hillary was
1:25:20
going to win 99 percent but
it's a poll
1:25:24
but they always have but it's a
specific
1:25:25
poll by specific it's a
specific poll
1:25:29
done by specific operation
honest
1:25:32
specifically select a group of
people
1:25:34
okay so it's manipulation it's
a little
1:25:37
new Alice not as much as you
might
1:25:39
imagine it's it's probably
fairly I mean
1:25:42
it it tends to lean left so
slightly
1:25:45
wrong but let's go with this
let's
1:25:48
listen to this and and because
now all
1:25:50
of a sudden there's some new
new angles
1:25:52
this CNN approval rating
generality
1:25:54
number one his approval rating
is now at
1:25:58
39% okay which is the lowest
for him and
1:26:01
I believe nine months Obama
though was
1:26:03
only a 43% at this point in the
first
1:26:06
term Clinton was only at 44
they both
1:26:08
want now I know in the world of
1:26:10
political polls you could say
39 verses
1:26:11
43 big difference but you know
it
1:26:13
doesn't sound like a big
difference does
1:26:15
the does this low approval
really matter
1:26:17
well yes no I don't think that
the five
1:26:19
point spread between Obama and
Trump is
1:26:22
really statistically
significant in
1:26:23
terms of where Trump stands
what's more
1:26:26
important is the larger trend
and the
1:26:28
fact that for the entirety of
his
1:26:30
administration he has never
once been
1:26:32
above 50% and the public
opinion poll
1:26:35
averages that's never happened
in modern
1:26:37
polling before we've never seen
any
1:26:39
president in modern history
who's been
1:26:41
so despised really hold on a
second
1:26:46
don't say really to that the
point is is
1:26:50
that the approval rating does
not is not
1:26:52
an indication of your despising
somebody
1:26:56
it's a matter of you approving
the job
1:26:59
they're doing it's like what's
the
1:27:00
approval rating it's not you
don't get a
1:27:02
pull thing do you have a just
hate the
1:27:05
president you just hate or
despise who
1:27:08
despise Trump not like find
annoying
1:27:14
despise and hate or what should
is
1:27:17
despise higher than hate I
think so
1:27:20
we've we should do the hate
hate we
1:27:23
should do the hate poll and so
the
1:27:24
approval rating now has somehow
it
1:27:26
becomes a despicable rated so
if you get
1:27:30
the 30 so now there was 39% of
the
1:27:32
public the way that there
couching this
1:27:34
and they continue to do this as
the
1:27:36
follow-up clip indicates she'll
use the
1:27:38
word despise again to pound at
home so
1:27:41
this was planned so no way you
would put
1:27:44
this in there unless you
planned it so
1:27:46
this is just a propagandistic
trick but
1:27:48
so what they're saying is that
third
1:27:50
only third only 39% of the
public
1:27:53
doesn't despise Trump that's
great good
1:28:00
job everybody
1:28:01
where does loathe fit in on the
scale
1:28:04
I don't know this uh is I think
is less
1:28:07
than hate but more to despise
it's kind
1:28:09
of a simmering hate I'm telling
you you
1:28:15
need to do a cosmic weenie bit
about
1:28:17
this list in there so so
despise is not
1:28:24
the when you talk about the
approval
1:28:26
rating of the president it's
got nothing
1:28:28
to do with despising the
president even
1:28:31
though I'm sure a few people
that voted
1:28:32
no I don't approve his job do
despise
1:28:36
him but that's not what the
poll is
1:28:38
although they now made us think
that
1:28:40
because they slipped that in
and then
1:28:42
later on clip to here as
there's the two
1:28:45
who are still chatting Aaron
had to
1:28:49
throw the word in again that
even though
1:28:51
she's flubbed it which is funny
1:28:53
which mazed it indicates to me
that it
1:28:54
was something rehearsed or
something
1:28:56
they tried because yes when you
flub
1:28:58
show like that that's when we
flub and
1:29:04
choke choke choke but she says
it again
1:29:08
to just to make sure that the
public is
1:29:10
a win can now associate the
approval
1:29:14
rating of the president with
despising
1:29:17
the president is disgusting
interesting
1:29:20
point you made great keep it
that people
1:29:22
he won with a pretty despising
that's
1:29:25
numbers right so we want
despising set
1:29:28
of numbers she choked oh gosh I
don't
1:29:35
know what she was supposed to
say
1:29:36
despicable set of numbers but
she said
1:29:38
despising set of numbers that's
bitch
1:29:42
must have thought to herself
that
1:29:44
sounded smart
1:29:46
cuz it's stupid play that clip
again so
1:29:49
we can just see how stupid that
really
1:29:51
is it's an interesting point
you made
1:29:53
great keep it that people he
won with a
1:29:57
pretty despising from set of
numbers
1:29:59
right so we want it's a pretty
despising
1:30:01
set of numbers it's completely
weird
1:30:04
well it's a non sequitur makes
it's a
1:30:06
just a senseless yeah
1:30:08
whatever she's died who knows
what she's
1:30:10
talking about but she had them
for some
1:30:12
reason get that word and again
to make
1:30:14
sure that we were but she
screwed
1:30:16
so the effectiveness was shot
shot to
1:30:20
hell but you could tell what
she did
1:30:21
what they're up to but I was so
I would
1:30:24
turn on CNN I get this and I'm
thinking
1:30:26
to myself that I only have
these clips
1:30:27
nice thinking of myself this is
a
1:30:29
terrible network well I'm glad
you
1:30:32
caught that because I cannot
watch Erin
1:30:35
Burnett anymore I used to
really enjoy
1:30:38
watching her on CNBC in the
morning she
1:30:40
was kind of you know bubbly and
she was
1:30:42
not dumb she and she knew I did
a show
1:30:45
about ten times was she nice
and when
1:30:48
you met was it only we are long
distance
1:30:50
distance I wasn't in the studio
with her
1:30:52
and it was quick she's
quick-witted very
1:30:56
quick and she was into a great
team with
1:30:58
Mark who died as she left and
the guy
1:31:00
died like six months later her
co-host
1:31:02
mark course his name again I
don't know
1:31:06
it's hard for me to watch but
the reason
1:31:09
why she is not white well the
reason why
1:31:13
Bernie Sanders is just ignored
is
1:31:15
perhaps because he says stuff
like this
1:31:19
anybody here know how much
Amazon paid
1:31:23
in taxes last year I talked
about it all
1:31:27
of the time and then I wonder
why the
1:31:29
Washington Post which is owned
by Jeff
1:31:32
Bezos who owns Amazon doesn't
write
1:31:34
particularly good articles
about I don't
1:31:35
know why so that would kind of
explain
1:31:39
you don't get in wopo you get
bad press
1:31:41
and whap oh oh you're not gonna
do very
1:31:43
well on CNN on the end right
the New
1:31:45
York Times put it put a woman
who is a
1:31:49
Bernie Sanders hater on him and
she
1:31:53
writes all that Bernie Sanders
material
1:31:55
I had her name I don't remember
it if
1:31:58
you look at the New York Times
Bernie
1:32:00
Sanders article you see this
woman over
1:32:02
and over again not all of them
but most
1:32:04
of them and she and she is just
a pit
1:32:07
bull I mean she is hates Bernie
Sanders
1:32:10
and she makes it clear in the
articles
1:32:12
at Bernie's no good Bernie's
got the New
1:32:15
York Times I mean the New York
Times
1:32:18
against both Bernie and Trump
but you
1:32:20
know it's it's a little more
sinister
1:32:22
that they're against Bernie so
much
1:32:24
there was there against Bernie
there
1:32:26
against I suppose Dubois Poe
and so
1:32:29
okay so a couple things they've
got to
1:32:32
be for Liz because liz is now
tight with
1:32:35
hills and that's important when
Hills is
1:32:38
close to somebody they pay
attention
1:32:40
they've been talking behind the
scenes
1:32:42
we don't know exactly what's
going on
1:32:43
but it's interesting and if
Hillary
1:32:46
Clinton is on the side of one
candidate
1:32:48
that's going to be an anointed
one so
1:32:50
that's one of the main reasons
a lot of
1:32:53
money
1:32:54
the New York Times finally
printed
1:32:55
something earlier this week
about all
1:32:58
the money she raised from big
big donors
1:33:02
and lobbyists and corporations
before
1:33:04
she went on the I'm not gonna
take any
1:33:06
money trip she's using money
from her
1:33:08
2018 campaign which was left
over from
1:33:13
her senatorial campaign ten
million
1:33:17
dollars from there so she's got
money
1:33:19
there's there's money to spend
there's
1:33:20
PAC so they know what side
their bread
1:33:23
is buttered on but there's so
much I
1:33:28
mean you heard Bernie Sanders
sounding
1:33:31
like Donald Trump it's in fact
it's a
1:33:34
it's almost verbatim a line
from Trump
1:33:36
yeah I talk crap about Amazon
and then I
1:33:40
get bad articles in The
Washington Post
1:33:42
well how can that be and this
came up on
1:33:45
a podcast Matt Taibbi spod cast
I'd like
1:33:48
Maddie there's a lot of
outstanding
1:33:49
working at a couple of people
on and
1:33:51
they they kind of came to a no
agenda s
1:33:53
conclusion which seems to only
happen
1:33:55
when you do a podcast and not
when you
1:33:57
do something on mainstream make
when
1:33:58
they get up there and they say
oh you
1:34:00
know who owns the newspaper
doesn't have
1:34:01
any impact on our coverage or
you know
1:34:04
who advertises in our channel
doesn't
1:34:05
have any impact on how we cover
things
1:34:07
everybody knows that's bullshit
right
1:34:09
look I've worked for news
organizations
1:34:11
that and I've have come up
against the
1:34:14
problem of criticizing an
advertiser
1:34:16
before like it comes up and and
all and
1:34:18
beyond that it on an
unconscious level
1:34:20
it's it's that's where it works
is that
1:34:24
works at the point of higher
you know
1:34:26
that if you start being a jerk
about
1:34:28
certain things you're not going
to get
1:34:29
promoted right companies hire
in the
1:34:31
first place right and it was
1:34:33
yeah it's not all over and
that's why
1:34:35
people like Jennifer Rubin and
Max B
1:34:37
rise to the op-ed page and you
know and
1:34:40
the glenn kessler is the world
will
1:34:42
write will do fine the point is
denying
1:34:44
all this just completely
undermines the
1:34:47
credibility right press with
with huge
1:34:49
swathes of the public left at
right Wow
1:34:52
Wow Matt you sound like Trump
people are
1:34:56
making this point are like
people who
1:34:58
just accused the press of being
biased
1:35:00
against Hillary Clinton oh
right yeah
1:35:03
you know I would be holding
right I mean
1:35:05
like bias exists everywhere and
it's
1:35:08
just a question of like how
effrontery
