Cover for No Agenda Show 1297: Going Bananas
November 22nd, 2020 • 3h 30m

1297: Going Bananas

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0:00
Hey guys,
0:01
Adam Curry Jhansi devora
0:03
Sunday November 22 2021 Nation media assassination Episode
0:09
1200 97 This
0:11
is no agenda,
0:13
cracking the algos and broadcasting live from
0:15
opportunity's own 33 here in the frontier of Austin, Texas. Star
0:20
State in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry
0:23
Gannon from Northern Silicon Valley where we're kids living
0:26
through the nocturnal shutdown because of the nocturnal virus.
0:30
I'm Jesse devorah.
0:35
Wow, you got a little bit louder than our pre show there. For
0:39
those of you wondering who just came through blue air drums,
0:43
that was john C. Dvorak. Whoo, everybody. Ah, yes. Another day,
0:49
john, another day of our government trying to kill us.
0:54
They'll do it any way they can. And Secretary of the Treasury,
0:58
Steve minuchin proves my point. Well, we hope it won't. And
1:02
again, you know, we're
1:03
working on mass distribution of the virus,
1:06
they're killing us. They just keep trying to kill us by
1:11
spreading mass distribution of the virus. At some
1:14
point we're gonna stop. And I
1:17
think that's because people are so used to saying, virus that
1:21
they can't even get the word vaccine in their brain anymore.
1:28
Yeah, I don't know this. Well, what
1:31
do you attribute it to then?
1:33
In fact,
1:37
okay, well, I got some other facts for you. This is it was
1:41
kind of I didn't know that that osterholm the guy who was on the
1:47
Joe Rogan show back in March when I was out there, the guy
1:50
who was talking about 2 million dead. He was one of the early
1:54
fear mongers. He has been rewarded with a spot on the
1:59
Biden Coronavirus Task Force.
2:02
So that's that's heartwarming.
2:04
Yes. So this kind of obscure guy who popped out of nowhere with
2:08
all kinds of death defying numbers, which did not check
2:10
out. He's now part of the Coronavirus Task Force team. And
2:15
he's got bad news. I think right now, we all have to understand
2:19
that we need current information on the number of cases. I think
2:22
that the White House task force report issued yesterday, or at
2:26
least we made public yesterday is right on the mark. We are
2:30
really in a crisis stage, we have to be discussing, what can
2:32
we do? What do we do? You know, it's not just enough to help
2:37
Americans understand you don't want to swap here? How do you
2:39
incentivize them? How do you help them realize that this is
2:43
what they want to do? And I've been saying for some time, we
2:46
need FDR moments right now, we need somebody to say this is
2:49
what's happened. This is how bad it is. We're going to see
2:51
hospitals collapsing in the next two to three weeks. And this is
2:56
to address that. And just remember one thing for the next
2:59
three weeks, the cases are already in the pipeline. The
3:02
people who are infected this morning will be the cases of
3:05
next week in the hospital a few days after that. And we'll be in
3:09
the intensive care rooms and dying after that. So even if we
3:13
did everything we could right now, we would still not turn
3:16
this thing around for literally three to four more weeks. Yeah,
3:21
it's very bleak. hospital systems will collapse in two to
3:26
three weeks. Well, that's interesting.
3:30
I have some clips.
3:31
I have an email. I have an email from your neck of the woods
3:34
about hospitals first about the system collapsing this is I have
3:40
I'm not I don't have the clip. I'm not gonna play the clip I'm
3:43
just gonna tell you about a clip I got because I don't know
3:45
particular which clip it is. But there Oh yeah, I know. I know a
3:48
clip it is uh, but they've been these hospitals are a bunch of
3:52
hospitals are closing Mm hmm. And did there's no explanation
3:57
for it. They just like go the hospitals closed. We're all
4:00
gonna die. Yeah. Yeah, play that blurry denote. Yeah,
4:05
so this is from she is, I mean, I'm trying to keep her anonymous
4:13
here. internal medicine physician who practices as a
4:16
hospitalist and she actually gave her her NPI number, we can
4:20
check her out and make sure she's legit. Anyhow, she says
4:24
I've been treating hospitalized covid patients in Los Angeles
4:27
County since all this started. And unfortunately the media is
4:31
telling the truth about hospitalizations being up, but
4:34
not the whole truth. I am seeing higher numbers of hospitalized
4:38
COVID patients than any time this year anytime this year
4:41
actually. However, I can nearly guarantee all of them will walk
4:46
out alive and okay. I cannot however say the same for my
4:50
other patients as we are quite busy with the typical heart
4:53
attacks pneumonias, drug overdoses. Hospitals nice use in
4:58
any sizable city or office. always crowded at capacity this
5:01
time of year even in Hawaii where there's no real winter.
5:05
This is a well known phenomenon between November and February
5:07
pandemic or not. That being said, from my humble
5:09
observations COVID appears to be decreasing in virulence. In
5:14
everyday language. It seems to be just as contagious as ever,
5:17
but causing much less harm.
5:19
Well, there
5:20
you go. Straight from the horse's mouth,
5:26
flat Flat death curve.
5:28
Yes. So So all of this hysteria is clearly not based on on any
5:34
reality. And here's the thing that aced on getting as much
5:38
money as you can
5:39
as late as Thursday, ABC News teaser.
5:42
Oh my goodness. It let me guess is this a full on COVID tease
5:46
tonight several developing stories as we come on the air
5:49
the CDC and what they're now urging involving Thanksgiving,
5:53
urging Americans not to travel. Just nearly 200,000 new cases
5:58
and nearly 2000 deaths reported in just the last 24 hours at the
6:02
CDC alarming new prediction about the death toll by mid
6:06
December. Authorities in New York City and across the country
6:09
taking new action in California issuing a new curfew tonight.
6:14
Ohio's governor warning hospitalizations are reaching
6:16
critical levels. Dr. Anthony Fauci at the White House podium
6:20
for the first time in months, and what he said late today, and
6:24
reporters asking where is the President on this virus. But
6:27
we're now learning about a third vaccine tonight showing promise.
6:31
Like today President Elect job by morning American lives are at
6:34
stake with the president refusing to work with him on any
6:37
transition plan for vaccine distribution, and with Mr. Biden
6:42
approaching 80 million votes in the popular vote. He was asked
6:46
about the President's continuing legal battles. Biden telling our
6:49
Mary Bruce, let me choose my words here. What he said next.
6:53
The abc news investigation tonight on the 100 hardest hit
6:57
counties in the US during this pandemic, the rural communities
7:01
where nearly everyone knows if someone lost to this 33 lives
7:05
lost in just one community. The subway back here in New York
7:09
City what we've learned tonight, and this evening, Prince William
7:12
Bell breaking his silence. investigation into that famous
7:15
interview with Princess Diana 25 years ago. Was she tricked into
7:20
doing it at what Prince William is now saying tonight?
7:25
I guarantee you the only story that people are interested in
7:28
who watched that broadcast is the Prince William story. Oh,
7:32
Lady die.
7:34
I'm sure you did. All right. Let's do a detour. Let's do a
7:39
little ABC Really? You
7:41
want to play that now? Is it long? By the way? No, it's not
7:44
long. It's actually quite short. But I will say something
7:47
geocache. Did you catch the number in the in the in the
7:49
teaser?
7:50
Did he say 80 million?
7:53
That was 80 more he's approaching both 80 and 80
7:57
million. But yeah, that was my no the number of people in that
8:02
community or died all one little community all died? No 33
8:09
somehow I missed it through the crappy Muse I'm
8:12
actually stunned. No, I'm
8:13
not nuts. This does not surprise me at all.
8:18
Can I let me give you an admission then.
8:20
All right.
8:21
I I heard the clip. I recorded the clip. I produced a clip and
8:25
I just heard the 33 this time
8:27
that's that's what happens.
8:30
Just 33 So what is it 33 Oh, that's interest. How did I miss
8:33
that over? Okay, this is the what is a minute 21
8:37
this is the this is the princess D story is in ewe. Tonight
8:43
Britain's Prince William is now breaking his silence on that new
8:46
investigation into the BBC his infamous interview with Princess
8:50
Diana in 1995. Investigation looking into claims she was
8:54
tricking doing it ABCs James Longman from London tonight.
8:58
Tonight, Prince William is breaking his silence about a new
9:01
investigation into this controversial interview with his
9:03
mother Diana,
9:04
do you think Mrs. Parker Bowles was a factor in the breakdown of
9:08
your marriage?
9:09
Well, there were three of us in this marriage,
9:12
so it was a bit crowded.
9:14
William saying he tentatively welcomed the independent
9:17
investigation into how journalist Martin Bashir
9:20
persuaded the princess to speak calling it a step in the right
9:23
direction and saying it should help establish the truth. It's a
9:27
significant move, lending wait too long held beliefs in Donna's
9:30
family that Bashir use dishonest tactics to land the interview.
9:35
Charles Spencer Diana's brother has claimed Bashir had bank
9:39
statements forged to trick Diana into thinking royal staff were
9:42
being paid for information on her and the Bashir said her car
9:45
and phones were being tracked. Bashir has yet to respond to the
9:49
claims to BBC saying he's too ill to comment after reportedly
9:53
suffering from COVID-19 and undergoing heart surgery.
9:57
The biggest he cleared of any wrongdoing In 1996, but it says
10:01
it's taking this new investigation very seriously.
10:04
All right, I mean, I almost regret that we had to listen to
10:07
that but why? Why is this happening? Why is this a story
10:11
it's everywhere I don't understand what what is what is
10:14
so incredible about it.
10:16
They're true I think this is the more of the anti Charles
10:21
because he's disciplined only coat they slipped in of her was
10:24
her bitching about bowls that woman Oh, wait, could this could
10:29
this be to get Charles out of the way because Queen mom is on
10:33
the road. He doesn't want him.
10:34
Yeah, and she's on the ropes. So this is probably a coup against
10:38
their own son.
10:39
I'm guessing that's the only possible reason for these stupid
10:43
stories are good and but Martin Bashir is also a guy who he's a
10:48
creep. I mean, this guy's The one who said he's the one who
10:51
really got the ball rolling on Michael Jackson, with a very,
10:56
very dishonest interview.
11:00
That started the whole court cases with him. That was
11:03
a lot of it. And it was a it was I watched it I thought it was I
11:07
had no feelings about Jackson one way or the other never knew
11:10
him. You did. But it was I was nobody interviewing and this was
11:14
a dishonest interview. It was it was a ambush style was a very
11:20
sketchy questions. It just very uncomfortable watching. It was
11:25
the same guy. This guy's notorious for this sort of
11:28
thing. Does
11:28
he have a new book out?
11:29
Maybe that he's in? He's in? He's in a hospital bed?
11:33
Oh, really?
11:35
I didn't know that. Anyway,
11:36
yeah, he's got COVID. And he just had heart surgeries. Done.
11:40
Okay, so dead men tell no tales. Now, let's go after Charles, get
11:44
him out of the way. So Harry can lead the New Year New World
11:47
Order, or William one of those two. All right, back to COVID. I
11:54
really don't understand. If we're being told that life can
11:58
go on with testing. So you can go and these health passes are
12:03
showing up everywhere. If you want to go to school, you have
12:06
to have a test. If you want to go to work, you have to have a
12:08
test. access to certain buildings, you have to have a
12:13
test. There's a variety of apps and every single one. So it's
12:16
just take the test and this you've got your cleared and then
12:19
you can move on. But for some reason, when it comes to
12:22
Thanksgiving, and this is a mantra I've heard over and over
12:26
again, on the M five m five M. The testing is you can't test
12:30
your way out of Thanksgiving. No, you just can't test your way
12:34
out
12:34
for tourists for folks who were still on the fence this morning.
12:37
How how dangerous is it to try to gather people together even
12:41
extended family for Thanksgiving dangerous?
12:44
extremely dangerous?
12:48
No, no, no, no, no. extremely dangerous. JOHN, it's extremely
12:52
so to gather your family for Thanksgiving is now extremely
12:57
dangerous.
12:58
extremely dangerous. You're gambling with your family's
13:01
lives. And I get it. We all want to see our family members. This
13:04
is a time of year we'd like to gather with him. I had to tell
13:06
my sister shares coming do not come over. It was one of the
13:09
saddest things I've had to do in a long time. But at the same
13:11
time, I want to make sure everybody's healthy. And I know
13:14
for most people, you know, this is we're seeing the light at the
13:16
end of the tunnel. We're hearing about the vaccine coming. You
13:19
need to take those extra measures because even though for
13:21
most people, we are seeing light at the end of the tunnel for
13:23
healthcare workers, it's deja vu, we are doing the same things
13:26
that we were doing months ago, we are seeing more people
13:29
hitting the hospitals, we're seeing these human behaviors
13:32
push people into these health health care situations where
13:35
they need this attention. And for healthcare workers is adding
13:37
stress. They have to go home to their families, they have to put
13:39
food on the table still because they have to work. It's one of
13:42
those things that just keeps on adding to itself. Right and
13:45
there's no light at the end of the tunnel for them.
13:47
Unfortunately,
13:48
you know what Dr. Torres back to thanksgiving for a second. I
13:50
think a lot of people think you know, don't you
13:52
love how she does that. It's like, Hey, I was here scaring
13:55
people about Thanksgiving. I don't want to hear about this
13:57
other crap. Let's get back to the scaring people part. Okay,
14:00
Dr. Torres Okay, let's get back to the message into it. So
14:03
Ryan,
14:03
there's no light at the end of the tunnel for them.
14:05
Unfortunately.
14:05
You know what Dr. Torres back to thanksgiving for a second. I
14:08
think a lot of people think
14:09
you know what,
14:09
I will get a cast and then I'll be fine to sit and enjoy
14:12
Thanksgiving but
14:13
there was a doctor that we just saw. Who said you cannot test
14:17
your way to a Thanksgiving Day table.
14:21
Exactly. The testimony gives you an idea of what's happening that
14:24
day you could test good on Wednesday, be positive on
14:27
Thursday for Thanksgiving You don't
14:30
know how does that work? All of a sudden all of a sudden the
14:32
test is only valid for 24 hours. This is this is I mean they just
14:38
don't want people getting together talking about what a
14:40
What a shit show it is. Hey, we
14:42
catch you know the funny you know that you mentioned that
14:46
because I can let people go to work. There's always things
14:50
going on. There's service workers, everyone works at the
14:53
grocery store. They're all there the cashiers but you don't want
14:57
to get together your family. Don't want you They someone
15:01
doesn't want you getting together with your family. And
15:03
it's got to be debt reason. Because within a family
15:06
structure, you will talk about stuff a little more frankly,
15:09
than you will with the cashier at Whole Foods. Yeah. And it's
15:15
possible that you'll be discussing things and come to
15:18
some realization of dubbing hornswoggled.
15:22
hornswoggled.
15:24
Ah,
15:24
this is a good one. I was not familiar. Do you know where that
15:29
comes from?
15:30
That's some little phrase from the from the south. I think the
15:34
point is, is that this is bullcrap. Yeah, well, they're
15:38
not playing it. And by the way, I'm surprised it wasn't in that
15:40
clip. Every clip I had that expresses the same bullcrap
15:45
tends to talk about the empty chair. Oh, yeah. You won't like
15:50
it next year than Thanksgiving when the when there's an empty
15:53
chair or granddaddy Susie Hill granny empty share meme that
15:58
Biden like to push? Yeah, the the empty chair was it can be an
16:03
empty chair.
16:04
So there's Oh, first of all, it got to suggest
16:08
a good Jewish meal is always an empty chair.
16:13
a suggestion for the Coronavirus generation is coronial. Which I
16:19
kind of like
16:21
Yeah, it sounds too much like corny.
16:24
Okay. All right. Good. 99 tonight. But while we're on the
16:29
topic of coronial, or whatever you want to call them. There's
16:34
you know how people we already identified the stay safe meme,
16:38
which Well, we know if we know what you reply to it when
16:42
someone tells you to stay safe. But a producer j says there's a
16:47
follow up now. And he says the recent discussions over the use
16:52
of the phrase stay safe it forced me to write you about the
16:55
new phrase going around I find personally disturbing. It too is
16:59
usually reserved for saying goodbye to someone. I noticed
17:02
that people started saying it about one year ago, my coworker
17:04
said it to me and immediately grabbed my attention. She's kind
17:08
of she is kind of one of those people who start saying the
17:10
latest slang words or terms that usually only stay within a small
17:14
group. So I didn't think of anything of it. But then with
17:17
only a short few months, I started having other people I
17:19
know say it to me. And I would overhear others saying to other
17:23
people. Are you ready? The phrase is,
17:28
I love you.
17:30
Or sometimes love you to make it more casual. I have noticed this
17:36
I have noticed this as well. Can I interest you? love I love you.
17:44
Hey, john, Love you. Love you Love you Love you, man. I mean
17:46
it.
17:48
Oh, be on the lookout for West Coast. They say that all the
17:50
time?
17:52
What am I thinking? Of course, everything's always like that.
17:55
Tough times ahead, though, for the show, I fear as we start to
17:59
explain more about the magical vaccines that are coming, which
18:04
are quite magical, because we've never done it this way before.
18:06
And there's no there's all kinds of
18:11
i would i was reading about the number of explanations of how
18:16
this vaccine works. And they all seem to be the same these are
18:21
mRNA mm, Mr. Ma the duck scenes and I can I have a slight
18:28
explanation that I might be able to express and you can tell me
18:32
Okay, how you feel you might be okay, this vaccine is not a
18:37
vaccine by any means. It's a it's a it's a it's a protein
18:43
that you inject into the body and it triggers the production
18:47
in this case of those spikes that you have on these
18:53
coronaviruses which by the way should include a cold this virus
18:56
this vaccine if it actually works, you should never get a
18:59
cold again seems to me and what it does is it produces the
19:04
convinces to buy or your system your immune system to produce a
19:08
bunch of these just random spikes the spikes that are on
19:11
the Coronavirus, despite, this is my rundown job and I would
19:16
like to hear from somebody do to explain why I'm wrong on this.
19:22
The body then produces this RNA. This mRNA vaccine makes the body
19:27
produce a bunch of these little meaningless spikes are just the
19:30
same spiked as on the Coronavirus and then inundate
19:34
the system. So there's a ton load of these spikes and these
19:38
spikes keep latching onto the various sensors that there's you
19:42
know, the receptors, and then they either spit them off or
19:47
they just get stuck on there or whatever, but it doesn't do
19:49
anything that's injected a viral load it the whole load into the
19:54
cell to make it produce more viruses. It just becomes a
19:58
nuisance in the body. So itself self. These things are our
20:03
pasts. Let's just junk, let's, let's get rid of them. And in
20:09
the process of getting rid of these spikes to get rid of
20:12
everything that has a spike on it, including the virus. So they
20:16
just rid themselves of any spike related a body that's in the
20:21
system. And that's how the whole thing works. And that should
20:24
mean that all coronaviruses should be exude by this
20:28
particular vaccine. Now,
20:32
this sounds like Space Age technology. Sounds like some
20:38
way I want
20:38
to hear what people think of that explanation.
20:41
I think you're pretty spot on that's I've heard it explained.
20:44
And yeah, I've never heard the spike analogy. But yes, it is it
20:48
trains. When you say the body, what I understand is it trains
20:52
your body's DNA to create the spikes and then not want them.
21:00
It's,
21:01
I think that there's an element of that something creates the
21:05
spikes, and then not doesn't want them because they're
21:08
nuisance nuisance, it becomes a nuisance spike.
21:13
I am certainly not planning on taking this vaccine. I don't
21:18
take the flu vaccine either. But this is going to be a problem
21:23
because those words that I just uttered are going to be a very
21:26
big issue coming soon to a podcast police force near you.
21:32
Dr. Fauci explains the truth and untruth of the vaccine. And the
21:39
first one, of course, is that it can't be safe because it's been
21:43
forced through by Trump, and it's just no good. One has to
21:47
look
21:47
at what are the reasons people don't want to get vaccinated? Is
21:50
this really safe? It's so quick, what do you mean, it's so fast,
21:54
you told me five years ago that it takes years to get a vaccine.
21:58
And now you're telling me you have a safe and efficacious
22:01
vaccine within less than a year was this is actually quite
22:05
interesting. And
22:06
not only just had that conversation with your
22:07
explanation, he's making a big deal about the speed of which it
22:13
was manufactured. But I don't think he says very much about
22:16
how different it really is, or the some of that's in here, but
22:19
not to the degree you gave us going on here.
22:21
So what we need to do, is in a very clear, understandable way,
22:27
explain and I try to do this as often as I possibly can, to the
22:33
general public, that the speed itself is a reflection of
22:39
scientific advances, taking a bias that you don't even have to
22:43
grow up with purified. You just need the genetic sequence, you
22:47
pull the gene out, you stick it into a vaccine platform. And
22:51
literally within days, you're making a vaccine. Wow, already.
22:54
You see.
22:56
This is this is some platform. Yeah, it
22:59
was there. Let me just stop you with your questions and answers.
23:03
And then one of the reporters says, Oh, that's interesting.
23:06
How come? We don't do the same thing with AIDS?
23:10
Yeah,
23:10
I don't think there was any questions. This is hair. Fauci.
23:15
Man, you don't ask questions, you follow the scripts on. And
23:18
literally, within
23:19
days, you're making a vaccine, already, you saved maybe a year
23:24
there, then you get that technology, and you quickly
23:28
develop it because that technology isn't the kind that
23:32
requires growing of the virus. You say
23:36
he uses the term technology in two different ways. He's got the
23:40
technology platform, and now he says it, but you wouldn't let me
23:44
see what he said,
23:45
Well, gee, and you quickly
23:46
develop it because you develop the technology. I mean, I don't
23:50
quite understand
23:51
that technology isn't the kind that requires growing of the
23:56
virus, you say, another multiple months, now you're in a phase
24:01
one trial. So that's speed, people hear speed? And they say,
24:06
wow, that's compromising safety. Has nothing to do with safety
24:10
yet, because you haven't even played it. That's true. Yeah,
24:13
that's right. The other aspects of the speed is that the federal
24:17
government has invested billions of dollars at risk and the risk
24:22
is not to the person, the risk is to the money, because what
24:27
they've done is they started producing doses of vaccine
24:32
before you even know what works and this,
24:35
I thought that this was what they were doing. But now that we
24:38
have the announcement from Pfizer, and bio and tech and
24:41
Madonna. Now, now I hear the CEO saying, Oh, yes, we're producing
24:47
the vaccine now. Well, what happened to I mean, a billion
24:50
dollars, I presume that's like 100 million vials, you've got
24:54
good to go. But now, all they're saying is all I have 20 million
24:57
by the end of December. So I Don't understand where the money
25:01
will buy Dude, I do understand where the money went, actually.
25:04
So that if the vaccine works, which by the way it does, it
25:09
does save the months and months. If it doesn't work, which is not
25:14
an issue now, then you've lost a billion dollars.
25:18
Okay, stand by john, here comes the message to you and me.
25:21
So the government felt that the risk of the benefit of getting
25:27
get quickly is worth the risk to the money now. So that's what
25:32
girls playing this one has nothing to do with compromising
25:36
safety without compromising scientific integrity. We've got
25:40
to keep hammering that home because for the group of people
25:44
who are concerned about the process, the process is sound.
