Cover for No Agenda Show 1419: Sleep Equity
January 23rd, 2022 • 2h 59m

1419: Sleep Equity

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0:00
Yeah, nice. Yeah. Adam curry
0:04
Jhansi divorce January 23 2022 This is your award winning keep
0:08
our nation media assassination episode 1419
0:12
This is no agenda sniffing the candles
0:16
broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas hill country here
0:19
in FEMA Region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam
0:22
curry
0:23
and another Silicon Valley where everybody's happy. I'm just
0:31
okay. Somehow I doubt that. Oh, no, they're all happy. Yeah,
0:37
everybody in San Francisco everybody has to be happy is
0:42
where a war is over. We're breaking out it's all done. This
0:45
is it. The whole world is opening up we're next up Yeah,
0:52
it's about time you know, the UK still seems on track this they I
0:57
guess they could still do something to stop it before
1:01
before Thursday, but seems like it's really on track. Just
1:04
everything drops. Everything's gone. It's crazy Ireland. Now
1:09
the same thing. And Czech Republic. But in in Belgium this
1:14
morning. mass or the whole day, I guess massive protests which
1:19
have turned violent. This is a weird world
1:26
clip. You know the funny thing about these protests have you
1:30
listened to the listen to our news. I guess I didn't get it.
1:37
Maybe if you listen to NPR, we have protests too. But our kids
1:44
aren't doing what they're doing in Belgium. There are kids. I
1:48
got a
1:48
frog. Here hear it. It's
1:52
protesting that they're not doing enough. They're not making
1:55
this mask up enough. No, making us take the shots that our kids
1:59
are
1:59
pro No. I thought that they just wanted more tests and no shots.
2:04
Everything they but the kids don't take the adults who are
2:07
harsh enough.
2:07
Oh. Do you have a clip of this? Because I'd like to hear that.
2:13
I don't know if I have an exact clip of that. But believe me, I
2:16
heard it but that tried this one COVID Shot Kids Choice. Okay, a
2:21
California senator
2:22
is proposing to allow children 12 and over to get vaccinated
2:26
without their parents consent. Some parents say that this is
2:29
the government overriding parents authority.
2:32
Senator Scott wiener introduced a bill to allow teens ages 12 to
2:36
17 to receive the COVID-19 vaccine without parental
2:40
consent.
2:40
This will empower her. Currently in California, nearly 1,000,012
2:47
to 17 year olds are not vaccinated for COVID-19.
2:51
Senate Bill 866, also known as the teens choose vaccines Act
2:56
was introduced on Thursday. If passed, it would allow minors 12
2:59
and older to receive a dose without their parent's
3:01
permission. As long as the vaccine is approved by the FDA.
3:05
On average, COVID is less likely to be serious, or create serious
3:10
illness for teenagers. teens do get get my shot.
3:15
This is 12 and over. Yeah. So at 12 years old you can make you
3:19
can make a life changing decision like that. This is
3:22
fantastic hospital,
3:24
on ventilators and tragically teens who die.
3:28
According to the State Statistics, the zero to 17 age
3:32
group accounts for 0.1% of COVID deaths. Winner argues this bill
3:37
builds on existing law out there
3:40
0.1% of the COVID deaths what is that? 800?
3:47
So 0.1% not that your likelihood of dying is 0.1. It accounts for
3:55
0.1 of the total deaths? Yes, yeah, it does. Which is probably
4:00
which I think is 0.1 to begin with. So something like
4:04
that is 8000 0.1% of the 800,000 will be 1000. Seems like a lot
4:12
0.1 of the 1000 to see 10% would be
4:18
we are possibly the worst. Yes, yes, we are. We always get this
4:26
wrong.
4:27
Well, you have to have a pad and paper to do it. Right. Yeah.
4:30
Well, I'm doing it here on the on the calculator. And I think,
4:33
sure there was a number of deaths, it was
4:35
0.1 or 0.01 0.1 0.1
4:41
of the total deaths were under this age, but that's beside the
4:44
point you're not. Well let the think play on and it'll have a
4:49
little more details. But this is the kind of nuttiness that we
4:52
have, especially from a guy like this guy. This is Scott wiener
4:55
he's out of the Bay Area. And he's I'm on his mailing list. So
5:00
I get to see stuff and it's like Jay
5:03
joy, joy,
5:05
and he's an openly gay male doesn't care about kids, but
5:08
he's gonna, you know, think this is a great idea because it gets
5:11
the numbers up. And, okay,
5:15
finish it off 17 age group accounts for 0.1% of COVID
5:19
deaths. Winner argues this bill builds on existing law that
5:23
already allows kids 12 and older to consent to receiving the
5:26
hepatitis B vaccine, birth control and abortions.
5:31
I just dispute that number he's thrown out there because that
5:36
the mainstream numbers more like 800. So maybe he was maybe
5:40
because you're off I think, yeah, but but then they can do
5:44
all kinds of they went to 12 year olds to build Yes. Or mean
5:47
abortion?
5:49
Of course, transgender medication
5:51
they're trying. Yes. Parents out of the loop. Yes. And, and I the
5:58
second series of clips that were one more clip after this one.
6:01
But there's a part two of this. Yeah, there is
6:03
the San Mateo Senator received a mix of responses on Twitter, the
6:07
single biggest reason
6:08
is most children don't make decisions that adults would
6:12
make. So informed consent is the biggest single issue that I see.
6:16
And children don't have the capacity to make that.
6:19
So I just think it's overreach, it's unnecessary. Parents can
6:22
make informed decisions for their children. We know their
6:26
background, their history, their risks, profile, etc. We care
6:29
more about our kids, then than the state does. I don't care
6:32
what they say they're not as invested in our children as we
6:34
are.
6:34
Another parent tells NTD he thinks legislation that chips
6:38
away at the ability of a parent would be a huge mistake. There
6:42
should be a very high standard for overriding a parent or
6:45
lawful guardians authority, and only under the imminent or
6:48
persistent and grave threat to the child's well being. He says
6:52
there are already established public school vaccination
6:55
constructs Child Protective Services and the courts to deal
6:58
with those situations. So there is no need to give minors
7:01
authority over these decisions.
7:03
This is really interesting that you bring this up and that this
7:06
is truly a report that is I mean, this is reporting on just
7:10
how great all this is think. Did you see this? This clip that was
7:14
going around of that of the the OG Joy read Melissa Harris
7:19
Perry? Do you remember her she was on MSNBC before joy, and she
7:24
got she got fired in I think 2016 or something. So for some
7:28
reason, this clip resurfaces. And everyone's you know, this is
7:31
what's so hard about doing our show. So everyone's like, Oh,
7:36
look at this, look at this, they want your children, they want
7:38
you to look at this, like, this has got to be old. And so
7:41
finally traced it down. So this is a clip, I think, from 2013.
7:47
This is nine years old, it's really short. But this at the
7:51
same moment that you that you have this on your local news,
7:55
this is going viral, you know, again, after nine years, we have
8:00
never invested as much in public education as we should have.
8:03
Because we've always had kind of a private notion of children,
8:05
your kid is yours and totally your responsibility. We haven't
8:09
had a very collective notion of these are our children. So part
8:13
of it is we have to break through our kind of private idea
8:15
that kids belong to their parents, or kids belong to their
8:18
families and recognize that kids belong to whole communities.
8:21
Once it's everybody's responsibility and not just the
8:23
households, then we start making better investments.
8:26
All they needed was the vaccine
8:28
had been our show. Hello, that's what I'm saying. Yeah,
8:32
so my point
8:33
is picked up by immediately somebody says, Hey, look at
8:36
this. The old clip that's that's we get the old clip
8:39
No, but that's my point is this was going and I didn't just get
8:42
it once you got it.
8:43
They've been doing now this has been going on for the entire
8:47
time of our show. And before that just trying to arrest the
8:50
kids as they would they think we're Sparta. Grab the kids at
8:54
birth Romanic camp tournament soldiers. Here's another example
9:00
that follows up to clips I just played where they you know, give
9:03
the kids some autonomy. This play this one. This is just just
9:07
happened. This is the ivermectin story out of New Hampshire.
9:11
custody battles taking place in New Hampshire. A lot of
9:15
attention. And what maybe a first of its kind case, a father
9:19
could lose his son for giving him ivermectin, a prescription
9:22
drug used by some to treat COVID-19 and TDs. Miguel Moreno
9:27
reports.
9:29
Former New Hampshire lawmaker Jr. Hall says that he gave his
9:32
family ivermectin because they had COVID-19. That was in
9:37
November. According to hole they quickly recovered from the
9:40
disease with no lasting side effects. But he says that in
9:43
December child protection workers and police officers were
9:47
at his door ready to take his two kids who weren't home at the
9:50
time.
9:51
So they were concerned that I used a particular medication
9:57
that's available online, international which is
10:00
ivermectin and I used it for myself, our whole family used it
10:04
to treat COVID. And they didn't like that it's a very
10:08
politicized drug or politicized medication. And they, they
10:13
thought it was the root cause for all the concerns relative to
10:18
my son's visit to the emergency room.
10:20
He says he had taken his son to the emergency room because the
10:23
boy took too many Tylenol pills, according to hold that was seven
10:27
to 10 days after his son took his final dose of ivermectin.
10:31
So, in his view, the boy's symptoms were unrelated to the
10:35
anti parasitic drug, the state initially sought whole son and
10:39
daughter, but whole says that now only custody of his son is
10:42
at risk. And how did the state find out that you gave
10:45
your son ivermectin, our nurse turn this into the state?
10:49
There's the thing is there is there's what's going to develop
10:52
out of this is an incredible distrust of the medical
10:55
community. Because if you can't have a conversation with your
10:58
doctor, or in this case with the nurse, about how you're treating
11:03
your family, because there's a threat that they're going to
11:06
turn you into the state people aren't going to share pertinent
11:09
information and that's going to lead to massive misdiagnosis of
11:14
what the issue is. We were being open and honest with what was
11:17
going on. Trying to make sure our son was as healthy as
11:20
possible.
11:22
Wow, how did the kid wind up taking seven or eight Tylenol
11:26
knows it that's not that doesn't
11:29
help the story. But the nurse narking on on the family that's
11:36
that's it's got to be some kind of, well, it is a breach of
11:39
trust.
11:40
Yeah, I think she should have been fired on the spot. But no,
11:44
they're not going to do that. She did everyone a favor. Just
11:48
plague of ivermectin.
11:51
Yeah, Australia now you get doctors can get six months
11:55
prison if they prescribe ivermectin. It's so sad. But
12:03
it's also funny.
12:05
It's hilarious. So we have
12:09
let's see. So obviously, they're still trying to, to keep this
12:14
going. At least some of the factions are doing this. This is
12:18
here's NPR doing their bit for the team.
12:21
Just 28% of children ages five to 11 years old have gotten the
12:26
first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and PR Zanya cabinets reports. A
12:31
new free online course is trying to change that.