1:35:09
what you are but it's the
denying it
1:35:11
that makes it difficult he's a
voice
1:35:16
coach I think Matt could do
with a
1:35:18
little work too but here's the
big news
1:35:22
this is groundbreaking this is
some big
1:35:25
ass news after five years
running a
1:35:29
National Public Radio NPR my
former boss
1:35:33
yarl mone formerly known as Lee
masters
1:35:37
on WMMR but he went when he
were started
1:35:42
he was the CEO of NPR I met him
during
1:35:45
that time I gave him some ideas
which he
1:35:47
never followed up on remember I
did that
1:35:50
conference in New York and we
chatted
1:35:51
for a bit and yeah you're
getting
1:35:53
nowhere now getting nowhere
1:35:54
well it and he also had a
open-heart
1:35:57
surgery a year and a half ago
and he
1:35:59
only he promised to do five
years and he
1:36:02
would get everything set up for
the next
1:36:03
person to come in and take over
and it
1:36:06
has happened and we have a new
CEO of
1:36:09
NPR and I think they made an
outstanding
1:36:14
choice if you want to
propagandize the
1:36:19
American people NPR has a new
CEO his
1:36:22
name is John Lansing a veteran
media
1:36:25
executive who has experience in
cable TV
1:36:27
and public service media he's
taking
1:36:29
over for Ural Mon who was
stepping down
1:36:31
after fulfilling his five-year
term NPR
1:36:34
media correspondent David
Falcon flick
1:36:36
is reporting on this hi David
hey Ari
1:36:38
tell us about who John Lansing
is John
1:36:41
Lansing started out as a young
man a
1:36:42
teenager is he as a
photojournalist at
1:36:44
work
1:36:45
in TV news from Rome Italy to
be the
1:36:47
head of of local / local
television
1:36:52
stations for the scripts
company and
1:36:53
then headed their basket of
cable
1:36:55
channels which included the the
Food
1:36:57
Network HGTV and a couple others
1:36:59
he's more recently since 2015
was
1:37:02
appointed by President Obama to
be the
1:37:03
head of what is now called the
US agency
1:37:07
for global media overseas
international
1:37:09
broadcasters like The Voice of
America
1:37:11
Radio Liberty Radio Free Europe
and
1:37:14
others that reach hundreds of
millions
1:37:15
of people each month broadcast
abroad
1:37:18
but not here probably offering
people
1:37:21
both news and also programming
offering
1:37:24
people propaganda Voice of
America and
1:37:27
Radio Free Europe it's
propaganda
1:37:30
against the Russians like it's
1:37:32
propaganda all over the world
and this
1:37:35
guy's been running it and now
he's gonna
1:37:37
run your National Public Radio
Smith
1:37:40
Monday anybody horrible I mean
I think
1:37:44
it's funny that you you brought
this up
1:37:47
and you're totally correct but
it's not
1:37:51
gonna change anything you're
already a
1:37:56
propaganda arm of the Democrat
Party I
1:37:59
mean what's gonna change
they're gonna
1:38:00
be worse it's any worse
1:38:03
they can do so much better
1:38:06
there's not there's not enough
loathing
1:38:08
there's not enough more than
enough
1:38:11
loathing yeah there's more
propaganda
1:38:14
works by being less overt like
they are
1:38:18
currently so maybe he'll back
it off a
1:38:19
little bit well let's listen to
the rest
1:38:21
of the soft form of diplomacy
1:38:22
what has defined his tenure
over the
1:38:24
last four years at the US
agency for
1:38:26
global media we have to
remember they're
1:38:33
talking about the new boss so
they're
1:38:34
all nervous his tenure over the
last
1:38:38
four years at the US agency for
global
1:38:40
media well it's been renowned
you know a
1:38:42
decade ago or so I did a lot of
reports
1:38:45
on how dysfunctional that
agency was and
1:38:47
it was over a series of of
1:38:49
administrations he's brought
real order
1:38:50
to it as its first CEO instead
of
1:38:53
stalling a clear line of
command a
1:38:55
clarity of the direction
philosophically
1:38:57
a great greater degree of
insulation
1:38:59
from sort of political
infighting on the
1:39:02
board after all the board is
appointed
1:39:04
by the government and in and
and there
1:39:07
is some sense of at times
partisan
1:39:09
efforts to pressure these in
journalists
1:39:12
that are protected by statute
but he's
1:39:14
also been a champion for the
idea of a
1:39:17
free press abroad the
importance of it
1:39:19
in companies excuse me in
countries that
1:39:22
want to have emerging
democracies and
1:39:25
it's been a message that he's
been
1:39:26
resilient about and it's been a
message
1:39:28
that resonated here at home as
well as
1:39:31
journalists and the idea of a
free press
1:39:33
unfettered has at times come
under
1:39:35
attack from the highest office
in the
1:39:36
land
1:39:39
mind you that had what eleven
CEOs in in
1:39:43
the past ten years remember
that before
1:39:45
yarl came in it was it wasn't
the guy
1:39:48
from Sesame Street yeah he
lasted nine
1:39:52
months it's not easy to run
that to run
1:39:55
that place because just the Lib
tardes
1:39:58
and I said it you said it Wow
1:40:03
I said it so this is Lansing
guy and if
1:40:06
you look at his background the
way they
1:40:08
described it he has to be a
spook of
1:40:10
course he's a spook and then
what makes
1:40:12
it even more clear that it to
me that
1:40:14
he's a spook he doesn't have a
wiki page
1:40:17
entry oh my goodness how can
1:40:19
be possible in fact when you go
to the
1:40:21
the end B I went look I tried
to find
1:40:23
first I couldn't find it so
then I went
1:40:25
to the NPR wiki page and there
there
1:40:28
Daria's listed as a key people
John
1:40:32
Lansing CEO and it's and it's
lit up
1:40:34
like it's like it's like
there's a link
1:40:35
right but the link is to John
Ten Eyck
1:40:38
Lansing jr. some dead 18 cent
is 19th
1:40:43
century to century lawyer right
mmm well
1:40:47
that's not him
1:40:48
no and then there's no other
John
1:40:51
Lansing that I can find so I
mean this
1:40:53
is a I would I'm just guessing
a spook
1:40:57
yeah I I think you should so
now if you
1:41:00
want to get your CIA news you
don't have
1:41:02
to go to CBS anymore which
because
1:41:04
they're having trouble with
their anchor
1:41:06
and they don't want to deal
with that so
1:41:08
you see the best your best
place to push
1:41:10
the CIA message is right out of
mpr
1:41:13
perfect I like it so creative
that was a
1:41:17
good move CIA yeah it's it's an
1:41:19
improvement over that XM TV guy
I mean
1:41:21
they kept it to three-letter
acronyms
1:41:23
but they had to move up in the
alphabet
1:41:25
and go from hands to the seas
that there
1:41:29
is a on the house.gov website
there is a
1:41:35
bio it's not really a wiki bio
but it's
1:41:39
a bio and it's kind of what
they said on
1:41:42
NPR same thing it's not much
else but
1:41:45
yeah I mean he must be it
doesn't even
1:41:47
talk about his education and
where do
1:41:50
you go to school
1:41:55
yeah probably went to
Georgetown or
1:42:00
American University or or Johns
Hopkins
1:42:03
those good ones for sure sure
well
1:42:08
Rhodes Scholar there was a big
meeting
1:42:15
at Jackson Hole big Jackson
Hill meaning
1:42:19
where all the central bankers
get
1:42:21
together as a party you and I
will never
1:42:23
be invited to I'm pretty sure
and there
1:42:27
was a lot of a surprising talk
this is a
1:42:32
meeting by the way I asked him
but we
1:42:33
talked about this on the DHN
plug show
1:42:35
mm-hmm and I was curious was
this like
1:42:37
the Allen and company meeting
what kind
1:42:39
of a meeting is this was
actually put on
1:42:40
by the Fed yeah it's it's the
central
1:42:43
bankers meeting it's the feds
party I
1:42:45
think is the way it's it's it's
coin so
1:42:48
the feds party they have all
the central
1:42:50
bankers come in and the
director or the
1:42:54
whatever's exact title is of
the Bank of
1:42:57
England Mark Carney who I think
is
1:43:01
actually Canadian he dropped a
bomb he
1:43:05
had this speech like hit the
luncheon
1:43:07
speech which is an important
one cuz
1:43:09
everyone's gonna be there and
they're
1:43:10
all chatting and and all of a
sudden he
1:43:13
starts coming out with well you
know the
1:43:15
financial system has clearly
gotta
1:43:17
change because not going so
well and you
1:43:20
know maybe we should consider
some kind
1:43:22
of cryptocurrency and this
shook up a
1:43:25
lot of people in nothing no not
us you
1:43:28
know I only heard about it days
after
1:43:30
like oh that's interesting
1:43:31
but when you think about it to
have this
1:43:35
guy from the Bank of England to
the
1:43:36
Federal Reserve's party and say
well you
1:43:39
know the central banking I
don't know we
1:43:40
got to change it we haven't
done so well
1:43:42
the transcript is available I
put it in
1:43:44
the show notes it's quite
interesting
1:43:47
quotes such as there will be a
change in
1:43:51
our unsustainable monetary
system so
1:43:55
when you're sitting around with
a bunch
1:43:56
of central bankers you know you
can
1:43:58
imagine a lot of spit-takes
going on
1:44:00
people like what the hell is he
talking
1:44:02
about and Mark Carney was
questioned by
1:44:06
member of parliament
1:44:07
Steve Baker in the UK and I
pulled three
1:44:12
clips from that I found the most
1:44:13
interesting and I think that
you know it
1:44:15
kind of gives you an insight as
to what
1:44:18
he meant and we'll start with
the there
1:44:20
will be changed in this
unsustainable
1:44:23
monetary system the things that
you've
1:44:26
said here do you think it's
possible to
1:44:28
avoid a long term fundamental
structural
1:44:31
change in the monetary regime I
I think
1:44:36
that there will be a change now
measured
1:44:40
over measured over decades it's
very
1:44:42
hard to predict the exact that
which is
1:44:44
unsustainable tends to go on
for longer
1:44:46
than you think and then happen
more
1:44:47
quickly than you expect to
paraphrase
1:44:50
Rudy Dorn Bush but I think that
these
1:44:55
structural flaws in the end in
the
1:44:58
system will ultimately result
in a
1:45:01
change and the rise of China
and the
1:45:03
relative rise of China will
also result
1:45:04
in a change through these two
forces and
1:45:07
the question I'm trying to
raise is do
1:45:11
we get ahead of that change or
do we
1:45:12
help manage that change and
effect some
1:45:15
sort of rebalancing of the
system and to
1:45:17
be absolutely clear on when I
say we I'm
1:45:20
talking not about the talk
about the
1:45:24
central banks the public side
as opposed
1:45:27
to the private side coming up
with an
1:45:29
entirely different