25:49
However, there's another group of people who don't even believe
25:54
that this is a phenomenon. They think it's fake news. That's
25:58
where I have a big difficulty and how I'm going to get to that
26:01
group of people. They
26:03
actually don't think that this is a problem, despite a quarter
26:06
million deaths, despite more than 11 million infections,
26:11
despite 150,000 new infections a day. They don't believe it's
26:15
real. That is a real problem. They're coming to take
26:19
us away hee hee, ha ha ha Oh, to the funny farm. Oh, yeah. That's
26:24
him signaling that you better get in line. You just can't you
26:30
just can't be talking like that. Ah. So,
26:36
you know, the funny thing is about the Pfizer vaccine. It's
26:39
actually Chinese. Yes, I
26:42
know. Yeah, there's
26:43
a third company they never talked about.
26:45
They hold I think they even have the patent is it's crazy. The
26:50
whole thing is nuts.
26:52
The Chinese version of the thing is the one that's actually made
26:55
by that company who it's not I can't remember the name. I'm
26:58
looking for it right now. Somebody in the chat room should
27:00
have it. Today already testing in Brazil.
27:04
Did you see the German doctor who was live streaming on
27:06
YouTube?
27:08
Yes, a guy got busted by the bullets a Yeah,
27:11
this this audio is I got like 40 seconds of it. So the guys live
27:14
streaming has a whiteboard like a flip board and he's drawing
27:19
stuff. I'm sure he's saying the Coronavirus is false. This isn't
27:23
hoax. Yeah. And here is
27:27
the vocalist Kate. Yeah.
27:38
They're banging the door in the police.
27:40
Just like Chicago PD.
27:43
But listen to how the cops freak out when they get in there.
27:46
Fine. You could take that that's the soundtrack from Schindler's
27:59
List baby.
28:01
Get on the ground. Yeah, you have the old our old clip where
28:05
you got arrested at one time with a knocking on the door and
28:08
just stopping in.
28:10
I have one I have one for you. And I have one for me. I think
28:15
this is a that's exactly the same. Oh, there they are your
28:23
door Mr. De Boer and good times. JOHN. Remember those days they
28:32
came knocking on our door trying to kick it all down.
28:35
Now they're not getting that poured. So the guys are real
28:37
doctor giving his explanations. He's which we've had plenty of
28:40
this. Like, here in the United States. They don't do that. They
28:43
just take them off of YouTube and they're done.
28:46
Not here. We take him off. Now. The story now is that they were
28:49
looking for somebody else. It was the wrong house.
28:52
I knew there was gonna be alright. Here's what I thought
28:56
after the thing because it was it was live stream. So these
28:59
police now embarrassed. So I figured it was gonna be one of
29:02
two things. It was just a mistake. Yeah. Or that somebody
29:05
had called in to do one of those pranks, you know, or you say
29:09
there's errors. Yes,
29:11
it looks. I thought that too when I first saw it. But then
29:14
the second or third cop I signed. I think this is real.
29:17
The first guy's like, this has got to be a joke that's just
29:20
acting or something. But I think it was real.
29:25
Yeah. They'll come to the New World Order. Exactly.
29:32
We have a study from the memory and ageing center of global
29:38
brain Health Institute at us, UCSF which claims that
29:45
conspiracy theorists who refuse to wear masks and embrace
29:48
lockdowns are the victims of their own scientific illiteracy,
29:52
which is fundamentally which has fundamentally damaged their
29:56
brains to such an extent they cannot understand the science of
29:59
code. COVID-19 This is a neurologist Bruce Miller from
30:03
University of California, San Francisco, he published a paper
30:06
about this in the Journal of American medalist Medical
30:08
Association. So, and that is anti mass behavior and anti
30:13
vaccine beliefs. These are denial of science, and it is a
30:18
brain damage.
30:21
Oh, is it Blitz got to be in a DMS or whatever that thing's
30:24
called the
30:24
DSM, DSM four or five, SM
30:27
four, it's got to be in there.
30:28
It will be Don't worry, it will be your disability insurance?
30:35
Oh, my goodness, hadn't considered that. That'd be like
30:38
pre existing conditions. And orange man won't let you have
30:41
any health insurance. By the way. That's health insurance. I
30:44
love so much those startups from California that decent is their
30:48
name. They get kicked out of Texas, they can't they can't
30:52
insure independent workers anymore. Boy.
31:00
Why?
31:01
I probably some, well, they have a long story. But it's it's
31:06
regulation. I'm sure it's, you know, some probably Texas blue,
31:10
blue cross or whatever, lobbying them out of existence. So now we
31:14
got to go find, you know, go go to the to the, to the market
31:18
place. And you know, what happens? You're screwed when you
31:22
go to the marketplace, then you you get calls and text messages
31:26
for the following eight months? Oh, why don't you want health
31:30
insurance, even though you get health and they just it's just
31:33
it's a marketing service. Thanks, Obama. And they just
31:37
sell your name to everybody. It's disgusting. So you got to
31:39
go through that crap again. Anyway, moving on with our COVID
31:44
coverage, which as you know, is above all else. We have the
31:51
incoming president, the President, the Office of the
31:55
President Elect Joe Biden, doing some some version of a of a
32:02
press conference about the COVID-19 and what he's going to
32:05
do and, and unbelievable how lame the journalists are. They
32:11
have no follow ups. They're effective. Here's your meesh.
32:16
Now your Miche we first caught on to her working at PBS and now
32:22
she's branched out she does side gigs for msnbc. She has a book.
32:28
she's a she's the perfect multicultural mix the news
32:31
business likes, and for her to ask a question of the office of
32:37
the president elect. She got all all giddy and all girly and all
32:41
giggly and Oh, yeah. And and I don't even know what Joe
32:46
answered.
32:46
Thank you, Mr. Vice President Elect and vice
32:52
president elect and vice president elect, here's
32:56
a question for you first,
32:57
which is what do you make of the fact that the President is
33:01
having these calls with Michigan county officials, amid his bid
33:07
to overturn the election? He's going to be having also Michigan
33:10
Republican legislators at the White House, tomorrow's anything
33:13
that he's doing, making you rethink your strategy? I know
33:16
you say that you don't want to have legal action right now. And
33:20
what do you say to Americans, especially
33:21
immigrant Americans, it
33:22
was interesting that this was about the COVID that came
33:26
to the United States, looking for political stability and
33:28
seeing all the things that the President is doing.
33:33
My way, it's not a joke.
33:39
Oh, when he says, hang on, I'm on my way. That's his version of
33:44
a superhero. Like hold my beer. I'm coming to save y'all. That's
33:48
what he says. That's his answer,
33:50
stability and seeing all the things that the President is
33:52
doing.
33:55
My way, that's what I say is not a joke.
33:59
What the President's doing now is,
34:02
is really,
34:03
I left all the silences in because it's too interesting.
34:08
To
34:11
me another incident where he will go down in history as being
34:17
one of the most irresponsible presidents in American history.
34:20
It's just out of the not even within the norm at all.
34:26
I think he's his, his memory IO is buffering or something. It's
34:30
taken a long time for the for to go through the system. There's
34:34
questions whether your next
34:35
residence Yes, ladies and gentlemen. It's gonna be
34:38
interesting, who shows up?
34:42
To me with the leadership, not so we have more guests from Joe
34:45
later on. Then from the opposing side, no surprise, this comes
34:51
from Republicans, the governor of South Dakota, Kristi, noem,
34:55
she did a little speech about the cases in
35:01
In her state, there are many states that do have mass
35:05
mandates in place. And some that do not. But I look at their rate
35:10
of spread. And the fact is, is that cases are increasing. And
35:14
many of those states as well, if you look at Wisconsin, they've
35:16
had a mass mandate since August. And they have a higher rate of
35:20
spread than the state of South Dakota, you look at Montana,
35:23
they've had a massive mandate in place since July, both of those
35:27
states have higher rates of spread than the state of South
35:30
Dakota. When you look at Wyoming, it has the fastest
35:33
spread in the nation. And that is the concern that I have as
35:37
many times I don't want to approach a policy or a mandate,
35:42
just looking to make people feel good. I want to do good and
35:46
actually put forward provisions that make a difference for
35:49
families. And these local communities have some
35:52
flexibility today that Sioux Falls can make a different
35:55
decision than Rapid City Rapid City can make a different
35:58
decision then lemon South Dakota Watertown can make a different
36:01
decision than pure. And and that's what some of these local
36:04
leaders are doing in reacting to the people in the community
36:07
based on what they want.
36:09
And that is your civics lesson for today. That is how the
36:13
United States is supposed to work. All these little pieces
36:18
can be can be looked at individually at a local level,
36:23
and they can decide what they want to do. It's coming to a
36:25
head. I mean, there's, there's people protesting in all kinds
36:29
of states,
36:30
I would recommend people look at the three charts out of about
36:33
six that I put in the last newsletter showing that the mask
36:38
mandate looks like it created the latest surge. Yeah.
36:43
It's very possible. Not that it matters not that you could
36:48
convince anybody of that anymore. But the the idea of not
36:55
letting yourself being locked down is is spreading and it's
36:59
even California. Now. This is one of the how many republican
37:04
representatives are there the House of Representatives
37:08
into hot corners?
37:10
Yeah, in California. This is McClintock
37:13
I mean, Republicans are in California that report. I'm
37:15
happy Republican Representative from California in the house.
37:18
Yeah, just one. It made me cry. Well,
37:23
he did a little spiel on the on the House floor, and he
37:27
commended your governor of California, his governor of
37:31
California for his brave action at the French Laundry
37:34
restaurant.
37:35
Mr. Speaker, I rise this morning in defense of Governor Gavin
37:39
Newsom, who recently defied his own idiotic COVID edicts, as a
37:43
part of one of the few restaurants has not yet been
37:46
forced out of business. I defend him because he was doing what we
37:51
once all did in a free society, make our own decisions over what
37:56
risks we're willing to run, and what precautions we're willing
37:59
to take according to our own circumstances, to protect our
38:03
own health. Yes, COVID is a nasty bug and a quarter of a
38:07
million Americans have died while having it. But this isn't
38:11
the robotic plague. The CDC is best estimate is that if you're
38:16
under 49, your chance for surviving COVID if you get it is
38:20
99.92%. Even if you're over 70, you have a 94.6% rate of
38:29
recovery. 40% get it don't even know they have it. yet we've
38:35
allowed our officials to ruin our quality of life over it,
38:38
destroying countless businesses, throwing 10s of millions into
38:42
unemployment, robbing our children of their educations,
38:46
and shredding our most cherished rights as Americans. Governor
38:50
Newsom's night of partying should be a wake up call for
38:54
every American. Every time we step outside our homes, the
38:59
risks that we face multiply. A free society assumes that its
39:04
citizens are competent to assess those risks, balance them
39:08
against the avoidance costs, and to manage their decisions in a
39:12
generally responsible way. It's called common sense. And it's a
39:18
necessary prerequisite for self government and liberty.
39:22
Anyone on and on and on. No one will ever hear that. It won't
39:25
ever be. Oh, of
39:25
course not. But
39:28
yeah, but it's good. Yes.
39:31
I have a cup. There's a couple of details about the new
39:35
something.
39:36
Oh, new details. New shit has come to light
39:38
apparently. Yeah, of course. I was listening to this one of
39:41
these. scaremongers go on and on about you shouldn't breathe.
39:46
Hold your breath. If you talk. No,
39:49
no, that's a clip. You don't you don't have
39:52
that on the clip. It was on the radio and they said And whatever
39:56
you do, don't talk loud because that sends more viruses out.
39:59
Yes, of course. They're going on apparently this has been
40:01
floating around this this idea that you don't want to be
40:04
raucous because being Raka so you spread the virus Yeah. At an
40:08
ad to dinner though they sang Happy Birthday didn't they? Know
40:12
is worse than that they were just yucking it up. It was a
40:15
bunch of well, you know, a bunch of buddies. Yeah. And there is
40:18
like a bunch of it's like a bunch of those, you know,
40:21
drunken bank VPS that show up every once in a while at some
40:24
big giant table they ruined everybody's lunch got all their
40:29
yucking it up.
40:30
That's why they had a private
40:31
room there. Apparently, we're making such a racket and said
40:35
making such a scene that they started to these people started
40:37
filming them had to close them in a room, which was again
40:43
illegal, but it is anyway has to keep the quietness out, by the
40:47
way, talking about rockets, you know, secretarial pools that did
40:51
lunch, buco to beppo in San Francisco is shuttered for good.
40:56
buco to beppo. Yeah. buco to beppo.
40:59
Have I been there with you?
41:01
No, I would never go there. Oh, go to bat boys. I thought you
41:04
might know this. But no, I don't beppo in San Francisco, you're
41:07
there long enough. It was it was these spot for those Secretary
41:12
gatherings where they get a big table and they did just kind of
41:17
the I wouldn't call it a horrible food because you could
41:21
actually choke it down. But it was this kind of party. It was a
41:25
party place for lunches, luncheons, and drunken
41:28
secretaries are great
41:30
for that. And you're like, I'm sure you were there long enough.
41:33
Curry. I'm surprised you didn't hang out with the drunken
41:35
secretaries at BU bucko whatever.
41:39
Well, that's kind of what I implied but not in that way.
41:44
Oh, no. Okay, so it's
41:47
mostly when you get new at any of this if you're working in the
41:50
city in any office environment. Every so often it comes up in
41:53
the conversation. Let's all go to buco to bed. Oh
41:56
gosh. Yeah.
41:57
I thought you knew it. Sorry.
41:59
No, um, there is this stigma that we brought up on the last
42:04
episode of the show about getting COVID particularly
42:07
amongst people who probably watch msnbc a lot and CNN and,
42:12
and and they are apparently embarrassed. And it's a stigma
42:17
it really is a stigma. People will whisper behind your back
42:20
apparently like
42:23
this, but
42:24
Oh, okay. Let's
42:25
listen. You brought it up in the last show I mentioned in the
42:27
newsletter. Yes, I'm called COVID shame.
42:31
Here's an example. Stephen King, the author on Twitter. He
42:37
writes, Rick Scott, another Republican, big shot with COVID.
42:41
It proves yet again that for many people coronavirus isn't a
42:45
disease, but a symptom. The root cause being stupidity.
42:54
Stephen King's off the rails.
42:55
Yeah, but he I think he does represent a segment of the
43:00
population who thinks that way?
43:02
Well, apparently mostly Democrats.
43:04
Okay. So what you got? Well, let's
43:07
you brought this COVID shame thing up and you kind of stunned
43:10
by it. last show. So I had one of our producers wives gives a
43:15
seminar. She's a psychologist or psychiatrist, one of the two.
43:18
And this is the Cova shame explained is a short clip from
43:22
the beginning of a 27 minute lecture.
43:24
Hey there, everybody, and welcome to this presentation on
43:27
COVID shame. I'm your host, Dr. Donnelly. Snipes. So you may be
43:32
asking what is COVID? Shame? Well, it is shame that people
43:38
experience when they actually get COVID. They feel
43:42
embarrassed, they feel ashamed. And let's talk about where
43:45
that's coming from and what people can do. Yeah, let's start
43:48
with the basics. Shame is angry at yourself for doing something
43:52
you shouldn't have, or failing to do something you should have.
43:56
You know, we all feel guilt and shame occasionally. And
44:00
sometimes it's justified because we actually did do something
44:03
that we shouldn't have done. And sometimes it's not justified. We
44:07
are projecting what other people tell us we should do or should
44:11
think or should feel.
44:13
Jeez, it goes on. Uh, okay. Kind of like in an introduction.
44:19
Meanwhile, we have an example of two examples, two clips from
44:22
Chris Clemens, who is a YouTube star with a million subscribers.
44:28
Yeah. And he's kind of classic. He's a he was a he's just
44:32
outside of the Gen Z as a young millennial. Jade listens to him.
44:38
Yeah, he's very affected. And he's got Corona affected. Sorry,
44:44
affected. He got Corona and I want to play two clips from this
44:49
guy moaning about it. And I saw everyone she says you got to see
44:52
this, because she knows but she does the show. Yeah. And I said,
44:56
this guy's full of crap. This is bull crap. He just Yeah, he does
45:01
no way and he's the subset. And no, she says she's listened to
45:05
this guy, or watched his videos is amusing. I guess he's an
45:09
PewDiePie kind of way amusing. And she says no, he's dead
45:14
serious. There's no way he's faking this at all. And this is
45:17
the two clips I gotta get Chris Clemons gets Corona. This is the
45:20
way he opens his pot. His latest video with everybody
45:27
he should have started with Hey guys, that's he's not a he's not
45:30
a he's a fake tuber. Fake tuber you got to start with Hey, guys.
45:34
Hey, guys. Wait, let's do that together. Hey, guys. Wait, Okay,
45:40
wait, I can't wait. Ready? Yep. Okay, guys gotta count it in
45:45
otherwise, okay. 12321
45:48
Okay, guys.
45:54
This is a video I
45:56
have to say. Remember to like and subscribe down below.
45:59
literally never thought I have to film and I don't even want to
46:03
buy. I don't know what's ahead. And if I suddenly stopped
46:09
posting, I don't want people being like, what the fuck?
46:12
But as you can tell by the title, I tested positive for
46:16
Corona. virus.
46:23
Wow. crying.
46:26
Yeah, it's great. Now you want to mention something? You have
46:30
to know this part of it. He has absolutely no symptoms
46:35
whatsoever. No cough no cold, no fever.
46:39
So we just tested positive. They tested positive. Why did he get
46:42
a test? Do we know?
46:44
Yes. Because he had to do a video with somebody he insisted
46:47
they do a test and he do a test before they even get in the same
46:50
room.
46:50
And he's and he's tearing up.
46:53
So he's she's in tears. And that's when he did that little
46:56
whooping sound? Yeah.
46:57
No, believe me. I'm rewinding to that. That was I got it though.
47:02
Who?
47:02
Oh, I so.
47:04
Oh my goodness. This could be a winner. Let's check it out here.
47:07
Oh.
47:12
Like Little Richard he needs to be jammed up. Yeah.
47:19
I feel embarrassed.
47:20
I feel angry.
47:25
I got tested tonight because I was going to film with somebody
47:30
who I hope will still want to film with me in the future. And
47:36
so because of that I obviously anybody I see I make sure we get
47:42
tested. The very few people do see and have seen the reason I
47:47
got tested was because I was going to film a video with
47:50
somebody today that is I was like the only video I was like
47:55
been looking forward to filming in the last four months I feel
47:59
and I was super excited and because we were filming together
48:02
and we both quarantine I asked them about get tested and
48:06
because it was for a video I found that I have literal
48:10
footage of me getting tested positive twice with Corona.
48:14
What kind of Chinese torture sorcery has been emitted upon
48:18
these poor human resources?
48:20
They'll listen to no agenda. He filmed himself being tested in
48:27
his in the car and they test them they come back with the
48:29
positive results and then he says I gotta be tested again.
48:32
He's paying 125 bucks a pop. Ah, this is the instant test Yeah,
48:37
and and so he pays another hundred 25 to get tested again
48:40
it gets tested is still positive. So now the second half
48:44
of the clip is him driving home after another get into into a
48:49
wreck driving home he's got the camera in the car is is one of
48:51
those youtubers with the camera in the car. Yeah. Yeah. So he's
48:54
driving home and I just thought to do this. And he's a wreck.
49:02
Man.
49:04
I'm getting another test just to make sure because false
49:07
positives are a thing. Oh, yeah. so unfair. unfair. took another
49:14
desert.
49:15
back positive.
49:24
Is unconsolable
49:26
so I'm sad.
49:35
Doesn't feel fair at all.
49:37
I feel literally fine.
49:39
It checks for fever. I don't have a fever. I'm just angry and
49:51
I feel embarrassed and stupid and
49:56
angry.
49:58
I'm just so angry. Doesn't feel fair. I don't go anywhere I
50:02
don't like see anyone without getting Dustin first and then
50:05
getting Dustin.
50:07
Whoa. Oh my god, ladies and gentlemen, we have others in
50:12
this category we have Van Jones with his crying which we felt
50:16
was the most easy up until this point, but are dramatic. I don't
50:21
know. I think it might go to the YouTuber.
50:28
This is tubers. Well this is only up there
50:31
I feel I mean on on one hand I'm very happy about this clip
50:36
because this is the self The show is made up. But this is a
50:42
psychosis.
50:44
And Ron
50:45
Well, one of our producers who was this producer Paul wrote and
50:51
he says he's got a theory, I was a member of a Facebook group for
50:54
COVID support in my county. The initial purpose was to repost
50:58
news provide information on local testing in the area and
51:01
post store inventory on toilet paper and disinfectant wipes.
51:06
Clearly an important group to be a member of soon afterward, a
51:09
small group of people took over the group. Now I hate to use the
51:12
term karens it was more like the group of mean cheerleaders from
51:16
high school. The acceptable comments for every story were
51:20
the usual thoughts and prayers. And why are people going out?
51:25
Why aren't people why are people wearing a mask? Oh, why are
51:28
people so stupid? If you had a comment that was against the
51:32
group think and administrator would delete your comment and
51:35
call you out to justify it or just outright ban you from the
51:38
group. This even included the emoji responses thumbs up like
51:43
no longer meant you approve the comment or story you had to make
51:46
sure the thumbs up for good news and sad emoji for bad news. I
51:51
saw one member use the laughing emoji get called out to justify
51:54
or change your response and only to go on to write an apology
51:58
post to the administrator in order to stay in the group. I
52:02
think that people that are feeling bad are the ones who are
52:04
doing the name calling the Why are people so stupid group after
52:08
months of preaching to others they get thrown into the stupid
52:11
group and ashamed into feeling that way. That Yeah, but I like
52:15
our producers wife's little seminar their little webinar.
52:21
Makes sense that you you were being told what to do hair Fauci
52:27
is telling you what to do. And you must have done it wrong. You
52:30
must have slipped up somewhere. You must have touched your nose
52:33
at one point with a mask also slipped down. You didn't follow
52:37
the rules you didn't obey.
52:39
This is what this Chris Clemons said in one place as I feel so
52:43
stupid stupid, right? Yeah. How do you feel stupid for catching
52:48
a virus an airborne virus? Well,
52:52
that's what people have been taught. This is very, very, very
52:56
and so when I say that they're coming for your pets. And now of
53:00
course we have the story that cat cats are probably spreading
53:03
COVID-19 as they can be so scanned it can be asymptomatic
53:08
carriers of SARS, people I guarantee you we will see
53:13
stories of pet shelters filling up with abandoned pets by these
53:18
very same people who are afraid that having a pet is going to
53:23
make them look embarrass them by catching COVID
53:28
it's coming
53:31
to me my
53:32
god man. What am I reading here? football players from the
53:36
University of Pittsburgh in Virginia Tech will have to wear
53:39
masks while playing on while playing. What are we doing?
53:50
That is dumb gay I mean those get kids are gonna pass out.
53:54
Yeah. Well, this has gotten to the point
54:02
where my clips Yeah, you got some COVID lunacy we're loving
54:05
it. Yes, I'm
54:06
caught called clips. Let's play this one. This is a call. This
54:09
is a Chicago cancels Thanksgiving.
54:13
at Chicago Chicago's Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison
54:16
on watty urged city residents to put off Thanksgiving holiday
54:20
plans warning as many as 180,000 residents are currently
54:26
infectious.
54:27
As many as one in 15 Chicagoans has active COVID-19 right now.
54:37
The risk of gathering is significant. Here in New York
54:42
Mayor Bill de Blasio has canceled in person classes for
54:46
the city's public school system largest in the country. Even as
54:51
bars, restaurants and gyms remain or limited service.