12:36
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health is
12:39
offering a two hour course on the platform Coursera to prepare
12:42
educators and community members to talk to parents who have
12:46
doubts about the vaccines. The course creators say start by
12:50
listening with empathy. Then tailor your responses to address
12:54
the specific concerns that people express, try to debunk
12:58
misinformation and offer fact checking from trusted sources
13:01
without putting people down or mocking them. And if someone
13:05
states a false belief, validate their feelings by acknowledging
13:09
that it's hard to make our way through the disinformation
13:11
landscape. Then pivot to the truth.
13:14
pivot to the truth baby. So it's really only write that down.
13:21
Pivot to
13:23
what show title? Yeah, maybe
13:25
maybe pivot to the truth. So yeah, let's pivot to the truth
13:29
them because people are starting to see stuff that is making them
13:32
think and it's it's really these local reports. Like the one you
13:38
just played made us think in a different way. This is from
13:41
Minnesota on the local ABC affiliate, the Center for COVID.
13:45
Control tonight facing
13:46
this fraud lawsuit filed by Minnesota's Attorney General,
13:49
these entities collected samples from Minnesotans for COVID-19
13:53
testing, but either failed to deliver test results or
13:56
delivered test results that were false or inaccurate.
14:00
They would either not process the test in time so that it
14:03
couldn't get released in time. Or they would have lost the
14:12
actual result to the test or
14:16
they would have
14:20
never even processed the test. Michael
14:22
Pino says while he worked here from September and delete
14:25
December, so many tests were coming in for processing that
14:28
they were stored in these garbage bags
14:30
that came in a trash bag on the floor of an office.
14:35
And people see this, this is the local news. This is what people
14:38
will actually watch like, hold on a second what's going on.
14:41
It's also happening in Illinois,
14:44
the Illinois Attorney General Kwame rolled, released a
14:47
statement last night saying in part that although the company
14:51
voluntarily suspended operations, my office contacted
14:54
company officials to demand that the Center for COVID control
14:58
immediately stop engaging in In any fraudulent or deceptive
15:02
conduct, particularly with respect to the delivery of
15:05
testing results or billing, the Illinois Attorney General's
15:09
office says they have made that decision after receiving
15:13
numerous complaints ranging from results gone missing to results
15:17
that are inaccurate. And B C five response talk to a man who
15:20
says he went to one of their locations in December with his
15:24
wife and daughter. But after seeing how chaotic it was
15:27
inside,
15:27
he decided to leave without
15:29
giving a sample. And about
15:31
five hours later, all three of us got emails saying that our
15:35
samples have been collected and are tested come back negative.
15:40
You know, it's like,
15:41
I don't know leaving a sample.
15:42
I don't know what Bill Gates is thinking, but he better hurry up
15:45
with whatever magical test to stay device he has, well,
15:49
they're
15:49
gonna have to deal with it. We haven't really had a similar
15:52
news story here. I didn't clip it because it was a it was it
15:56
was really a promotion. His company, I think it's called
15:59
Summer bio, they have created an assembly line process is almost
16:03
like the FMC kind of you know, if you look at these, these
16:07
factories that make cookies and different kinds of ice cream
16:11
treats, you know, there's a huge assembly line and dripping the
16:13
stuff on here and it goes to the next thing the next thing Oh,
16:15
it's good processor. Yeah, it's a food processor. It's only
16:21
they're processing these tests. And so they've created this
16:24
little mini robot like system that's that can process 100,000
16:29
tests a day. And so they've been flying these tests in from all
16:33
over I mean far away from Monterey and other places like
16:36
that and they run them through here they they're at capacities
16:39
100,000 They're gonna they think they can franchise the operation
16:43
and create these other facilities that can do this so
16:45
you don't have that what you just showed is really going on
16:49
which is just a bunch of fraud.
16:51
Yeah, punching. Throwing it in garbage bags, not even assessing
16:54
it. And yet people get results no matter what Oh, as Oh, good.
16:57
Just mark that off bill. Yeah, what do you call them? The
17:02
government health people not that's just government
17:04
corporations buts the same problem rat poop rats poop
17:08
inspectors? Yes, exactly. I'm sure that these are people who
17:12
are under stress and there's no one wants to work and they're
17:15
like, Oh, well, you know, no one's showing up do that.
17:17
No, no, no, they want to go out in front of an audience with a
17:20
microphone because something they never got to do in their
17:22
entire life, but the MPH that they received a Master's of
17:26
Public Health, which is not a doctor's degree by any means. So
17:30
they get out. They can tell people what to do in Boston
17:33
around which is what they've always wanted to do. It looks
17:35
like
17:35
So in true American fashion, when people are starting to look
17:39
around you get some of these local reports. You know, we got
17:42
to do something we got to do something on a grand scale to
17:45
get people on edge just a little bit. What can we do? Here's the
17:49
meeting we would have remember we all consulted on that movie
17:53
with a Dustin Hoffman? Of that one? Because they outbreak they
17:58
all yes outbreak outbreak what happened and outbreak. It was a
18:02
monkey state police
18:04
and the Pennsylvania game commission spent Friday night
18:06
searching for for monkeys in the wooded area along Route 54 off
18:10
Interstate 80 hours after the animals escaped from their
18:14
transport truck that collided with a dump truck troopers tell
18:17
us the transport truck was carrying 100 Monkeys from Africa
18:20
taking them to a lab in Missouri. Eyewitness News
18:23
confirmed the forces were found in put down Michelle Fallon
18:27
spoke to us at the scene late Friday night. She told us she
18:30
was driving behind the truck just before the crash happened
18:33
and thought it was crates of cats that had toppled.
18:35
They had this like green cloth over so I peel it back and I go
18:38
to stick my finger in there to try to pet it and it pops up and
18:42
I'm like, oh, so monkey. So I was like, I'm shocked. So I
18:46
walked over to the guy and I'm like they're not cuts their
18:49
monkey sickness or what? Like their monkey.
18:52
Even though the search was suspended Saturday interest in
18:54
the missing monkey continues.
18:56
Last night. I was just scrolling through my phone and I saw a
18:59
question about it. And that was pretty weird. But Baum came into
19:02
my room and asked me about it asked me to help go
19:05
when you listen to this report. Okay, and this is almost over.
19:08
This sounds so much like the fake news would be on a T on a
19:14
in a movie about a monkey on its way to a lab in Missouri.
19:18
There's a lady who touched the monkey. She put her hand into
19:22
the box thinking was cats and then you get this stoner dude is
19:26
like, yeah, man, it was pretty weird. It's like a monkey on the
19:29
loose man. There's
19:30
no rationale for these public health measures. So go and live
19:33
your life. Monkey continues.
19:35
Last night I was just scrolling through my phone and I saw
19:38
people posting about it and thought it was pretty weird. And
19:40
then my mom came into my room and asked me about it. asked me
19:43
to help go look for the monkeys.
19:45
TJ Stafford works at a fast food restaurant close to the crash.
19:48
He says this area's usually quiet and he still can't believe
19:51
what happened.
19:52
Everyone's talking about it pretty much. It's talking to
19:55
town now.
19:56
Michelle Fallon Saturday morning
20:00
Hey, son.
20:02
But Mom,
20:04
come on, get out. Get out, get out, put some clothes on. We're
20:07
gonna go look for the monkey.
20:08
That's exactly right. This is a movie script. Alright, so we
20:13
want to have two wide look for what monkey we want to put a
20:17
package together that we can have, you know, kind of as a
20:19
local report and we'll get a stoner dude. He's like, Hey,
20:22
man, everyone's it was like it's the talk of the town. It's the
20:25
monkey. We're going out for the looking for this monkey. Yeah,
20:28
hey, there's a lady who touched the monkey.
20:31
Talking to town now. We checked in with Michelle Fallon Saturday
20:34
morning. She tells us the CDC contacted her to look out for
20:37
any cold like symptoms within the next 31 days. To a letter
20:42
they just patient zero 10 to her the surviving monkeys will be
20:45
quarantined and monitored for infectious diseases before their
20:48
release. Now Fallon spoke to me this morning and she said
20:52
fortunately, she's not experiencing any symptoms.
20:55
However, she was told if she is then she has to reach out to the
20:58
state health department. Now state trooper hasn't provided an
21:01
update on the search for the last monkey. Now
21:05
call me crazy. But this lady was came in contact with a monkey
21:10
from Africa on its way to the lab and they just let her go
21:13
home. They need to they need to put a bag over this lady's head.
21:16
Put her in quarantine right away.
21:20
Let me get this straight. So she's in a car and there's a
21:25
dump truck. That was it. Was
21:30
the truck the truck with cages? Yeah, this and I think it was an
21:33
accident. It was in a two car collision.
21:36
So the so the truck with the cages plows into the dump truck
21:40
or the dump truck hits this. We don't know which one Yeah, yeah,
21:43
it doesn't. Mitch seems more likely to hit the dump truck
21:46
because they don't go that fast.
21:48
And I don't know about dump truck. I don't. The Dump Truck.
21:52
Truck. He specifically said dump truck. Yeah. Wow. Okay, right at
21:57
the beginning of the report. First thing I noticed because
21:59
I'm always amused by the idea of something hitting a dump truck
22:03
or not.
22:05
Oh, hold on a second. I want to hear this
22:07
beginning. State police and the Pennsylvania game commission
22:09
spent Friday night searching for for monkeys in the wooded area
22:13
along Route 54 off Interstate 80 hours after the animals escaped
22:17
from their transport truck that collided with a dump truck
22:20
collided with a dump truck the transport truck collided with a
22:24
dump truck
22:24
it hit the dump truck. Okay. Got it always comedic.
22:31
Point, point since this is scripted,
22:34
put yourself in a woman's shoes. She sees a truck hit a dump
22:40
truck. And she some for some dumb reason is going around this
22:46
this unfortunate wreck. She stops, gets out and goes and
22:52
sticks her hand into a cage. Is that something anyone that you
22:58
know would do?
22:59
Yes. Yes. That would be the that would be that dude's mom in the
23:03
clip. That's the one who did that. And then she came back to
23:06
her son and said, Hey, man, I touched the monkey. Let's go
23:08
look for it. That's how you tie it all together.
23:11
Story falls apart. Thanks. Well, this
23:14
is the story. It's gotten quite a lot of attention. Monkeys. And
23:19
there's just one on the loose John, just one. One lone monkey
23:23
from Africa on his way to a lab in Missouri. Do we have any BSL
23:28
Level biosecurity? No,
23:31
but it wouldn't surprise me if there weren't
23:33
let me see biosecurity lab in Missouri. I think if there's one
23:41
there
23:44
could be a black lab. Yeah, yeah, man.
23:46
You have a white lab? No, it's an Akbar. No, I
23:50
said joke is a joke.