decentralized system
1:45:32
so this is partly where we may
part
1:45:35
company at that point yeah
exactly in
1:45:40
favor of choice but just to be
clear so
1:45:42
he's talking about a
decentralized
1:45:44
system which is not what the
Federal
1:45:47
Reserve wants as we've
mentioned before
1:45:49
yeah almost every transaction
hits the
1:45:52
New York Fed one way or the
other and
1:45:54
that's how we can shut down
countries
1:45:57
like Iran etc this is quite a
power
1:45:59
powerful tool and here's this
guy just
1:46:03
saying no no it's clearly as
stuff is
1:46:05
wrong it's got a chip we got to
1:46:06
decentralize it it's when you
say
1:46:08
decentralize my ears prick up
I'm like
1:46:10
all right let's use Bitcoin no
well no
1:46:13
such luck but
1:46:15
yes some thoughts one of the
issues
1:46:17
which is linked back to the
speech is
1:46:19
whether or not there are going
to be
1:46:21
central bank digital currencies
in order
1:46:25
for there to be instantaneous
costless
1:46:27
payments domestically and
potentially
1:46:32
cross-border
1:46:32
which will be to the benefit of
citizens
1:46:35
and businesses and particularly
small
1:46:36
medium-sized businesses but all
1:46:38
businesses and the question is
whether
1:46:42
if that could could that happen
1:46:45
and the answer is yes it could
happen in
1:46:46
fact mr. holiday is helping to
lead our
1:46:48
efforts and thinking about how
the
1:46:50
various ways and there's more
than one
1:46:52
way you could do it and various
avenues
1:46:54
to do it but the question is if
you do
1:46:58
have that happen does it make
sense to
1:47:01
do it on a coordinated fashion
with some
1:47:05
of the core central banks which
brings
1:47:08
benefits in and of itself from a
1:47:10
cross-border perspective but
happens to
1:47:12
be a component of a more
seamless
1:47:14
rebalancing of how transactions
are
1:47:18
priced so a lot of big words to
say well
1:47:21
you know people are actually
doing this
1:47:23
very thing you're asking me
about with
1:47:25
Bitcoin today so yeah I think
we could
1:47:29
probably come up with some kind
of
1:47:30
digital crypto thing that would
work and
1:47:32
we probably have to do that
because they
1:47:34
have to compete and this got so
out of
1:47:36
hand that the French finance
minister
1:47:39
was asked the question about
well and of
1:47:43
course when you when you think
about
1:47:44
this now this is being said
like well we
1:47:47
need to change the financial
system we
1:47:50
need to decentralize we need to
have
1:47:52
some form of digital currency
and of
1:47:55
course that's what Facebook is
trying to
1:47:57
do with Libre they're taking a
basket of
1:48:01
currencies China US Europe etc
and
1:48:05
they're using that as a
quote/unquote
1:48:07
stable coin to be able to
manipulate the
1:48:10
price of it obviously and just
using the
1:48:13
digital properties of it for
being able
1:48:15
to do transactions and I think
that's
1:48:18
why they were they were ready
for this
1:48:20
to happen and the French finance
1:48:21
minister Bruno Lamar is having
none of
1:48:25
it
1:48:25
I want to be very clear I fully
share
1:48:28
the concerns expressed by
Stephen
1:48:31
manoosh in about deliver we do
not want
1:48:35
any private company to have the
1:48:37
possibility to create a
sovereign
1:48:40
currency we have sovereign
currencies
1:48:42
Dada
1:48:43
euro and other sovereign
currencies
1:48:46
which are obliged to fulfil some
1:48:48
commitments and some
requirements so we
1:48:51
cannot accept to have any
exchange
1:48:55
currencies being with the same
kind of
1:48:59
power and the same cap of all
as the
1:49:02
sovereign currency so I think
that there
1:49:04
is a need for regulation there
is a need
1:49:07
for very strong commitments and
1:49:08
obligations for that project
1:49:11
and for the time being I think
that the
1:49:15
necessary requirements are not
fulfilled
1:49:18
by the project Navarre and it's
not
1:49:22
going to happen because there
is a plan
1:49:24
in place and this Member of
Parliament
1:49:28
Steve Baker who is asking the
questions
1:49:31
really goes we're going back to
Mark
1:49:34
Carney now the president of the
Bank of
1:49:37
England he starts to insinuate
what is
1:49:41
going how this is going to work
and I
1:49:42
think I know what it is let's
listen to
1:49:44
the question-and-answer first
to me it's
1:49:49
the highlight of what we're
third
1:49:50
explained in the long term
nothing I
1:49:52
should emphasize those watching
lives in
1:49:53
the long term that we've got a
system
1:49:54
which is unsustainable and
cannot
1:49:56
go on longer than anyone
expects and
1:49:58
then will change faster than
anyone
1:50:00
expects it feels to me like
that in such
1:50:02
a moment of change globally
will need
1:50:04
leadership from global
institution dr.
1:50:06
hell doing work with what kind
of
1:50:08
institution might provide such
global
1:50:10
leadership on monetary reform
such
1:50:12
circumstances where should we
look for
1:50:15
leadership to move this
conversation
1:50:17
forward for the whole world
1:50:19
well I meander there are a
number of
1:50:21
international financial
institutions who
1:50:23
are charged with thinking about
just
1:50:24
these questions and you know
their names
1:50:27
some of them are also through
that
1:50:29
acronym but I hope within that
and Mark
1:50:34
is very much in the forefront
of our FSS
1:50:37
institution to put ideas on the
table
1:50:39
for reforming all of these
things London
1:50:44
and the UK still is home to one
of if
1:50:49
not the world's biggest global
financial
1:50:51
center we have over the years
this
1:50:55
institution given huge amounts
of
1:50:56
thought to redesign of
international
1:50:59
monetary system and I hope we
can
1:51:02
continue very much in in that
vein so we
1:51:09
our hope would be among others
only that
1:51:13
I save you because I'm very
confident
1:51:15
you will be amongst those but
I'm also
1:51:16
confident that the IMF will be
amongst
1:51:18
them and I'm not promise I
won't press
1:51:20
you too far on this but the
journalists
1:51:21
watching will know where I'm
coming from
1:51:23
and will afford up to my
Twitter feed I
1:51:24
feel confident and will metal
do you
1:51:27
think that the IMF should be
led by a
1:51:28
politician or do you think it
should be
1:51:30
led by somebody who really
understands
1:51:32
these issues in detail and can
1:51:35
articulate what should be done
in order
1:51:37
to address these going through
causes is
1:51:39
that a question the minister
back
1:51:41
I think I've made my point for
those
1:51:42
watching I wish you will so
when I heard
1:51:47
that I was like oh wait a
minute so he's
1:51:50
saying really do you think that
who
1:51:53
should be running the
International
1:51:54
Monetary Fund who should really
be in
1:51:56
charge to be a politician or
someone who
1:51:58
knows what's going on now we
know that
1:52:00
fifi Lagarde just left the
International
1:52:03
Monetary Fund to become the
president of
1:52:06
the European Central Bank now
I'm I'm
1:52:09
not schooled in in monetary
system so
1:52:15
I'm gonna go out on a limb and
then jump
1:52:17
in wherever you think
appropriate the
1:52:20
the central banking system is
in trouble
1:52:22
be and that's why we see
negative
1:52:24
interest rates because there's
just the
1:52:26
simplified I think the the way
you
1:52:28
create more money in our
current system
1:52:31
globally pretty much is with
debt and
1:52:34
we're out of it it's just no
more debt
1:52:37
to be created at least you know
we were
1:52:40
stretching it very very thin so
we need
1:52:42
to create new money enter Fifi
Lagarde
1:52:45
before leaving she promised to
paint the
1:52:51
European Central Bank her new
place of
1:52:55
work Green and what she means
by that is
1:53:00
the green bonds that are being
1:53:05
structured and/or created right
now at
1:53:07
the International Monetary Fund
backed
1:53:10
by SDRs the Special Drawing
rights and
1:53:14
we've been talking about this
for the
1:53:16
entire length of the show I
think 10
1:53:17
years at least
1:53:18
then the SDRs are based on a
basket of
1:53:22
currencies sound familiar with
the US
1:53:24
dollar
1:53:25
the Chinese wampum we've got
the the
1:53:28
euro in there a couple more and
they're
1:53:32
going to create this money
1:53:34
it'll be represented as a bond
now it
1:53:37
could be a digital bond and
there is now
1:53:41
already an announcement been
made that
1:53:44
under the euros European
Central Bank
1:53:47
the euro systems asset purchase
program
1:53:49
they will be buying these green
bonds
1:53:52
now this is where
1:53:54
gets a little fuzzy for me but
I think
1:53:55
that is the next the next
bubble they're
1:54:00
going to inflate is all of this
money
1:54:02
that's going to be created and
we have
1:54:05
to buy them because if we don't
the
1:54:09
earth will die and we will die
with it I
1:54:11
think that's the messaging
we're going
1:54:13
to see is here's this bond it's
a green
1:54:16
bond they're calling it the
green bond
1:54:18
and we need to buy these because
1:54:21
otherwise the earth will just be
1:54:23
destroyed from climate change
and that's
1:54:26
how they're going to create
trillions of
1:54:27
new of new money
1:54:30
well I don't know if that's
anything
1:54:33
close to what's happening but
the green
1:54:36
bond idea is interesting to me
because
1:54:38
they they have all these
obligations to
1:54:41
pay all these other countries
mm-hmm I
1:54:43
mean we've supposedly the Paris
Accords
1:54:46
I mean all these climate deals
that
1:54:48
Trump refuses to sign on to are
largely
1:54:51
just scams to get get our money
ship
1:54:55
through a bunch of little
islands and
1:54:58
people that need bright here
that want
1:54:59
free money mm-hmm and we've
already been
1:55:02
pretty good at giving and that's
1:55:03
possible at this that this debt
they're
1:55:05
not creating new money to
create a new
1:55:07
debt which creates new money
it's that's
1:55:09
that's the same if you want a
different
1:55:11
side with the same coin
1:55:14
it increases the money supply
mm-hmm yes
1:55:18
that's what it does there's no
new money
1:55:21
it increases the money supply
yes
1:55:23
correct oh there's a bunch of
money
1:55:25
flying around that you can use
and the
1:55:27
new monetary people are the
whole thing
1:55:30
just be becoming nuts it needs
a reset
1:55:33
but I don't like it I don't
like going
1:55:38
over there and free well the
green bonds
1:55:41