54:56
They are pushing this too far. I don't care what country And we
55:00
just happen to be the country with the guns but you're pushing
55:02
it too far. People are going to snap and they believe what they
55:08
believe this you can you can tell them anything now and they
55:13
Oh better follow the rules.
55:15
Well yeah, let's go to the beginning of this a Amy's
55:18
report. I ended up having to watch democracy now.
55:21
Yeah I
55:22
got you.
55:22
I really felt that bilim advance is gonna give me COVID is
55:25
watching that show. Amy push here's the original. She starts
55:30
the show with Amy put pushes fear
55:34
on the COVID
55:35
Iris rageous out of control right out of control coast in
55:40
the United States with 172,000 infections and near okay.
55:46
She's doing my my pet peeve to say testing positive in cases.
55:53
All right. You got that but to say people are infectious that
55:58
is that is apt is just not true. Is the test does not show your
56:02
infectivity. She has no idea what she's talking about. But
56:05
yet let's just call these people infected.
56:08
there instead diseased 1000 infections and nearly 2000
56:13
deaths reported on Wednesday alone. Us hospitalizations
56:17
continue to shatter records now with over 73,000 COVID-19
56:23
patients hold
56:24
on what's what what what records have been shattered?
56:28
Some records some records been shattered, shattered,
56:32
broken teeth and the average daily death toll rising in 33
56:37
states. Columbia University epidemiologists estimate more
56:42
than 3 million people across the US are currently contagious with
56:47
coronavirus, nearly 1% of the population.
56:52
I mean, isn't this just the signal we've heard it now in two
56:57
reports this 33 states? Isn't that exactly how it started the
57:01
last time 3333 it was 33 everywhere.
57:07
I mean, come on.
57:13
Lay the last clip up for this is her talking about Biden in a
57:16
nurse complaining. Oh,
57:19
I got it in the Midwest. Over 900 employees at the Mayo Clinic
57:24
hospital system have contracted covid 19. In just the last two
57:28
weeks. The infections led to a labor shortage at the Mayo
57:32
Clinic campus and Rochester Minnesota where Intensive Care
57:35
Unit beds are filled to capacity and over 1000 health care
57:39
workers are off the job due to covid 19 exposure or diagnosis.
57:45
stat news reports hospitals in at least 25 states are
57:49
critically short of nurses, doctors and other staff and a
57:52
conference call with President Elect Joe Biden Wednesday,
57:56
Minnesota Nurses Association President Mary Kerner describe
58:00
the toll the outbreak is having on frontline health care
58:04
workers.
58:04
The physical impacts of this virus have been devastating.
58:08
I myself, have held the hand of dying patients
58:13
cried over their family that they can't see.
58:18
I've taken care of co workers as they fight for their lives on
58:21
ventilator. As the head of the Minnesota Nurses Association
58:26
broke down President Elect Biden also wiped away a tear,
58:30
promising personal protective equipment and paying sick leave
58:34
for frontline workers. He said the Trump administration's
58:38
refusal to acknowledge the outcome of the election was
58:41
preventing his transition team from accessing critical data
58:45
about us outbreak and could slow the distribution of vaccines in
58:49
2001.
58:50
There's a whole lot of things that are just we just don't have
58:53
available to us. Once the machine is made available soon
58:56
we're gonna be behind by weeks or months being able to put
59:01
together the whole
59:04
the whole the whole. Whatever he says the word whole all I can
59:08
think is load. Yeah. And
59:13
yeah, origin of the virus. Now Apparently, the official story
59:18
is in question once again, as very analogous to the climate
59:22
gate scandal, which you'll recall was a bunch of emails
59:26
that showed that researchers were changing in values and
59:31
jacking up numbers
59:32
jacking up the numbers. So this
59:35
is Flinders University Professor Nikolai petrowski, who has
59:40
reviewed these, these emails about the gain of function and
59:46
the Wu Han lab. And I believe someone published this in The
59:51
Lancet in a letter. And I'm not exactly sure maybe we'll get
59:56
more information from the clip but he has reviewed this and
59:59
seems like The wet market that story is falling apart to
1:00:03
science is all about truth and transparency. And unfortunately,
1:00:08
we don't see any of that reflected in these emails.
1:00:14
Here we have a situation with a serious pandemic, in fact, who
1:00:18
at that time were refusing to call for the pandemic. And we
1:00:24
have a group of scientists based at a particular Institute who in
1:00:29
fact, you know, implicated at least in very similar gain of
1:00:33
function research to what may have created a virus like this
1:00:38
seeking to really I guess, unfortunately, deceive the
1:00:42
readers of these journals that this is a letter that's not come
1:00:48
from an individual or a single Institute, but the emails
1:00:51
clearly indicate the desire to cover that up inside this is
1:00:55
coming from just a group of of scientists from around the world
1:01:00
when that was not in fact the case so so on scientific
1:01:03
principles, you know, it really doesn't stand up.
1:01:07
I mean, I hope one day we get to the bottom we discussed this
1:01:11
on the show in great months
1:01:13
yes months months
1:01:14
and months ago including the what I discovered to be the chi
1:01:18
Mira genesis of that No, it didn't come from a lab which was
1:01:21
a letter to the editor in one one of nature's What was your
1:01:25
nature and nature medicine are one of those I haven't
1:01:27
documented, but I should write it up. I don't know why I
1:01:30
haven't. But this is bullcrap. This it's obviously this is lab
1:01:34
created, and it was ended the differential Nobel Prize winning
1:01:39
medicine guys said this right at the outset.
1:01:45
Please welcome Nobel Prize medicine guy,
1:01:49
Nobel Prize medicine guy. Now I do have one funny clip. Okay.
1:01:55
This is Democracy. This is the lawsuit is the titles lawsuit.
1:02:00
Now there's a bit of humor in here. It's like gallows humor or
1:02:05
the kind of thing that if you ever actually worked in a
1:02:08
factory floor than anything that
1:02:11
can kill you.
1:02:12
What working class people do. just just just brings it out,
1:02:20
but she brings up in a typical, arrogant, disgusting way as
1:02:25
these people but you'll hear it and then at the end, we can talk
1:02:28
about it for a second
1:02:29
in Waterloo, Iowa. a wrongful death lawsuit accuses Tyson
1:02:33
Foods of willful and wanton disregard for workplace safety
1:02:37
at a pork slaughterhouse that led to over 1000 workplace
1:02:41
infections and at least five deaths. The family of meatpacker
1:02:45
sido Fernandez, who died of covid 19 April 20 alleges in an
1:02:50
amended lawsuit that quote, plant manager Tom Hart organized
1:02:54
a cash buying winter caecal bedding pool for supervisors and
1:02:59
managers to wager how many plant employees with test pass for
1:03:05
COVID-19 Well, of
1:03:07
course we have that going on. Hello
1:03:12
apprehensible
1:03:14
Oh my goodness. I'm sure they talk real pretty they're on the
1:03:18
floor of democracy now.
1:03:21
So these guys at this at this this supervisor supervisors
1:03:25
doesn't mean it if she makes it sound like God, you know,
1:03:29
corporate shareholders or something we're talking about
1:03:31
here the foreman Yeah. The guy it's a game move faster over
1:03:36
there. You're slowing down the line. is a super high end
1:03:42
supervisors the way she puts it, of course, they would put
1:03:45
together a Deadpool.
1:03:47
Hello, it's what you do. It's what you do,
1:03:49
because it's like What else you got to do what else we had a bet
1:03:52
on this week. They did like the bet they did can't there's no
1:03:54
football, basketball season's over, you can't put those
1:03:57
together. Something I thought was hilarious person Lana, when
1:04:02
she was all upset about
1:04:03
some more news you can use that will not be revealed to you
1:04:06
through any of the traditional New World Order channels. On
1:04:10
November 11th, a Portuguese appeals court ruled it unlawful
1:04:14
to quarantine people based on a PCR test, which is not even a
1:04:18
test. The court stated the test reliability depends on the
1:04:22
number of cycles used and the viral load present Hello no
1:04:26
agenda show for about a month, citing Jafar at all 2020.
1:04:30
The
1:04:31
court concludes that quote if somebody is tested by PCR is
1:04:34
positive. When a threshold of 35 cycles or higher is used, as is
1:04:38
the rule in most laboratories in Europe in the US, the
1:04:41
probability that said person is infected is less than 3%. And
1:04:46
the probability that said infection is a false positive is
1:04:49
97%. The court further notes that the cycle threshold used
1:04:53
for the PCR test currently being made in Portugal is unknown. So
1:04:57
at least there's people talking about It.
1:05:00
Now where was this Portugal, Portugal, Portugal appeals and
1:05:03
what was the source?
1:05:06
The source? That's a good this is a unique
1:05:09
Portugal's in the country. Nobody wants to talk about the
1:05:12
other ones who decriminalized all drugs and everything went
1:05:15
through the floor in terms of overdoses and everything like
1:05:19
that. Yeah, it did work. This is one of those things. Don't know.
1:05:23
Don't talk about that. Yeah. It's a very common sense.
1:05:27
Country.
1:05:29
Yes. And a nice place to visit. No, it's
1:05:32
gorgeous. And they also are, it's also a cheap place to
1:05:37
visit. Yeah, everything in Portugal. I've said it before is
1:05:41
underpriced. The olive oil is underpriced. The wine is
1:05:45
underpriced. Everything is underpriced. Why is that I wish
1:05:47
I knew. I've been fascinated by when I went to Portugal, I
1:05:51
noticed this phenomenon and then it carries over and over with
1:05:54
their exports. I mean, you can get Portree really high quality
1:05:57
Portuguese olive oil is way under priced. And wine over
1:06:02
here. And I'm going to give an example which makes me sound
1:06:04
like a it's a weird example. But the grocery outlet which has a
1:06:09
lot of wine, many of it a lot of is from Bordeaux, and is quite
1:06:13
good for the especially for the price. They had a Portuguese
1:06:16
wine called Red blend, I bought a couple of cases of it. It was
1:06:21
it was a delicious, well balanced, perfectly tasty, nice,
1:06:28
everyday red $4 and 95 cents. And I don't buy cheap wine. I
1:06:33
rarely rarely buy wine that's less than like $10 or 11 or 12.
1:06:38
And I drink a lot of 20 and $30 wine, but for $4 and 95 cents.
1:06:43
That's pretty good. And I've given it to everybody nobody got
1:06:45
a headache. I wasn't a headache wine even worse while you're
1:06:49
running some cheap wine is really good. And he had a
1:06:51
headache. No, none of that it was just an outstanding product.
1:06:55
And I have no idea if something's up with Portugal.
1:07:01
Maybe they're just not ripping everyone off like everyone else
1:07:04
does.
1:07:04
Yeah, that probably just low key man. Criminals hangout and
1:07:08
Portugal's good place to go hide
1:07:11
on reliably.
1:07:14
Ah, yeah. Interesting.
1:07:15
Yeah, just saying. So knew that on the same day that the World
1:07:20
Economic Economic Forum posted about the great reset, as they
1:07:23
say building future resilience to global risks. On the exact
1:07:28
same day. The New York Times comes out with a headline about
1:07:32
the baseless great reset conspiracy theory.
1:07:37
Yes, I saw this as it this is bullcrap. This doesn't exist,
1:07:41
people are dreaming it out. And then they just say well, what is
1:07:44
this? What are they saying here? The World Economic Forum? Did
1:07:46
you guys even look? The New York Times is pathetic.
1:07:51
The great reset it's you know it's a fight. It's really a
1:07:57
fight between who said that now it was the The Great Race the
1:08:00
fight between the great reset and the Great Awakening. When
1:08:04
everybody went all the all the elite shenanigans shall be
1:08:08
revealed.
1:08:09
Yeah, that and the 10,000 sealed indictments. You know,
1:08:13
I was thinking about this. We have been going nonstop since
1:08:18
the big since before this pandemic, we have not taken a
1:08:20
show off. We typically will take maybe a show off during the
1:08:24
summer, which we didn't do. And I think it's fair to say if we
1:08:29
even have producers now emailing us with Hey, I did like a Best
1:08:33
of Show. Here's some mixes you guys should take a day off or
1:08:37
so. And I'm sure you would you wouldn't mind having a full week
1:08:41
of not doing it. But when I see what's ahead between now and
1:08:47
January 20 we can't sum something no and miss
1:08:53
another aspect of this. take a day off. What are you gonna do?
1:08:58
Well, don't tell me
1:09:00
go like take a trip to New York and go see a Broadway play.
1:09:03
Don't tell anybody. Don't tell anybody that we we just this the
1:09:07
same life. We're just not doing the show. keep collecting
1:09:10
stories can't even get away from it. No. No. So but I fully
1:09:16
expect some weirdness between now and and Inauguration Day.
1:09:23
Oh, half
1:09:23
he has to be
1:09:24
Yeah, we've got a lot of a lot of interesting stuff happening.
1:09:29
But let's just stick with the social media for a moment. As we
1:09:35
are now seeing some pretty big shifts. We identified it here
1:09:38
quite a while ago on the show we're seeing there's a shift in
1:09:42
in, in media. We're seeing a lot of the republican republicans
1:09:49
for sure. But probably a lot of conservatives moving away from
1:09:52
Fox News. They're losing ratings. And, and of all all the
1:09:58
stations. I mean, we've got cheddar. We've got cheesy, we've
1:10:01
got newsy we've got black news channel of all these channels,
1:10:06
Newsmax is the chosen destination. But I think we're
1:10:10
going to it's going to go much further.
1:10:13
And
1:10:14
Devin Nunez was on the American thought leaders podcast, which
1:10:20
is the the epic times, anti Communist Chinese Communist
1:10:24
Party podcast, which has interesting people on and Nunez
1:10:28
was talking about the social media issues with conservatives.
1:10:33
And I think it's pretty clear what's going to happen over the
1:10:36
course of the next
1:10:38
four to eight years, you or your family members or your friends
1:10:41
or neighbors, you're being poisoned with left wing garbage,
1:10:45
he's
1:10:45
talking about Twitter here, obviously,
1:10:47
on a daily basis, and our ideas are being blocked out, as if we
1:10:52
never make them. And, you know, I can give you great examples of
1:10:57
that. But probably the best example is just the the
1:11:01
followers that I've picked up on parler, which is a replacement
1:11:05
for Instagram and, and Twitter. Like I've like all of a sudden,
1:11:10
people know, they can find me and they can follow and they can
1:11:13
see what I have to say on a multiple times a day. They know
1:11:17
what I'm communicating out there. That didn't happen
1:11:20
before. on, you know, if you were just following me on
1:11:23
Facebook and the other usual platforms. The other big one
1:11:27
that we've that we've now noticed is is quite alarming is
1:11:32
YouTube. And I knew I was being censored on YouTube. So I
1:11:35
switched over to rumble, which is a YouTube alternative.
1:11:40
And all of a sudden, I'm
1:11:41
getting, I'm going from a few thousand views that I was
1:11:45
getting on YouTube and you couldn't even you can't even
1:11:47
find me on YouTube, at least the last time I checked to me, you
1:11:49
go in there and search and all you're gonna see is, you know,
1:11:52
negative, hateful fake news stories mostly about about me.
1:11:57
Now on Rumble, I'm getting 10s of thousands of views on on my
1:12:01
posts.
1:12:03
So he's talking about the alternatives to Twitter,
1:12:09
Instagram, Facebook, that would be parlour pa AR le AR, and the
1:12:13
alternative to YouTube would be rumble. And I think that this is
1:12:17
going to be an important distinction coming soon it feels
1:12:21
to me like instead of saying I'm a Democrat, born I'm a
1:12:24
Republican, or to any version of whatever people however people
1:12:28
want to identify politically, I think it would be much easier
1:12:31
just to say I'm with the Twitter party or I'm with the parlour
1:12:35
party. That's what it will be. It will be all the people who
1:12:39
are over here will be on parler all the people over there will
1:12:41
be on Twitter and that's just going to be our life moving
1:12:44
forward. And we stand mastadon of course we say that that's the
1:12:48
third group these are these are the problems children were
1:12:51
the true independence
1:12:53
Yeah, yeah,
1:12:55
yeah, I have a few comments I'm sure. First of all, I started
1:13:01
you know I have I got a new piece of gear and it allows me
1:13:06
to pick up a bunch of stuff I normally don't have i mean i
1:13:09
although my smart TV the LG TV will pick up the chair What did
1:13:13
you
1:13:13
get what kind of new gear did you get?
1:13:14
I got an I got a channel master DVR okay which records over the
1:13:20
air it's like a DVR for over the air without having to pay a fee
1:13:24
all right fee
1:13:26
and high quality digital
1:13:28
and it's good it's actually works doesn't do it's not
1:13:31
perfect and makes it you know there are issues with it as
1:13:35
there are with anything I
1:13:37
What's this thing called again? What's the name of this device
1:13:40
channel master they have a DVRs usually if you go it's just 150
1:13:43
bucks for the DVR without without a desk
1:13:46
sounds like a fish you own fishing equipment for some
1:13:48
reason.
1:13:51
But if 150 bucks normally but if you instead of going to Amazon
1:13:54
you go to the channel master website Yeah. And order it
1:13:59
directly is 58 $99 Okay, yeah for $99 I'd say it's a good
1:14:03
product
1:14:04
now did you get the channel master stream plus are the two
1:14:07
edge was the one so this round?
1:14:11
Looks like that's the stream
1:14:12
looks like an Alexa
1:14:13
Yeah, I got it channel master stream plus.
1:14:16
Yeah, it's not it's it's it's a good piece of gear. Ah, so I one
1:14:22
of the things that shows up easily and there's Newsmax and
1:14:24
so I've been watching Newsmax on and off again. Everyone talks
1:14:28
about Newsmax being some great Newsmax is terrible to Mickey
1:14:33
Mouse channel. Totally. It looks like Russian TV. It looks like
1:14:37
yeah, even though if you go to Russian TV modern Russian TV is
1:14:40
more modern than anything you've ever can imagine. But I'm
1:14:44
talking about imaginary bad Russian TV from the 50s. That's
1:14:47
kind of what it looks like the back the guys up against the
1:14:50
background. They do. They put almost all their work into the
1:14:55
opening and you know, the opening graphics are the guys
1:15:00
See I
1:15:00
like the teams I like it when there's a man and woman team
1:15:03
that trying to do a fox news midday type thing which is I
1:15:07
think a huge mistake because it just ditzy and they just like
1:15:10
you know, kind of they all think they're doing Good Morning
1:15:13
America for some reason but they're talking about you know,
1:15:17
vote for voter fraud and and bullcrap Coronavirus. The whole
1:15:22
thing is it doesn't work. It doesn't
1:15:24
work and it's hokey and it's and the guy is it's it's pretty much
1:15:30
trying to be sean hannity on steroids.
1:15:33
Now I will say the difference between Fox News and Newsmax I
1:15:37
understand the appeal. Because on fox is to just kind of
1:15:42
topically talking about stuff they don't really go in. You'll
1:15:45
never see a Joe digenova or Sidney Powell or any of these
1:15:49
people on Fox, on Fox in general. I mean, of course, Rudy
1:15:53
Giuliani shows up to do a thing from time to time, but they're
1:15:58
really they're really not sticking to their formula and
1:16:00
people just at home still and hungry for stuff. And Newsmax is
1:16:06
kind of like Captain Crunch
1:16:11
crunch crunch really tasty cereal.
1:16:13
Now on the other hand, we could be watching CNN, and Fareed
1:16:18
Zakaria, the anti constitutionalist, a hall, who I
1:16:22
think also somehow is involved in some of the Ukraine
1:16:25
shenanigans he was over there speaking for a fee for some
1:16:31
dubious outfit a
1:16:32
guy say the guy's a pizza
1:16:35
plagiarist
1:16:35
we can say that bad and he's a bad person
1:16:38
is a well, I don't know, man. He seems to fit in with our men,
1:16:42
Donald J. Lemon. Would you call this a coup? An attempt at a
1:16:45
coup? Oh, there's
1:16:46
no question. It's an attempt at a coup. It's as with everything
1:16:49
Donald Trump does. The intention is as malign as one thinks the
1:16:55
execution is as incompetent as you can imagine. And so it is
1:16:59
likely to fail because it is not particularly well thought
1:17:03
through. But there's no question he is trying. You know, you put
1:17:08
it exactly right. He's trying to go to execute a coup, as you
1:17:12
pointed out, it's it's people say it's unprecedented in
1:17:14
American history. It's really pretty unprecedented around the
1:17:18
world. I mean, when Augusto Pinochet, Chile, the general who
1:17:23
had run the government as a dictatorship, for decades, when
1:17:26
he lost an election, he left office, you know, when Indira
1:17:30
Gandhi lost after have been declaring, essentially martial
1:17:33
law in India, when she lost an election she left out, but this
1:17:37
is this is pretty out of bounds, really anywhere in the world.
1:17:42
And remember, Donald Trump is angry and just have seeded this
1:17:45
conspiracy theory, and then go away, he is still going to be
1:17:49
around, he's going to be the most powerful republican as Ron
1:17:53
Brown. He was saying, gee, this party has now become a
1:17:56
personality cult. And we will continue to feed this conspiracy
1:18:00
theory, which warps the Republican Party. It shreds
1:18:04
American democracy. But you know what, it's good has a shred
1:18:08
anything's good for his ratings. And that appears to be all good.
1:18:12
He cares about.
1:18:13
So he goes from this is the way the whole way he goes from this
1:18:17
is a coup to it's really only about Trump in his ratings. I
1:18:20
mean, the in the span of one minute,
1:18:23
when How is it a coup when the guy's the president? And it
1:18:26
seems as if these democrats want him to leave office tomorrow?
1:18:30
Yeah, resigned the post?
1:18:32
Yeah, get out, get out, you know,
1:18:33
get out.
1:18:34
Now let's look at what's happening at Fox and I
1:18:37
find the way he's still present until January 20. I mean, I
1:18:42
don't know what they're talking about.
1:18:44
Well, you do. It's, it's, it's mind control. It's just it's
1:18:51
it's unhealthy is the stuff they're doing there. That's
1:18:54
unhealthy behaviors. leave it at that. But then we have an I'll
1:18:58
tell you that no matter what happens, no matter who's
1:19:01
inaugurated on the 21st of January, the news business is
1:19:05
going to have to account for the so called news business. And we
1:19:10
have kind of a rule about not playing Tucker Carlson. But just
1:19:14
to prove to you that we
1:19:15
continue to do so
1:19:17
well, I don't know. I always cut him out of the clips. I don't
1:19:21
really
1:19:21
but this is, yeah, he's boys boring. Well,
1:19:23
this is only him. And it's two clips. And you can see that
1:19:27
where they're messing it up. He's really not doing a good
1:19:30
job. Because when when we had the Biden hunter Biden laptop,
1:19:36
he don't even remember the guy babalu ski. What was the guy's
1:19:39
name bubbling ski. He had him on for a long time. He has all
1:19:44
kinds of he has UFO guys whose business it is an entertainment
1:19:49
company to make entertainment video products about UFOs and he
1:19:53
has them on with like, it's all serious. But of course it is.
1:19:57
But come on, if you're gonna if you're gonna go in do that
1:20:00
stuff, then you can certainly at least have Sidney Powell on. But
1:20:04
apparently his request didn't go so well. And and what I heard
1:20:09
from the Sidney Powell side is that they were badgering her and
1:20:13
show us the evidence and why Anyway, here is the Tucker
1:20:17
Carlson throwing Sidney Powell under the bus. And this happened
1:20:22
earlier in the week.