23:51
I know I hear you. I hear ya. USBs elaborate smile, maybe one
23:56
of the trolls can find it. But just adding a monkey to it just
24:00
makes it it makes it a good story. I like it. Always one
24:03
monkey. So now we have Fauci also trying to do his bit to
24:08
prolong everything. And he does something fantastic in this
24:13
minute long clip, where he somehow is able to tell us that
24:18
the next danger that we have to be on the lookout for is what
24:24
exactly just happened now with Omicron?
24:28
What is your best guess about what the next six months will
24:31
look like? With respect to COVID-19? Could you please lay
24:34
out several possible different scenarios. The best case
24:38
scenario is that the description that Dr. Wollensky just gave us
24:41
about the diminution in cases in many regions of the country will
24:46
continue to go down to a baseline level. That is a level
24:51
of what we call adequate control. Namely, it's not
24:54
destructive of what we do, and the combination of vaccinated
24:59
and boosted people And the protection afforded by prior
25:03
infection will have a level of protection in the community so
25:08
that you won't get the situation where there's enough activity
25:12
which leads to hospitalizations, deaths and stressing the health
25:17
care system. That's the best case scenario. The worst case
25:21
scenario is something we have to be prepared for. And that is we
25:25
do get down to a level that we would say would be adequate
25:29
control. But we're faced with another surprise with a variant
25:34
that's so different. That includes the accumulation of the
25:38
immune protection that we'd gotten from vaccinations and
25:43
from prior infections.
25:46
Isn't that exactly what Omicron was? That's like it would went
25:51
around vaccinations people who had even been sick with Delta
25:54
Omicron hasn't been hospitalizing people enough. No,
25:58
no, this is so over. And you notice now they're starting to
26:01
slip in the well, you know, if you have had COVID, you have
26:06
natural immunity, then you're kind of vaccinated. Do you under
26:10
the technical term?
26:11
Thank you for the professional sports for starting that trend.
26:15
Yeah. Did you see the NFL Play this this is a clip that is a
26:19
good example of everything you're talking about, which is
26:21
what's going on in Chicago, where it's peaking. But you
26:25
know, I don't know we should still be super cautious is
26:28
Omicron peaking but
26:32
the omachron surge of Corona virus infections appears to have
26:36
started to peak nationally, though, in some specific places.
26:40
They're still spiking, and there are still some 160,000 people
26:44
hospitalized for COVID around the country. But in Chicago
26:47
cases are on their way back down. Although as aerosol Gomez
26:51
Aldana of member station WBEZ reports. There's still a long
26:55
way to go before mask mandates
26:57
are lifted.
26:58
Chicago Public Health Commissioner Allison Arwood. He
27:00
says new cases test positivity and hospitalizations mean
27:04
Chicago remains in very high COVID transmission wrist. At the
27:08
same time, she says those numbers are decreasing, which
27:11
makes for tricky messaging. And the last
27:14
thing that I want to do is we have a false sense of security.
27:16
We have reached that peak of Omicron. But the peak of
27:19
omachron just means that it's not getting worse,
27:24
or what he remains concerned about the strain on the city's
27:26
hospitals. across the city, some 200 people are still being
27:29
hospitalized with COVID daily. Chicago is averaging more than
27:33
2800 cases per day down about half from last week. That's your
27:37
beef right there is the How about that's good news, lady.
27:41
Oh, no, that just means Oh, make it go.
27:44
Oh, no. Oh, no. Oh, no.
27:46
By that, by the way my daughter I told you about Yes. She went
27:50
on this to a cabin with a bunch of people. And they all got the
27:53
Rona, her boyfriend who had recently Omicron and all that
27:58
turns out one of them. I was you know mentioned the name, but one
28:04
of them ended up in the hospital. Oh, no. Yeah, young
28:08
that was the one that was double vaccinated and double boosted.
28:12
Oh, no. Is that other one? Okay. I guess Yeah. But I mean, it's
28:18
still in the hospital.
28:19
I don't know. It was just amusing that the most
28:23
well yeah, amusing to a degree I'm not
28:27
a musical Sahlberg in a very very morbid sense.
28:30
Yes. Yeah, very dark very dark is very dark. So you know so it
28:36
seems clear that we're people are starting to just get what we
28:40
want to get out the I don't think people are test are
28:43
looking at QR codes as much in the US at least in in Europe,
28:47
there's still a lot happening Canada. I mean, this is so
28:51
here's another one of these things. It's just totally
28:53
baffling. Why are you going to do this now now that things are
28:56
really starting to get to a place where we don't? I should
29:01
answer my own question because they want to kill everything and
29:03
every buddy in the world. Listen to this insanity.
29:06
There are now new border crossing requirements for
29:09
Canadian truck drivers who are not fully vaccinated. As of
29:12
Saturday they will need to produce PCR test results
29:15
collected within 72 hours of arriving at the Canadian border
29:19
and quarantine after arrival on vaccinated us drivers will be
29:23
denied entry.
29:23
We would like to see an extension of time. And I know
29:26
there's probably a lot of people out there that said Cobots but
29:29
going on a long time. Our industry knew about this since
29:33
November, but they're always the hope that it would go away.
29:36
Shelley Walker
29:37
with the women's trucking Federation of Canada says she's
29:39
heard from some drivers who returned from the US before the
29:42
policy took effect at midnight.
29:44
Do have them put in a 16 hour driving day, but they were not
29:48
getting stranded down in the US there is a shortage of PCR
29:51
tests. And where do you go in a vehicle that 7075 feet long?
29:56
Well Canadian drivers will not be denied entry those who do not
30:00
follow the policy could face enforcement action or fines.
30:03
Walker says truckers are planning a convoy to Ottawa in
30:06
protest,
30:07
while supply chain is already hurting. And we're just about to
30:10
make it worse.
30:11
The Canadian trucking Alliance has said between 10 to 15% of
30:15
cross border drivers could be lost during an already ongoing
30:18
labor shortage.
30:20
This just makes no sense. I don't know what they're
30:25
thinking, why would you do this? Or freaked out? Or they're
30:29
freaked out by losing their power? That's the only thing you
30:32
can think of. And meanwhile, I mean, this has got to be
30:35
partially an attack on Biden, for whatever political reasons.
30:38
I'm not sure exactly what the strategy is yet, but the New
30:41
York Times, New York Times, this is the economics reporter, Peter
30:47
Goodman. Here's what he has to say, oh, and I should actually
30:50
say, morning,
30:52
Amy Goodman clip inbound, you think billionaires and now
30:56
trillionaires have prolonged the pandemic? Oh, I
30:59
don't think there was was a trillionaire named one.
31:06
This is why the trigger warning clip was played and you hated
31:09
No, no warning. You went straight into trigger mode.
31:13
She said trillionaires
31:17
I'm sure in institutions, there's some trillionaires
31:20
around
31:21
Do you think Canaris and now trillionaires have prolonged the
31:25
pandemic?
31:25
Oh, I don't think there's any question that they prolong the
31:28
pandemic. I mean, the fact that we have omachron is a direct
31:32
result of our unwillingness to challenge patents to challenge
31:37
the monopoly profits of companies like Pfizer and
31:40
Maderna. We have effectively subsidize those profits through
31:44
the tune of our own suffering that has extended this pandemic.
31:49
extended the pandemic. That's big words for the New York Times
31:52
right
31:53
into these old clips. I played a piano a month ago, Amy and her
31:57
really polished in their policy clips about why are we if we
32:01
have a cure, and this is such a pandemic, that's gonna kill
32:04
everybody. It's gonna it's the most dangerous thing ever
32:06
released the dogs released the dogs. Yes, cut off these patents
32:11
and just make everybody make the vaccine. Is that great?
32:14
Yeah, no. So so we have an overall awareness, former New
32:19
York Times, staff writer, Barry Weiss, who was gone semi off the
32:25
reservation, at least off the New York Times reservation. Did
32:28
you see you're on Bill Maher?
32:29
He died to substack reservation?
32:32
Well, she's yeah was subs I'm sure she's finally making real
32:35
money doing substack. She's got an interesting cross section of
32:40
audience she was on the Bill Maher show which this last
32:42
episode is one to watch. Because Bill Maher is just like, I'm not
32:46
having this anymore. I know more. I want, you know, he's
32:49
just done with it. And that's exactly why he had Barry Weiss
32:52
on listen to this. I'm done
32:56
with this question. I went so hard on COVID. I remember read
33:04
the Pringles cans that I bought at the grocery store, strip my
33:07
clothes off because I thought COVID would be on my clothes.
33:10
Like I did it all. I watched Tiger King, I've got to the end
33:13
of Spotify. Like we all did it right. No, we didn't know. But
33:19
here's the thing. A
33:20
lot of us did a Bill Maher I got no, no, we didn't all do that.
33:24
No, no, I had other things to do with my time.
33:26
I did it all. I watched Tiger King. I've got to the end of
33:29
Spotify like No, we didn't. Like here's the thing, a lot of us
33:37
didn't do it. And then we were told you get the vaccine, you
33:41
get the vaccine and you get back to normal. And
33:45
by the way, stop it. I stopped the clip. What kind of reverse
33:50
virtue signaling was that? Which part? You made me listen to it
33:55
twice. So now I'm perfect about it. Oh, no, we didn't do that.
34:00
We didn't eat cheese on it. She's doing a bit. She didn't do
34:04
it either. She was stripping her clothes off every every day. But
34:08
she was just trying to exaggerate, trying to explain
34:11
and it was a it was like a bit. It's just like, and he's a
34:13
professional comics stepping all over her act.
34:17
That's a good point.
34:19
It's because his emotions got in the way. I think he is so pissed
34:23
off about the whole situation. And he's, I mean, it's weird
34:27
because fine, you
34:28
can be pissed off. But that doesn't mean you have to step
34:30
over somebody bit. This is a bit she's doing.
34:33
He just lost his steps all over. He lost his composure.
34:37
I didn't do that. It's his
34:38
emotions. He lost his composure. This is this is part of what's
34:42
happening. Professionals are losing their shit
34:45
and do it. And then we were told you get the vaccine, you get the
34:49
vaccine and you get back to normal. And we haven't gotten
34:54
back to normal. And it's ridiculous at this point. I know
34:58
that so many of my liberal and progressive friends are with me
35:01
on this. And they do not want to say it out loud because they are
35:04
scared to be called anti Vax or to be called Science denial or
35:09
to be you know, smeared as a Trumper. I'm sorry, if you
35:13
believe the science, you will look at the data that we did not
35:16
have two years ago. And you will find out that cloth masks do not
35:21
do anything, you will realize that you can show your vaccine
35:25
passport at a restaurant and still be asymptomatic and
35:29
carrying omachron. And you will realize most importantly, that
35:32
this is going to be remembered by the younger generation as a
35:36
catastrophic moral crime. The City of Flint, Michigan, which
35:41
is 80%, I think minority students has just announced
35:44
indefinite virtual schooling. In the past two years we've seen
35:47
among young girls, a 51% increase in self harm. People
35:52
are killing themselves. They're anxious, they are depressed,
35:55
they are lonely. That is why we need to end it more than any
35:59
inconvenience that it's been to the rest of us. I think it's a
36:07
pandemic of bureaucracy. It's a pandemic of bureaucracy.