are from the IMF and she's
going over
1:55:43
there saying she's gonna buy
them from
1:55:45
where she used to work at the
IMF I mean
1:55:46
hello oh wow that good yeah
that's a
1:55:49
good little focus but they're
happening
1:55:53
then I mean it's a loan for
what I mean
1:55:57
a bond is alone is like you you
you take
1:55:59
you're getting money from the
center
1:56:01
from a bank you're getting it
from the
1:56:02
public or the or the
government's right
1:56:05
and so I'm Apple yeah I decided
float
1:56:09
some bonds to get some more
working
1:56:14
income cuz I don't know why add
Apple
1:56:16
doesn't need it but let's just
say they
1:56:17
do it so they get some bonds
out there
1:56:19
and people buy up the buzzer so
they get
1:56:21
a bunch of money but they
course have to
1:56:22
pay that back overtime with
interest
1:56:25
mm-hmm and if it's as if it's
the if it
1:56:29
goes beneath the interest rate
then they
1:56:32
actually the better it works
the other
1:56:35
way the value goes up well if
it goes
1:56:39
below the interest rate goes
below zero
1:56:41
then the money is actually
extracted and
1:56:45
in the reverse force for the
bank's get
1:56:47
more and more money right
because the
1:56:49
they're holding the bonds and
so that
1:56:52
bonds are whenever they sold
the bonds
1:56:55
they sold the bonds
1:56:56
my head's exploding okay is
ridiculous
1:56:58
what you're talking about is
right now
1:57:01
the system is in you know
borderline
1:57:04
collapse mode yes yes that's
what it
1:57:06
sounds like and it could
collapse and if
1:57:09
it does it'll be I don't know
what what
1:57:11
to tell you I don't know what's
gonna
1:57:12
happen it's a mystery it'll be
a Potter
1:57:16
- mystery yeah well these are
no small
1:57:19
statements that these guys are
making at
1:57:22
loser freak out they don't know
what to
1:57:23
do
1:57:24
they already screwed up I think
that's
1:57:26
the that's the message that
needs to be
1:57:28
communicated they're they're
freaked out
1:57:30
because they screwed up and
they don't
1:57:31
know what to do then and it
seems like
1:57:34
everyone is directing it's
actually
1:57:37
going the wrong way yeah with
this
1:57:39
negative interest rate thing
that's not
1:57:40
with the way that anybody wants
nobody
1:57:43
wants to see that it's only
getting
1:57:45
better it's negative interest
rates are
1:57:48
just doing better and better
every day
1:57:50
well they haven't gotten to us
yet so
1:57:52
we're hanging in there the
United
1:57:54
States's above it that's why we
attract
1:57:57
so much money which keeps
everything
1:58:00
propped up didn't we have it a
clip on
1:58:02
the last show that someone said
yeah it
1:58:04
could come here pretty soon
yeah they've
1:58:06
been saying that for a while
but it
1:58:07
hasn't yet right but it actually
1:58:09
happened in your and is
happening in
1:58:11
European countries so it can't
happen
1:58:15
anyway I remain a Bitcoin
maximalist I
1:58:17
think that's still the safest
way to go
1:58:19
for my ten dollars a week
imagine all
1:58:25
the people who could do this oh
yeah
1:58:27
[Music]
1:58:29
I know I just don't sell
everything and
1:58:36
buy just all in we have a bit a
couple
1:58:40
maybe to buy no one for sure we
have a
1:58:42
Bitcoin millionaire up in the
Seattle
1:58:45
area
1:58:45
oh it's one of our producers
and he just
1:58:49
retired he's about I think he
seems to
1:58:52
be about in his 30s and he got
in early
1:58:55
and stayed in and got filthy
rich and
1:58:59
his the omelet is he on the on
the list
1:59:01
for today oh she's not should
have a
1:59:06
meet up in that's about it yeah
no
1:59:10
donations for you but hey hi
I'm at the
1:59:12
meet up Paul al Burris starts
us off
1:59:15
with 100 $23.45 Jason says the
show is
1:59:20
outstanding
1:59:21
mr. piehole comes in with a 120
321
1:59:24
Christopher pie food in Buckeye
Arizona
1:59:28
one 11.11 anonymous $100 from
new york
1:59:32
ron van dyke $100 from holland
anonymous
1:59:37
$99.99 it's interesting we have
9999
1:59:40
anonymous at 100 anonymous went
penny
1:59:43
more it happens or carries in
drackett
1:59:45
massachusetts or dry i don't
know how to
1:59:48
pronounce that is a dry cooked
dry coot
1:59:50
bracket bracket Kalin mr. in
Northville
1:59:56
Michigan 90 119 and these are
the 91 19
2:00:00
this was the gimmick the
palindromes the
2:00:03
palindrome the 91 19 keel in
this door
2:00:06
and 91 19 was also struck ariza
sir
2:00:11
Kevin McLaughlin Earl of Luna
in Locust
2:00:14
North Carolina also 91 19
stanley Jones
2:00:18
Sikeston Missouri got a birthday
2:00:21
birthday two days ago William
Cornell 91
2:00:26
19 name Laura of the snowy
Cascades and
2:00:29
Sammamish Washington Washington
91 night
2:00:34
house caramel artwork she says
we sold
2:00:37
in three days
2:00:38
nice
2:00:41
a Christopher wrote eager in a
Roger
2:00:45
wrote ger I don't know in
Meeteetse
2:00:48
Wyoming Amy meet Ted see meet
Ted see 91
2:00:52
90 that's it that's our hole
that was it
2:00:55
and he wants some new human
resource
2:00:57
karma for the newest Rutger
born on nine
2:01:00
one one nine so we had seven
people that
2:01:05
took up the ballot the pound
drums don't
2:01:08
work anymore no I think I think
we do
2:01:12
they used to work you know it's
better
2:01:14
when when the producers come up
with
2:01:16
their own number sequences that
seems to
2:01:19
catch on when we do palindrome
yeah the
2:01:21
first couple times people liked
it as a
2:01:22
number but they still did they
hate us
2:01:26
despise and loathe despise
2:01:31
these numbers say that they
that were
2:01:33
despised Peter nuyk nuyk
Coolidge Nakula
2:01:39
what do you think new collage I
think
2:01:41
yeah maybe 808 and Alexander
soles
2:01:45
burger 800 ate those are also
2:01:47
palindromes but they're also
boobs it's
2:01:49
a combination of balance the
bestest
2:01:52
palindrome Susan now sand
Petrolia
2:01:57
Ontario Canada uh 75 79 no note
Matthew
2:02:05
Mungle 69 Lauren Lawrence de
Bruyne
2:02:13
5860 Lawrence the brown
lauenstein Brown
2:02:18
he actually sent a note in that
that we
2:02:21
should read I thought you would
have had
2:02:25
that
2:02:27
I think I have a copy of it
here oh he's
2:02:30
yeah he's got it here says he's
a nice
2:02:32
gem donation birthday my father
bought
2:02:35
boss Dubrow
2:02:37
on 12 September douchebag here
he needs
2:02:39
a douchebag call-out he's a
douchebag
2:02:41
call it - Simon pass he needs
car my
2:02:47
help with the name
pronunciation Adam -
2:02:49
John email with attachments
sent as
2:02:51
background information yeah
hold on a
2:02:54
second because it was it was a
I'm
2:02:56
surprised you didn't you didn't
receive
2:02:57
it was a note written in
longhand
2:03:01
I just get any nobody know it
the male
2:03:04
division in the mail I got no
note hmm
2:03:08
I'm trying to open it up ah
here we go
2:03:11
Dear John C Devore I can Adam
curry fan
2:03:13
of your
2:03:15
Uniting since I was a precocious
2:03:18
twelve-year-old reading my
father's PC
2:03:21
magazines in the late 80s early
90s
2:03:24
your column was the most
entertaining
2:03:26
and understandable to my young
mind long
2:03:30
time listener and
2:03:33
occasional donor through the
this is
2:03:35
longhand so through the no
agenda show
2:03:37
the two of you have affected my
thought
2:03:40
pattern in such a way that I am
no
2:03:43
longer employable or dateable
keep up
2:03:47
the good work
2:03:50
I'm no longer employable nor
datavault
2:03:53
keep up the good work so call
out my
2:03:57
childhood friend Simon pass as a
2:03:59
douchebag we did that just a
minute ago
2:04:00
but that can never hurt please
add my
2:04:06
dear father Buster Brown to the
birthday
2:04:08
list as he turned 71 on the
12th of
2:04:10
September today congratulations
boss
2:04:12
I've been hitting him in the
mouth to no
2:04:16
avail despite the fact that he
appears
2:04:18
to independently have similar
world
2:04:21
views I always get great value
for my
2:04:26
donations as John mispronounces
my name
2:04:29
and has done so for the past
five times
2:04:31
thank you
2:04:32
Louden stirrer Brown that's
nice that's
2:04:38
a nice note so now what do we
have what
2:04:40
we'll do
2:04:41
he needs we did the the douche
bagging
2:04:45
and all throw him to Karma form
in a
2:04:46
minute
2:04:47
indeed onward Gwendolyn Adams in
2:04:52
Sarasota Florida 5555 serve
Baba the
2:04:55
High Point another birthday guy
to D 546
2:04:58
Eric Schneider in Reid's town
Wisconsin
2:05:02
55:33 Daniel Galloway in
Marietta
2:05:05
Georgia
2:05:06
$55 Denon Christian Spokane
5495 Omar
2:05:11
Bongo Bongo Lam
2:05:19
he says Omar Bongo from e-i
yeah sure
2:05:23
ob mr. Bongo Bongo Bongo land
am Bongo
2:05:30
baronet's for economic hitman
51 he's in
2:05:34
$50 in once and he's in Houston
2:05:36
hi Kimberly Redman in Toronto
Ontario
2:05:38
these are all $50 donors name
and
2:05:41
location if available Kimberly
Redman
2:05:44
and Toronto drew Moe check-in
2:05:47
Cerrito California Kevin
Silverman in
2:05:50
Severn Maryland and ray Klaus
Robert
2:05:55
Kerr back in essexville
Michigan sure
2:05:59
creak creak and rostov-on-don
and uh in
2:06:05
rostov-on-don ie was the 50 is
that I
2:06:09
are just I mean I would think
that's our
2:06:10
numbers Russian he says he's in
Russia
2:06:12
hmm what's I oh maybe he's got
a mile in
2:06:16
it
2:06:16
ie would be Ireland yeah but
he's in
2:06:19
Russia he probably has an ISP or
2:06:21
something that runs I don't
know that's
2:06:25
what we're getting that Robert
Dagenais
2:06:27
in Fairfax in fact if you're in
Russia
2:06:30
or trying to
2:06:30
I mean it's China they kind of
tolerate
2:06:33
VPNs but not for long Russia I
don't
2:06:39
know I don't know how you do it
how you
2:06:41
get around the restrictions
robert Daken
2:06:45
in Fairfax Virginia
2:06:46
Fairfax Roy 10 we need more
donations
2:06:50
from Fairfax wink-wink
nudge-nudge Roy
2:06:53
10 hava in pine knocker very
good
2:06:56
Jonathan Farris and liberal
Kansas and
2:06:59
last but not least for Kyle
mired there
2:07:01
in Atlanta Georgia I want to
thank all
2:07:04
these folks for contributing to
show
2:07:07
1170 whatever it is to and I do
even
2:07:11
know what I wanted to read
before we got
2:07:12
off to the other stuff it's
just a
2:07:13
donation note from another
previous
2:07:15
donation gosh this is from
Julian Julian
2:07:20
aus I'm donating with my own
money but I
2:07:24
have my mom's credit card
because I
2:07:25
don't have my own also this
donation is
2:07:27