1:20:23
So that's a long way of saying we took Sidney Powell seriously,
1:20:25
we no intention of fighting with her. We've always respected her
1:20:28
work. We simply wanted to see the details, how could you not
1:20:31
want to see them? So we invited Sidney Powell on the show, we
1:20:33
would have given her the whole hour, we would have given her
1:20:36
the entire week, actually, and listened quietly the whole time.
1:20:39
rapt attention, that's a big story. But she never sent us any
1:20:43
evidence, despite a lot of requests, polite requests, not a
1:20:46
page. When we kept pressing, she got angry and told us to stop
1:20:50
contacting. When we checked with others around the Trump
1:20:53
campaign, people in positions of authority they told us, Pat was
1:20:56
never given them any evidence either. Nor did she provide any
1:21:00
today at the press conference. Hell didn't say that electronic
1:21:03
voting is dangerous. And she's right with her there. But she
1:21:06
never demonstrated that he single actual vote was moved
1:21:10
illegitimately by software from one candidate to another, not
1:21:13
one. So why are we telling you this? We're telling you this,
1:21:17
because it's true. And in the end, that's all that matters,
1:21:20
the truth? It's our only hope. It's our best defense, and it's
1:21:24
how we're different from them. We care what's true, and we know
1:21:28
you care, too. That's why we told you, maybe Sidney Powell
1:21:31
will come forward soon with details on exactly how this
1:21:34
happened, and precisely who did it. Maybe she will, we are
1:21:37
certainly hopeful that she will.
1:21:39
Now what does that sound like to you? What kind of what kind of
1:21:44
airtime is he using here? What is he saying? Like?
1:21:49
Trump lost the election.
1:21:51
So he got a lot of pushback, apparently from his audience on
1:21:55
their way out the door to Newsmax. And he had to kind of
1:22:00
recount what he said recant what he said
1:22:02
last night in a segment about voter fraud and investigations
1:22:06
into it. We told you about Sidney Powell, the former
1:22:08
federal prosecutor, and her claim that roughly 7 million
1:22:11
votes were secretly changed on election night by vote rigged
1:22:14
vote counting software for the last 25 years since we did that
1:22:17
we've heard from a lot of people about this segment, including
1:22:20
people in the White House, and people close to the President.
1:22:23
Like us, they have concluded this selection was not fair.
1:22:27
Like us, they're willing to believe a explanation for what
1:22:30
happened. Like us, they have not seen a single piece of evidence
1:22:34
showing that software change votes, doesn't mean it didn't
1:22:37
happen. It might have happened. It means they haven't seen any
1:22:40
evidence that it happened. And by they we are including other
1:22:44
members of Donald Trump's own legal team. They have not seen
1:22:47
pauwels evidence either no testimony from employees inside
1:22:51
the software companies, no damning internal documents, no
1:22:54
copies of the software itself. So that's where we are. Sidney
1:22:58
Powell came on Fox this morning and suggest we may not have to
1:23:00
wait much longer. I fully expect she says that we will be able to
1:23:05
prove all of it in a court within the next two weeks for as
1:23:09
far as we're concerned. That is great news. If Sidney Powell can
1:23:12
prove the technology companies switched millions of votes and
1:23:16
stole a presidential election, she will have almost single
1:23:19
handedly uncovered the greatest crime in the history of this
1:23:22
country. And no one will be more grateful for that than us.
1:23:26
Yeah, no, I think he screwed the pooch on that one. I think he
1:23:30
made a big mistake. That is not what his audience wanted to
1:23:33
hear. They
1:23:33
want to see these people. They weren't just from a television
1:23:36
perspective. Come on, man. They want to see Joe digenova they
1:23:41
want to see Vicki toasting to let me get this straight. He
1:23:45
didn't have her on because she didn't produce a bunch of
1:23:48
documents or something before the interview this year require
1:23:51
that of all his guests. Yeah, I
1:23:53
guess so. I think the guy thinks Hey, at least he's talking about
1:23:59
it when we were doing the show on Thursday. No other station
1:24:03
was going to cut a well they did. They went they went to the
1:24:06
the press conference of the President's legal team for a
1:24:09
little bit. But here's here's CNN.
1:24:14
It has been a bad week for the Trump legal team that actually
1:24:18
right now is holding a press conference to just so bananas we
1:24:20
can't even bring it to you because it's just so full of BS
1:24:25
and that's the cable news emphasis on news network are
1:24:30
they wait hold?
1:24:32
Are they mind reader's?
1:24:34
Do they know what he's about to say? And so they know it's full
1:24:37
of BS. Well, they got you know, in advance which is what she
1:24:41
claims that this you we can't bring you this because it's just
1:24:44
full of BS.
1:24:45
It's bananas. You heard this is a bananas.
1:24:50
Bananas a good show title.
1:24:54
Never to be just bananas less.
1:24:56
I haven't heard that since the 60s. I think it was done
1:25:00
laughing or something. But now I got bananas.
1:25:04
Because so right. It is. Let's just listen to it again that
1:25:07
that's a very good point here. Let me crank up our audio a
1:25:11
little bit, make sure we can hear a tear say it perfectly.
1:25:17
It has been a bad week for the Trump legal team that actually
1:25:21
right now is holding a press conference that is so bananas.
1:25:23
We can't even bring it to you, because it's just so full of BS.
1:25:28
And then over on MSNBC, Brian Williams, of course picked up on
1:25:32
the
1:25:32
most by the way. Yeah, I'm gonna just because it's so cnn it's
1:25:38
almost epitomizes everything that we've been doing for the
1:25:41
last 10 years. And when it comes to this network, I'm going to
1:25:44
give you a clip of the day for that banana split.
1:25:47
That is very common. But wait, Brian Williams is rivaling
1:25:53
that gets us to today and today may
1:25:56
be remembered when all the craziness is over. For one
1:26:00
thing, and it's this visual. Rudy Giuliani's hair dye started
1:26:05
dripping down after outbreak flopsweat during a press
1:26:10
conference, which will only be remembered for conspiracy
1:26:14
theories and dark liquid. It was rambling repugnant,
1:26:18
reprehensible, hysterical. And as the man just fired by Trump
1:26:23
for protecting the security of our elections, said on Twitter
1:26:27
today, it was the most dangerous one hour 45 minutes of
1:26:31
television in American history.
1:26:34
Indeed, the dark seepage
1:26:36
almost overshadow what we heard at that press conference with
1:26:41
the last lawyers left in America willing to defend the president.
1:26:46
I feel that oh my god, I
1:26:48
feel the dark seepage is also a possible show title.
1:26:52
I don't think it's good as bananas. But this guy repugnant
1:26:56
How was what was he repugnant about it? What's he talking
1:26:59
about? How is it repugnant? And how is it the most dangerous
1:27:03
hour in the history of America?
1:27:04
Oh, man,
1:27:06
he's wrong with these people.
1:27:07
Well, what's wrong is Sidney Powell is going to every outlet
1:27:11
she can find any podcast. I mean, I haven't put I haven't
1:27:14
put our hat into the ring, but I'm pretty sure we could get
1:27:17
her. She's going anywhere she can radio shows all of the news
1:27:23
channels which are above 225. On my system, and I have collected
1:27:30
a number of shortish clips, so we can just get I think we
1:27:33
should do it before we take a break. Because people want to
1:27:36
know what's up with the crack. And where are we at. And I have
1:27:39
watched all of her interviews, listen to everything pulled out
1:27:43
just a few pieces that are pertinent and our new
1:27:45
information to the show. And we'll start with the lawsuits
1:27:50
that will be filed this coming week in swing states,
1:27:53
we're going to have to file several lawsuits. It's going to
1:27:57
be in all the swing states. We're still gathering massive
1:28:03
amounts of evidence. To the point we haven't even had time
1:28:07
to process all of it. People are falling, drafting affidavits for
1:28:11
us right and left. patriotic Americans are coming forward
1:28:16
from every corner of the country and some people even
1:28:19
internationally. They are fed up with the corruption and they
1:28:23
want to clean up the system. And stop this election rigging that
1:28:27
has gone on all around the world for the profit of all kinds of
1:28:33
tyrants and global interests that have just lining their
1:28:37
pockets while they write their own countries and treated their
1:28:40
people horribly. We know it's happened to many countries in
1:28:44
Latin America, it was exported to Argentina, I think it was
1:28:49
exported to Mongolia probably most every country around the
1:28:53
world now has been infected with this sort of election rigging
1:28:58
that's been made available by dominion and smartmatic. And,
1:29:02
and other companies as well have used the same sort of code in
1:29:07
their machines that would allow the same results to be
1:29:11
controlled. Well,
1:29:13
I'll give you a little spoiler that we're we're Sydney power
1:29:16
leads all of this consistently, is that there is a global a
1:29:21
global cabal slash conspiracy of regimes and straight up
1:29:28
governments using machines with smart Matic software. And that
1:29:34
this has been rigging elections around the world for 10 to 20
1:29:39
years. And there's a lot of different countries, a lot of
1:29:44
different players involved. You've heard the names domian
1:29:47
and smartmatic. And there's connections to George Soros and
1:29:54
the story that louie Gohmert we played the clip from him that he
1:29:57
said, Oh, wait a minute, there's some kind of regular going on at
1:30:01
that as at the server farm where some of this information is
1:30:06
stored in Frankfort. And then no one really could confirm that.
1:30:10
But we have some confirmation now from Sidney Powell,
1:30:14
in might look at the fact that Dominion offices have shut down
1:30:20
and moved all of a sudden, in Toronto where they shared office
1:30:23
space with a source entity. And also in Denver, all of a sudden,
1:30:28
they just shuttered and moved, their employees have been taking
1:30:32
their name off LinkedIn, and eliminating any affiliation with
1:30:37
either company, there are over 100 of those that have happened.
1:30:42
It's I mean, we've, we've unearthed a global criminal
1:30:49
conspiracy, that is just mind blowing. And we've only
1:30:53
scratched the tip of the iceberg. The servers that Seidel
1:30:58
in Germany, were confiscated. The other day, I'm hearing it
1:31:01
was our forces that got those servers. So I think the
1:31:06
government is now working on an investigation of what really
1:31:10
happened. But we're getting in evidence also that there were
1:31:14
wines into the servers from for foreign countries, all extremely
1:31:21
adverse to the interests of the United States.
1:31:25
This is going to get very good now. Because there's a couple of
1:31:31
different narratives. And we'll get to the to the one that the
1:31:35
President had a trap set for all this to take place. Yeah, now
1:31:41
i'd hate I'm just reporting the news, someone has to do it
1:31:44
properly. First, let's understand how these votes were
1:31:47
changed in these systems.
1:31:49
There are multiple ways of doing the alterations of the votes,
1:31:55
the person sitting at the data center where their votes are
1:31:58
coming in, can do it that can watch in real time and change
1:32:02
things. They can put an algorithm on the system across
1:32:07
the board that does the initial shifting. And then in each data
1:32:12
collection point, which is best we can tell for the major
1:32:16
alterations were the democratic controlled, politically corrupt
1:32:20
strongholds in the country cities like Detroit and
1:32:23
Philadelphia, for example, and Atlanta, by the spikes in the
1:32:28
data, the statistical experts can, and mathematical experts
1:32:33
can tell you exactly when the anomalies occurred that are
1:32:39
statistically impossible. And we found places where, for example,
1:32:44
something like 384,450 votes were added for Biden, while a
1:32:50
third of that amount were added for Trump. And those exact same
1:32:54
numbers were replicated 20 minutes later.
1:32:58
So she's got some kind of receipts that she's going to
1:33:00
file in, in multiple states. The question is, is there enough
1:33:05
time,
1:33:06
I think we can get it done, that we already have collected more
1:33:11
evidence than probably half the prison population is in prison
1:33:15
for right now. It's just a matter of tying it together in
1:33:19
the way this adjustable. And we're in the process of doing
1:33:23
that as we speak. And I'm hoping we get something filed on next
1:33:28
week that starts outlining and improving the overall fraud. But
1:33:32
I will tell you, too, that the standard of proof people are
1:33:36
expecting is more than would be necessary for a criminal
1:33:40
conviction, which is absolutely ridiculous. Our standard of
1:33:43
proof is only preponderance of the evidence. And on top of
1:33:47
that, the mountain of evidence we have to deal with is is huge.
1:33:53
And we've got a force all of me, against us all the global
1:33:57
interest against us all the social media companies against
1:34:00
us because they're all owned and controlled by foreign money.
1:34:03
There are trillions of dollars of wealth and corruption at
1:34:08
issue against our little team. In this effort, every despot
1:34:14
every tyrant around the world who has been elected by the
1:34:18
system, I'm sure it's putting all his or her resources and
1:34:22
connections and everything else against us. We're, we've had
1:34:26
technology issues, we know that our people are blowing up my son
1:34:30
all the time. Everybody out here a lot of truth and justice is
1:34:37
attacking us in one form or another. But we're gonna keep
1:34:40
going and we're gonna we are gonna prove it. So this
1:34:43
does promise sparks and fireworks that will be coming up
1:34:46
and and this will be my last clip and I think we've had the
1:34:49
cracking update. You have to take into account the recent
1:34:55
creation of a new branch of the Department of Defense Which is
1:35:00
the Special Operations special ops? This Ezra guy, who has been
1:35:08
nominated to the Secretary of special ops and who will report
1:35:13
directly to the acting, Secretary of Defense is the guy
1:35:19
who many say that he's actually cute. And yes, but that it is
1:35:25
necessary for the President to have a force in place, when they
1:35:30
blow the lid off of the whole thing. I'm not just talking
1:35:33
about, oh, wait for it, wait for it. I'm not just talking about
1:35:36
the voter fraud, because, of course, the 2018 executive order
1:35:41
that the President put out, as legally set everything up for
1:35:45
these people to be seen as terrorists, and to be handled by
1:35:48
the military as such, which would would be the reason why we
1:35:52
have the Special Forces. And the guy who explains it all the way
1:35:57
to the end, what's going to take place it brings it all together.
1:36:00
All the things we've been hearing throughout the past four
1:36:02
years, is Linwood, this is the Covington kid lawyer who got
1:36:06
hundreds of millions of dollars in libel payments after lawsuits
1:36:10
from CNN, Washington Post, maybe the New York Times, probably
1:36:14
MSNBC and others is still ongoing. T boils it all down to
1:36:19
what this is really going to be all about.
1:36:22
The Supreme Court's being aligned, the Department of
1:36:25
Defense was recently realigned by the president, take a look at
1:36:29
how he put in place cyber terrorism and a terrorism
1:36:32
expert. As I said, Look at what he did in 2018, with the
1:36:36
executive order to deal with foreign interference in our
1:36:39
national elections. I think, listen, in a perfect world. I'd
1:36:44
like to see john doe ontraport come out and people go to jail.
1:36:48
And likely through Jeffrey Epstein and delian Maxwell, and
1:36:51
I'd like for a lot of people to go to jail. I'd like to see
1:36:54
what's on hunter Biden's laptop. I'd like to see those people go
1:36:57
to jail. I'd like to see what's on on anthony Weiner's laptop.
1:37:02
I'd like to see a lot of people go to jail. And then when we get
1:37:05
to the final phase of the election fraud, I'd like to see
1:37:08
a lot more people go to jail. The one thing I will say
1:37:11
there'll be an intermingling. There'll be people going to
1:37:14
jail, I believe, who are involved in all of those are
1:37:17
some of those investigations. So there is potentially a great
1:37:22
awakening. The truth has to come out. Yes, I believe it will. I
1:37:27
do not think that you can hide the truth. I do say it and I
1:37:30
believe that every lab will be revealed. This country is going
1:37:34
to be shocked when it learns the truth about who's been occupying
1:37:37
the Oval Office for some periods of years. They're going to be
1:37:41
shocked at the level of pedophilia. You're gonna be
1:37:43
shocked at what I believe will be a revelation in terms of
1:37:48
people who actually engage in satanic worship.
1:37:55
We can take a day off they're gonna unveil thousands of sealed
1:38:00
indictments for pedophiles satanic worship vote.
1:38:04
Any minute this will be happening as we as we're doing
1:38:07
the show. Now, I want to ask you a question about a let that last
1:38:11
clip slide on where's the CIA and the NSA and
1:38:17
they're the ones they're the ones that perpetrated
1:38:19
perpetrated the crime.
1:38:21
Apparently they did
1:38:22
the CIA versus di a it's the same old story
1:38:26
about where some information about that from either one of
1:38:29
these agencies
1:38:30
working for Tucker Carlson. I'm just saying I'd like
1:38:33
to see some you know, some we got to get a little more than
1:38:36
these guys. These blowhards coming on and I'm putting Sidney
1:38:40
Powell in that category. She doesn't get some action here
1:38:43
pretty soon yeah. No, I understand your skepticism is
1:38:46
right it's just a bitter against the world. It's not gonna work
1:38:49
out that never does. It it's not a movie.
1:38:53
Oh, but show but this is Donald Trump's world. Of course.
1:38:56
There's a fourth act. It is a movie now. He may fail, which
1:39:00
will be a sad ending for the movie.
1:39:02
Yeah, this won't be sad. Any if you read my upcoming column and
1:39:06
substack on next Tuesday, Oh, do tell
1:39:09
Can you can you can you lift the kimono a little tell us what's
1:39:11
gonna happen?
1:39:13
Well, it's just it's just an exposition of what happens after
1:39:17
Trump. If if I'm not giving 100% pull. But if he gets booted,
1:39:24
ousted, yes. What happens then? And this did just discussion of
1:39:28
what happens is going to be worse for it's gonna be really
1:39:32
bad. What happens because he if he stays in the game? Well, and
1:39:36
he won't be the only president who's done this. I mean,
1:39:38
Roosevelt did it Grover Cleveland did it. Grover
1:39:41
Cleveland is the only president who was president got voted out
1:39:46
and then ran again and got voted back in
1:39:49
that could happen the same same year or after four years. Oh,
1:39:52
no, he was voted in. Four years in kicked out four years out of
1:39:57
office and he came back ran again. Yeah. years later, boom,
1:40:01
he's back in. So that's not impossible. So Trump could run
1:40:06
again, even though it's really gonna be too old. But you have
1:40:09
to read the lights, a lot of stuff.
1:40:10
I have dire favorite constitutional lawyer, Alan
1:40:15
Dershowitz explaining in under one minute exactly what is going
1:40:19
to happen and how this will go to the house. And as an aside, I
1:40:24
should mention that, as we know, Alan Dershowitz now worked for
1:40:27
Newsmax
1:40:28
Look, they have a theoretical road to sounds like
1:40:32
having the election thrown into the House of Representatives the
1:40:36
way for elections were in the 19th century, none in the 20th
1:40:41
century. And they should be allowed to pursue that road, the
1:40:44
road is not to try to get to
1:40:46
70 votes for President Trump, but
1:40:49
to deny President Biden a majority have to quote the
1:40:53
constitutional language, all the electors that have been
1:40:57
appointed. And once you know how many electors there are, you
1:41:01
only know that when the states have certified electors, then
1:41:05
unless there's a majority on the first ballot, the Constitution
1:41:09
says that there's no majority for one candidate, the election,
1:41:13
immediately the word immediately is in the constitution twice,
1:41:17
must go to the House of Representatives, where every
1:41:19
state gets one vote, and
1:41:21
the Republicans have 26 votes to 24, five or 23
1:41:26
by the Democrats.
1:41:27
So that's how that's how it would go. It would it would be
1:41:30
like the 12th amendment final option there.
1:41:35
That's not happening either.
1:41:36
Really, you're so skeptical, what do you think is going to
1:41:39
happen, then?
1:41:41
What's obviously gonna happen?
1:41:43
Well, you tell people
1:41:44
quit office and you leave on the 20th of January. And then
1:41:48
there's more on violence, Biden, I hate to call him that, but
1:41:51
come on. We'll be in office, if he lives that long or Kamala
1:41:55
Harris will be they just that she will be a great puppet for
1:41:58
the democrat puppet masters. And they hopefully will not get the
1:42:02
Senate and which seems that they won't. And then they've did Oh,
1:42:08
just be get locked for years, which is sounds good to me until
1:42:12
2022 when the republicans actually really take over the
1:42:15
place. And I believe the republicans are all in on this
1:42:18
because they like the idea. They know what's gonna happen if, if
1:42:22
Trump does get back in everyone's gonna moan and groan
1:42:24
and scream about it, they're gonna impeach him again, it's
1:42:27
gonna slow everything up, nothing's gonna get done. And
1:42:30
then when 2022 comes around, they're gonna lose the Senate.
1:42:33
And then they may lose them the third impeachment. So the
1:42:36
republicans are Oh, the Republicans aren't saying
1:42:38
anything. Oh, no, they're all Mom. Yes, sir mom, because they
1:42:41
know that with Trump out, they can really go to work. And that
1:42:44
means in 2022, they can take back the house. Pelosi has
1:42:49
already given up being the speaker in 2022. She said, so
1:42:52
they're going to take over the house, take over the Senate, and
1:42:55
then make, you know, start doing legislation and then putting the
1:42:58
screws to President Harris or President Biden, depending on
1:43:02
who's in office at the time, and make them start to sign things.
1:43:06
And then they can win the election because it's going to
1:43:09
be such a mess at the presidential level, they should
1:43:11
be able to easily win the White House back in 2024. And they
1:43:15
they're all drooling over this idea. This is their, their wet
1:43:19
dream. Okay.
1:43:24
Now we have two sides. I will add a third element to this. I
1:43:28
did a show with Moe yesterday. And he too believes that that
1:43:33
the he has a he had a lot of evidence about voting machines
1:43:37
particularly in in Georgia. But the evidence that he came with
1:43:41
was quite interesting. In Georgia, 5 million people voted
1:43:45
Stacey Abrams, who claimed that she won the gubernatorial race
1:43:51
you know, she started this fight fight for the future or fight
1:43:55
for our voting rights or something, you know, Soros
1:43:58
money. She is a Council on Foreign Relations members. She's
1:44:01
very ingrained into the into the globalist system but I think
1:44:07
pretty much hated by Democrats for whatever reason. She claimed
1:44:12
no sirpur she claims that she registered 800,000 people for
1:44:18
this election. So she registered almost 20% of the voters in
1:44:24
Georgia i'm not i'm just not believe in that. And so what
1:44:30
most said is they're setting her up to hold the bag if it comes
1:44:34
out she's gonna be the one blamed for phony ballads or
1:44:38
something else like that. Which I kind of like is this theory?
1:44:43
Yeah, it sounds it's not gonna happen either.
1:44:46
Well, then, then the future is boring. Come on, man. I'm
1:44:51
holding my wife. Hey, you
1:44:54
know what it says crackpot in buzzkill.
1:44:59
You know what that means?
1:45:01
I'd like to thank you for your courage to say the morning to
1:45:03
you the man who put the sea in the COVID shame john C.
1:45:09
Well in the morning to you, Mr. Adam the crackpot curry in the
1:45:16
morning all ships to see boson Rafi in the ourselves in the one
1:45:19
that names a nice out there.