36:10
Yeah, you're right. Then she launched to try to launch her
36:13
meme at the end of the bit there the pandemic of bureaucracy,
36:17
which I like, but I don't since it's hard to spell, it'll never
36:20
work. It's hard to spell cuz I was trying to write it down.
36:24
Bureaucracy. B U R E. A, you pure rock c ra see you as hard.
36:30
You can't mean that.
36:32
No. It was a nice try, though. I mean, I appreciate the effort.
36:38
Yes, she's off the reservation. And Michelle like the fact she
36:41
course names yourself as a liberal progressive, which is,
36:44
of course, everybody at the New York Times. Yes. They don't know
36:47
quite what to do it themselves now that they figure it out.
36:50
They're wrong. Yeah.
36:52
Turns out the conspiracy theorists podcasters were right.
36:56
Groups, long groups rules. Were eating your lunch to look at all
37:00
the ad money we're taking away. Oh, wait. Well, no, not at all.
37:06
Not at all. That's the funny
37:07
Facebook taking away all the Yes, yes. Correct. So I got two
37:12
more clips that have to do with this one as the Dasia. I listen
37:16
to this, and I just say I didn't hear this already, but it's
37:19
brand new. Oh, which is the mandates overturned? Okay.
37:26
Good afternoon, everyone. The only exception to President
37:28
Biden's vaccine mandate for federal employees was for those
37:32
who received medical or religious exemptions, which have
37:34
been hard to come by US District Judge Jeffrey Brown, who was
37:38
appointed by then President Donald Trump worked
37:41
expeditiously to make the ruling on the case, only about a month
37:45
after it was filed. Brown made the ruling on the same day
37:48
federal employees could have been disciplined for not being
37:51
vaccinated. Robert Kenickie, Executive Director and General
37:54
Counsel for the Texas Public Policy Foundation said the Biden
37:58
administration didn't have the authority they claimed to
38:01
enforce vaccine mandates.
38:03
A government pointed to three statute that that it argued,
38:07
gave it authority. And very methodically, Judge brown walk
38:11
through each of the statutes that were claimed by the
38:14
administration as giving it the authority to do this. And he
38:17
examined said each of those three statutes doesn't say you
38:20
can do this. And so you're seeing that as a common
38:23
characteristic. The Vita ministration is issuing these
38:26
sweeping mandates just on its own. When they're being
38:30
challenged in court. They're trying to point to some kind of
38:32
vague statute to say that this arguably could could give them
38:36
the power to do so. And judges are correctly examining the text
38:40
of the statute and say no, Congress name never gave you
38:44
this authority.
38:45
The lawsuit was filed by Feds for medical freedom. The group
38:48
describes itself as a national grassroots coalition formed to
38:52
respond to mandates imposed on public servants and government
38:55
contractors. pinoke says judge Brown made the right decision.
38:59
But there is a bigger picture that is being missed. When
39:02
judges have blocked the vaccine mandates.
39:04
They're getting to the right outcome. But the courts are only
39:07
addressing these vaccine mandates by looking at the
39:10
specific text of the statute and deciding for themselves whether
39:14
that statute gives the federal government the power under that
39:17
law. It's missing the bigger context, the bigger question as
39:21
to constitute finality. Forget what the specific statute may or
39:26
may not say. Does the federal government have constitutional
39:30
authority command Americans to take a medical procedure that
39:34
they don't want for themselves? I think under the Constitution
39:38
The answer is clearly no.
39:40
Well no that's why they don't want to address that of course
39:43
no one wants to be the guy who has to debate that one it's not
39:47
it's not a Career Builder either way.
39:51
Well, this is gonna this this man is gonna hold up because it
39:55
is going to go to the fifth appeals court and they're very a
40:00
libertarian.
40:02
Give me so it can't come back to the Supreme Court after that,
40:05
because which judge just Lonnie Harvey is what? Well, there was
40:09
a judge a federal judge in Texas. Yeah, that's it. That's
40:13
the one
40:13
guy. Okay. Yeah, you'll be able to follow it because it's gonna
40:18
be a Texas thing. Yeah,
40:19
exactly. But, so that'll be overturned in the fifth and then
40:24
But then it's not gonna be overturned. It will be staged or
40:27
whatever confirmed. Okay. And but then someone could still
40:30
take it to the Supreme Court, but they just won't. They
40:32
probably don't want it. There
40:33
is time. Yeah, this thing man want to touch it? Nah, they
40:36
don't want to touch it well, okay, so it blows over. We get
40:40
there eventually. It looks for us. I think your initial
40:44
assessment based upon the pattern of the 1918 pandemic is
40:49
April, April, May, April, May. The UK now I've read and I've
40:55
heard some rumblings that somehow legally they could, even
41:00
though Plan B, which lists all all mandates and mass
41:03
everything, which is listed as if this coming Thursday,
41:06
Plan A,
41:08
I have no idea what it is, just as Boris Johnson said it, so who
41:12
knows if it's true. So I think they still have some emergency
41:18
powers where they could switch it back up until February 6. I'm
41:22
not sure if that's true or not. But the Czech Republic is going
41:27
completely dropping all mandates in Ireland. And it was one of
41:31
our producers sent me two short clips from an Irish radio show.
41:35
And it's a discussion and one of the speakers is Dr. Pete Lund.
41:40
He's the head of behavioral research. At ESRI. Which some
41:47
university and they're talking about opening up Ireland and
41:51
that this is something and this is something we might we have to
41:55
listen to, to maybe prepare for what's coming for us because
41:59
it's not just going to be, hey, alright, everything's gone.
42:02
Everything's dropped all good to go back to normal. People are
42:05
gonna freak out over that. And
42:06
there's no rationale for these public health measures. So go
42:09
and live your life.
42:11
But you know, do you not think there's an element of care of
42:14
that? People are so brainwashed by and it was Pete, you'd agree
42:18
propaganda for the last few years effective and true.
42:21
Unnecessary propaganda, maybe but people are so brainwashed.
42:25
Some people no almost think that the norm is that society should
42:29
be shut down and opening it up is kind of deviant position. And
42:34
why would you be opening up?
42:36
That's coming here. There's no doubt about that.
42:39
There's no doubt about it. Because of the some of the clips
42:42
I didn't get, which I mentioned, which is all the kids that are
42:44
protesting because the parents, their schools and the parents
42:48
and everyone's not strict enough, even though I think does
42:51
a lot of those are phony, and I think is trumped up by the
42:54
media. At the same time. I think there's a lobbyists and people
42:58
are buying it.
42:59
Here's a part two to that.
43:01
But then moving on to people's kind of anxiety with this. I
43:04
mean, given how quickly this has happened psychologically, I
43:06
think we've got a lot of explaining to do, actually. So I
43:08
mean, this is great news. And I don't want to in any way detract
43:11
from it. But I think there are a lot of people who now don't get
43:14
the narrative. So where are we going next? What am I supposed
43:17
to do? How much do I alter the dial on how much risk to take?
43:20
You know, do I still need to be two meters from people? Should
43:22
I still avoid crowded situations? Yeah, people are
43:25
going to be confused. They won't know what to do. I should just
43:29
stay indoors. It's better safe. I
43:33
well, those people should stay indoors.
43:37
So I think that the way this wraps up as as you know, we're
43:41
going to get pretty close to the to the end here will it'll just
43:44
be confirmation I think from here on out, except for the
43:46
political part, which we just don't see the path yet for that.
43:50
President Harris. Huge, I think they still would like to get
43:56
people using some kind of passport, but it'll it'll, it'll
43:59
boil down to it's not really that important. But you know,
44:02
whether you've been vaccinated, it doesn't really matter. I
44:05
don't know if you'll have to be fully boosted. Maybe there'll be
44:08
that requirement. We have different different up to date
44:11
different color levels for how up to date you are but if you
44:14
had natural immunity, then you'll also be using the
44:17
passport to be a very small number of people who want in any
44:21
and that's really that's all they need is just to have that
44:24
mechanism in place. I think as long as we have something we got
44:27
people to install some piece of software that we can do stuff
44:30
with and you know eventually pour the the central bank
44:35
digital dollar the federal digital dollar into juicy that
44:38
they they announced they're they're studying it with MIT.
44:41
Yeah, the Fed. Yeah. Oh, that should be interesting
44:46
one, chumps.
44:49
Hey, you know, I see them doing it. If China does it, they'd
44:54
have those have to do but then setting parameters around it.
44:57
You know, it'll be just like cash.
45:00
China. I have my last the COVID clip, which is not a COVID clip
45:04
is about the the back and forth going on between China and the
45:08
United States regarding flights.
45:10
Oh, yeah. Okay.
45:14
Flights blocked both ways.
45:16
The transportation department is going to block 44 flights
45:20
heading to China operated by four Chinese airlines. The
45:23
suspension will go into effect January 30. And end on March 29.
45:28
This is in response to China's decision to block several US
45:32
airline flights. Over COVID concerns. The four Chinese
45:35
airlines impacted our CMN airlines, Air China, China,
45:40
Southern Airlines, and China Eastern Airlines.
45:44
Yeah, this is this is waging war over the convenience of the
45:50
human resources of the world. That's that's what's going on
45:56
here. Oh, you don't know. You don't want to you don't want to
45:59
vote our way in the United Nations Security Council about
46:03
North Korea sanctions. Okay. Then no flights for you. To
46:06
which then China says, Oh, we're just going to shut down the
46:08
ports. No good for you. Who is running this show? Who is real?
46:17
Ah, the China saw this was funny. This showed up on RT, of
46:23
course. Or was it Brighton? I was RT, China brings back anal
46:28
swab Coronavirus test in Beijing. Was this this thing
46:33
ever proven to be true or not?
46:35
Well, it has to be kind of true. Because they can they we
46:39
although I was skeptical, I still am where they're taking
46:42
municipal wastewater and they're determining how many people have
46:46
got COVID Based on the crap that they process. So the swap should
46:51
work.
46:53
Yeah. Well, I did wastewater, that would make sense. So you
46:56
can you can target?
46:59
No, I'm just saying if you have to wastewater contains crap.
47:02
Yeah. That has no Yeah, no,
47:03
I understand. I understand. I'm just saying that in that
47:06
context, that the wastewater testing that's much better for
47:09
finding out you know, if you need to shut down an apartment
47:11
building as for targeting purposes, I mean, it's pretty
47:15
obvious who who's positive when you're using the anal swab? It's
47:18
one person. It'd be so cool. That future where you just lock
47:24
people down on their own homes. We're so used to it now. You
47:27
haven't you? You haven't been good. We can see the
47:30
positive many gay, too many humorous directions, you can go
47:34
with this material. Yeah.