in Canadian dollar so I'd like
to claim
2:07:29
full credit of $100 even though
it will
2:07:32
come in as less continuing on
I've been
2:07:34
listening to no agenda since
last
2:07:36
November says my dad hit me in
the mouth
2:07:39
and a DNA as part of my school
2:07:42
curriculum hmm I'm 15
2:07:46
Wow since then I've come to
love your
2:07:49
analysis of the news as well as
the
2:07:51
random bits of in this is a
this is a no
2:07:53
reason I'm reading this is a
note from a
2:07:54
15 year old who grabbed enough
2:07:57
you gave us a donation of $100
in
2:07:59
canadian money since then I've
come to
2:08:02
love your analysis of the news
as well
2:08:03
as the random bits of
information I
2:08:05
picked up listening to the
Shona even
2:08:06
planned to get an iPhone 5 yeah
turning
2:08:09
into an OTG phone similar to
Adam smoked
2:08:12
it nice
2:08:14
well I might fail yeah we're
good make
2:08:16
sure to send Adam notes to help
you yeah
2:08:18
I hope yeah if you need it of
course a
2:08:19
lot of my family listens to
your show
2:08:22
but not many of them have
donated every
2:08:25
as previously mentioned I'm 15
and as
2:08:28
the youngest consistent
listener in the
2:08:31
family I'd like to request a D
douching
2:08:33
for myself as well as douchebag
2:08:40
call-outs for ready yeah get
the button
2:08:44
ready Adam now a juice bag
bonanza and
2:08:59
now that I've called them all
out as
2:09:01
douchebags I'd like to do a
birthday
2:09:03
shout out for my dad David his
birthday
2:09:05
is on the 14th and just so I
must be the
2:09:07
best dad in the university oven
though
2:09:09
he won't agree to sponsor my
knighthood
2:09:12
[Music]
2:09:14
gotta put this on the list so
this is
2:09:17
tell me again that who's from
David
2:09:18
House right
2:09:20
well that's but it's from from
Julia
2:09:24
Julia we don't have a date to
we at 14th
2:09:28
okay with no age we don't have
the ink
2:09:31
okay just thank you so much for
the
2:09:34
showing the amygdalas that
Migdal a
2:09:36
shrinking news deconstruction
you
2:09:38
provide for all the producers
I'm hoping
2:09:40
to donate again soon and
eventually gain
2:09:42
virtue signaling title of no
agenda
2:09:45
Knight of the round table until
my next
2:09:47
donation Julia
2:09:48
that's a beautiful note I love
that
2:09:51
great good that was really a
nice No
2:09:54
thank you Julia well done
2:09:57
very nice and that's includes
our we are
2:10:00
well-wishers well thank you
everybody
2:10:02
for participating in our value
for value
2:10:05
Network it is after all your
podcast
2:10:07
you're the one that produces it
in more
2:10:09
ways than one not just
financially but
2:10:11
you do a lot of work and we're
the
2:10:13
packagers it's kind of like the
THC
2:10:15
vapes I also I went to the P o
box my P
2:10:19
o box at 18 to 0-9 Austin Texas
seven
2:10:23
eight seven six zero I go once
every two
2:10:26
weeks and finally yeah I have
my make
2:10:31
Hillary run again hat from
Mexico weed
2:10:35
mug from Mac I have I got the
weed mug
2:10:38
on the last trip this is the
the Hat
2:10:41
made in China of course from
maxsa made
2:10:44
in China Park Jesus you get a
button I
2:10:46
did not get a button but Maxine
Waters
2:10:49
gravel Allah sent this to me
make
2:10:51
Hillary run again it's I it's a
great
2:10:53
it's a great hat it melts now
people
2:10:56
don't always you know they'll
send me
2:10:58
stuff directly from Amazon
which is not
2:11:00
a great idea because I don't
know who
2:11:02
it's from so I got this
investigate
2:11:05
childer burg t-shirt which I'm
not quite
2:11:08
understanding the reference I
understand
2:11:10
the Bilderberg joke but and I
don't know
2:11:13
who it's from so I'd like to
know and
2:11:15
then I another I got a nice
book but
2:11:19
again I don't know who from the
master
2:11:21
switch by Tim Wu I think you
have a copy
2:11:25
as well John coming at this
from Tim Wu
2:11:28
didn't he did signed
2:11:33
no you think you said telling
me Tim
2:11:36
Wu's no no no no Tim would you
say Tim
2:11:39
woo the book is by Tim woo yeah
why
2:11:42
wouldn't he send us the book
because the
2:11:44
note says hi Adam here is a
book you
2:11:46
will enjoy John is looking
forward to
2:11:48
reading his copy centralization
and new
2:11:51
media felt very na bought my
copy on
2:11:54
impulse in 2011 a local borders
2:11:56
liquidation poetic wedding but
Tim whoa
2:12:01
isn't he the guy who is
credited with
2:12:03
coining the phrase and termina
in the
2:12:06
concept of net neutrality not
that I
2:12:10
know of yeah I think he's the
guy I
2:12:11
think he's the one that coined
the term
2:12:14
so I can hate read this now
let's see
2:12:18
whoo I think that's the guy
2:12:20
net neutrality let me see
2:12:25
yeah he's the guy huh yeah he's
the guy
2:12:29
he came up with that okay so
I'll hate
2:12:31
read that thank you very much
and we
2:12:36
have a couple things to take
care of we
2:12:39
got some Karma's so we got some
new
2:12:41
human resource car and we got
some that
2:12:43
job karma and we got some what
else
2:12:48
although some other karma let's
do all
2:12:50
that right now after I remind
you that
2:12:52
you can also be mentioned if
you support
2:12:55
the show you can do it for this
coming
2:12:57
Sunday show all you do is visit
this
2:12:59
very easy to remember website
for org
2:13:04
jobs jobs and jobs let's vote
for jobs
2:13:10
you've got
2:13:22
well today is the 12th of
September 2019
2:13:26
we do have a list of birthdays
firstly
2:13:28
belated birthday - Joel Tucker
who
2:13:30
celebrated on the 9th
2:13:32
Stanley Jones also bladed
birthday for
2:13:34
his September 9th celebration
Lawrence
2:13:37
the brown says happy birthday
to his dad
2:13:39
Buster Brown celebrating today
sir Bob
2:13:41
of high points his happy
birthday to his
2:13:43
brother Sir Andrew and Julia
says happy
2:13:46
birthday to her Dave dad David
knows
2:13:48
noose and he celebrates on the
14th
2:13:50
happy birthday for everybody
here at the
2:13:52
best podcast in the universe so
I have a
2:14:06
list of course of some meetups
for you
2:14:08
but first a recap of the
orlando meetup
2:14:11
it was not great
2:14:14
says dame meow dicin Adam I
want to
2:14:17
provide a recap of the Orlando
meetup
2:14:19
from tonight sadly the
organizer was a
2:14:21
no-show and texts or calls from
myself
2:14:24
and other attendees went
unanswered on
2:14:27
top of that the venue was
locked so the
2:14:30
five of us plus one extra
friend had to
2:14:33
make our own plans he went to a
brewery
2:14:35
down the street ate some food
had some
2:14:37
drinks for a few hours and it
was a
2:14:38
generally nice time my
boyfriend and I
2:14:41
printed your heads for sticks
but we
2:14:43
forgot them
2:14:44
lots of fails for this meetup
but we
2:14:46
will definitely be trying again
some
2:14:48
good news is that we learned
the that's
2:14:49
true ladies live in Central
Florida area
2:14:52
and we're hoping they host a
seminar so
2:14:54
some of us can stop by all in
all it was
2:14:57
an enjoyable low-key night and
we will
2:14:59
make another attempt at an area
Meetup a
2:15:02
dame me out listen and I'm
sorry to hear
2:15:04
that this we try to avoid these
things
2:15:06
but you know it's completely
volunteer
2:15:08
and it typically does work out
very well
2:15:11
you can go to no agenda meetups
dot-com
2:15:14
you can find out what's near
you and if
2:15:16
there isn't one you can create
one
2:15:18
yourself but if you're gonna do
it you
2:15:19
should probably show up and for
the 14th
2:15:22
coming up this week we have
Pittsburgh
2:15:24
PA and the El Paso Las Cruces
meetup on
2:15:27
the 19th Toronto the 20th
Southeast
2:15:30
Louisiana Nelson British
Columbia South
2:15:32
East London and Wilsonville
Oregon four
2:15:34
in one day on the 21st Eastern
North
2:15:37
Carolina Minneapolis and
Boulder Creek
2:15:39
if you're in Arlington Virginia
2:15:41
we were gave you shout out
earlier
2:15:42
September 22nd is your date to
hang out
2:15:44
the 26th Las Vegas and
Luxembourg
2:15:47
there's only 30,000 people who
love live
2:15:49
in Luxembourg it will be at the
meet up
2:15:53
27th of September San Antone in
Texas
2:15:56
the 28th Victoria BC and also in
2:15:59
Copenhagen and Havre de Grasse
Maryland
2:16:02
that's where you will be able
to hang
2:16:05
out with people get some
in-person close
2:16:08
up connection with people who
don't get
2:16:11
triggered and people you
probably would
2:16:13
never know
2:16:14
we're listeners of the No
Agenda show
2:16:15
moreover they're all producers
so we'll
2:16:20
hopefully have more reports and
more
2:16:21
meetups on the next show and
right now
2:16:23
we've got
2:16:25
[Music]
2:16:26
[Applause]
2:16:27
[Music]
2:16:32
sir otaku the Baron of the
Northeast
2:16:35
Texas and the Red River Valley
has
2:16:37
dropped his status once again
with
2:16:40
another thousand dollars in
total
2:16:41
donations to become the earl of
2:16:43
northeast texas and the red
river valley
2:16:46
we congratulate him on his new
title and
2:16:49
you can always go to ITIM slash
peerage
2:16:54
to find out exactly where
everyone
2:16:56
standing is and in the event of
calamity
2:16:58
who is in charge of what region
of the
2:17:01
world that's what our knights
and dames
2:17:02
and and titles above that adieu
our
2:17:05
bearings for sure they have
2:17:07
protectorates and they are the
people to
2:17:09
talk to when this shit hits the
fan and
2:17:11
thank you again for everything
and
2:17:14
supporting the No Agenda show
no Knights
2:17:17
or no Dame's today just one
title change
2:17:20
that's odd yeah well
2:17:25
happens all right so where were
we
2:17:29
um will
2:17:34
I've go uh yes and something I'm
2:17:37
following up on something we
talked
2:17:38
about and something I couldn't
find so I
2:17:42
did want to circle back to that
we'll
2:17:44
start off with another
obsession of the
2:17:47
m5m mainstream certainly in the
United
2:17:50
States and just for a to mix it
up I
2:17:53
figured I'd bring in Jimmy
Kimmel to
2:17:55
tell us the day's news instead
of
2:17:57
meeting with the Taliban
yesterday Trump
2:17:59
spent the day lashing out at
John Legend
2:18:02
and Chrissy Teigen for realies
2:18:03
apparently he's watching a town
hall at
2:18:06
NBC last night probably waiting
to hear
2:18:10
his name mentioned it was upset
that
2:18:11
John Legend didn't give him a
shout-out
2:18:14
for the bipartisan criminal
justice
2:18:16
reform bill that he signed so
he got out
2:18:19
his thumbs and he wrote guys
like boring
2:18:22