1:45:20
And in the morning to all the trolls in our troll room hands
1:45:23
up trolls. Let's count you for a second here we have 2120 Okay,
1:45:29
it's a nice number down could have been a little higher for
1:45:32
for Sunday, but we appreciate every troll used to average
1:45:36
about 17 Yeah, we are averaging up that's for sure. These trolls
1:45:43
are from all over get mo nation they congregate at no agenda
1:45:46
stream.com where you can listen to a stream of podcasts that are
1:45:50
all from all around GMO nation. All talk no commercials and
1:45:54
certainly no agenda and you get to hang out. It's like it's a
1:45:57
cool, it's technically a chat room. But if there's trolls in
1:46:00
there, it's a troll room. And you can get there again by going
1:46:03
to no agenda stream.com and if you're in there ask someone for
1:46:07
an invite to no agenda social.com that is our federated
1:46:10
social network. That is the third option for those of you
1:46:14
who don't want to go to parlour don't want to stay on Twitter.
1:46:17
You just want to interact with people and not get duped by
1:46:21
algos and even bump into some famous people like the real deal
1:46:25
Dvorak Yes,
1:46:26
I want to mention something I looked at parlor and I find it
1:46:34
extremely uncomfortable. The great thing about masterminds is
1:46:37
just pretty much like Twitter works pretty much the same
1:46:40
except for the expand this to thing which is I think could be
1:46:43
better executed. But with parlor for some reason is awkward. I
1:46:48
don't like it at all. I haven't accounter I just bailed out on
1:46:53
it. I just don't like it. I
1:46:54
think it stinks. So trolls are yelling at me. I should stop
1:46:58
calling it mastodon I should call it the Fetty verse, which
1:47:02
is pretty lame as a term I'm sorry, said reverse death Fetty
1:47:08
verse The Fetty verse just
1:47:10
it's not it doesn't mastodon mastodon man's term
1:47:15
guys are wimps in that
1:47:17
30 verse.
1:47:19
Verse mastodon, the
1:47:21
theory verse
1:47:25
can find that uh no agenda social.com and you can probably
1:47:29
hit people up on Twitter for an invite if you want emailing me
1:47:32
it's automatic penalty. But please enjoy that as it is all
1:47:37
part of the services we provide in our value for value system
1:47:41
here which includes artwork that changes with every single show.
1:47:46
Every album art is different it's it's real sexy, just scroll
1:47:51
down the list of all the episodes if you have no agenda
1:47:54
show calm on your, on your on your phone, your mobile device,
1:47:57
it looks so good. And we need to thank the artist who brought us
1:48:01
the artwork for Episode 1296. We titled this the cracking keeper.
1:48:08
And it was a dynamite piece with a skull green skull. I think
1:48:15
it's a binary 33 number if I'm correct,
1:48:20
nice. 33
1:48:21
Yeah, this is correct. The record who is no stranger was
1:48:25
Appspot Oh, it wasn't correct to record. I'm sorry. Let me
1:48:27
refresh Darren O'Neal. That's what I meant. It was I had to
1:48:31
refresh my page, Darren O'Neal. And
1:48:35
it's a very minute, by the way. I'm going to tell Derek just a
1:48:38
little again. You know, art director tune?
1:48:40
Yeah. as we need to. Yes.
1:48:43
Darren's stuff started to look like Darren stuff.
1:48:49
Yeah,
1:48:50
that's a good point. So
1:48:51
you look at a page of art and you say, oh, there's Darren's.
1:48:54
There's Derek we without clicking I cuz you have to click
1:48:56
on it to see what the artist was. Yeah. But you didn't have
1:48:58
to address Oh, there's Darren. There's Darren, there's Darren
1:49:01
there's Darren and this was a typical of Darren stuff and
1:49:07
until I saw it was there and I was actually surprised how
1:49:10
different it was from Garen stuff. And I appreciated the
1:49:14
fact that he is kind of backing off on his formula a
1:49:18
little bit. You mean his style?
1:49:21
It's a style but it's also a formula.
1:49:23
Yeah. Well, we're very very happy with this and and
1:49:26
extremely appreciative that all of these artists put in such
1:49:29
phenomenal work. There were a number of different pieces we
1:49:32
were looking at. And a reminder, this podcast is fully podcasting
1:49:36
2.0 compliant as of this show, which means it yes, we are
1:49:41
podcasting 2.0 compliant at its current state, which means we
1:49:46
have transcripts of every show, which show up in multiple of the
1:49:50
new podcast apps, you can go to new podcast apps.com It's a crap
1:49:55
page right now, but that'll someone is working on making a
1:49:58
nice page. So you can see What apps do the transcripts are most
1:50:02
importantly chapters. And I've always fought against chapters
1:50:05
because I just it's like I when I'm done with the show, I want
1:50:08
to put it put it up. And I really don't want people jumping
1:50:11
to different parts of the show is like, No, I'm not giving you
1:50:14
it a table of contents, you should just listen to it. But
1:50:19
podcasting 2.0 chapters, they are in the feed and not in the
1:50:24
file so they can be added to after the show was already
1:50:27
published. And today is an experiment. I'd like to try some
1:50:31
community chapters. Which means that you can listen to this show
1:50:36
in the hyper Capture App. It's only on iOS, I think, at this
1:50:40
point. And you can set chapter marks and you can make set URLs
1:50:46
for images as well as links. So I'd love for someone at this
1:50:50
point to bring up the artwork of Darren O'Neill's beautiful
1:50:53
piece, because that's how it works. It's like a slideshow. So
1:50:58
now you can so when we're talking about a graph or a
1:51:00
chart, as you mentioned earlier, the three charts in the
1:51:03
newsletter, those could pop up on your podcast player and
1:51:06
rotate in real time sync to the timeline. And this apparently is
1:51:11
something that people are really dig it even works on podcast
1:51:13
addicts on Android and anyway go check out new podcast apps calm
1:51:18
we're building and this is your first official podcasting 2.0
1:51:22
compliant podcast. And I note about some of the artwork that
1:51:28
all shows up at no agenda shop.com they now have and we
1:51:33
have no official business relationship with any podcast
1:51:36
app store with a no agenda shop. We just like what they're doing.
1:51:40
And no agenda shop now has FEMA Region t shirts, which I saw
1:51:43
them promoting this is to me
1:51:46
they do their own art.
1:51:49
Yes, exactly. But it's you know, these
1:51:51
guys get cranking out art but not enough of it. It's exactly
1:51:55
right. We didn't have enough to choose from so now we made FEMA
1:51:58
Region t shirts, I have to say I like I like being from FEMA,
1:52:01
FEMA Region number six, I'm gonna get me one of those t
1:52:03
shirts. But a lot of this artwork does show up over there
1:52:07
on hoodies, t shirts, hats, mugs, cups, and they give a
1:52:13
third of the proceeds to the artists they keep a third for
1:52:16
the store and they donate a third to the show. And we
1:52:18
appreciate that very much no agenda are generated calm is
1:52:21
where you can check it out. And Darren O'Neill thank you again.
1:52:24
And now for your time, talent and treasure portion. We'd like
1:52:27
to look at our executive producers and associate
1:52:30
executive producers for Episode 1297. And thank you
1:52:35
for that introduction. Every thing, Your Honor, Miss of
1:52:38
dogpatch starts us off.
1:52:39
Oh,
1:52:42
he's the early Yeah. Isn't the normal at the beginning of the
1:52:44
month? Well,
1:52:47
no, he's normally at the very, very end. Okay, like the very
1:52:50
end like maybe next. The show after Thanksgiving would be a P
1:52:54
is
1:52:55
the saint of pain for the patrons or the patron saint
1:52:59
serrana must have dogpatch out there in the unknown universe
1:53:02
sending us Western Union wasn't Western Union today? Well, I
1:53:07
don't know what he's saying or what they say. But I do know
1:53:09
that dogpatch has been on my case. And he continues to be so
1:53:13
Oh, with us note What's up?
1:53:17
Because we got into the discussion about Brennan being a
1:53:20
Muslim and you know, I found it to be odd that he would never
1:53:25
talk about this. No one ever asked him about it. I thought it
1:53:27
was strange to have this former CIA director convert to wahabism
1:53:32
Mm hmm. There's Salafism. dwelle He is the head of the CIA. This
1:53:37
is to me seemed like something that was a security issue.
1:53:40
Right. And so this thrombus of dogpatch or lower slobo via took
1:53:44
issue with this. But he did on the last
1:53:47
note, as you recall.
1:53:48
Yes.
1:53:49
So anyway, so he's continuing and I made the I explained it on
1:53:52
the next show, and it was fine. it to a point. Anywhere from sir
1:53:56
on amis of dogpatch in Lawrenceville. bovie. And then
1:53:59
he has a and probably a Muslim.
1:54:04
Already,
1:54:05
I am Adam Curry and probably a Muslim. Okay. Mm hmm.
1:54:08
Thank you to all the producers for their hard work and
1:54:11
remarkable community building a community with Amish like
1:54:15
behavior when someone needs help to community rebuilds their
1:54:18
barn.
1:54:19
That's true. This is very much our security. That's very true,
1:54:23
john. Oh, I agree with your observation of Brennan, and you
1:54:28
had nothing to defend regarding his situation. My comment
1:54:33
related to another presumed CIA professional that you mentioned
1:54:37
with that tagline, as a US citizen that travels to
1:54:40
countries that often direct and probably that often direct and
1:54:45
probably CIA towards me, oh, I am sensitive to such comments.
1:54:53
I'm scissors of comments. Perhaps self preservation
1:54:56
heightens one sensitivity overseas. quote and probably CIA
1:55:04
and in the US and probably Muslim can put a person in I've
1:55:07
never suggested that Artemis was in the CIA or had anything to
1:55:12
do. I don't
1:55:12
recall that either. I didn't have never
1:55:15
done that. I have maybe suggested offhandedly handedly
1:55:20
and somewhat humorously Danny might work for Saudi
1:55:23
intelligence
1:55:25
that's not the same as likely if he's a
1:55:27
US citizen that travels to countries that are often direct
1:55:32
and probably CIA's towards him I'm sensitive but such comments
1:55:35
perhaps self preservation heightened sensitivity Okay,
1:55:38
that I'm never gonna mention any spy anything with him. You know,
1:55:42
I think there's no agenda show you come to donate without you
1:55:46
as a CIA agent
1:55:47
we're not going to do and you're not obviously one or you
1:55:51
wouldn't be making such a fuss course manner. He is making a
1:55:53
fuss in a different man
1:55:54
what he is is the head of the Amish who was helping to raise
1:55:58
the barn whenever necessary and
1:55:59
Amish it could be now there's a cry anyway. He says you can put
1:56:04
a person in an uncomfortable position in some venues. I don't
1:56:08
think anybody that's in these venues you discuss listen to the
1:56:13
show, but I could be wrong since we have a lot of listeners might
1:56:18
count was not as serious complaint, but it comment from
1:56:21
an oversensitive self preservationist okay got it well
1:56:26
Apology accepted. Mobile three be hypnotic mantra build back
1:56:31
better build back better build back better is another term for
1:56:34
nation building or perhaps rebuilding, post pandemic nation
1:56:39
rebuilding will be highly charged topic in the coming
1:56:42
years. If the US has since the US has a long history of failed
1:56:47
efforts in nation building, this is true. Yeah, including our
1:56:51
own. I recommend dropping use of the three be mantra and use
1:56:56
reconstruction to represent represent the struggle the US
1:57:00
will face in the coming years. You can suggest that but you
1:57:03
have to suggest that to Biden, tabletop tabletop games used in
1:57:08
war colleges help students develop approaches to specific
1:57:12
problems. These games hide the time and location, but students
1:57:17
are presented with historical facts and events to develop
1:57:20
approaches to the problem. At the end of one nation building
1:57:24
exercise, students were asked to identify the time and place of
1:57:28
the event they were addressing. All said the game was a thinly
1:57:32
veiled cover for the US and their iraq experience. The game
1:57:38
was wholly based on US Army experience in the south after
1:57:42
the Civil War. Oh, really matter? I'm really now it's kind
1:57:48
of interesting. I don't know where you get it's some
1:57:51
something he knows. Words matter and reconstruction effectively
1:57:55
communicates the political effort of be three build back
1:57:59
better, referencing the unique experience will inflame some but
1:58:03
the efforts will inflame regardless. Moreover,
1:58:07
reconstruction is a heavily researched but little studied
1:58:10
period of our history, making it ideal for m five m
1:58:15
reinterpretation. Hmm no jingles no karma? Well, we
1:58:18
appreciate all you do but astronomers have dogpatch and
1:58:23
again a coded number that we'll have to figure out $1,555 we
1:58:29
cannot say thank you enough
1:58:31
let down or 55,000 yeah 55 no sense
1:58:34
no sense Thank you. Thank you sir. animus we take it to heart
1:58:37
we will analyze
1:58:39
always good material Always. Always. which in itself is is
1:58:46
your Do you want that easy to use your mic falling Sir David
1:58:49
Baron in Pennsylvania is next on the list. 624 bucks from snores
1:58:53
town Pennsylvania, as the Behringer Pennsylvania proclaim
1:58:57
that this is the best podcast in the universe. If you want to
1:59:01
truly be a producer, you should get the 3333 monthly boarding
1:59:04
pass. I started doing it this is a subscription you can see it on
1:59:07
the it's in the newsletters. We promoted on the on the divorce
1:59:11
org slash na. I started doing this earlier this year and it
1:59:14
actually made my amygdala expatriate to New Zealand. I
1:59:17
don't miss it. My first donation of those two jokes was on
1:59:22
episode 95 when I sent $6 and 24 cents like six times as john
1:59:26
said, but it was really only four. Oh brother I kept giving
1:59:31
for the value I was getting but you really can't keep up. The
1:59:35
value keeps growing exponentially. If you know what
1:59:39
that means. Don't wait for show 1300 or show 2000. Donate now.
1:59:44
Yours truly Sir David Baron in Pennsylvania in Norristown. I'm
1:59:48
probably a Vikon by now but don't want to tile change until
1:59:51
becoming a Grand Duke. I can't emphasize enough how much the
1:59:55
show can keep you balanced in this world. Don't accept a new
1:59:59
normal
2:00:01
Yeah well Sir David Baron of Pennsylvania thank you thank you
2:00:05
very much and we're glad glad that you're getting that kind of
2:00:08
value out of it this heartwarming No sir
2:00:11
no jingle another desk two in a row no jeans, no camera or not a
2:00:14
mystery 4567 anonymous disagreement with significant
2:00:19
other over mask mandate just bought sub stacks from grin grin
2:00:23
greenwall don't raft anti Eb in a rage? Not really a rage but
2:00:28
you know, here's some more rage donation adios mofos love you
2:00:33
mean it
2:00:34
yo yo.
2:00:36
Another that's three in a row. No jingles no karma. I'm loving
2:00:40
it. Brian Frazier, in Conor Frey Frasier Fraser. I don't know
2:00:46
Fraser and conroe Texas 33838 I've been enjoying the media
2:00:53
deconstruction but you all have to do something about this Yoko
2:00:56
Ono dog jingle it's too much to bear. I have a belated call it
2:01:02
from my boss JB Deering on November 19 it's on the list no
2:01:07
jingles no karma. I did want to in Fraser Fraser.
2:01:10
I did want to mention that something is taking place that I
2:01:14
wanted to identify and as always producers drive these things.
2:01:19
And we start off with simple karma. Then we went to goat
2:01:24
karma. Then we got stereo loose karma. Then we got the dog karma
2:01:32
and now
2:01:35
hydrogen karma
2:01:40
hydrogen karma just wanted to point out that it's there in
2:01:43
case anyone needs it.
2:01:44
Well, he didn't ask for it. That was four in a row with no
2:01:46
jingles no karma. But that ends with Daniel surveyor of the
2:01:50
realm. British Columbia he's in Victoria that cute little town
2:01:55
of Victoria 333 42 ITM gents it's my birthday. He's not on
2:02:00
the list that I can tell unless I can get yellow here. Yeah,
2:02:03
he's on he's on a show day no less to celebrate have some
2:02:06
money Can I get some karma for all in need and a nap for
2:02:10
humanity for those swollen amygdalas out there? They need
2:02:14
it badly.
2:02:21
You've got karma classic.
2:02:25
So Adam sent me a backup of all the jingwei it arrives
2:02:30
it arrived good.
2:02:31
Yeah, I'm actually I thought you sent me one of those little
2:02:34
uthai was a different fly.
2:02:35
I cannot. I'm sorry. Stop the show. I asked you multiple
2:02:41
times. Specifically I said it's one of these it's the one
2:02:44
terabyte that goes inside the one you advise me Do you have
2:02:47
the cable? You said I got so many cables. Tell me you
2:02:52
know I have dead cables. Like I got those I got those years ago.
2:02:55
That's an that's a new
2:02:59
drive. tell everybody about the drive. It's a drive. It's
2:03:02
a little terabyte SSD. That's very it's the same one that I
2:03:05
have in my machine actually. Same brand. Same system. Drive.
2:03:10
I own one of these drives
2:03:11
what you advise me to buy Oh,
2:03:14
I thought you I thought I was pushing you toward this Evie
2:03:17
this E it was e m v these little bitty dinky little
2:03:20
book when you said little dinky that's exactly what it is. It's
2:03:23
a little dinky SSD.
2:03:26
imagine it being one fourth that size. Oh, even smaller. Okay. I
2:03:31
didn't
2:03:31
realize that. Yeah, well anyway, so did you enjoy
2:03:35
fine. I mean, it's great. As fast as does everything. It's
2:03:37
not as fast as that.
2:03:39
I mean, the content. I mean, just do you see the wealth of
2:03:41
content that we have collapsed what
2:03:43
I was going to talk about not to drive, which was there's a lot
2:03:48
of forgot I'm going to put together a few I'm not going to
2:03:50
do it all at once. But there's a lot of forgotten jingles huh.
2:03:56
That you'll be reminded they actually exist for sure.
2:03:59
There's tons of stuff that we've forgotten about.
2:04:02
And I was going through the thing Oh, geez, I forgot all
2:04:06
about this gym. Whoa, this is a winner that we stopped using it
2:04:10
I know. It's too much.
2:04:13
I mean that I'm glad we're doing this and I will refresh your
2:04:16
drive every couple of months or so because I you know that's
2:04:20
that's our life right there. We lose that. The show was over.
2:04:24
Yeah, you have to have remote. Right to be remote. I backed it
2:04:29
up already. Of course you did. Course. And so we can. Yeah, I
2:04:34
think once every two months is fine.
2:04:37
Yeah, I backup every two weeks. I backup all all files full on
2:04:43
backup in. Well, two places now three weeks.
2:04:46
I tend to ghost my main drive every two to four weeks. And
2:04:54
then I think crabs I just do a swap out and I just lost
2:04:58
whatever
2:04:59
but but it is It is a and of course, all of this is online in
2:05:03
the show notes too. And I want to remind people being it.io
2:05:08
this, this search engine being it being it dot being it.io.
2:05:14
Whenever you say I'm looking for that clip that
2:05:18
you play, yeah,
2:05:20
please go to bing.io first, everything is in there.
2:05:24
I'm not gonna look up people's I'm not gonna look up clips for
2:05:27
people, they send me the same note. You know, you were talking
2:05:31
about me maybe on the last show, maybe I didn't catch it. But
2:05:35
every every
2:05:35
clip we play is in the show notes. And it's searchable on
2:05:40
Bing it.io or you can do whatever you want. But that's
2:05:43
the best place. That's the one I like there's multiple search
2:05:46
engines. And
2:05:46
if you can't find it, you can't find it's
2:05:48
a treasure trove of goodness people.
2:05:50
All we do is to show we don't do the
2:05:52
show research. We don't do anything.
2:05:55
No, we got it. We got a new show to work on.
2:05:57
Yeah, yeah. After the show. We're working on the next show.
2:06:00
Yeah, that's the way it is. Yeah. I look back Sunday and say
2:06:04
Holy crap, we wasted a lot of our life. What was grandpa
2:06:10
doing?
2:06:11
Please, people appreciate it. Oh, one of the persons who
2:06:14
appreciate shizzle Amy Ekman spray Spradling, in Healdsburg,
2:06:19
California. 333 33 ITM gence jingles and she's got her
2:06:24
jingles China's a whole don't enslave me camel and a dosa baby
2:06:27
making karma. My handsome husband Chris turns 33
2:06:32
coincidentally, on November 23, please add him to the birthday
2:06:35
list. I believe he's on there. And as a couple who know agendas
2:06:38
together I feel compelled to donate in honor of the
2:06:40
numerologically magical milestone. In the midst of
2:06:46
writing this note i was i was caught. My husband stated. If
2:06:51
you're donating to no agenda, I don't want to credit you are too
2:06:54
close to becoming a dame proof that he is a keeper. Oh, just
2:06:58
one small donation away from the roundtable. Thanks to my better
2:07:01
half who hit me in the mouth two years ago. I couldn't thank you
2:07:04
enough. Happy birthday, my love. Amy Ekman sprach now sweet.
2:07:10
There's a little dimensionality to this note, I hate to say. But
2:07:15
when these notes come in, especially with a donation,
2:07:18
especially when they're separate, you look at the email
2:07:21
address, you know, as they're using Google or the keys using I
2:07:25
don't know the exact one. But I think it's very toss winery.com
2:07:29
it's gonna be very tough. So she is work. She's a winery, a
2:07:32
winery, woman. Oh, and apparently her husband is too
2:07:36
and they work in these different wineries or they have and she's
2:07:38
now at Veritas is that from the looks of her emails at a groovy
2:07:42
winery? Oh, this is one of the I this is wine. This is why this
2:07:48
is one of those super high end boutique wineries that does get
2:07:53
hundred point ratings from the big boys Wow. consistently and
2:07:58
the wines 500 bucks a pop Polish by the way for these hundred
2:08:02
point California wines is cheap because everyone else I mean,
2:08:05
they all overcharge. But I have to assume as a small winery,
2:08:08
they're not making that much of it. Although you can still buy
2:08:11
it online. So I'm thinking immediately although she's not
2:08:16
the winemaker I think she's one of the marketing people i think
2:08:19
i think a barrel tasting
2:08:25
was wondering where this was going. If it's not a bit big
2:08:28
part and it's barrel tasting. Okay. Oh, there you go. You've
2:08:33
doctor
2:08:33
appropriately. You know, I might drag their Hollywood producer
2:08:38
over there for some barrel tasting
2:08:40
now I'm jealous.
2:08:42
I mean, he would never done this. I mean, I've barrel taste
2:08:45
all over the world. And
2:08:48
you know, last time I was barrel tasting, I was thinking I was in
2:08:53
burger was in Goa.
2:08:55
He's never done this and he would be it would be good for
2:08:59
him to start off the highest of high end
2:09:02
and then you can slip in your bit part request
2:09:04
now and get him sauce.
2:09:07
Unless he starts producing again, I'm getting nowhere
2:09:09
anonymous and Dubai's Next on the list Hold on, hold on.
2:09:16
And here's your karma.
2:09:18
You've got karma
2:09:25
not to me. What
2:09:26
are you bear? What mic are you using? Are you using your
2:09:28
regular mic?
2:09:29
I've got it. Why?
2:09:31
sounds different.
2:09:33
It's because instead of aiming it at the floor, yeah, it's
2:09:37
aimed toward the ceiling and so you're probably getting some
2:09:41
plosives you're getting you're probably getting some ambience
2:09:45
that's different.
2:09:46
Hmm. But don't use pointed at your face.
2:09:51
It's pointed upwards towards my face is below the mic is below
2:09:55
me. Okay. As opposed to being above my nose and pointing down.