47:42
Exactly. See what else I had on this? Yeah, no, I think that's
47:50
that's kind of it. I mean, from the way what I see is only ways
47:56
out for the power hungry. And you know, for the for the
48:01
political set that that has been abusing us and abusing the world
48:05
with this thing is climate change cyber pandemic, and then
48:10
maybe eventually some kind of financial thing, but it's all
48:13
it's five years away, at least, don't you think? They got to
48:17
Reese? They got to do a lot of stuff here and
48:19
a lot of study, do they have to analyze what we just went
48:22
through and see where the weak spots were? What the mistakes
48:26
were why we didn't get everybody on board? And what was the
48:30
reason with these these outliers? Yes, like 30% of the
48:34
public, why didn't they buy in at all?
48:36
Here's something that is happening right now. You're
48:39
absolutely right. This is happening right now the self
48:42
analysis is going on at the World Economic Forum. This is
48:47
the the theme for this year's symposium is the gates
48:51
narrative, these people and listen to this self reflection
48:57
at Davos a few years ago, the Edelman survey showed us that
49:03
the good news is the elite across the world trust each
49:08
other more and more. So we can come together and design and do
49:11
beautiful things together. The bad news is that in every single
49:16
country, they were polling, the majority of people trusted that
49:20
elite less.
49:22
Yeah, I'm glad you got that clip because I hadn't lost it. So I
49:26
tell you that I had in my mind somewhere. I look at this clip.
49:30
And I'm like, this could easily be from three years ago and I
49:33
wouldn't know it and I tried five years ago. You have no idea
49:37
anymore. It's really annoying.
49:39
I don't know where that where that could when that was done.
49:42
But it when I heard it. It was like yeah, these are this is
49:45
exactly right. These elites, elites would revolt now we're
49:49
adopting the fact that they're, they call themselves elites.
49:52
This is crazy. I think so. Yeah. Well, not all of them. She just
49:57
did. Yeah, she did. But I think there's more of a Europe panting
50:00
she had a slight accent. I don't think Americans do that so much.
50:04
No, no, no, no, no, yet. But, but I'm sure they feel that way.
50:10
And it's like, yeah, you know, the people to the, I think were
50:14
more self aware about the leads not being well liked. Right.
50:18
Whereas the European at least I can see them not understanding
50:21
it. I mean, it's like they might one of my favorite things I saw
50:26
was on 60 minutes or is on some it was on or maybe it's on a
50:30
video package. There was some guy went up to Jacob Rothschild,
50:34
you probably seen this clip. Some deck goes up to Jacob
50:38
bracha, who just roams around like a normal process
50:41
in his garden. No, no, you want on the street on the street?
50:45
Yeah, he's, yeah. And he's gonna walk to his house. The guy
50:49
follows them all the way to his mansion.
50:51
Yeah, he follows him. He's haranguing him. Yeah. And yeah,
50:55
I mean, Ross shells got no body guards. He's, you know, he's
50:57
just, you know, he's a banker. And he's retired. He's just an
51:01
old man. And really what he really is, and you know, they
51:04
did was, he couldn't even understand what the guy was
51:07
talking about you You guys are ruining the world. I'm trying to
51:10
get home.
51:12
What's your point that he's not evil? Because he's a senile old
51:15
man?
51:16
No, I think he was a C now to say the least, because they
51:19
interviewed him later. But he's old as for sure. But it's just
51:24
that they have a cavalier attitude because of the dare
51:27
elite status. They really have this belief that there like
51:30
above it on some. Yeah, it's not something we can understand the
51:35
United States is really alien. But, yeah, let me hear, you
51:43
know, some guy makes, you know, I see somebody say makes half a
51:48
million dollars a year that you have some of these guys get
51:50
bodyguards that go around with an entourage. You know, you get
51:56
that special
51:57
insurance where it's not the life insurance, it's not listed
52:01
anywhere. And only a special code can be used to claim the
52:05
insurance. And the amount is not known all these all these
52:10
things. I used to get those calls, I would laugh. What am
52:15
What am I going to divvy up? And for John, you get my mark of the
52:20
Unifor unicorn audio device so you can continue with the show?
52:25
No, no.
52:26
Mac.
52:29
Mark Cuban, speaking of elites is opening up an online pharmacy
52:34
to provide affordable generic drugs. This has scam written all
52:39
over it with this guy.
52:41
So it's a wait, let me get this. I'm removing my reminders
52:44
thinking about this. Actually, I think my woke up from some crazy
52:47
dream. And I was thinking about different people that go into
52:51
businesses where they've had no no experience whatsoever ever.
52:55
And because you never wants to tell somebody, I think you know,
52:58
what we can do is go make some money doing this. Well, you've
53:00
ever been in the business? No. So Mark Cuban's net is you know,
53:04
he's a bet his business really is a basketball owner. And
53:08
something of a I wouldn't call him a scammer per se, but his
53:11
broadcast.com which Oh, yeah, $3 billion. He just did just did a
53:16
great job with that. He was he was early and very smart guy.
53:21
And it can it can
53:22
be jealous. It was just he just did a great job on getting that
53:25
timing. And he does what he wants to do. So his NBA did
53:30
HDTV. He was into that for a while and he was got pretty good
53:34
at it. But it wasn't, you know, wasn't network bought. That
53:37
wasn't high. It
53:38
wasn't exponential, the growth wasn't there.
53:40
But so what does he know about drug pharmacies that he wants to
53:45
do this? No. There's no, you know, the old sayings in his
53:50
Valley was always what was it when you had a lot of skills in
53:53
some arena? It was called
53:56
by Randy Commissar.
53:59
It's a there's a term for
54:02
entrepreneur and residents. Not confusing. You know, I'm sorry,
54:07
I
54:08
know. It's okay. I'm a master jack of all trades is is that
54:10
he's got no business doing this.
54:14
No, this is going to be exactly like him doing the keynote at
54:18
the Podcast Movement, the big podcast conference announcing
54:22
Oh, yeah, this is the future of podcasting. With his fire fire
54:27
hose or whatever it was called, I don't remember any of this.
54:30
Yeah, they gave him the keynote speech, of course, or he paid
54:34
for it. That's usually how it works with the bad I think he
54:38
has enough celebrity appeal for the podcast, conference
54:41
organizers like Oh, call Mark Cuban's come to the keynote,
54:45
which he did with some podcasting. Yeah, with some some
54:49
this.
54:51
How come you didn't get the keynote? This is you actually,
54:54
you know why? Because they want you to pay for something about
54:56
podcasts.
54:57
No, no, they always want you to sponsor this is from the first
55:00
podcast conference where they said, Hey, man, you know, you've
55:03
got VC money, you should have come to the keynote. I'd love to
55:06
do keto. Yeah, but you need to sponsor for $20,000. I'm not
55:10
going to sponsor $20,000. We did spend that money on doing shit.
55:13
Well, man, that's not cool. You're not You're fucking the
55:16
community. Besides, no, but it's usually conferences. That's
55:24
where they make their kind of upfront monies sell those
55:26
sponsorships? It's paid to speak. That's what it is. So no,
55:30
I'm not into that. But I don't. But you can get a name big
55:33
enough, I think Cuban probably qualified. And he had a big
55:35
announcement. And it was dumb. It was clubhouse for podcasting.
55:39
And it was it was, it was failed at launch was a year ago, like
55:45
three years, like nine months ago. Yeah. I think never kind of
55:50
launched. And, you know, it was just, it was a mess. You know,
55:53
it's like you own your own content. And then the Terms of
55:56
Service said, we own the content. Anyway, so the elites
56:02
are just mucking up the waters. Although not happening in your
56:08
neck of the woods, in many places, and also not in mind, by
56:12
the way, many places in the United States. And this is
56:16
article I'm reading here, US food supply under pressure from
56:19
processing plants to store shelves, grocery store shelves
56:22
have gotten harder to fill as workers calling in sick of added
56:25
to continuing supply and transportation disruptions. So
56:28
whatever the reason, or compounded reasons, this,
56:31
there's shortages, and it's probably going to get worse. And
56:36
this is where we need to slip in some climate change stuff.
56:41
Because that's our real problem is the carbon and the food and
56:45
how it's made. And he's back Al Gore,
56:48
former Vice President Al Gore took us for a ride in his
56:51
electric ATV. And bet most people don't think of you as
56:55
farmer out.
56:56
No. I don't have many calluses on my
57:02
butt. This land outside Nashville is also Gore's Climate
57:06
Change laboratory, and then just push it in. He's collecting a
57:11
soil sample as he explained
57:14
to one of his massage therapist.
57:19
No, no see, those stories? They never get brought back up again.
57:24
I just did. Yeah. Say it again. Because people forget.
57:29
An Al Gore was busted for being a douchebag he should have been
57:34
canceled. But the Oh no, hi, we cancel this guy because he's the
57:37
climate change guy. He should have been canceled because he
57:41
was making lewd comments and dropping his towel around all
57:45
these massage people. He'd bring them up to his room and it's all
57:50
documented. What do they need? You know? Oh, look at this.
57:53
Well, this is an interesting thing here. What do you think
57:55
that's gonna do? Oh,
57:56
my towel drops.
57:58
So I'm gonna put up with this.
58:02
What was Moses homeless? Second, this is a clip from it. This is
58:08
from the 25th during that era.
58:11
My exclusive interview with bachelor Jake's coming up but
58:14
right now another outdoor scandal. It was the cheating
58:19
rumors and now accusations of sexual assault.
58:24
Good Times No, no, no farmer
58:27
sexual assault that he should have been canceled me to the
58:31
rest of these guys.
58:32
Yeah, no farmer out and then
58:35
just push it in.
58:36
He's collecting a soil sample. As he experiments with what's
58:40
known as regenerative farming.
58:43
That means cut back on the on the plowing there better ways to
58:46
plant
58:46
there's actually three times more carbon stored in the
58:49
topsoil of the earth than all the trees and plants combined.
58:53
By plowing less and making that soil more fertile scientists a
58:57
farmers could help trap massive amounts of additional planet
59:00
warming carbon emissions in the ground.
59:02
Job Number one is to stop using the sky as an open sewer for all
59:07
of this manmade global warming pollution. And that's what made
59:11
them
59:11
I just, I just love how he makes carbon dioxide sound like
59:16
diarrhea. I mean that that's some wordsmithing there I have
59:20
to I have to hand the towel here.
59:22
I'm using the sky as an open sewer for all of this manmade
59:26
global warming pollution. And that's what's making the weather
59:29
crazy and dangerous. Crazy.
59:32
He says Mother Nature is now making the most effective
59:34
argument for climate action. And he's encouraged by the rapid
59:38
growth of solar and wind power. But the plan is still rapidly
59:41
warming as we continue to pump near record amounts of pollution
59:45
into the sky. There's all this progress being made but isn't
59:49
enough.