musician John Legend and his
filthy
2:18:24
mouth wife who wasn't even
there by the
2:18:26
way are talking about how great
it is
2:18:29
but I didn't see them around
when we
2:18:30
needed help getting it past his
filthy
2:18:33
mouth what what is what we
can't have
2:18:36
all these filthy mouth women
around what
2:18:37
the Taliban is coming over guys
Trump
2:18:41
hates women who talk dirty
unless
2:18:43
they're spanking him with a
forbes
2:18:44
magazine so Chrissy Teigen
responded to
2:18:48
this she wrote lol what a ass
bitch
2:18:56
etc and for that she got more
than
2:18:58
500000 lights there's almost 10
times as
2:19:02
many he's like is he god for
his tweet
2:19:04
about her which i think means
she's our
2:19:06
no president right Oh what I
found
2:19:12
interesting they bleeped
2:19:15
the pussy part so what she was
tweeting
2:19:17
over and over again it was a
hashtag his
2:19:20
pussy ass bitch president why
would they
2:19:23
bleep the pussy and leave the
ass bitch
2:19:26
in that makes no sense not a
weird isn't
2:19:30
it
2:19:31
yeah cuz they save grabbing by
the pussy
2:19:33
yeah that's well I don't know
why
2:19:35
instantly you know grabbed by
the pussy
2:19:37
grabbed by the pussy but now
they bleep
2:19:39
it yeah so pussy ass bitch
became a
2:19:43
trending topic and it was just
like it
2:19:46
really this is all that we can
obsess
2:19:47
over and that gave me reason to
go back
2:19:50
and find the fine John Legend
clip from
2:19:53
NPR where he claims that really
the only
2:19:56
people who are creative
2:19:59
our Democrats well we've always
been
2:20:01
liberal musicians actors it's
almost by
2:20:05
disposition we deal with the
gay and
2:20:09
lesbian community all the time
so we're
2:20:10
going to feel like they should
have to
2:20:12
let you get married just like
we do we
2:20:15
deal with people of all colors
and all
2:20:17
races and we travel to different
2:20:19
countries all the time to
perform so
2:20:21
we're going to have a more
global view
2:20:23
and a more inclusive view it's
almost by
2:20:25
nature and by and by
circumstance of the
2:20:29
things that we do so
2:20:31
if America doesn't want to
consume the
2:20:35
art of people who are liberal
minded
2:20:38
there's not going to be a lot
of art for
2:20:39
them to consume as simple as
that
2:20:41
because the best artists most
of them
2:20:43
are liberal sorry there are
some country
2:20:46
artists that I know where they
are
2:20:47
conservative I have a lot of
country
2:20:49
artists that are friends and
believe me
2:20:51
some of them are liberal but
they don't
2:20:52
make a big deal out of it
because they
2:20:54
know it'll eliminate their base
2:20:56
I'm telling you most creative
people are
2:20:59
liberal
2:21:00
just so you know
2:21:02
and they say things like pussy
ass bitch
2:21:05
it's pretty liberal is very
create very
2:21:09
create very very liberal very
creative
2:21:11
liberal oh yes John Legend now
this next
2:21:18
clip was one of the few times
they tried
2:21:22
to create some good news the
mainstream
2:21:25
let's put some good news out
there I
2:21:27
don't think you saw this video
because
2:21:30
as you'll hear in this clip
they say it
2:21:34
went viral but their numbers
are odd
2:21:35
this was the two the two kids
two little
2:21:38
boys black boy and a white boy
and they
2:21:40
see each other on the sidewalk
and they
2:21:42
run towards each other and they
hug each
2:21:44
other did you see this video
out there
2:21:46
in the wild by any chance
probably
2:21:48
didn't did you
2:21:48
I think I did right so oh so
cute
2:21:52
so cute but the reason I play
this clip
2:21:55
is a because they they're
trying to make
2:21:57
it go viral and be I just
couldn't
2:21:59
resist listening to this guy
without
2:22:01
with y'all
2:22:04
twenty six month-old Maxwell
and 27
2:22:08
month-old Finnegan pure joy at
the sight
2:22:10
of one another running to give
each
2:22:12
other hug much bigger than
their size
2:22:14
the innocence of it all is
exactly why
2:22:17
it's going viral they just took
off
2:22:19
towards each other and I just
got my
2:22:21
phone out as quickly as
possible and
2:22:22
just try to record it and they
are just
2:22:24
too cute together and are you
ready for
2:22:27
this another minute is this guy
of talk
2:22:29
cute is an understatement
michael says
2:22:31
narrows Maxwell's dad shot the
video he
2:22:33
says he's not normally one to
post a lot
2:22:35
of private things on Facebook
but
2:22:37
explains why he decided to in
this case
2:22:39
with all the racism and hate
going on I
2:22:41
just think it's a really
beautiful video
2:22:42
the reason that it's getting
attention
2:22:44
because it is with a little
black boy
2:22:46
and a little white boy and
one's mind
2:22:50
right you know or just changed
their
2:22:52
view on things you know then
it's
2:22:53
totally worth it
2:22:54
at last check it's gotten over
300
2:22:56
shares and sixty-five hundred
views
2:22:58
that's viral the comments are
mostly
2:23:01
positive but there are some
naysayers
2:23:03
definitely not staged and it
was just a
2:23:06
lucky moment and I got it on
camera and
2:23:07
now with all the attention that
it's
2:23:09
getting it's just gonna be a
great story
2:23:11
to tell him when he's older the
2:23:12
pint-sized best friends have
known each
2:23:14
other for over a year now it's
a special
2:23:16
relationship and their parents
are good
2:23:18
friends as well
2:23:21
and there's not anyone else
that comes
2:23:23
close to Finnegan status in
Maxwell's
2:23:25
eyes great to spread the love
and to
2:23:27
show people that kind of love
and beauty
2:23:28
in the world yes thank you very
much
2:23:30
I'm 650 plus all the love and
beauty in
2:23:33
the world now I didn't even
think about
2:23:38
cuz I did see this I just said
yeah I
2:23:40
just visualize you yeah yeah
but now
2:23:47
that he mentioned it now I'm
convinced
2:23:51
it's staged the core thing he
if he
2:23:53
didn't say I just like to tell
right
2:23:55
yeah I didn't staged it no it
wasn't
2:23:58
staged but I'm thinking about
it totally
2:24:03
to kids into doing this and you
get the
2:24:05
camera ready because for one
thing you
2:24:06
can't if the kids were running
and
2:24:08
they're gonna go hug and they
just you
2:24:10
can't get your camera out in
time you're
2:24:11
not gonna make this it's just
it's not
2:24:13
gonna happen it's just bullcrap
2:24:15
so he staged this oh he's okay
kids on
2:24:17
the count of three run to each
other
2:24:19
gives you the biggest hug you
can and
2:24:21
they probably did okay let's do
a safety
2:24:25
[Music]
2:24:26
okay that was great let's do
one more
2:24:29
for safety how much I hated
that that
2:24:36
was great great segment Adam
perfect
2:24:38
let's do one more for safety
2:24:39
you liked it or you didn't like
it
2:24:42
yeah what's the safety bullcrap
so they
2:24:47
staged it was obviously staged
cuz these
2:24:50
kids see each other all the
time why
2:24:52
what's always what's the deal
you know
2:24:54
that now they're hugging each
other so
2:24:55
what yeah yeah a stage great
2:24:58
thanks pal some happy booting
that
2:25:02
polluting the minds viral video
arena
2:25:06
was staged crap but of course
nobody
2:25:08
does that
2:25:09
never why do we do that there
was a
2:25:14
thing I think it was in busts
Jeter
2:25:15
wanted they should have top
five viral
2:25:18
videos that were staged oh yes
so I went
2:25:22
through him and there was a
couple in
2:25:24
there that I remember seeing
and I had
2:25:25
no idea they were staged
remember which
2:25:28
one yeah I'll remember the one
you you
2:25:29
probably saw it it's some I
think it's a
2:25:31
black girl but it's some girls
little
2:25:33
just slightly over
2:25:34
I look slightly chubby and to
add to the
2:25:38
thing is she's gonna she's
danced in on
2:25:40
the camera in this she's gonna
do us
2:25:42
she's gonna stand on her hands
or
2:25:44
something against the door and
then
2:25:46
somebody opens the door she
falls
2:25:48
backwards into a table of
candle yes yes
2:25:51
yes that was that's the place
on fire
2:25:53
that was staged
2:25:55
it's totally staged huh good
one yeah
2:26:00
that's right that was
impressive you can
2:26:04
fool me with a state and
there's the
2:26:06
number all along but it's like
I can see
2:26:08
being fooled
2:26:09
I mean thought of were the ones
that
2:26:10
we've all seen and we know were
staged
2:26:12
like the Eagle coming down and
grabbing
2:26:14
the baby on the golf course
well yeah I
2:26:17
think that was not that was
edited that
2:26:18
wasn't staged that was just
shoot it was
2:26:21
a fake fake fake
2:26:24
but yeah a couple of OTG items
OTG
2:26:31
off-the-grid baby OTG yes well
you
2:26:35
probably saw that well I saw it
and then
2:26:37
what a waste of time the Apple
special
2:26:39
events where you know it's a
big camera
2:26:43
thanks that's great but they're
also
2:26:48
they announced iOS 13 and we
also have
2:26:52
Android 10 coming up and face
bag is
2:26:56
very worried about this so they
have
2:26:59
Paul McDonald the engineering
director
2:27:01
has posted a it made a blog
post just in
2:27:07
starts off like this
2:27:08
Facebook is better with
location it
2:27:12
powers features like check-ins
and makes
2:27:14
planning events easier it helps
improve
2:27:16
ads and keeps you and the
Facebook
2:27:19
community safe how does it keep
you safe
2:27:22
it keeps you safe just shut up
and don't
2:27:24
question the bad man features
like find
2:27:28
Wi-Fi and nearby friends use
precise
2:27:31
location even when you're not
using the
2:27:34
app to make sure that alerts
and tools
2:27:38
are accurate and personalized
for you
2:27:40
your Android or iOS location
settings
2:27:44
allow you to control when you
share your
2:27:45
device's precise location with
apps like
2:27:48
Facebook that's why we're
letting you
2:27:51
know that Android and iOS have
released
2:27:53
new versions of their operating
systems
2:27:55
which include updates to how
you can
2:27:57
view and manage your location
the newest
2:28:00
version of Android gives people
more
2:28:02
visibility into and control
over when
2:28:05
apps can access the devices
precise
2:28:07
location the new version of iOS
called
2:28:10
iOS 13 will send people
reminders about
2:28:13
which apps can access their
precise
2:28:15
location information when
they're not
2:28:17
using the app and how many
times each
2:28:19
app has accessed it so I'll
skip forward
2:28:23
a little bit if you decide to
update