2:09:59
I'm actually happy with it I just wanted to remark that it
2:10:01
sounds different
2:10:02
now okay well I did I just using the different like I've read
2:10:07
breed, I've adjusted how I'm making myself okay, anonymous is
2:10:11
next on the list from Dubai and he's in Dubai here man was
2:10:15
333 33 nothing beats getting myself a knighthood for my
2:10:21
birthday turned 34 on November 21. I have been on 3333 for a
2:10:26
while and I was planning on getting a knighthood for my 33rd
2:10:29
birthday but shit hit the fan last year and I think my delayed
2:10:34
knighthood triggered the beginning of the end of times.
2:10:36
Oh no, aka 2020 Okay, oops. Anyways, I wanted to acknowledge
2:10:43
all the great work you guys do and your insights are so often
2:10:46
spot on. Specifically when it comes to Gen Z. As a teacher
2:10:51
whose students are all Gen. Gen Z's, everything you speak of, I
2:10:58
see even all the way from Dubai, being over socialized and under
2:11:03
informed is the true global pandemic. I also believe the
2:11:06
millennial should be split into two groups older and younger,
2:11:10
which we've discussed on this show many a time because yeah, I
2:11:13
personally have both those groups represented in my house.
2:11:17
Yes, yes.
2:11:20
Where the younger millennials share many of the blinded traits
2:11:23
of Gen Z's a few but they're aware of the difference. I will
2:11:29
be working hard to make sure my two Gen alphas at home are well
2:11:35
informed with shrunken amygdala Yes, sorry john for the long
2:11:39
note this was medium size note. You love you. You love the show.
2:11:45
You love me Tarzan, you will love the show
2:11:48
your love the show. No jingles only karma for my knighthood
2:11:52
please give me the title of Sir teacher sir. Sir teacher, sir
2:11:57
the anonymous Arab in Dubai. And for the roundtable I'd like some
2:12:02
Shri Rama Sharma and shwarma and Thomas Thomas is at the
2:12:08
roundtable
2:12:08
Yes, well, we're adding some schwarmann here's the karma
2:12:11
flow.
2:12:12
You've got karma for
2:12:13
you actually.
2:12:17
Laura Nelson in Strasbourg, Colorado 333 all credit to
2:12:23
Preston and a deed dishing please Happy Birthday Preston in
2:12:32
his name is she last name is Shin gone or shingle shingle and
2:12:37
maybe I have no he
2:12:38
gets the credit though. But he gets the credit. Okay,
2:12:41
thank you for making us a no agenda Family
2:12:43
Law. Nice.
2:12:45
That was a good note. You can thank Laura later. Tyler Boyd
2:12:50
and Cary North Carolina because the first associate Executive
2:12:52
Producer $270 and 51 cents doesn't make good of months four
2:12:56
months of laughs information and true journalism. Thank you for
2:13:00
being part of my sanity network.
2:13:02
I'd like to request a de douchey and please play tears freedom
2:13:07
and pretty good
2:13:30
I like good sequence especially a
2:13:34
good one Chris Baylor in Grafton Wisconsin 23456 a favorite of
2:13:41
mine first thank you both for doing the work secondly Adam for
2:13:45
jingles you can you sort them by date? I'd like the third oldest
2:13:49
if not some pew pew. Okay, actually cancer and by dig but
2:13:55
not easily from the looks of it. By the way I want to mention
2:13:58
this again if I want to interrupt the show again. You
2:14:02
are a neat freak I said so before I've said it again I've
2:14:04
been to your house you say you're not but anyone with
2:14:07
Tourette's is generally a neat freak. Your organizational
2:14:11
structure for these clips and all the other crap that you sent
2:14:15
me the backup of crass like very, very over organized. What
2:14:20
are you talking about? How over organized? It's organized by
2:14:25
date? How is that over? organized? Yeah.
2:14:29
What do you go
2:14:30
for folder in a folder in a folder and a folder in a folder?
2:14:33
Holy moly.
2:14:34
I'm a folder. Your folder guy not a scripture.
2:14:41
Secondly, Adam for the genius can be sorted by date. Okay, can
2:14:44
I get an F cancer for my aunt and the chancellor of my
2:14:47
university, both amazing people and very close with can also get
2:14:52
a deer hunting karma for everyone out there in the woods
2:14:55
this weekend. You can thank Kevin Rose for bringing me to
2:14:59
the fold As a big fan of diggnation and john was on a
2:15:02
podcast with Kevin around the time he started the best podcast
2:15:05
in the universe. I went back to listen to episode one and caught
2:15:09
up rather quickly. As a young TV reporter in western Wisconsin,
2:15:13
it was great to know I wasn't crazy, disagreeing with my ga m
2:15:18
a JMS professors and feeling like an outsider in the newsroom
2:15:24
for wanting to look into real stories. It took me a while to
2:15:27
get out of news, but now I work in higher ed and fit in
2:15:32
perfectly.
2:15:32
What is gems? professors gems journalism and media science
2:15:37
and media science? I betcha
2:15:40
media, Media Studies Journalism and Media Studies. Yeah. Okay.
2:15:45
mediocre study, journalism journalism and mediocre studies.
2:15:50
Any ways I'm sorry to get a bunch of diseases how you
2:15:56
pronounce it. I'm sorry today's donations long but it's my last
2:16:01
at least as a humble mortal producer. Today I become a nice
2:16:05
accounting attached in the back of a Costco receipt. I would
2:16:08
like to be known as sir camera Chris of the BJJ mats. And
2:16:13
that's Brazilian Jiu Jitsu you. Can I please get some line each
2:16:20
line is red and cheese curds. Okay, I'll bring the hot sticks
2:16:26
line in cools beer. And something john would look into?
2:16:31
Or is some old line in Google's beer. Something? I've had the
2:16:34
beer. Just suppose a bar in Chicago that serves that I've
2:16:37
had it there. Is it good? It's quite good. I think they were
2:16:41
bought and sold by some as maybe passes. Maybe they're not owned
2:16:44
by the originals, so it might not be as good as when I had it.
2:16:48
That's it.
2:16:49
Thanks, Chris. Yes, Chris. I did do a quick reverse sort. I just
2:16:54
picked the first jingle that came up. I don't think it's by
2:16:57
any means the oldest but I'll play it for you with the F
2:17:00
cancer requests. I've got information man. New shit has
2:17:03
come to light.
2:17:09
You've got karma.
2:17:15
Mike, this is I think it's Brewer 234223247. And he emailed
2:17:21
in a note. This is a note. It's kind of long but he does have a
2:17:26
boots on the ground report that I do need to read the note
2:17:28
itself is short. Because in Adelaide, South Australia, so we
2:17:32
may have information Yes, South
2:17:34
Australia is locked down. Or what lounge center.
2:17:39
Many thanks for your efforts and imig Dillard demin de munition
2:17:44
which I like the term that's a good show title to a MiG dilla
2:17:48
definition. I've been listening to you guys since show 1247
2:17:53
having moved across from JRE Could I request a deed dishing
2:17:58
please?
2:18:00
You've been juiced.
2:18:02
I've said it before? I'll say it again. I love the fact that a
2:18:05
lot of jr II people come in at the higher levels of the
2:18:08
donation segment. Yeah, they have money. No jingles but a
2:18:14
goat common for everyone's suffering through COVID-19 84.
2:18:17
Thank you for your courage Mike and Adelaide now I have I can
2:18:21
read the boots on the ground report now or later.
2:18:24
Well, let me do this. Let me do the deducing first. I mean, that
2:18:27
seems to be an order.
2:18:30
You've been juiced?
2:18:33
I'll tell you what, tell me.
2:18:35
I'm going to I will. I'll tell you what, once you get the good
2:18:40
karma. I'm going to skip the big reveal tg report until we get
2:18:44
back to the show itself because it is worth reading. Okay.
2:18:48
You've got karma
2:18:54
quite good. Actually. A Gus not K and OT and groaning and
2:19:02
moaning and groaning guys
2:19:04
not get some special pronunciation who's not know
2:19:08
who's cannot?
2:19:09
Tony said. Okay. To a 666 and he's in good. Running in
2:19:17
singing. Please de douche me, Adam.
2:19:21
You've been
2:19:25
on Yes, john this way. Okay. I'm not reading this note. You're
2:19:29
reading it in the proper Dutch accent.
2:19:33
Okay, yes, George. Sean, this will be a doing breaker for you.
2:19:36
Once again. It's me again, who's not from cloning in the great
2:19:41
Oh, yes, but I'm also known as ski a far I used to live on St.
2:19:45
Martin, North East Caribbean, but since Hurricane Irma smashed
2:19:49
my house into pieces, and me and my little family me my wife
2:19:53
Jessica and my daughter Skylar had to relocate back to my home
2:19:57
grounds in the area of the city of Corona it in a small village
2:20:01
called harks data, which is actually very old and has quite
2:20:05
the history with monks living there and nights and shit.
2:20:08
Anyways, thank you guys for the best podcast in the universe I
2:20:13
have been listening for over a decade, and I feel ashamed for
2:20:17
only now starting to donate. You guys inspired me for years
2:20:22
already ago to start one of the most legendary ditch podcast
2:20:26
series ever made is the Qf podcast on Radio 66.6 fm.
2:20:31
Nonetheless, I will keep punching peeps in the mouth and
2:20:34
by debate. I hope you guys like the cartoon scene that I'm
2:20:37
working up on the both of you guys flying a Huey helicopter
2:20:40
attacking the MSM offices with little missiles and stuff.
2:20:44
Martin JJ came up with the storyline and no agenda social
2:20:48
again. Thanks for all the good work and I will try to keep
2:20:51
doing my best to keep these donations flowing your way.
2:20:57
Interesting. It wasn't written with enough of a double Dutch
2:20:59
accent incorporate that you could really get to your Dutch
2:21:02
accent I did
2:21:03
the best I could do i mean he's just I just
2:21:05
find it interesting because I've noticed this myself if I want to
2:21:07
do an accent reading some note. It really has to be in the
2:21:11
writing it does if it's not absolutely
2:21:13
clearly the guy has almost no accent. He speaks English
2:21:17
fluently.
2:21:18
Yes. I might sound like a Frenchman
2:21:23
Thank you very much. Did he want anything any? I'm gonna give him
2:21:26
a karma just feels we're not only making fun of him. You've
2:21:29
got
2:21:33
Thank you, sir Don Baron of New Hampshire in the Merrimack
2:21:37
Valley and Windham, New Hampshire. $201. And his note is
2:21:41
thanks guys. Karma Please, sir Don Baron of New
2:21:45
Hampshire.
2:21:47
You've got karma.
2:21:51
Last on our little list is Lilian Oh, Soner. I'm guessing
2:21:56
so e h. n er $200. I called out my husband she writes for
2:22:00
wishing me a happy birthday last week on the show, and not
2:22:04
donating Oh, no, he added a human resource a couple of years
2:22:07
ago. And so it's been a while since we both donated. I quote,
2:22:12
hit everybody in the mouth about your show. And mainly start off
2:22:15
by saying, Do you remember Adam Curry from MTV? And then
2:22:20
proceeded to explain what this show is about?
2:22:23
I always wonder what the next line is. So in my mind is like
2:22:27
this, you'd be the unsuspecting person about to be hitting them
2:22:30
out.
2:22:30
Hey, how you doing? Hey, do
2:22:32
you remember Adam Curry from MTV?
2:22:35
The guy with the hair? Yeah.
2:22:38
He's nuts. I don't know. What is the next line? As they say, Oh,
2:22:46
the guy with the hair. You're exactly right. What is next?
2:22:50
What is the next line?
2:22:51
He's nuts. He's gone nuts.
2:22:54
He's gone crazy. He's hanging out with weird people.
2:22:58
My husband taught Thank you. My husband told me you hate being
2:23:02
referenced like this. But for my age group, it's all I have. Oh,
2:23:07
no.
2:23:08
Okay.
2:23:09
I outed myself with some knowledge of COVID testing to a
2:23:13
group of my newly found mom group friends sounds like but no
2:23:17
one wanted to listen to it. My daughter's play days have been
2:23:21
awkward ever since?
2:23:23
Oh, my goodness, this is it. This is you can't is nuts. You
2:23:26
can't say anything. You're right,
2:23:29
Adam, I feel you cannot discuss anything with anyone. A few
2:23:34
people I know got COVID and hannig xiety. And heart
2:23:38
palpitations for weeks afterwards. I believe the stress
2:23:43
of the media and how the virus is being portrayed is making a
2:23:47
big psychological impact on people. Thank you so much for
2:23:51
all of your efforts and dissecting the COVID news that
2:23:54
has kept me from losing my head. You have been spot on about
2:23:59
everything and what is coming. I won't give up the fight. No
2:24:03
jobs. Karma would be great for my husband, who is a dude named
2:24:07
Ben.
2:24:09
Yeah,
2:24:10
boy, man, it's it's really bad this this. People have been
2:24:16
frightened to such an incredible degree. We were getting notes
2:24:20
from around the world that are very similar. Yes. And I don't
2:24:25
know if how these people ever get out of that. I mean, it's
2:24:28
there was a
2:24:29
but you're talking about the people that don't listen to the
2:24:31
show how they ever? Yes,
2:24:32
yes, exactly.
2:24:34
There was as the show seemed to be to have their heads on
2:24:36
straight.
2:24:37
Trying to think there was some kind of was that there was an
2:24:45
example of something in recent US history, which was the
2:24:51
windshield pitting scandal. Did you know anything about this?
2:24:57
Apparently there was in Seattle. There you go. Go. This was the
2:25:01
great Seattle windshield pitting epidemic of 1954. Where where
2:25:08
people were convinced by the 10s of thousands, that there were
2:25:14
little pits appearing in their windscreens on their cars there.
2:25:19
And it turns out, this turned out to be completely bullcrap.
2:25:23
But people swore that it was happening.
2:25:25
Mass hysteria. Yes, there's a there's a number of books on
2:25:28
this that have been written about mass hysteria events. And
2:25:35
they're real, and they do cause they cause cause illness. And I
2:25:38
have to say that one of the things about doing this show
2:25:41
which we break down the things that could cause mass hysteria,
2:25:46
especially these mainstream media, the M five M. And it's
2:25:50
interesting that the five actually was the number of media
2:25:53
outlets that are doing all this bad. Work with ABC, NBC, CBS,
2:25:58
New York Times Washington, post five, five. Everybody else
2:26:03
follows suit. It's, it's a benefit. I feel good about at
2:26:08
least blowing holes in the nonsense that could cause you to
2:26:13
get sick, just from listening to the reports. Terrible, and it's
2:26:17
true.
2:26:17
And I actually have another example of that in a moment. But
2:26:20
first, we need to do the jobs, karma, jobs,
2:26:22
jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:26:28
Karma?
2:26:33
Is that it?
2:26:35
That's it. That's our associate executive producers and
2:26:38
executive producers per show. 1278 1297. Yeah, when you few
2:26:44
left, and we got the show 33 more,
2:26:46
and we'll be at the big 1300
2:26:48
show 13,000
2:26:50
thank you to these executive producers and associate
2:26:53
executive producers for doing the work and supporting the
2:26:56
show. It's really the only way we can continue as you can tell,
2:26:59
there's no one else who can do this is certainly not if you
2:27:03
have commercials or you're taking some kind of corporate
2:27:05
funding, it will not work. We all produce this together. You
2:27:09
are doing it by sending us clips, information, your
2:27:11
experience, artwork, running servers and helping us
2:27:15
financially. It truly is the value for value model network.
2:27:19
And we love having you all a part of it here and get donation
2:27:22
to support us for Thursday's show. And you know, it's going
2:27:25
to be a doozy. Please go to
2:27:27
devora.org
2:27:29
slash n A and thank you again for this credits, which are all
2:27:32
completely real and verifiable. Thank you for your courage.
2:27:35
Our formula is this. We go out. Actually, I
2:27:52
was gonna play this for you because I'm only for you do
2:27:56
that. Oh,
2:27:57
do you know the genesis of the word? a doozy said Dude, I said
2:28:03
it's gonna be a doozy. Yes,
2:28:04
I did say that. That
2:28:06
that word come from I
2:28:07
do not know.
2:28:09
But how's it spelled
2:28:10
de o ZY?
2:28:13
Well, it's also spelled de OZ and d o s. Weiss got a lot of
2:28:17
spellings, but it refers to the Duesenberg car,
2:28:22
which if I recall was a failure.
2:28:24
No, it wasn't.
2:28:26
There wasn't the Duesenberg was.
2:28:27
Rosenberg was one of the greatest automobiles ever made.
2:28:30
Well, I'm thinking of something
2:28:31
when I thinking about when we think about the term starts
2:28:35
with,
2:28:35
there's no the Duesenberg ism was a huge successful car. But
2:28:39
it was a high end car. Every coach was pretty much hand built
2:28:43
nice. And it was like the creme de la creme of cars and does
2:28:46
does it was a doozy. Well, that is exactly what we're getting on
2:28:49
Thursday from the show a high end car, everybody gets a car.
2:28:55
And you get a car. Just when we'd gotten used to the
2:29:01
medication being advertised on television, for people who are
2:29:06
suffering from schizophrenia, schizophrenia, which I mean, we
2:29:11
heard those commercials that literally voices whispering,
2:29:15
which I think triggers this actual condition. And now as
2:29:21
with almost all drugs in the system, I'm not shaming anybody,
2:29:24
but I do find it remarkable that we have a medication which
2:29:30
according to the side effects can kill you. For
2:29:39
what did I just say? I'm already forgetting the the affliction is
2:29:43
already working. You were talking about schizophrenia.
2:29:45
Yes, I'm sorry, the other voice was talking. But now you have a
2:29:50
condition that you can get from taking that drug which is called
2:29:56
akathisia. And this commercial I'm going to say it right up
2:30:01
front. If you have this condition turn off the podcast
2:30:05
or just turned on the volume because I believe that they are
2:30:08
trying to trigger all kinds of horrible things with people who
2:30:12
suffer from this Listen to this.
2:30:18
restlessness.
2:30:22
extreme anxiety.
2:30:26
Pacing
2:30:28
a constant urge to move. If someone you know is suffering
2:30:32
from schizophrenia, they may also be struggling with apathy.
2:30:37
A common side effect of some schizophrenia medications, Learn
2:30:40
more at myakka sesia.com
2:30:43
cannot be healthy. Dare plan like
2:30:45
dentist sound good
2:30:47
dentist drills and knocking on garage doors. That is that is
2:30:51
wrong that is triggering for some people. Yeah.
2:30:57
So what did what tell us about this ailment?
2:30:59
I know it's it sounds like tardive dyskinesia. It's all
2:31:05
kind of related is apparently on a lot of these SSRI based
2:31:10
medications you get twitches and movements similar to Tourette's.
2:31:14
And it's involuntary movements shoulders, arms, heads twitches.
2:31:21
So that Okay, now there's a medication to stop that, but why
2:31:25
but why do it with those sound effects? This can't be this
2:31:28
can't be good. It should be our laws, health, commerce, health.
2:31:31
Do you hear voices?
2:31:34
So you mentioned that, you know, one of our donors talked about
2:31:38
giving common appeal without hunting. So there's a big story
2:31:42
up in the Seattle area about this teacher who just decided
2:31:45
she just bailed on her class and went to the woods.
2:31:51
And why not? Why not?
2:31:54
candles? Some sort of
2:31:55
take the laptop and she did classes from the woods.
2:31:58
She couldn't get internet she claimed there's no power in the
2:32:01
woods. Uh huh. But so there's a big skate like I picked up by a
2:32:05
back and forth about it on it was on fox and friends in fact,
2:32:09
by picked up the local station up in Seattle discussing this
2:32:13
with the woman herself and bitching about these these
2:32:17
remote learning situations.
2:32:19
Some parents are doing to struggle along with their kids
2:32:23
dealing with a remote learning environment. But the one thing
2:32:26
you don't expect us to get an email from your kids teacher,
2:32:29
suggesting that remote learning has to be canceled because your
2:32:33
teacher has moved to the forest and doesn't have internet access
2:32:37
due to a power outage yet. That's exactly what happened to
2:32:40
Seattle's Jenny Feldman,
2:32:42
who has three kids, one of whom was impacted by this decision in
2:32:46
the language arts class, and a middle school. She
2:32:49
joins me now Jenny, welcome to the show. Thanks, Jason.
2:32:52
So you posted a screenshot of this email that you got to your
2:32:56
Twitter feed kind of exploded. You ended up doing an interview
2:32:59
on Fox and Friends earlier this morning. Take us through this
2:33:02
email that you got.
2:33:03
Yeah, so my daughter got a message from her language art
2:33:09
teacher the other day saying that? I'm sorry.
2:33:13
language arts teacher, what is this? What subject is this? I
2:33:19
have no
2:33:19
idea. I never had language which we used to have. When I was a
2:33:22
kid. They teach your French or German or Latin, which was the
2:33:26
ones
2:33:26
you just say language wise it? Is it language arts, they
2:33:29
call it this? Would they call it so it's a language arts?
2:33:32
Yeah. So my daughter got a message from her language art
2:33:38
teacher. The other day thing that class was canceled because
2:33:43
she was in a forest. And she'd lost internet. And my daughter
2:33:48
brought that message to our attention. She thought it was
2:33:50
kind of odd. She's 13.
2:33:53
And she had she had told the class offline that she was deep
2:33:58
in the woods visiting her parents for a few weeks. So I
2:34:02
posted this message really not because of this specific
2:34:05
situation, to be honest, it's it's more highlighting the
2:34:10
impact of remote learning on the kids overall, which has been
2:34:13
going on for eight months here in Seattle. And these kids have
2:34:18
just been dealt a lot
2:34:21
so have the teachers we had a couple friends over last night
2:34:27
all local is Dale the bar owner who's whose bar was destroyed by
2:34:31
the shutdowns it's the the teacher now the teacher we
2:34:36
talked about you know, she gave us a lot of good insight on the
2:34:39
on the conditions. But she says it's completely ineffective. And
2:34:44
everyone is goofing off every everyone's doing these things
2:34:47
from the car to do it from the hammock did it from wherever
2:34:51
they feel like it and there's there's no progress. There's no
2:34:55
guidance. They're not teaching that just babysitting pods. It's
2:35:00
it's completely uneffective it's it's not working, this is not
2:35:05
going to end well for these children.
2:35:10
Or they catch up by double timing it, but they won't No,
2:35:14
no, no, no. And if that's gonna make it worse, it's gonna make
2:35:17
it worse for our basic thesis about over socialized and under
2:35:21
educated.
2:35:22
Well, did you hear the Megyn? Kelly podcast?
2:35:28
No, this is your beat? No, you're
2:35:30
the one that started bringing Megyn Kelly to the party.
2:35:33
But I know but you really liked it.