59:49
A realist will tell you Look, we've done some damage. Some of
59:53
it regrettably is not recoverable. But we we go from
59:58
where we are
1:00:00
We go from where we are
1:00:02
doing this. What Where did the CBS,
1:00:05
CBS this weekend? The guy
1:00:07
doing the report says pollution and yes, referring to natural
1:00:12
carbon dioxide pollution and methane, which are all natural
1:00:16
that come from the earth is all its organic
1:00:19
pollution. It's brown. It's like an open sewer up there from the
1:00:24
pollution. Yeah, this is narrative forming. And what's
1:00:27
interesting is I've been following regenerative farming,
1:00:31
regenerative farming, and I couldn't my brain was hurting,
1:00:36
why would Al Gore promote something that's actually good?
1:00:41
And I'm not talking about the the co2 although Sure, that's
1:00:44
fine. We just keep it in the earth. But going back to that,
1:00:47
I'm not talking about throwing herbicides and pesticides on it
1:00:51
and not tilling, but, you know, having cow manure, pig manure,
1:00:54
chicken manure, etc. So how can this douchebag elite be
1:00:59
promoting the right thing? It's almost like Did they capture the
1:01:03
term? Is there something I'm missing? And after some
1:01:06
sleuthing, Ah, okay, I understand what's going on here.
1:01:10
Here's part two of this series from CBS this weekend. Gore is
1:01:15
a major investor in a new tech platform called Climate trace.
1:01:18
It uses satellites, sensors and artificial intelligence to track
1:01:22
greenhouse gas emissions around the globe. Gore believes this
1:01:25
will be an important tool to hold countries accountable for
1:01:28
their pollution.
1:01:29
We're not the climate cops, maybe the neighborhood watch.
1:01:35
But our neighborhood is the whole world. We're in constant
1:01:38
communication with the scientific community.
1:01:41
Al Gore has been sounding the climate alarm for more than four
1:01:44
decades. First, as a young congressman,
1:01:47
the Arctic is experiencing faster melt. And then 15
1:01:52
years ago with his planetary PowerPoint in the film, in
1:01:55
Inconvenient Truth.
1:01:57
The crisis is still getting worse faster than we're
1:02:00
deploying the solutions there is a remaining question about
1:02:04
whether we will solve it in time.
1:02:09
He's still optimistic mainly because of young people all over
1:02:12
the world now demanding change
1:02:15
I want them to in the words of spinal tap, I want them to turn
1:02:18
it up to an 11 feet to the fire and the more they can march the
1:02:23
more noise they disguise
1:02:24
so square he says it wrong it goes to 11 all want him to turn
1:02:30
it up to the
1:02:31
11 words of spinal tap I want him to turn it up to an 11 and
1:02:35
Atlanta fire and the more they can march the more noise they
1:02:40
can make the more demands they insist upon the calling for
1:02:45
riots as to progress will make I'm a firm believer in that.
1:02:49
And he still believes that climate crisis is one we can
1:02:53
also
1:02:54
solve the direction of travel is clear. And I do believe that we
1:02:59
will get there
1:03:00
I do believe Yeah, he always says that does he believe or
1:03:03
does he do
1:03:04
do beliefs? So I look this this outfit of his up and now this is
1:03:10
Al Gore is he's playing a long game I got to appreciate it.
1:03:14
So I'm gonna be dead by the time as long game is over. Well, what
1:03:17
is this long game always been with Maurice Strong whose is
1:03:20
dead Mari strong all is already not going to see the long game.
1:03:24
It was the carbon credit exchange. Now Gore is Mr. Carbon
1:03:28
credit. He wants a price on carbon. So we can wait the tax
1:03:32
the hell out of him is a skimmer. Yeah, but this is
1:03:35
interesting because this if you look at this website, they have
1:03:39
it's the equivalent of the pew pew map for the wars that that
1:03:44
cyber outfit where they show all the attacks taking place. Oh,
1:03:48
there's Russia. Oh, there's one from Ukraine. Oh, there's one
1:03:50
from North pew pew pew. So he has this a satellite image. You
1:03:54
can twirl the globe and it's showing the exact amount of
1:03:59
carbon you can zoom in you can see where where there's too much
1:04:02
carbon ah key is going to be counting whether he can do it or
1:04:08
not is a whole nother question. keys that he's trying to become
1:04:13
the authority. Oh, I see right there. I see those three acres
1:04:16
down in Texas there in Central Texas. That looks like curry. It
1:04:20
looks like there's too much carbon emitting from those three
1:04:22
acres. Let's tax him telling you this, this guy is and he always
1:04:30
rolls out to Silicon Valley to the money people first. Before
1:04:34
that movie even came out. He was showing it to Kleiner Perkins.
1:04:37
Because I was there when he did it. And he got everyone all
1:04:40
invest in Kleiner Perkins had their green tech fund. Lord
1:04:44
knows what
1:04:45
happens with one of the few funds that they lost money. I
1:04:49
know. They lost their ass on it. And the cut end of Kleiner
1:04:54
Perkins has never been the same. I know. It's not even good.
1:04:58
People talk about the VCs. They talk about Sukhoi, they talk
1:05:02
about all kinds of different operations. Even even
1:05:05
Andreessen, which is like, not even a, you know, a Smart
1:05:08
Company, but kind of purpose is out of the conversation. Yeah.
1:05:13
Oh, yeah. No, they, they, because they can't do it. They
1:05:15
don't know how to make it work. Yeah, some. This guy, some Bjorn
1:05:23
Lumbergh, who is some dude on Twitter, did the calculation, so
1:05:27
take it for what it's worth. And he says, Okay, if we if we
1:05:32
really need to use battery power the world uses, he's what he
1:05:35
comes up with 51 gigawatt hour per minute, and has 64 gigawatt
1:05:41
hour of total battery storage. So enough for about one minute
1:05:46
and 15 seconds of energy. If the, if everything goes to shit,
1:05:50
that's how long we can keep the lights on if we kept everything
1:05:52
on. And he said by 20, that's probably true. Me too, just by
1:05:56
2030 It'll be much better 10 minutes, 10 minutes, 24
1:06:01
seconds about batteries that you know, is kind of not. Batteries
1:06:05
are like a batch process. You fill a battery up you gray and
1:06:10
you fill it they use a it's a it's not a it's a batch process.
1:06:14
So far as like what you just described, if you had to run the
1:06:17
world, you need a continuous process where you have a coal
1:06:20
fired plant, it's just making energy can constantly because
1:06:24
the coal is coming in being burned. Energy comes out through
1:06:28
a generator. A batch processes are always frowned upon in
1:06:33
technology. You don't want to do things in batch, you want to do
1:06:36
them in continuous, you want to use the continuous process.
1:06:39
That's why that food processing stuff so fascinating for
1:06:42
everybody, including you, where the cookie factory doesn't make
1:06:45
a batch of cookies. They're making the cookies on an
1:06:48
assembly line. Oh yeah. Pouring out the back these cookies,
1:06:53
batch process stuff which is small batch artists and all that
1:06:56
stuff. It's a low profits item is really not the way to go
1:07:00
about things. Oh, that's a good point. And so to that this whole
1:07:04
battery thing is all batch process.
1:07:07
So you mean the creation the charging the discharge
1:07:10
everything
1:07:10
it's a batch process operation, right? That's
1:07:13
like the Tesla battery itself is just a batch of double A
1:07:16
batteries is not yet it is cells.
1:07:19
Yeah. The cells? Yes. For some legal reasons. They don't have
1:07:23
to be that way.
1:07:24
I thought that should they buy him from Toshiba or something
1:07:26
like that? And then pretend like they're doing some some in doing
1:07:29
something special in the in the Gigafactory What are you doing?
1:07:32
I'm loading up batteries all day. I mean, yeah, I've actually
1:07:35
been looking at a mechanical batteries just out of interest
1:07:39
to see
1:07:39
what kind of give me like an internal combustion engine? No,
1:07:43
like a water tower, where you use some mechanism to slowly to
1:07:48
get the water up there. And then yeah, yeah, and then store it
1:07:50
because you'd basically storing energy that you could have
1:07:52
collected over a month's time to fill it up. And then when you
1:07:56
need it, you have to have all that water and then it drives a
1:07:59
turbine and you could you could go for a while I think I'm
1:08:01
trying to look actually
1:08:02
there is a power plant in Washington, I believe is off the
1:08:06
Hood Canal road. I've driven past this place like I don't
1:08:09
know 100 times. And I'm at first I looked at it what the hell is
1:08:15
this? It's like a small power plant. And they have these giant
1:08:19
pipes that go up to them. And
1:08:21
that's the Trump a TR, O MP there's a I've looked into this
1:08:26
go ahead tell me what you see there make sure I'm talking
1:08:29
Yeah, well you got it you got your little power plant you can
1:08:32
see there's a glass is really pretty and then there's these
1:08:35
big pipes that go way up into the into the somewhere up into
1:08:38
up to inside the hill. And I'm just told that that's when you
1:08:42
know the some situations they accumulate or they pump water up
1:08:46
there when they get too much power they don't get it they use
1:08:49
their turn these pumps on and move water up there and then
1:08:51
when they they need it they just run it through the turbines on
1:08:55
the way back still kind of baffling to me but it's very
1:09:00
attractive.
1:09:00
This is other power plant which I think is something different
1:09:04
at the Montreal River in in Canada Navia and it's the system
1:09:10
is called a trumpet TR O M P E and it creates compressed air
1:09:16
and it does that by having if you have a water source that is
1:09:21
as high as possible really that yeah I've heard compressed it's
1:09:24
really interesting to see how it works yeah and compressed air I
1:09:29
mean compressed air used to it still used in mines for to
1:09:33
generate electricity though it's a non flammable gas. Don't know.
1:09:37
Yeah, power tools work on compressed air.
1:09:39
Yeah, a lot of power tools do this one of those. Spray paint
1:09:44
operations there's
1:09:46
there's the one of the dudes from Revenge of the Nerds sent
1:09:49
me an email. I know this was in the movie Revenge of the Nerds.
1:09:53
Or voice partner. I can't know what it was. They've come up
1:09:57
with a windmill. That that that collects compressed air. And
1:10:02
they've been trying to get investors for five or seven
1:10:05
years, but it actually seems to seems to work.
1:10:09
So is the point?
1:10:10
Well, so if they like they want to, they could they say they can
1:10:14
generate one megawatt hour in and there's, you know, and all
1:10:19
you need is, I think, like 30 miles an hour of wind and not
1:10:23
even continuously they've got these turbines that suck in the
1:10:26
air. And then they have this mechanism that compresses it and
1:10:29
puts it into a tank and then you can unleash the tank and then
1:10:33
you you drive your electrical generator, start things up. And
1:10:38
you know, he says we can do small neighborhoods. I have to
1:10:43
look the company up. This is a lot. There's a lot of
1:10:47
interesting stuff out there. Not none of it's an exit strategy
1:10:52
yet.
1:10:52
No. I'm working on it. Hot air.
1:10:56
Yeah. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage in
1:10:59
the morning to you and the man who put the seat in the climate
1:11:01
change Mr. John C. Dvorak, everybody
1:11:05
well in the morning you miss jam creating morning trips to see
1:11:07
boots on the ground, feeding yourself in the world with names
1:11:09
and ice out there. Yeah.