2:28:26
you'll have the option to allow
when you
2:28:29
good your apps to access your
precise
2:28:30
location either while you're
using the
2:28:32
app or when you're not we
understand
2:28:34
this may be confusing if you're
already
2:28:36
use
2:28:37
Facebook's background location
setting
2:28:39
this update may cause a few
instances
2:28:41
with Android and Facebook
location
2:28:43
settings will be out of sync a
long
2:28:46
story short they're doing
everything
2:28:48
they can to tell you that you
should not
2:28:50
be worried when you see your
phone
2:28:51
telling you that Facebook is
tracking
2:28:53
your precise location and and
this comes
2:28:56
back to what we've always said
it is
2:28:59
location is everything
2:29:01
you're the location of where
you are
2:29:03
tells you so much about a
person where
2:29:07
are you I'm at the doctor's
office Bing
2:29:09
we know that where I'm at the
bank being
2:29:11
where you I'm in an office Oh
probably
2:29:13
your office being without
telling
2:29:15
anybody without posting without
even
2:29:17
speaking you are telling these
companies
2:29:19
exactly what you're doing and
what your
2:29:21
life is about and you need to
delete
2:29:23
these apps from your phone
because now
2:29:25
they can easily access where
they can
2:29:27
continue to easily access your
location
2:29:30
although not entirely precise
even when
2:29:32
you're not using the app delete
this
2:29:35
crap off of your phones then
for the
2:29:39
credit karma users amongst us
and other
2:29:43
credit the score based apps
there's
2:29:46
we've looked at the data points
there
2:29:48
now adding in to your credit
score which
2:29:50
where is turning slowly into a
social
2:29:53
credit score in addition to
your pin
2:29:57
this is now being proposed as
law that
2:29:59
all of these companies will
need to
2:30:01
report this and act upon it
2:30:03
not just your your utilities ie
do you
2:30:06
pay your your utility bills on
time
2:30:10
which is now being added to
your social
2:30:13
credit score but also which
magazine
2:30:17
subscriptions you have and
Goldman Sachs
2:30:21
ally financial discovery
financial
2:30:24
services are all now
incorporating the
2:30:28
information on magazine
subscriptions
2:30:32
which I believe the post office
is
2:30:34
probably helping them with since
2:30:36
whenever you move and I've
moved a
2:30:37
couple times four times in
Austin or
2:30:40
five times in Austin alone they
always
2:30:43
try to sell you magazine
subscriptions
2:30:45
now so I'm pretty sure that the
post
2:30:48
office the US Postal Service is
somehow
2:30:50
involved in
2:30:51
this information I don't I I
don't think
2:30:54
they know I really disagree
with that
2:30:55
it's too much work
2:30:57
the the date if there's
databases out
2:30:59
there that you can purchase
that will
2:31:01
get you all this information
easy enough
2:31:03
it's already there now first
off is not
2:31:05
gonna give you anything
2:31:06
okay so what's out there but
then it but
2:31:09
they're now incorporating it so
if you
2:31:10
subscribes to a garden in
violation of
2:31:15
my privacy for people to know
all my new
2:31:17
magazine subscriptions this is
like what
2:31:20
web pages of I'm browsing it's
it's very
2:31:22
similar and so if you subscribe
to
2:31:24
gardens and guns which is a real
2:31:27
magazine is a good magazine
2:31:30
it's an austin-based magazine
no less
2:31:32
gardens and guns or you know
who knows
2:31:36
what you subscribe to could be
a whole
2:31:39
bunch of things that is that
will now be
2:31:44
known to the credit scoring
social
2:31:47
scoring companies and well I
guess if
2:31:50
you what difference does it
make to them
2:31:52
what magazines I subscribe to
2:31:55
well what there's seriously
well this
2:31:57
are trying unless gardens and
guns is
2:32:00
like for boating or I don't
know well I
2:32:04
guess would they also use an
ammo and
2:32:07
all the rest of motorcycle week
I mean
2:32:09
do what difference does it make
to them
2:32:10
let my said affect my credit
score but
2:32:12
let me tell you the example
they use in
2:32:15
this article
2:32:18
there was a because you caught
me a
2:32:22
little off guard like in
paraphrase a
2:32:24
woman had a bad credit score
for some
2:32:27
reason and she could not get
credit to I
2:32:29
don't to buy a house or
something and
2:32:32
they they went in they looked
closer oh
2:32:36
here it is
2:32:37
Christina Segura 24 had a low
credit
2:32:40
score from unpaid medical debts
when she
2:32:43
applied for financing from from
fin tech
2:32:47
startup Mert Merritt eyes which
is a
2:32:50
credit score based company
providing
2:32:53
with loans the company which
funds
2:32:54
higher education skills based
training
2:32:56
used her high school transcript
to
2:32:58
approve her loans totaling nine
thousand
2:33:01
to attend pipe Welding school
merit eyes
2:33:05
considers factors such as
improvements
2:33:07
in grades signs of students
challenge
2:33:09
themselves etc so they just
want to have
2:33:13
more social information about
you to
2:33:16
make their determination of how
2:33:18
creditworthy you are and I can
see where
2:33:22
the you know if you would
subscribe to
2:33:25
Harvard Business Review
2:33:27
mmm that will be good
2:33:29
garden and guns probably not
this is
2:33:34
illegal
2:33:36
is it it should be
2:33:40
between face bag trekking and
tracking
2:33:42
your location when you don't
even you
2:33:44
which is encouraging stalking
by the way
2:33:46
if you're a woman or like our
little our
2:33:50
15 year old that just sent that
note in
2:33:52
who wants to go OTG mmm-hmm if
I was a
2:33:55
woman I would have all that
stuff turned
2:33:57
off because I don't want to be
tracked
2:33:59
because people can hack through
these
2:34:01
systems and you get some creep
yeah
2:34:03
who's just following you around
is a
2:34:05
stalker well if they psych I
always
2:34:07
thought this was inviting
stalkers yeah
2:34:13
sure does nobody ever mentions
that this
2:34:15
is like inviting stalkers
because it's
2:34:18
technology man it's cool it's
cool
2:34:25
all right well I'm sufficiently
grossed
2:34:28
out sorry
2:34:31
don't make it up let's catch up
on some
2:34:35
stuff okay
2:34:36
there was an interesting little
uh well
2:34:39
first there's a guy from the
Great Bay
2:34:40
an expert on the Great Barrier
Reef came
2:34:44
on they came on to discuss some
of the
2:34:47
bullcrap he got fired fired
from he was
2:34:50
that what he's like the number
one
2:34:51
expert on the Great Barrier
Reef and he
2:34:54
got fired from some University
for
2:34:55
telling him that dull we were
hearing
2:34:57
his bullcrap but anyway here's
some of
2:34:59
it well thank you very much
don't let's
2:35:02
all heard that the Great
Barrier Reef is
2:35:03
on its last legs and it's being
2:35:05
smothered by sediment polluted
by
2:35:07
fertilizers and pesticides it's
killed
2:35:10
by dredging and of course
climate change
2:35:12
so who who here put your hands
up
2:35:15
believes that story is true as
a matter
2:35:17
of interest right let's in
traces so I
2:35:20
mean out there almost everybody
believes
2:35:22
it true there's literally
hundreds of
2:35:23
millions of people around the
world who
2:35:25
think that so you you guys now
have got
2:35:28
a little bit of a tricky
question
2:35:30
because you've been told is
dead and you
2:35:32
believe it's dead so how are
you going
2:35:36
to tell this am I just our
whistleblower
2:35:38
or and the world has been
conned or am a
2:35:41
complete lunatic and of course
the way
2:35:43
you decide is that you listen
to my
2:35:46
arguments that this is the
libertarian
2:35:48
way but unfortunately that's
not the way
2:35:50
of a modern University as we
will see in
2:35:52
a minute so I'll give you
before we go
2:35:55
into my little tricky situation
with the
2:35:57
University I'll give you some
some facts
2:35:59
about the universe about the
reef
2:36:02
climate change is supposed to
be killing
2:36:04
all the corals but did you know
that
2:36:06
most of the corals that live on
the
2:36:08
Great Barrier Reef also live in
2:36:09
Indonesia and Thailand where
the water
2:36:11
is one or two degrees hotter
and they
2:36:13
actually grow 50% faster
they're in fact
2:36:16
probably more coral bleaching
which
2:36:19
you've heard such a lot about
is not a
2:36:21
new phenomenon it's been going
on for a
2:36:22
hundred million years or so
it's like a
2:36:25
bushfire it looks terrible but
the the
2:36:27
corals rapidly recover from it
he goes
2:36:32
on and I was one thing after
another
2:36:34
everything you've heard about
the corals
2:36:36
is bogus
2:36:38
this guy's the coral expert get
the
2:36:43
whole I got to get this whole
speech
2:36:44
because then he goes after his
universe
2:36:46
that fired and because he kept
he kept
2:36:48
he kept contradicting people
that were
2:36:51
just dropping these lies and if
2:36:53
apparently if it is what if
things do
2:36:55
warm up the corals will grow
fifty
2:36:57
percent faster oh man
2:37:00
I haven't wondering you know I
remember
2:37:03
the Greta turned Bergen team
assuming
2:37:07
gaming mmm cumin yeah she what
happens
2:37:11
with that girl when she when
she flips
2:37:14
and goes on and finds out that
she's
2:37:17
been that most of his bullcrap
oh we
2:37:19
burned her at the stake no no
she's just
2:37:22
be a dynamo she seems like the
kind of
2:37:26
person to be very easily worked
two
2:37:30
weeks trip on that boat press
boat but
2:37:37
you haven't given me for today
isn't I
2:37:39
so I thought I had one in here
I don't
2:37:43
see any ISOs and we do need
something
2:37:45
well you have the China China
asshole
2:37:49
okay when in doubt you can
always roll
2:37:53
that one out yeah I got an old
Democracy
2:37:56
Now clip I want to play this is
again
2:37:58
something we haven't been
talking about
2:38:00
much it's kind of got out of
the news
2:38:03
cycle it kind of will come back
but it's
2:38:05
the water scam which we used to
talk
2:38:07
about quite a bit now it's kind
of
2:38:09
fallen by the wayside but it's
being
2:38:12
maybe brought back by democracy
now 17
2:38:16
countries representing around
one
2:38:18
quarter of the world's
population are at
2:38:20
risk of running out of water
this
2:38:22
according to new data published
Tuesday
2:38:24
by the World Resources
Institute the
2:38:27
countries which include India
Iran and
2:38:29
Qatar are facing extremely high
water
2:38:32
stress meaning they're using up
almost
2:38:34
all of their water reserves