2:35:35
I think Megyn Kelly, I mean, it's interesting when someone
2:35:39
has $65 million, how freely they speak. But she still has ads or
2:35:45
whatever. She is moving out of New York, New York City with her
2:35:50
family where she has been for I think quite a while being in the
2:35:54
New York media scene. And the reason for it is a a letter that
2:36:00
was circled that was circulated by the I don't know if was the
2:36:03
principal of the school where her kids are, or some higher up
2:36:07
on the school board. And it was important that all the
2:36:10
children's parents were aware of this. And she shared this letter
2:36:16
on her show, which she read and I
2:36:21
I'm just flabbergasted. And I think she made a very smart
2:36:24
decision by taking your kids out of this particular educational
2:36:27
facility. She says there is a killer cop sitting in every
2:36:33
school where white children learn. They gleefully soak in
2:36:37
their whitewashed history that downplays the Holocaust of
2:36:40
indigenous native peoples and Africans in the Americas. They
2:36:43
happily believe they're all white spaces exist as a matter
2:36:47
of personal effort and willingly use violence against black
2:36:49
bodies to keep those spaces white. As black bodies dropped,
2:36:53
like flies around us from violence at White hands, how can
2:36:57
we in any of our minds conclude that whites are all right? white
2:37:02
children are left unchecked and unbothered in their schools,
2:37:05
homes and communities to join advanced and protect systems
2:37:08
that take away black life? I am tired of white people reveling
2:37:13
in their state sanctioned depravity, snuffing out black
2:37:16
life with no consequences. Where's the urgency for school
2:37:21
reform? for white kids being indoctrinated in Black Death and
2:37:26
protected from the consequences? Where are the government
2:37:29
sponsored reports looking into how white mothers are raising
2:37:33
culturally deprived children who think Black Death is okay. Where
2:37:38
are the national conferences, white papers and policy
2:37:41
positions on the pathology of whiteness in schools? And here's
2:37:45
the last part this time, if you really want to make a difference
2:37:49
in black lives, and not have to protest this shit again, go
2:37:53
reform white kids, because that's where the problem is,
2:37:57
with white children being raised from infancy to violate black
2:38:02
bodies with no remorse or accountability.
2:38:08
How about that?
2:38:10
That's a gym. It's it's a scandal.
2:38:13
It is beyond scandalous. How dare these people? I'm sure this
2:38:19
is going on in a lot of schools.
2:38:22
But yeah, well, that's the this is what's going on everywhere.
2:38:25
And that's where these kids are. So they don't know anything
2:38:27
about anything. And as somebody once said, No nation can survive
2:38:34
when its children are taught to hate the country, which seems is
2:38:39
exactly what's going on. Yeah, they're just teaching these kids
2:38:43
to hate themselves and hate the country. That's why you see
2:38:46
these you see it with these teenagers on some of these
2:38:49
YouTube channels? I I am, you know, I'd rather be black than
2:38:53
white. In fact, it makes a lot of black commentators go
2:38:56
What? Most say most black commentators. Yeah,
2:39:05
thank you. Thanks for that's a good No, no, it's a Gen Z, since
2:39:09
we're talking about,
2:39:10
Ah, yes, Gen Z. Hi, bin. Look, I have a I have one Gen Z clip. Do
2:39:18
you want to start off with your j? My Gen Z's. And why are we
2:39:22
doing this? Why are we doing this Gen Z
2:39:24
segment, we decided that it's important to just to and in
2:39:28
fact, we get a lot of we're getting notes now about it. Take
2:39:31
a look at Gen Z and see where it fits into the scheme of things
2:39:33
is that's the next group of kids coming up. They're going to be
2:39:36
dominating everything in probably 20 years. And we need
2:39:42
to know what what where they're coming from where they're all
2:39:45
about. Are they normal?
2:39:50
Yeah, yeah, perfectly normal for the times I guess. We'll put
2:39:56
what clip do you have? Oh, I have an example of gender. Radio
2:40:00
production?
2:40:01
Oh, well, let's do it
2:40:03
Gen Z radio production. And it's this is from public radio, PRI
2:40:09
Public Radio International. So they are a commercial entity
2:40:11
that produces Public Radio programming. And this particular
2:40:17
clip is about a tweet. And that should tell you I mean, this is
2:40:23
a two minute segment on public radio that in to some degree,
2:40:30
taxpayers pay a little bit for but not very much. But you will
2:40:34
get an idea of what Gen Z radio sounds like. And I think it'll
2:40:38
probably fit in with your clips. This was a about the tweet for
2:40:41
the emotional support Canadian.
2:40:49
on election
2:40:49
night alone, Canadian tweeted, I read your American emotional
2:40:54
support Canadians are on standby. If you have not yet
2:40:57
received your emotional support, Canadian one will be assigned to
2:41:00
you shortly.
2:41:07
thousands of Americans expressed interest and they demanded
2:41:11
emotional support Canadian like now, dear customers, the waiting
2:41:16
time may be longer than usual. We apologize for the wait. And
2:41:20
thank you for your patience. Some Americans even requested
2:41:23
specific support Canadians like Ryan Gosling,
2:41:26
so it's not gonna be easy. It's gonna be really hard. That's
2:41:29
from the movie, the notebook,
2:41:30
but it's like he's talking right to America.
2:41:33
What do you want?
2:41:34
It's not that simple.
2:41:35
What do you want?
2:41:37
What do I want? I want to call my own emotional support
2:41:41
Canadian, my bestie Christine Lee up in Toronto,
2:41:44
you know, no use of the term bestie. And this needs to be
2:41:48
documented my bestie Christine Lee up in Toronto,
2:41:52
you know,
2:41:54
this is a time where people have to get together. Trust that the
2:41:59
system will work. Unite again, you're the United States for
2:42:03
God's sake, you would honestly have trust in the institutions.
2:42:09
I mean, you have a strong democracy, and you've got to
2:42:12
keep it strong.
2:42:14
Do you honestly believe that because you're an optimist.
2:42:17
I am an optimist. And you know, where Canadians diverged from
2:42:23
Americans that believes in government, we believed in
2:42:27
paying our taxes. paying your taxes actually cared for each
2:42:35
other, you wouldn't be in this mess to begin with. This is like
2:42:38
a guilt trip like I get from my grandmother.
2:42:40
I mean, the world looks to the United States for its ability to
2:42:45
get itself together. So
2:42:47
yeah, we believe in you.
2:42:50
You got to get together.
2:42:53
Isn't she a great emotional support Canadian? I'll probably
2:42:57
be calling her a lot in the next few months. Besides, I'm pretty
2:43:00
sure Ryan Gosling was taken.
2:43:02
And that is how radio airtime is wasted by Gen Z.
2:43:10
I thought there's a couple of insights in there. One, I didn't
2:43:14
know that paying your taxes was part of a belief system. Oh,
2:43:19
yes, yes, yes. Yes.
2:43:21
I didn't know that. That was news to me. You just paid your
2:43:26
tag? No, no,
2:43:27
I believe in it. Rather, it's a belief system.
2:43:30
Well, you know, there's a number of things, but Gen Z, we talked
2:43:34
about, they're self absorbed. For one thing, they also have,
2:43:38
like you said, the bestie they have a lot that language of
2:43:41
their own. I have an example of this.
2:43:44
What can I just read I think
2:43:45
is the queen of Gen Z.
2:43:47
One of the big things I'm noticing with the gen Z's. And
2:43:51
again, we are going on the premise that they are over
2:43:54
socialized and under informed. So they're always on the lookout
2:43:57
for not offending anybody.
2:43:59
They should I think they're misinformed. But you go on
2:44:02
Yeah, okay. No, no, actually, I disagree. They're under informed
2:44:08
they have no desire to read beyond the headline. So besides
2:44:12
this bestie business, which kind of cropped up in the past year.
2:44:19
People are so afraid to miss gender, or or not use the proper
2:44:24
pronoun. I've noticed they will say Hello, friend. Hi, friend.
2:44:33
It's It's It's Yes, it's the perfect way it
2:44:36
talked into this
2:44:38
one. Well, because you can't say guys because Haha, oh. You can't
2:44:44
say guys.
2:44:46
Can't say he.
2:44:47
No. No. So we can say she so it's it's it's much better to
2:44:51
say Hello, friend. Hi, friend. I get this all the time. Hi,
2:44:54
friend.
2:44:56
Yeah, you retort. I'm not winning. No, no no your friend
2:45:01
if someone comes up to me and says hi friend I just go
2:45:07
that's what I do.
2:45:10
So I the queen of Gen Z in my opinion, is Claudia Conway.
2:45:18
Oh yes.
2:45:19
Kellyanne Conway is
2:45:20
otter senior old botting She is the pro toe Jen's ear
2:45:26
and since she just played a clip with the best The thing I want
2:45:28
to start off I got three clips from her but I want to play this
2:45:32
is her mumbling I want you to tell me what she says
2:45:35
Can someone please tell me I look at borrows from euphoria.
2:45:39
Okay,
2:45:42
can somebody please tell me let me dissect it
2:45:44
Can someone please tell me about it for us from euphoria?
2:45:48
Can somebody please tell me why I'm so giddy with euphoria? Can
2:45:51
someone please tell me about the money for us from before?
2:45:53
You know I did we able to deconstruct What's he saying?
2:45:58
I was never able to hear it until somebody in the mastodon
2:46:02
chat room. Uh huh. He gets triggered again. Somebody tell
2:46:05
me if I look like Maddie paret she's wearing some sweaty
2:46:09
looking thing is, is tight fitting costume. And she's
2:46:13
posing. And then she comes up and says Do I Can somebody tell
2:46:16
me I look like Mattie Perez from euphoria.
2:46:19
Oh, and that's an important thing. Obviously.
2:46:23
Please tell me a little bit about the pros from before you.
2:46:25
Come on. Okay.
2:46:28
Thanks. And this fast talking, which I will have to add to Gen
2:46:32
Z is possibly Adderall induced.
2:46:37
I think
2:46:39
I, I don't want to throw too high a number out there. But I
2:46:43
think 90% of Gen Z. The characteristics of Gen Z are
2:46:48
Adderall induced. This is in fetta means Yeah. These are a
2:46:52
generation of kids that are hopped up on amphetamines. Yeah,
2:46:59
Adderall is just a blend of amphetamines. They find this.
2:47:02
It's messing speed.
2:47:05
Let's not mess this up. I think there's some dexedrine in there.
2:47:07
So I use blender. Oh, yeah. It's a good blend math.
2:47:11
It's good stuff. It's good.
2:47:12
God knows what the kids are dream is lovely as they used to
2:47:15
come the
2:47:15
kids love the vyvanse that's what the vyvanse because it has
2:47:18
timed release throughout the day. So you don't get that
2:47:21
rundown feeling just odd feeling.
2:47:26
amphetamines eventually cause a let down and suicide catches
2:47:30
that sourcing a lot of suicides in Gen Z can't Yeah, can't be
2:47:33
people should not be taking this crap. They love it. I mean, if I
2:47:36
were supposing I was a kid, and I had free amphetamines. I
2:47:41
didn't have to go to the black market or go to a you know get
2:47:45
at you can get their pure you can get I'd probably be drug
2:47:49
you can get them from disk. You can get them from the school
2:47:52
doctor.
2:47:54
Yeah, I I'd be doomed. I feel these kids. They got to get a
2:47:57
clue. All right. So here she is. Apparently, he has been invited
2:48:02
to audition for American Idol.
2:48:06
Hey, guys, I'm here. That's how you start. That's how you start
2:48:10
a post. Hey, guys.
2:48:12
Hey guys. I'm
2:48:13
here at American Idol confessional. Today, and I have
2:48:19
my audition soon. So stay tuned for that very, very nervous but
2:48:24
very excited.
2:48:27
Oh,
2:48:29
this is good. Now the question is of course Why does anybody
2:48:33
give a crap about this but apparently she she is self
2:48:36
absorbed she's putting this out there for everybody must be
2:48:39
driving her mother and dad nuts but okay. She's
2:48:43
divorced and she emancipate from her parents or
2:48:45
is that no, she never managed to pull that off. That's why
2:48:48
Kellyanne quit the White House and went move back in to get
2:48:52
this daughter back on track but she kept I don't know if she's
2:48:54
been successful. How's that working out getting? The
2:48:57
daughter wasn't getting enough attention from her. Oh, crowd.
2:49:00
Oh, that's what it is. Yeah.
2:49:02
So I said well, okay. She's gonna she's gonna do an American
2:49:06
house. She's gonna be embarrassing to watch somebody
2:49:08
do so I found a tick tock of her singing Oh. So we can know what
2:49:14
to expect and when she ever if she gets on the air, and I think
2:49:19
Yeah, she's got nothing but talent.
2:49:21
Well, first of all before I triggered the clip, guaranteed
2:49:25
her audition is going to be on the air. Are you kidding me?
2:49:27
This is television gold doesn't matter.
2:49:31
I just said that in passing is it would be impossible not to
2:49:36
put her on the air. And by the way, they're not going to slam
2:49:38
or either because because what's his name that the grouchy old
2:49:42
Brit guys not on the show anywhere who is real
2:49:44
complimentary?
2:49:45
Oh, really? That that? Oh, that's interesting. So they had
2:49:48
to ruin the format of the show because it ruined
2:49:51
the show with everybody's nice.
2:49:53
Oh, no, that's not that's the that was the beauty of the whole
2:49:56
show is everyone there was one guy who was claimed to be on it.
2:49:59
I'm cow. So they've taken that element out of the show.
2:50:04
Yeah, so same is gone. And now it was Katy Perry and she never
2:50:08
really doesn't have a bad word for anything.
2:50:10
What are you doing?
2:50:11
Honey?
2:50:11
What are you doing watching this drivel?
2:50:13
I don't watch it. I just watch Claudia.
2:50:15
Okay, well, let's get to Claudia singing. I can't wait. Oh my
2:50:24
god, I
2:50:25
was so flat. Wait.
2:50:57
It's so bad.
2:51:02
Oh my god.
2:51:04
Oh, no. And she's getting all angry. Yeah, she
2:51:09
blows her top.
2:51:10
Oh, this is Adderall. Oh, yeah. No, I did as this is, after all,
2:51:16
she getting all pissed off about it. Oh, my goodness.
2:51:21
Yeah, there Well, there's a lot of this going around. A lot of
2:51:25
this is going around and we sit here and
2:51:27
laugh at it. I know that Edie are really bad. He should be
2:51:30
nice.
2:51:31
No, no, no, no, in fact, I'm going to play three, three gas
2:51:36
from your, from the Office of the President Elect, which I
2:51:40
would also just like us to laugh at. And we're just this is just
2:51:43
pre laughing. Because, you know, john is pretty sure that Joe
2:51:47
Biden will assume the overall will consume the Oval Office. So
2:51:53
let's get ready for the kind of things we can expect from from
2:51:58
Good Old Joe, here we go.
2:51:59
We talked a lot about the governors about what their
2:52:02
immediate needs are, I'm gonna we're gonna impose the we're
2:52:05
gonna enforce the excuse me employ the defense, Rick attract
2:52:10
the actor to be able to go out there and dictate companies
2:52:15
build and do following things. We need much more testing. We
2:52:18
need much more masculine You mean, it's more we need gloves
2:52:22
to go and ask the National Governors Association through
2:52:25
the Governor Cuomo and the ones on the line to let us know
2:52:28
what their shortages are. What
2:52:30
what I mean, this guy is going to be dynamite for the show. If
2:52:35
we can ever figure out what he's saying.
2:52:38
Thirdly, we discussed the need to help states with title 32
2:52:41
funding for the National Guard. That's a fancy way of saying
2:52:45
governors, governors need to be able to get funding when they
2:52:50
just fall when they just they need to
2:52:54
remember to bring their national guard to play and National Guard
2:52:57
is gonna have to play this to cost a lot of money.
2:53:00
Oh, man.
2:53:02
And this is not edited. This is his answers from a press
2:53:05
conference.
2:53:10
The public was kept in the dark about this guy.
2:53:14
Uh,
2:53:15
okay. They were we weren't in the dark we saw what was coming.
2:53:21
Oh, yeah.
2:53:24
We're not the Fae them anymore. It's pathetic any aspect of it?
2:53:29
Well, I I'll play my last little set here. We haven't really done
2:53:34
any green New Deal. Green New Deal stuff. And as we know, the
2:53:39
shutdowns, the shut ins, the lock downs, the great reset,
2:53:43
which according to you, john is all coming because you know
2:53:47
Joe's gonna get in and then it's built back better time
2:53:50
everybody, it's going to be a bonanza. And it'll be lots of
2:53:53
good paying green jobs, union jobs.
2:54:00
good paying jobs, a lot of good paying jobs by shutting down the
2:54:04
economy, the normal. We're a petroleum society or fuar base
2:54:08
the whole country is based on petroleum is it powers
2:54:11
everything it the paint that you use on your house is petroleum
2:54:14
based. The plastic containers you use? The keyboard you're
2:54:18
using on your computer is all from petroleum products. But
2:54:21
we're gonna just end that and go Somehow, I don't know how a
2:54:25
keyboard is gonna ever show up again, if everything's powered
2:54:27
by wind and we shut the refineries down and kill the
2:54:30
petroleum business. But somehow it's doable. Sir Chris recycle.
2:54:36
Sir Chris was checking out the BBC and he sent me a couple of
2:54:40
clips and they are talking about the extinction event that as you
2:54:44
know, john, we are currently extinct as we speak. This is
2:54:49
what climate rebellion is all about. The extinction is upon
2:54:52
us. We're all going to die. This may be nothing we can do about
2:54:55
it. And to prove this, the BBC put together a nice little
2:54:59
little series here a little a little package. It turns out
2:55:03
that the way we are extinct in ourselves right now, happened
2:55:08
before the exact same scenario.
2:55:12
Millions of years ago, a change in the Earth's climate killed
2:55:16
off more than 95% of the earth, ocean life and
2:55:20
new research into the great dying could help us understand
2:55:23
our current environmental problems. Here's our reporter,
2:55:26
Peter coffin.
2:55:27
We've all heard the asteroid theory, how a giant space rock
2:55:31
hit the Earth 66 million years ago, and lead to the extinction
2:55:35
of the dinosaurs. But there was another mass extinction long
2:55:39
before that one 250 2 million years ago, in fact, that wiped
2:55:44
out the vast majority of life on this planet. And two new
2:55:48
research reports have determined the probable cause massive
2:55:52
carbon dioxide and methane emissions caused by the burning
2:55:57
of fossil fuels.
2:56:00
So just you know, 200 and 50 million years ago,
2:56:04
but 252 to be exact,
2:56:06
they were Yes. They were burning fossil fuels. They're driving
2:56:10
around in their Flintstone mobiles, or was it something
2:56:13
else BBC,
2:56:15
it all started with volcanic eruptions in what is now
2:56:17
Siberia. Lava and magma burned through huge deposits of coal
2:56:23
and oil, creating more carbon emissions than humans have since
2:56:27
the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.
2:56:29
Now there's, they're starting to connect the two dots. So one, it
2:56:33
was burning of fossil fuels, which Yeah, is the volcano
2:56:37
technically a burning of fossil fuels?
2:56:39
No, I don't. I think what he means I might take aside it,
2:56:43
like for the for the explaining the stupidity. The volcanoes.
2:56:51
The magma from the Aquino's went through the forests and set them
2:56:55
all on fire. And the forest way can be assumed to be a fossil.
2:57:03
They're dead to me fossil fuels oil that's from dead dinosaurs.
2:57:07
Yeah,
2:57:07
that's what
2:57:08
those are, but that's okay. The molten lava cut all these
2:57:13
forests on fire, and it was no, buddy that stopped because we
2:57:16
didn't have air tankers back in the day. For the waterway,
2:57:20
they talk you think they did? I mean, Oh, yeah,
2:57:22
yeah. And so that I think that's what he means that the whole
2:57:26
place was burning up,
2:57:28
I guess. Well, that extinction event, mass extinction, which
2:57:33
killed all life on Earth, because of the burning of fossil
2:57:35
fuels? Yeah, that event? Oh, yeah, we're doing a much better
2:57:39
job of it. Now,
2:57:40
we are once again facing a rise in carbon emissions, a warming
2:57:44
planet, and high levels of acidity in the oceans. That's
2:57:47
making it harder for species like oysters and clams to form
2:57:50
shells, and it causes the bleaching of coral reef.
2:57:54
As soon as you release a huge amount of co2 to the atmosphere,
2:57:57
like the first effect is warming and acidification of the ocean.
2:58:01
And that's very detrimental for many organisms. If the
2:58:04
temperatures continue to rise, and the co2 being emitted in the
2:58:06
ocean will also get more significant. That will
2:58:09
eventually be very hard for many organisms.
2:58:11
We are moving toward those consequences at an alarming
2:58:15
speed.
2:58:15
Oh, yeah.
2:58:16
What speed is it? And shouldn't volcanoes burn through more fuel
2:58:19
than humans ever have? But we are turning out emissions. 14
2:58:25
times faster.
2:58:27
Yeah, golfing
2:58:29
14 times faster, baby, we are doing good. And you know what
2:58:34
term I keep hearing again. Be on the lookout bio diversity is
2:58:42
back. It's all over the place. They're there. They're bringing
2:58:46
it around. They're ramping up getting ready for Boris and Joe
2:58:50
and Angola. And everybody to build back better. We've got the
2:58:55
big cop 27 I think now, or is it 29 by now? That's coming up? No,
2:59:01
it's gonna be a bonanza. And you're gonna be locked down.
2:59:07
Media exempt.
2:59:11
Yeah.
2:59:13
Well, you may not care much about what happens to the world.
2:59:16
certainly do.
2:59:18
I'm media exempt. I don't care. That's, I get. Yeah. I'm trying
2:59:25
to think of what to play here. I got a couple of things. Because
2:59:28
do we do do you do WORLD NEWS once in a while? Yes. And
2:59:32
there's some some stories coming out of Afghanistan, especially
2:59:35
the draw down, Trump has decided, Well, you know, there's
2:59:37
not even though they say he's not doing anything, he's doing
2:59:39
all kinds of stuff. executive orders, and he's taking people
2:59:43
out of drawing down from Afghanistan. And
2:59:48
we didn't really even discuss it but after once some outgoing
2:59:52
military guy was boasting about how they always lied about the
2:59:55
numbers. So you don't read out the white house doesn't actually
2:59:58
know how many troops were Have anywhere because they just they
3:00:02
cover that over with rotations in and out and it's probably
3:00:05
twice as many as as being said and the whole reason why they
3:00:09
need 2500 troops anywhere is to keep the military industrial
3:00:13
complex machine turning it's not about the troops. It's about the
3:00:17
machinery and the and the services and the flights and all
3:00:21
of this stuff. Well,
3:00:23
I think we play these two propitious precipitous down draw
3:00:27
down cups, but I have something else that I it kind of
3:00:29
interested me. Is it possible? Because we know that the
3:00:34
pronunciation of of our of our climate Queen what is the gretta
3:00:45
good at a tune berry temporary is different and we learned that
3:00:50
from Amy Goodman. Well, I want you to listen to her
3:00:54
pronunciation of the word Afghanistan in these two clips
3:00:58
is then this is a short clip just because of this. I'm
3:01:01
wondering are we Is this something that changed is the
3:01:05
left decided to pronounce Afghanistan some some sounds
3:01:09
like somebody's trying to pronounce ven Glock Okay, can
3:01:13
I give it a shot? Can I have not heard the clips? Can I can I
3:01:16
give it a shot as to how I think she's going to pronounce it. Go
3:01:20
off call me Stan.
3:01:24
It's it's you're in the right you're headed in the right
3:01:26
direction.
3:01:27
Yeah, cuz it's almost Dutch a Pawnee stun.
3:01:29
But it's a Dutch sound. The way she does is a little more dutchy
3:01:32
than you even that's really
3:01:34
up on
3:01:35
the head of the Australian military has apologized to
3:01:38
people of Afghanistan. For for profound Australian Special
3:01:42
Forces committed war crimes by murdering at least 39 non
3:01:47
combatants in Afghanistan.
3:01:49
This is a good this is the elite way of speaking of Coniston.
3:01:54
So it's the first part you got the first part, right but the
3:01:57
last part if you didn't go on or anything crazy, it was just
3:02:00
conscious that the F guy, the F Gup part.