1:11:10
And in the morning to the trolls who are here one hour and 11
1:11:14
minutes into the show, and they are active as always, let's see
1:11:17
how many of you have seen this? This is a this is a Sunday show.
1:11:24
I didn't get the count here. What is the count? Oh, 2648.
1:11:28
Hey, that's pretty high. Isn't that close to? To the record?
1:11:31
You have the posted note, do you not?
1:11:35
It's the new record. Oh, no. Oh, no. Yeah, the old regular 2642
1:11:42
Fantastic. Because donations are a record lows. This is very
1:11:45
interesting. Yeah. That's very interesting. All right, trolls.
1:11:49
Well, good. Maybe this is the an indicator for things to come.
1:11:54
Good to have you all here on donations. Well, though, for
1:11:57
maybe for the next show, if you like oh, yeah, that was such a
1:12:00
good show. We had such a good time we're going to support it.
1:12:03
The trolls can be joined for free at any time you want go to
1:12:06
troll room.io It's just the basic chat room. And if you
1:12:10
register you can keep your nickname and all that groovy
1:12:12
stuff. And the cool part about it is you can go to no agenda
1:12:16
stream comm or even troll room.io and listen to the no
1:12:19
agenda stream live, which is on Thursdays and Sundays, but it's
1:12:22
24/7. So there's a lot of live shows taking place that you
1:12:27
control in real time everyone, almost everybody interacts with
1:12:30
with the troll room one way or the other. And it's just it's
1:12:33
just a fun place to be. I want to thank erinnern for doing
1:12:39
something genius you know, we keep talking about no agenda
1:12:44
social calm and how that's really you know, that is that is
1:12:48
that's the real web three right there. decentralized social
1:12:52
network works across any type of Mastodon or fediverse compatible
1:12:57
server. And it's so nice to see Macedon dot social I guess we've
1:13:03
been unblocked or something. Because there's lots of people
1:13:06
contributing to to threads. I see it on on our server, you
1:13:09
know,
1:13:10
maybe complaining about it helps.
1:13:12
Well, something happened. It just seems like or maybe we were
1:13:16
not in their federated timeline, but people can still follow I
1:13:20
don't know, but it's working. And this this Niall D platform,
1:13:23
it's just it's simple. There's no algo you know, you get into a
1:13:26
heated debate, it scrolls off to something else, you go on with
1:13:29
your life, everybody's happy doesn't come back to haunt you
1:13:31
continuously. And what Eleanor did is because I always say, you
1:13:35
know, follow at Jhansi Dvorak at no agenda, social calm or follow
1:13:39
Adam at no agenda social.com. And of course, it turns out
1:13:44
after he put the alias in, that a lot of people were emailing us
1:13:49
these email addresses, which is very confusing. I don't know how
1:13:52
to solve that. Because when you say, you know, it's like, follow
1:13:55
us there. People like oh, that's how I email which is interesting
1:13:59
because Adam curry calm is so much easier to spell. So, have
1:14:05
you received email through this yet? No. Well, they only do it
1:14:10
to me then. But anyway, I'm happy because some donation
1:14:12
notes even came through that way. That is not the preferred
1:14:14
method, but it works. Let's thank the artists who brought us
1:14:23
the artwork for the previous episode. We'd like to do this
1:14:27
like to discuss the many entries that come in. Because this top
1:14:33
notch talent that is working on this stuff like everybody else
1:14:36
who produces the best podcast in the universe, homeless
1:14:38
Apocalypse was episode 1418 and the artwork was expertly created
1:14:45
by Taunton nail. And this was the Boris Johnson no more
1:14:49
mandates partay he's got his pints of beer and just one of
1:14:53
the best expressions which I don't know if, if she What kind
1:14:58
of bass she had to work with, but man That's
1:15:01
she obviously saw that image someplace and like any other
1:15:04
artists thing and you know, I bet check it fun to use for this
1:15:10
Yeah, and there it is. I mean, I've never seen that image
1:15:14
before and but it's and it doesn't look like it's been
1:15:16
shopped. No. So it's just a it's just a funny image what can I
1:15:23
say? And we liked it.
1:15:25
I mean there were a couple other candidates. We
1:15:27
liked a lot of stuff but with this we this was a fall back. We
1:15:31
had it took a little voting back and forth we had a bunch of
1:15:36
stuff I like the you'd like the mouse holding the spear that's
1:15:39
right next to it from Parker Paulie. Holding the swab. Yeah,
1:15:45
I like the voter fraud with the with the clown on the side.
1:15:51
Yeah.
1:15:52
That was Darrin O'Neill, as you know, I hate him. So you do?
1:15:55
Yeah, that's why I'm not gonna choose.
1:15:57
Just that wasn't gonna happen even though what you thought and
1:16:00
thought through like, I
1:16:01
know, I hate him too much. I can't let that happen. You let
1:16:04
the cat out of the bag.
1:16:06
Test your hamster with this swab and the little cartoon? Are you
1:16:10
sure you like a cat? It looks too much like a cat.
1:16:13
It does look like a cat.
1:16:15
He made a fuss about that. Well, you
1:16:16
were you were just bitching and moaning I like that one. I like
1:16:19
that looks like a cat. But I like it. It looks like a cat.
1:16:24
It says hams I
1:16:25
like I like bumbling Joe the candidate yes
1:16:29
but we both liked that but we we had to keep to the rule this
1:16:33
networks that it was just too small and just doesn't try and
1:16:37
there's lots of funny stuff in there.
1:16:39
Yeah, it was really you couldn't read it? If you blow it up.
1:16:42
You see what did you have here? No joke new corn pop flavor.
1:16:45
Omega 33 All good stuff. Just too small.
1:16:50
Yeah, you can see the gag a damn I like That round thing Kenny
1:16:54
Ben did with the with the hamster something I don't know
1:16:58
what that is but I just like her badges she does a bunch of other
1:17:01
badges she does
1:17:02
she does good badge to get a good badge yes she does.
1:17:07
And then that was it. Oh there was one other one I think I
1:17:13
can't think of what it was but there's one other one we have a
1:17:15
little debate about
1:17:21
thanks so maybe not No that was pretty much it
1:17:25
yeah we were struggling and then then we decided on the yeah on
1:17:32
the on the one with Boris and it was just the one that was the
1:17:35
winner Yeah,
1:17:38
yeah. Yeah, I feel bad but you know now the DERA knows I hate
1:17:43
him there's just no no way that can win
1:17:46
to battle he's gonna win again. He he does the he always if you
1:17:53
can't if this if it wasn't Boris and did boom next guy down
1:17:59
thank you to all the artists and of course Taunton Neo for
1:18:02
nailing it Neil nailed it with the artwork This is very
1:18:06
important part of the value for value model that no agenda
1:18:09
pioneered and use to this day there's no way you can have any
1:18:13
type of process that is affordable even doable to have a
1:18:17
piece of artists to slap onto the mp3 right after the show is
1:18:21
recorded. Are you kidding me?
1:18:23
Let me make another at least an observation. Roger round he did
1:18:28
something with his rule follower to be a I don't know if he he
1:18:33
should know this. But maybe doesn't that we don't use images
1:18:37
of ourselves under any circumstances. Because the well,
1:18:45
but booze for the first two or three years of the show.
1:18:47
But if you look at that piece, I think that's the joke. Because
1:18:52
it says na show art rule follower. No hosts no spiky
1:18:56
viruses, no frogs and the images are
1:19:01
one of those one of those meta gags that he's actually used
1:19:05
that for now and for I use it for the pre show art on the
1:19:08
previous on that episode 1418 Because it's like one of those
1:19:13
one and Dunn's. Yeah, of course. I knew we're never going to
1:19:15
choose it. But you know, he did a pretty good job because the
1:19:19
spike goes through the ribbon. Look how the ribbon is wrapped
1:19:22
around the frog's neck.
1:19:24
No, he's not a slouch. No.
1:19:25
And look how Look how he applied some kind of filter that makes
1:19:28
us look like very old turtles. Oh, that that part? I didn't
1:19:33
know. Yeah, yes, your blood. If you blow it up. There's some
1:19:36
weird filter effect on it. It just looks like we just our
1:19:40
faces are just we have creased skin everywhere.
1:19:45
Okay, seeing this. No, no. Their heads even though there's a frog
1:19:52
down below.
1:19:53
Yeah, but you don't you don't see the the lines, the swirly
1:19:56
lines. It's stylized. You don't see that? Yeah.
1:20:00
blow it up, I gotta blow it up.
1:20:01
Well, the people who are using a podcasting 2.0 app right now can
1:20:05
probably Yes, stop or just don't have to stop. Just look at your
1:20:08
app right now. And you'll see this image because that's one of
1:20:11
the many new features. But more importantly, with podcasting
1:20:14
under increasing attack, we have made it so that there are at
1:20:18
least 15 apps, some of them pretty big, including overcast,
1:20:22
where you just can't get D platformed. It's just not going
1:20:25
to happen. So try a modern podcast app and support the
1:20:30
protection and enhancement of podcasting new podcast apps.com.
1:20:36
Now I'd like to thank our executive producers and
1:20:39
Associate Executive producers we kick it off with Jason Payne
1:20:44
girl, pink girl from Elk Washington with $600.85.
1:20:51
Interesting number in the morning, gents, please accept my
1:20:54
lopsided donation on behalf of my smokin hot wife Carly. Please
1:20:58
do share. Okay, on a second. Didn't even have the dee doo
1:21:01
shirt ready. I want to make sure it's not too cold. You've been d
1:21:07
do also send some health karma her way show. I knew I was
1:21:10
listening to the right podcast when my son started asking for
1:21:13
clips from your show to send to his homeroom teacher.
1:21:17
Oh god.
1:21:19
He's in Washington, Washington State John Inslee. Oh my You
1:21:24
guys have kept us sane during this whole pandemic and two
1:21:27
weeks ahead of what was happening so at least we knew
1:21:29
what was coming. Thanks for everything from he'll come from
1:21:32
the hill country of Washington State. Anyone says some jingles
1:21:35
here. He wants his get vaccinated course everybody
1:21:40
loves that. He wants to stay safe and he wants to know and of
1:21:45
course we'll do the massive health karma cutbacks.
1:21:48
Good to see you please stay safe know.
1:21:53
You've got karma.
1:21:57
Jerry Adam of Hooverville came in from Austin, Texas at four
1:22:01
four. And he asked where is Kaylee now? I miss her.
1:22:09
Yeah, she shows up on shows Fox was on Fox. Yeah, I've seen her
1:22:14
there or we can always remember her fondly from this.
1:22:18
I got to Kaylee beat.
1:22:20
I do like to Kaylee.
1:22:22
I got to Kaylee beat. Kaylee beat. I got to gain a beat.