several US
2:38:37
cities and states such as Los
Angeles
2:38:40
and New Mexico are also
considered to be
2:38:42
under extremely high water
stress the
2:38:46
number of afflicted regions will
2:38:47
continue to climb due to global
heating
2:38:50
the World Resources Institute
says water
2:38:53
stress is the biggest crisis no
one is
2:38:56
talking about its consequences
are in
2:38:59
plain sight in the form of food
and
2:39:01
security conflict and migration
and
2:39:03
financial instability
2:39:07
she said
2:39:09
I don't know if this clip was
just old
2:39:11
no it's not that old
2:39:12
she said global heating yeah
she said
2:39:15
global heating I noticed that
too it's
2:39:17
kind of odd yeah you mean it's
not the
2:39:19
climate crisis the climate
emergency a
2:39:22
global warming its global
heating I
2:39:24
think that's a more like an
anglicized I
2:39:26
think the Brits use that
sometimes
2:39:28
global heat global heating
2:39:31
and then one I don't know what
the point
2:39:33
of that was to she's usually
Ron bored
2:39:35
with the climate emergency yeah
yeah a
2:39:39
climate crisis yes and she also
was
2:39:42
either one of those water
stress another
2:39:44
good one so in the newsletter I
put this
2:39:47
little item about I guess dan
Rather
2:39:52
came out with a tweet that said
you know
2:39:56
Trump talked about fighting
Nazis you
2:39:59
know there oh he went back to
the fine
2:40:01
people on both sides yeah and
then but
2:40:03
he took it further he said that
he
2:40:05
called Nazis fine people that's
what he
2:40:07
said it is he's dead rather the
bastion
2:40:10
of news reporting guy who you
know got
2:40:14
fired for this for a really bad
story on
2:40:17
George Bush Maya in which
people lived
2:40:20
show us all defended him
because they
2:40:21
thought it was a real story but
even
2:40:23
though it was Bogut if this was
the
2:40:24
letter this was written
supposedly
2:40:27
during the forties or during
George
2:40:29
Bush's time and not in the 40s
but I
2:40:33
guess during the Korean War
some period
2:40:34
of time it was so long ago that
you that
2:40:37
it was obvious it was not there
was a
2:40:40
fake because they had the th
was in
2:40:43
small up lower innocent 11th
with a T
2:40:47
Asian no and it's not like
Microsoft
2:40:48
Word does it shrinks it and
puts it up
2:40:50
there that you couldn't do that
back in
2:40:52
the day so rather and he gave
his pissed
2:40:55
and he kept working but I have
to say
2:40:58
you know these guys he's but
that these
2:41:01
guys these writers and
reporters that
2:41:03
are just locked in and they
refused to
2:41:05
listen to reason and of course
Scott
2:41:07
Adams jumps in and just his cuz
he's a
2:41:10
big oh let me guess let me
guess and
2:41:12
then Dan Rather went oh you're
right
2:41:14
Scott I'll stop doing that yeah
well
2:41:17
that obviously didn't happen
but I do
2:41:19
reminded me of this clip that
I've been
2:41:21
sitting on which is where we're
beta or
2:41:24
or ik is confronted by someone
from
2:41:27
daily the caller or some I
don't know
2:41:29
some right-leaning operation
about this
2:41:33
hoax because beta o rourke is
the big is
2:41:36
probably the biggest promoter
of it of
2:41:38
Trump saying and back people up
2:41:42
Trump never said that they
refined
2:41:45
people on both sides
2:41:48
except after he made a
disclaimer saying
2:41:51
I'm not talking about the Nazis
and the
2:41:54
white nationalists very clearly
did that
2:41:57
yeah and so that's what you
know so we
2:41:58
have this two sides that well
he he said
2:42:01
that but he still said find
people so
2:42:03
here's but here's the way the
Democrats
2:42:06
are and they hate to pick on
Democrats
2:42:09
but this is beta O'Rourke not
listening
2:42:12
to the guy and just going on
with his
2:42:15
pitch I really decided now here
I
2:42:18
despise beta O'Rourke the
President
2:42:22
Trump after charlottesville
said that he
2:42:25
condemned the white
supremacists and the
2:42:26
neo-nazis totally are you aware
that
2:42:29
you're misquoting him or
partially
2:42:31
quoting him not quoting the
full extent
2:42:33
of his remarks in
Charlottesville are
2:42:34
you concerned that that might
inflame
2:42:35
tensions rather than heal
divisions no I
2:42:37
believe in in the truth and in
being
2:42:40
honest about what the
president's doing
2:42:42
and it's not just that he
referred to
2:42:44
Klansmen as very fine people it
is that
2:42:47
he attempted to ban all people
of one
2:42:49
religion from this country for
2:42:51
constantly warned of an
invasion of
2:42:53
killers and rapists and animals
from
2:42:56
Central America and Mexico
though we
2:42:58
know that they commit crimes at
a far
2:43:00
lower rate than those who are
born in
2:43:02
this country this is a very
coordinated
2:43:05
attack on minorities in this
country on
2:43:09
the most vulnerable and the
defenseless
2:43:11
for political gain for the
president and
2:43:13
he knows full well that it not
only
2:43:15
offends our sensibilities as a
country
2:43:17
it is leading to violence and
the taking
2:43:20
of lies as we saw you know past
but he
2:43:22
said he wasn't referring to the
2:43:24
neo-nazis it's just a quick
just a
2:43:26
clarification he said he wasn't
2:43:27
referring to the Klansmen it's
very fine
2:43:29
people that he was referring to
2:43:30
nonviolent protesters left and
right
2:43:33
he has openly courted the
support of
2:43:37
white supremacists oh I got my
hair cut
2:43:41
yesterday and the lady who cuts
my hair
2:43:43
grew up in El Paso and you know
went to
2:43:46
the same school as Bobby is
Bobby by the
2:43:48
way not bad it's Bobby O'Rourke
2:43:51
robert francis bobby and even
people in
2:43:56
El Paso are like yeah we like
will is
2:43:58
worn better so if you can't
make it in
2:44:02
your hometown something's wrong
2:44:06
the guys is dick correct well I
have one
2:44:11
last thing to share Joe sent
this in I
2:44:14
think it's worth noting since
we haven't
2:44:17
really gotten and I trust our
boots on
2:44:19
the ground reports from our
producers
2:44:21
out of my wife and I had the
pleasure of
2:44:23
attending an event with Ruth
Bader
2:44:25
Ginsburg over the weekend she
lives
2:44:28
because of her recent treatment
but I
2:44:30
was pleasantly surprised to see
and hear
2:44:32
hear her in relatively good
health she
2:44:34
had a man and a woman escort
her by the
2:44:36
arms as she processed one of
whom was
2:44:38
certainly for security reasons
as well
2:44:40
as physical aid once she was up
on
2:44:42
little stage and seated she was
very
2:44:44
lively
2:44:44
she stood several times
throughout the
2:44:46
ceremony to deliver her pieces
spoke
2:44:48
with a strong with as strong of
a voice
2:44:50
as any diminutive 86 year old
lady could
2:44:53
be expected to do the
impressive part
2:44:55
the impressive part was the
vigor with
2:44:58
which she stood pop right up
every time
2:45:00
it was her turn if it comes up
feel free
2:45:02
to share the antidote don't
identify me
2:45:05
or the wedding
2:45:05
okie-dokie just know I was very
curious
2:45:09
about her health she appears to
be doing
2:45:11
well all things considered love
and
2:45:13
light joe says so there you go
she
2:45:15
lizard yes I think just grabbed
a lizard
2:45:23
lizard I wonder did you see
dart her
2:45:29
tongue in an ounce so she
smells coming
2:45:35
up on no agenda stream comm we
have Oh
2:45:38
mo facts meet the parents the
mo facts
2:45:42
with Adam Curry and I have a
couple of
2:45:44
good mixes the Darby's returned
once
2:45:46
again these are new guys on the
scene
2:45:48
also we have Jesse coy Nelson
2:45:52
sir Chris and Sir Felix Wilson
and Who
2:45:59
am I missing here and Freddie
got
2:46:01
fingers there you go as your
end of show
2:46:04
mixes we always welcome them
and coming
2:46:08
to you from the opportunity
zone it's
2:46:10
number 33 here in the frontier
of Austin
2:46:12
Texas FEMA region number six in
the
2:46:14
governmental Maps if you're
looking for
2:46:16
us in the morning everybody
2:46:17
I'm Adam curry and from
Northern Silicon
2:46:19
Valley I'm John C Dvorak we
return on
2:46:21
Sunday with another episode of
2:46:23
deconstruction for you right
here on no
2:46:25
agenda remember us at Dvorak
org slash
2:46:27
na until then adios Mose and
such
2:46:33
[Music]
2:46:47
Jumbo's and length of Trump
clowns
2:46:50
they're trying to start some
hail
2:46:52
dossier never happy without a
water cell
2:46:56
yeah mama they had a do it but
I'm kept
2:47:00
dragging on he's a coward
2:47:04
we choke finally trumpet weeded
now both
2:47:09
things I see is not when both
we could
2:47:13
have addressed each also cover
mean I'll
2:47:17
always be a Dodger will never
be in a
2:47:21
5x5 wfdys us to watch eliminate
North
2:47:28
Korea eliminate North Korea
maybe
2:47:30
couldn't stop that you were
young his
2:47:33
head and crash I've always had
a problem
2:47:37
with both and every time I
think Trump
2:47:39
is making progress Bolton putts
in and
2:47:42
here ooh is it a 20 white
Bolton is a
2:47:44
Chicken Hawk didn't want to
serve in the
2:47:46
Iraq war didn't want to sit in
the Iraq
2:47:49
once in Afghanistan they want
to serve
2:47:51
in Vietnam 2015 year wrote a
piece for
2:47:54
the New York Times saying we
ought to
2:47:56
bomb Iran but if we had done
that then
2:47:57
what do you think we do now
well I think
2:47:59
Israel could have done it 15
years
2:48:01
before we'd be in a much better
place
2:48:04
[Music]
2:48:21
disrupt as many people as
possible by
2:48:24
vegan process to specialized
farms like
2:48:27
this one out and California
reads
2:48:28
crickets for human consumption
if you
2:48:30
grab something like the Kyle
you can
2:48:31
always start me to sell it as
well
2:48:33
[Music]
2:49:11
it's coming
2:49:15
sorry candy that sorry candy
that sorry
2:49:23
[Music]
2:49:38
citizen is the belief that
humans are
2:49:41
superior to all other poisonous
whether
2:49:46
that's in actually farms their
flesh
2:49:48
whether that's when they're
locked up in
2:49:50
twos
2:49:50
well why no that's when they're
brought
2:49:51
into schools you know for
children to
2:49:54
have a bit of amusement on
their lunch
2:49:55
break
2:50:01
[Music]
2:50:55
Oh
2:50:58
[Music]
2:51:12
[Music]
2:51:34
here comes the train that gets
stuck in
2:51:37
everybody's head hit it so net
2:51:40
[Music]
2:51:44
I'll keep you sane
2:51:51
slowly
2:52:00
[Music]
2:52:06
the Borak dog /
2:52:11
[Music]
2:52:22
OPA Borat dot org slash and a
2:52:29
[Music]