3:02:05
Got Coniston? Oh, let me try to get honest on a harness done
3:02:09
by murdering at least 39 non combatants and a friend of
3:02:13
Coniston.
3:02:13
Oh, she's a Stan upon a Stan. Yes, she's
3:02:17
just an
3:02:17
older head of the Australian military has apologized to
3:02:21
people of Afghanistan, Afghanistan.
3:02:23
That doesn't sound right.
3:02:26
Now it doesn't sound right. It sounds like she's got I don't
3:02:30
know.
3:02:31
Flim Flam them.
3:02:35
All right. Now the second part of this clip was just kind of
3:02:38
interesting. It doesn't have anything to do with the
3:02:39
pronunciation. But this is one of these stories that they pull
3:02:44
up on Democracy Now. Every so often. It's like, wonder what
3:02:48
this is all about. But and is it even true, but let's play the
3:02:51
second part.
3:02:51
The probe reveals a practice known as blooding, where patrol
3:02:56
commanders order Junior soldiers to shoot a prisoner in order to
3:03:00
achieve the soldiers first kill. The military has now referred
3:03:05
dozens of cases to the Australian Federal Police for
3:03:08
criminal investigation.
3:03:11
That sounds nice. blooding, blooding. And it's supposed to
3:03:17
be Australian troops are somebody who is very, very
3:03:19
I'm not familiar with this. I
3:03:21
don't know about this at all. I never heard about it. Maybe some
3:03:24
one of our OCR let me play. Since we're talking about
3:03:26
Australia just for that moment. That gives me the chance to read
3:03:31
the boots on the ground report. Ah, this comes from a guy in
3:03:36
this is from Bauer up in in Dinah southern Australia. A
3:03:40
boots on the ground report from down under living under martial
3:03:43
law. Our six day statewide lockdown ends at midnight
3:03:47
tonight having only lasted 72 hours. On Wednesday lunchtime we
3:03:52
were told that we had a new super strain of COVID-19 Oh yes,
3:03:57
I
3:03:57
heard about this. This is a scandal. It's a scandal
3:03:59
scandal. It had the following mutations. It had a three day
3:04:04
cycle much faster than the original. It infected the lungs
3:04:08
directly without spending time in the nose and was spread on
3:04:13
surfaces even cooked food rather than arrow aerosolized
3:04:20
particles, aerosolized particles, anyone with a
3:04:24
background in micro who believes that this virus could have
3:04:27
undertaken such a significant mutation across those three
3:04:31
dimensions in one jump should get in touch with the
3:04:35
Samaritans. I hear they're looking for people who believe
3:04:38
in miracles. As a result, and like Southern humor, though,
3:04:43
humor as a result of this, we were subject to a statewide
3:04:47
lockdown. Even going outside of your house for exercise was
3:04:51
prohibited during midnight Wednesday night, starting
3:04:56
midnight Wednesday night sorry, continuing the theme from
3:04:59
earlier in The year bog roll quickly vanished from the
3:05:03
supermarket shelves which I believe is toilet paper. That's
3:05:05
it. Yes we call it bog roll or dunny a dunny roll quickly did
3:05:11
vanish in the supermarket shelves understandable is now
3:05:14
you sneeze if you sneeze everyone within 100 yards of you
3:05:19
ships themselves to be shot
3:05:23
net thrown over them.
3:05:25
The official story begin unraveling on Friday morning
3:05:29
when it was discovered that patient zero had lied. Yeah.
3:05:36
lied to the contract contact tracers they've locked
3:05:41
people for that. Yeah.
3:05:42
Yeah. Good work. patient zero. Yeah, it soon became clear we
3:05:48
had regular covid rather than the new super strain, and that
3:05:52
the lockdown was going to end midnight Saturday, our premier
3:05:56
Stephen Marshall has announced an inquiry into the fiasco in a
3:06:01
desperate attempt to restore faith and legitimacy in both our
3:06:05
political and medical elite. But observing the mood on social
3:06:10
media would suggest that the ship is sailed hashtag pizza
3:06:15
gate s A. Not Australia. The name this saga has acquired had
3:06:22
began trending at number one here on Twitter, but
3:06:25
entertainingly if you search for that hashtag Twitter showed no
3:06:29
results. Thanks again, Mike.
3:06:33
Hey, you go up against pizza gate
3:06:36
essay.
3:06:37
Yeah,
3:06:37
that's a way to conflate it guys well done.
3:06:41
by Joe nice to know agenda. Imagine all the people who could
3:06:44
do that.
3:06:45
Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
3:06:54
And D we do have people a few people to thank for show 1297 as
3:06:59
we approach show 1300 Whoo. Which is a lot of shows.
3:07:05
And
3:07:06
the program has improved over the years. Chad Belcher is at
3:07:11
the top of the list and he is in dill dip. reville reville doober
3:07:16
willing to do Brasilia Mississippi 155 55 A Joe
3:07:23
component on Ontario, California. 111 33. He wants a f
3:07:30
COVID karma Yeah, for his mom. Okay, at the end you're gonna
3:07:33
get we'll get that for sure. In Ian Ian field is 100 bucks. And
3:07:38
he Eastleigh, Hampshire, UK. A surprise Proteus in Newark,
3:07:45
Delaware.
3:07:47
100.
3:07:50
Paul, just Paul in Greeley, Colorado. 808. And he is
3:07:57
he was at the jury. He was at the Denver City Park City Park
3:08:01
sit in and mostly peaceful protest. Panic. picnic comes to
3:08:05
our picnic. Yeah, he's just sending us in some boob love for
3:08:09
having a good time at the meetup.
3:08:12
That that was Paul. Okay, now we got Andrew Andrei Andrei gagne
3:08:19
err in Edmonton, Alberta. 60. He's the
3:08:22
Rogen. He came over from, from March from the march upon.
3:08:27
Good night. Joseph lufa. Renault in Victoria, Texas. 58. I'm sure
3:08:34
that's not how I pronounce he's been
3:08:35
listening for about a year. All right, nice.
3:08:37
Baron Bob gusik. of High Point High Point North Carolina. 5532.
3:08:42
Rory busco in Novi. Is that right? Yes. 51 he's got goose
3:08:51
sick by the way has some needed health karma for his upcoming
3:08:54
back surgery. Yeah, yeah, do that. Forrest Martin 505 Andrew
3:08:59
Ben's 505 in Imperial Missouri. And in the following people are
3:09:05
$50 donor shortlist today, Thomas Tallaght in Shawnee,
3:09:09
Oklahoma. Michael marmorino. In cynthiana. Kentucky, Adrian
3:09:14
molar in tuscadero, California a lot of artichoke ground on
3:09:19
there. Julian Robinson aptos California Robert case in mill
3:09:24
spring North Carolina Lucas Deaton in Dayton, Dayton in
3:09:29
Dayton 50 Matthew grace Parts Unknown Kevin Silverman in
3:09:36
Severn Maryland. Daniel sir Daniel boy if I'm not mistaken
3:09:41
in Bath Michigan, Sarah Gordon in Tucson, Arizona and last, Sir
3:09:46
Patrick Macomb in New York City. Thank you all for helping us
3:09:51
produce show 1297 that's a lot of shows.
3:09:55
Indeed. And we always want to thank the people who came in
3:09:59
under the fiscal See dollar cutoff level that is for
3:10:02
anonymity, anything under 50 will never be mentioned but also
3:10:05
we have our programs which people sit on for many, many
3:10:09
moons and eventually wind up at the roundtable the no agenda
3:10:12
knights and dames. And for more information about that and for
3:10:15
just supporting the work for our next show, please go to
3:10:18
volterra.org
3:10:20
slash and
3:10:22
thank all of you for your time your talent, your treasure and
3:10:24
producing the best podcast in the universe to karmas. We got a
3:10:28
lot of people need some TPP jobs and the F cancer as requested.
3:10:36
You've got karma.
3:10:45
You've got karma.
3:10:57
So the birthday list we do have a couple here in front of me
3:11:00
today we say happy birthday actually Brian Frazier says
3:11:03
Happy Birthday to his boss, JB Deering, who celebrated on the
3:11:06
19th anonymous in Dubai turn 34 turns 34 turns over yesterday.
3:11:12
Daniel surveyor of the realm is celebrating his birthday Amy
3:11:15
Ekman Spradling says Happy Birthday to her handsome husband
3:11:19
Chris who turns 33 tomorrow the magic number and finally Lauren
3:11:23
Nelson says Happy Birthday to Preston Ching Gong and gave him
3:11:26
the executive producer ship to boot Happy Birthday for
3:11:29
everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Again
3:11:34
no titles today but we do have an anonymous night actually we
3:11:40
have two nights so let's roll those out right now if you can
3:11:43
hit Hello blades blades pointing at the ceiling like your
3:11:48
microphone up on the podium anonymous and Chris Baylor both
3:11:55
of you joining the roundtable that no agenda knights and dames
3:11:58
today thanks to your support of the best podcasting University
3:12:01
in Mountain $1,000 or more and I'm very proud to pronounce the
3:12:05
Kane vs sir teacher certainly anonymous Arab in Dubai and sir
3:12:10
camera Chris of the BJJ mats gentlemen for you. First bow red
3:12:15
boy Chardonnay, we got more we got Lenny's red and cheese
3:12:20
curds, pharma and hummus, pinball and power cores
3:12:23
pepperoni rolls and plls beer and blunts per se in hotties we
3:12:27
got Reuben as women and rosae gerbils breast milk and pablum
3:12:31
bonnets and bourbon and the button and the Mead and they all
3:12:36
can be found here at the roundtable of the no agenda.
3:12:38
knights and dames getting pretty full here should probably
3:12:41
upgrade that table. For those of you who are looking for these
3:12:44
rings your brand new Knights go to no agenda nation.com slash
3:12:47
rings Eric The show will be more than happy to take your mailing
3:12:51
address details and get everything out to you as soon as
3:12:53
possible usually takes about a month because we do order them
3:12:57
separately each time. So we don't have a whole bunch of the
3:13:00
wrong sizes. And thank you all again for your courage.
3:13:12
If you're looking for a good time to go hang out with some
3:13:15
people who will not be triggered by what you have to say and they
3:13:18
won't care if you're triggered because you won't get triggered
3:13:20
is a no agenda meetup. They happen around the world. Almost
3:13:25
every day, it seems. And we have a couple of meetup reports we've
3:13:28
received the first one from sir Ryan short meetup report. The
3:13:31
San Diego meetup was a great success with 33 amazing
3:13:36
attendees. That's quite a good a lot big group and all of San
3:13:40
Diego State
3:13:43
governor Gavin Newsome crowd Yeah,
3:13:45
they've been not they've been locked down so long. They're
3:13:47
sick and tired of it. Fellow producers planning on sending
3:13:51
you an mp3 of a thing in the morning. didn't receive it yet.
3:13:54
Some of us even got to see the anonymous lab technicians
3:13:57
laboratory. And we were shown the almighty PCR testing machine
3:14:02
was fun and
3:14:03
it would be worth going to
3:14:05
Yeah, fun and educational. Yeah,
3:14:08
a couple more meetups us real trip more than a meetup.
3:14:11
Just exactly right. Here's a report from Los Angeles in the
3:14:15
morning, john
3:14:16
and Adam. This is Ryan Darrow. And my wife and I are whoa,
3:14:20
wait,
3:14:20
this is not from Los Angeles. This is the escape from Los
3:14:22
Angeles in the morning, john and Adam. This is Ryan Darrow and my
3:14:27
wife and I are hosting the escape from LA. No agenda meet
3:14:30
up in Lubbock,
3:14:31
Texas. There you go and behold, we only had two attendees. We
3:14:34
have a couple here and we'll introduce you shortly in the
3:14:37
morning. This is crystal Darrow currently producing the human
3:14:40
resource Can I get some
3:14:41
karma
3:14:42
This is assumed to be a dame atomic ginger of the caprock
3:14:45
where social distancing is part of the atmosphere. And this is
3:14:50
Ike in the morning.
3:14:54
This is a really cute couple. They they escaped from Los
3:14:57
Angeles and they wound up in Lubbock, Texas. Hello Have the
3:15:00
blue waffle. And but it's so nice because they found they
3:15:04
they scheduled a meetup. Now I think we we do have more
3:15:09
producers in Lubbock. So I don't know why it was a smallish
3:15:13
meetup. But imagine escaping Los Angeles to Texas, and then being
3:15:19
able to hook up with some cool people. Now, this is what this
3:15:22
is what these meetups do. It's a really good connector. I'm so
3:15:26
pleased with how everyone has grabbed on to these. Then here
3:15:29
is the final report the flight of the no agenda meetup. Hi,
3:15:32
everyone. This
3:15:32
is Leo Bravo at the plight of the no agenda, meetup. And I'm
3:15:38
passing the phone around to see if anybody has a few words. Hey,
3:15:41
guys, this is slick, Rick, and great time here at the meetup.
3:15:45
JOHN, turn your speaker down. Sir Brian is orange hills
3:15:49
in the morning.
3:15:50
This is g force. Excellent time at the meetup here.
3:15:54
love your show
3:15:55
guy. Right. We love your reports and on the calendar for the 28th
3:16:01
I guess we don't we got Thanksgiving coming up of course
3:16:03
this week. So not a lot happening. meetup wise, but this
3:16:09
coming Saturday, the post turkey open range and meet up that'll
3:16:13
be in the redwoods of Santa Cruz Mountains, the Baron of Silicon
3:16:16
Valley organizing that then on December 2. The Hurricane no
3:16:20
agenda rooftop St. Pete beach in Florida meetup. It's every first
3:16:25
Wednesday like a party meet up at the hurricane seafood
3:16:29
restaurant. A dude named Ben is organizing that for us. Here's
3:16:33
what's coming up on the calendar on the fourth. We've got a meet
3:16:36
up in cottage country Ontario on the fifth in Springfield
3:16:41
Missouri, the sixth in Tampa, Florida. Also on the sixth
3:16:45
Philadelphia with their regular local 76 to 12th in New Orleans.
3:16:49
Also on the 12th Columbus, Ohio pittsburgh pa moving to the
3:16:53
sixth 19th we have Nashville that'll be the no Noel agenda
3:16:58
and on the 24th of January Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and a
3:17:04
reminder from the no agenda meetup.com website and back
3:17:07
office please this is for no agenda meetups only knitting
3:17:10
circles fantasy book clubs, pool tournaments, square dancing
3:17:14
competitions do not apply. This is only for people who are no
3:17:19
agenda is to come together without an agenda and just hang
3:17:22
out there's no other mission you should have except for a meat
3:17:25
shoot because guns are always cool. Thank you very much for
3:17:29
joining for organizing and supporting the no agenda meetups
3:17:33
if you want to find one you you go to no agenda meetups calm if
3:17:37
there isn't one near you on the calendar, start one it's easy
3:17:40
and it's like a potty.
3:17:51
be triggered.
3:17:54
You want to be
3:18:04
I did have
3:18:06
to
3:18:08
know yes. I did have to I know you already had a pretty good
3:18:12
answer show ISO. Which I will replay here. Okay.
3:18:19
it up.
3:18:20
Turn it up.
3:18:21
Well get make sure it's like Yeah,
3:18:23
come on. You're pumped. Okay, hold on, hold on pumping a bit
3:18:26
damp and I'm pumping and maybe kind of pumped up. It doesn't
3:18:30
really it doesn't really smash into the Yeah, it doesn't have a
3:18:36
clear.
3:18:36
It's okay.
3:18:37
I mean, it's funny, and
3:18:39
I'm not arguing I thought
3:18:40
it was a weak suggestion is all I had for this show. Okay, I
3:18:43
have but it is it does have an eerie sound of who
3:18:47
it has.
3:18:50
Let's try this one.
3:18:51
I finally listened to that dead gum podcast
3:18:55
is that which is from the Simpsons, and I have Frau
3:18:59
Ingraham do what you're told on the kind of like that one
3:19:02
because it's punchy.
3:19:03
How about Frau Ingraham followed by the
3:19:05
EU?
3:19:06
Okay, let's see. Let me get fro where's where's the fro? Okay.
3:19:13
do what you're told. Followed by the Who? Okay, we can probably
3:19:16
work. Let's have a listen to what you're told. Okay. All
3:19:21
right. Worst combo ever been asked to stick? There's nothing
3:19:25
I can do about it. Nothing I can do about it. All right. Do you
3:19:30
have anything to take us home?
3:19:33
Ah, let's see. Oh, yeah, I had a probably even leftover item
3:19:39
here. Well, I got rushing them about going on about but uh,
3:19:42
Jason Whitlock article, which I thought was interesting. Okay.
3:19:47
Because he likes to you know, but then again, to stay with we
3:19:50
can talk about that some other time. It's not that important.
3:19:53
But I do have a little story from democracy about palm pay.
3:19:57
Oh, and by the way, the she's the only one who didn't suggest
3:20:00
is this palm pail floating around Israel. I want to play
3:20:04
this clip and I have a comment about it. This palm pail
3:20:07
deserves some we got cover international news here. Pills
3:20:11
floating around Israel. She's bitching and moaning about it
3:20:13
because he's going to step in here and he step in now you
3:20:15
shouldn't be going anywhere to play it.
3:20:17
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has arrived in Israel, where he
3:20:21
toured an illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West
3:20:24
Bank in a surprise move. pompeyo also said he would tour
3:20:27
settlements in the occupied Golan Heights on Syrian land
3:20:31
illegally annexed by Israel in 1981. It's the first time a US
3:20:35
Secretary of State has toured Israeli settlements which
3:20:38
violate multiple UN resolutions and the Geneva Conventions.
3:20:42
Speaking in Jerusalem, alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
3:20:45
Netanyahu peyer said the US would label the boycott
3:20:48
Divestment and Sanctions movement anti semitic the BDS
3:20:52
campaign as a global nonviolent movement seeking to pressure the
3:20:55
Israeli government over its treatment of Palestinians many
3:20:58
of its leaders are Jewish peace activists.
3:21:02
Hmm. This so
3:21:04
everybody else except her? Yeah, I'm surprised she didn't do
3:21:07
this. But all the other people that reported on this was not
3:21:12
necessarily the mainstream media, but all the other
3:21:14
alternative media. That report on this Yeah, they all said the
3:21:18
same thing. This is a prelude to pompeyo running for president in
3:21:23
2024.
3:21:25
Are you kidding me?
3:21:27
That's what I said. I
3:21:28
mean, come on. This guy's a doofus.
3:21:31
I'm pale running for president. Oh, yeah. People are gonna warm
3:21:35
up to this guy. That that's what they all said. And that was that
3:21:40
was one show it was on one of them. I don't know if it's msnbc
3:21:43
or CNN or one of them. They went and did a whole thing on it.
3:21:47
They had brought people in as a little pawn parents got his eyes
3:21:50
on the white owl. Do
3:21:51
you think he does? I mean, I'm the first of all, he seems like
3:21:53
the kind of guy who would definitely have his eyes on the
3:21:55
White House. I can see him being old
3:21:58
enough to think that he can.
3:22:00
He can definitely be diluted enough.
3:22:03
Yeah, so I think it's a possibility but it's laughable.
3:22:08
Good luck. Good luck from
3:22:10
z 100 All right, I'm calling john we once again have have
3:22:14
brought all the doughnuts to the table as we close in on three
3:22:17
and a half hours of quality entertainment and programming.
3:22:21
Wrong all
3:22:22
slaves of Gizmo nation we appreciate your support and help
3:22:28
in creating this episode. We'll do it again on Thursday. Please
3:22:32
remember us@n.ly slash na and of show mixes got a couple here
3:22:39
we've got April Kirby who sent one in during the show I have
3:22:42
not listened to it but I trust this work so we're just gonna
3:22:45
play that. We've got Mr. Miyagi wild ride Jesse coy Nelson and
3:22:49
ser seek sitter. And a couple more that we'll have to hold
3:22:53
over until Thursday show and I'm coming to you from opportunities
3:22:57
zone 33 here in the frontier of Austin, Texas Capitol the drone
3:23:02
Star State. It is FEMA Region number six on all of the
3:23:06
governmental maps that you may be looking for. Coming up with
3:23:10
no agenda stream.com grumpy old Ben's until Sunday in the
3:23:13
morning everybody. I'm
3:23:14
Adam Curry came from Northern Silicon Valley. i'm john c.
3:23:17
devorah.
3:23:17
We returned on Sunday right here on no agenda remember, remember
3:23:21
us at the vortec.org slash na until Sunday and such
3:23:35
on kids
3:23:48
knows was scary to know.
3:23:53
The future is not so bright and
3:23:59
invisible killer
3:24:01
is stalking its prey.
3:24:04
The message is clear. Stay home slave against this pandemic
3:24:16
monster thing.
3:24:20
Officials set out to control
3:24:24
protests
3:24:29
from COVID.
3:24:40
Who knows which administration
3:24:42
will be I guess time will tell. Meanwhile, President Elect Biden
3:24:45
took a bike ride today near his beach home in Rehoboth
3:24:48
Beach, Delaware to select
3:24:49
the Constitution is one way in the Constitution. I know it
3:24:53
looks messy. Dead people voted.
3:24:58
Voting fraud
3:25:01
Dominion voting systems have ties to high level
3:25:05
Democrats.
3:25:06
President Trump is still refusing to concede
3:25:09
we have put together I think the most the most
3:25:12
extensive and inclusive voter fraud.
3:25:16
Trump rallies will
3:25:17
continue until democrats admit to election best and concede the
3:25:21
election.
3:25:22
Oh my goodness. The magnitude the size of the crowd was just
3:25:26
amazing yesterday and it's just been a lot of love. It was great
3:25:30
to be around people of all races, you know, not just why
3:25:34
the media would try to make you think
3:25:36
that people voted.
3:25:40
Voting fraud.
3:25:43
Dominion voting systems have ties to high level Democrats.
3:25:48
President Trump is still refusing to concede
3:25:52
This is not enough stay
3:25:54
at home one of the best way for us to avoid water is to stay.
3:26:04
There Megan
3:26:05
bags are good and we'll have a vaccine shortly. They say
3:26:13
no know. Mikey 90 to 95% effective
3:26:17
there's only one thing you can say.
3:26:24
Pain.
3:26:28
Surveillance will lead to continue. We still have a long
3:26:31
road to travel
3:26:37
or on TV. The feeling of
3:26:42
Bluetooth tracking.
3:26:48
Uses Bluetooth technology
3:26:52
to come in and
3:26:55
shut it all down.
3:26:57
The ozone.
3:27:02
Science is back baby
3:27:20
may require a vaccine rather
3:27:42
than JC de
3:28:12
party. attempted coup keeps getting dumber and more
3:28:15
desperate today. His lawyer Rudy Giuliani had a meltdown live on
3:28:19
television is trying to overturn the will of the voters in
3:28:22
Michigan
3:28:44
democracies
3:28:52
succeed in
3:28:55
brilliant, really rude he shows up that really worries me.
3:29:24
Interest
3:29:25
the election is canceled.
3:29:31
story that's true.
3:29:35
Besides what's
3:29:40
reported on Moody's
3:29:48
extraordinary news conference,
3:29:51
making unsubstantiated claims a
3:29:56
frantic press conference with Rudy Giuliani While conspiracy
3:30:05
theories, none of which were supported with a single shred of
3:30:09
evidence. President Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani
3:30:14
did not provide any evidence. As he and the campaign's legal team
3:30:18
floated the unsubstantiated idea of hair dye streaming down his
3:30:22
face.
3:30:31
mopho.org
3:30:34
slash and
3:30:36
do what you're told
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