1:22:28
I do like the Kaylee deep die. You're kind of smitten with
1:22:31
Kaylee. You liked her?
1:22:33
I think she was a winner. Yeah. She was she was sassy.
1:22:41
Yes. James Murray in Huntington Beach California are finally
1:22:46
executive producer with the perfect amount of 33333 no note
1:22:51
though I don't have anything from James Murray do you have to
1:22:54
say came in at my site either. And then I will and James if you
1:22:57
have something you can always send it post show or let us know
1:23:01
what happened John much Nick Much, much much ink much ink in
1:23:06
Austin Texas. 245 first Associate Executive producer in
1:23:09
the morning dudes. Please credit this to Amy Mullen my smokin hot
1:23:14
wife who took animated no agenda who it took animated no agenda
1:23:18
to finally bring to the dark side You mean the light side? We
1:23:22
are a rownum Oh couple rownum a couple kneading house buying
1:23:28
karma to flee Austin and get back into the great state of
1:23:30
Texas soon love is lit Thanks How hard can it be
1:23:36
a house got the big Austin's got the real estate prices through
1:23:39
the roof is easy to get out.
1:23:42
Boy says How's to be to be fair he says house buying karma which
1:23:48
buying something affordable anywhere in the within? uh gosh
1:23:53
maybe in the 500 mile radius of Austin is going to be difficult
1:23:56
but yeah, of course we're gonna get that to you.
1:23:59
You've got karma
1:24:01
and I've done the switcheroo before the credit
1:24:04
good Abla harsh Kumar ah in Bombay. This came in as a had to
1:24:13
be adjusted came in as a wire transfer I was
1:24:16
gonna say because Pay Pal I don't think does India do they
1:24:20
know he did it as a wire transfer but to the bank
1:24:23
account, which means I had to dig it up. Ah, greetings from
1:24:27
Bombay I reached I realized that I had been making small medium
1:24:31
donation says 2011 are very close to achieving knighthood
1:24:34
who'd have thunk it so he's been getting money in mostly true I
1:24:38
have to say through wire transfers very cool which is a
1:24:41
cost 10 boxes it's not the best way to do it but it does work.
1:24:46
Anyways, he continues I wanted to confirm my accounting with
1:24:49
you since I did you send some accounting in and it looks okay
1:24:53
to me and take into account anyways got about 100 bucks to
1:24:59
go in it. Okay, well, he won't know he did a double credit back
1:25:03
in the day when we did the twofer. And yeah, I want to know
1:25:06
if that was okay. I figured dish your course,
1:25:08
of course. Hey, he's taking the time and effort to support us.
1:25:12
Yes, yes. Yes. Very cool. Thank you. I'll be lush and send us a
1:25:19
pronunciation guide please. Tim Lang San Francisco to one two
1:25:25
ITM update from Denmark. Okay. So I guess he's from San
1:25:29
Francisco temporarily. In Denmark after the casual culling
1:25:32
of millions of mink, the head of the Danish CIA has now been
1:25:36
imprisoned on undisclosed charges. Yeah.
1:25:39
I've been following that. Oh, what is it?
1:25:42
We don't know. I think espionage might have been doing
1:25:47
for the Chinese. What's he doing?
1:25:49
I don't know that I'd have no information. I know that he was
1:25:52
that in, detained I don't know about imprison. And it's
1:25:55
undisclosed charges. So we don't know what it is. The stylization
1:25:59
of Denmark continues. Also quick plug. Suave vampires on open
1:26:04
sea. Godspeed j na. Sounds like he's promoting NFT here. Suave
1:26:11
vampires?
1:26:12
Are you that is code?
1:26:14
No, it's NFT. open sea is an NFT marketplace.
1:26:18
Oh, that's right. Yeah. Gregory de Bernardo in Canton, Georgia.
1:26:23
20252. He writes a less that'd be part of a problem of the 7%
1:26:30
decrease in the amount of donations and the best podcast
1:26:33
in the universe. Please accept this my second donation as a
1:26:37
token of my appreciation. We bring somebody out of the
1:26:40
woodwork good, huh? My appreciation for the good work.
1:26:43
You guys. Do? You boys? I actually do read the newsletter
1:26:47
see? Yeah, about 1/3 of the way to being a knight. I think if
1:26:52
the amount of donations you get is related to the amount of
1:26:55
COVID cases we are seeing, it really shouldn't be a big deal
1:26:58
to just lie about the cases like everyone else does.
1:27:03
Yeah, we shouldn't make John, what a mistake we're making.
1:27:07
We're making people feel good.
1:27:10
That's what makes me happy says either that or we're going to
1:27:14
have to make sure Fauci I won't give them the respect of using
1:27:18
the doctor in his title. I don't think you should either. never
1:27:21
goes away for the sake of the show. Give me every sharp babble
1:27:26
you have on the soundboard. And I will be thrilled by the way.
1:27:30
I've got a new Sharpton. Oh, it's just a little one, but I
1:27:33
think it can be incorporated into the bigger the bigger
1:27:36
Sharpton events.
1:27:38
The bigger Sharpton events, okay.
1:27:40
The Arizona Democratic fatherly party, potty li
1:27:46
what does he say? farter li Bardoli.
1:27:49
The Arizona Democratic quaterly potty.
1:27:52
I think he says partly, I'm not sure if he says far too early,
1:27:56
but now you've programmed it. So now that's how we will hear it.
1:27:59
The Arizona Democratic fatherly party night is the measure of
1:28:04
whether the country begins in the state of Wisconsin, a
1:28:09
national drive to push back or whether we have more to go to
1:28:15
build a movement of resistance but resist we much we must and
1:28:21
we will much about that. Be committed properly party.
1:28:32
Thank you, Gregory. And we'll see we've got ball just finished
1:28:37
him out here. That's a very short segment today Falls
1:28:39
Church, Virginia. Jonathan Crowe. I appreciate you guys and
1:28:42
didn't want to be the only douchebag at the defeat the
1:28:44
mandates March meetup. Okay, well, good. Any any support says
1:28:51
thank you keep up the good work. And we have Chuck Bennett from
1:28:55
Caldwell, Idaho also $200. And it's just as donation from Chuck
1:29:00
Bennett. And we appreciate that. And these executive producers
1:29:03
and Associate Executive Producers receive the title, the
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recognized. If anyone has any issue, any issue whatsoever, let
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us know because we'll vouch for him and if you just go to search
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Producer status. If you want to become one of those go to full
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rack.org/and A thank you again for bringing it with your time
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and talent your treasure for 1419
1:29:45
Our formula is this. We go out. We hit people in the mouth
1:30:07
So I was listening to NPR.
1:30:10
I have a series. It's become pretty funny, haven't they?
1:30:14
Yeah, I think I'm amused and they have to wait. There's
1:30:17
speaking patterns kind of changed a little bit because
1:30:20
there's a lot more pauses and a lot of, huh, a lot of those. So
1:30:26
they attack Joe Rogan and I figured I could play these.
1:30:30
Yeah, this is I think we've probably heard the same thing.
1:30:34
But you got clips. Okay.
1:30:37
And there's commentary that's necessary. And we'll go with
1:30:42
these. This is a Rogan's attack. But it really wasn't an attack
1:30:45
on Rogan. It was an attack on a symbol of podcasting.
1:30:53
I know we're under attack.
1:30:55
And they're worried about podcasting, because they don't
1:30:58
and I don't know who is calling the shots on this. But somebody
1:31:02
irked about the podcasting. And then they said lady
1:31:05
from I think the Rockefeller Foundation, who's done all the
1:31:09
studies
1:31:10
I cast What are they talking about? But that's new podcast.
1:31:13
Does, yes. Good podcasts and bad podcasts?
1:31:16
No, there's podcasts that you could control and podcast. And I
1:31:20
would, by the way, Joe Rogan is on the same category as we are
1:31:23
in so far as independents. Nope. He could be, but he's not. For
1:31:28
good reason. I would say, well, he isn't it 100 million good
1:31:32
reasons.
1:31:33
Well, I would say the only just as a caveat, I don't know if
1:31:36
it's in this report or not. Joe can make whatever he wants
1:31:40
Spotify, because they only licensed it. They don't make it
1:31:43
they don't produce it. They don't own it. So I understand if
1:31:45
they don't take it he can I think he has the option. Yeah,
1:31:49
moving. But the point is, is that you can tell that what
1:31:54
they're really concerned about is control course podcasting is
1:31:57
not controlled and they have messaging that goes on that
1:32:01
nobody can do anything about and and they got a couple of the
1:32:04
last clip, the little short one at the end is it was really kind
1:32:07
of I think in their in their craw. But let's start with the
1:32:10
first clip NPR one.
1:32:13
Over 1000 doctors, scientists and health professionals are
1:32:15
calling out Spotify over false claims about COVID aired by its
1:32:19
most popular podcaster Joe Rogan. As NPR tech correspondent
1:32:23
Shannon bond reports while platforms such as Facebook and
1:32:26
Twitter face intense scrutiny for their role it's reading
1:32:28
harmful health hoaxes, Podcasts can be even more influential
1:32:32
sources of information. It wasn't the
1:32:35
first time Joe Rogan or his guests have floated dubious or
1:32:39
outright false information about the pandemic loaded, but for Dr.
1:32:42
Katrine Wallace Rogan's last podcast episode of 2021 was the
1:32:47
last straw.
1:32:48
This particular episode of The Joe Rogan podcast was sent to me
1:32:52
hundreds of times the day that it went live by my followers
1:32:56
because their friends and family were sending it to them as
1:33:00
evidence that the vaccines are dangerous and that they
1:33:03
shouldn't get it.
1:33:04
Wallace is an epidemiologist at the University of Illinois,
1:33:07
Chicago, and part of a community of experts who debunk medical on
1:33:12
social media immunity. In the episode in question, Rogen
1:33:15
interviewed Dr. Robert Malone, a scientist who worked on early
1:33:19
research into the technology behind the top COVID vaccines in
1:33:22
the US, but who's now a vaccine skeptic Malone made a lot of
1:33:27
baseless and disproven claims like saying that getting
1:33:31
vaccinated puts people who have already had COVID at higher risk
1:33:35
it all alarmed Wallace.
1:33:38
Okay, so let's start with this. The very beginning of this clip
1:33:42
had this little comment which really made me do a little work,
1:33:47
play Rogen calling sub clip and then we'll go from there. Over
1:33:51
1000
1:33:51
doctors, scientists and health professionals are calling out
1:33:54
Spotify.
1:33:57
Alright, let's take a look at this. This is again by I bitched
1:34:02
about this all the time, which is the mailing list that
1:34:04
somebody has. I'm signing a petition, we're going to send it
1:34:08
around and we're going to you can say you want to sign it or
1:34:10
not. Yeah, yeah, I hate Rogen, boom, they sign it. And it turns
1:34:14
out that the number of signatures on this thing was
1:34:17
actually 13 124.
1:34:20
The the number who have signed it now you mean the total
1:34:23
number?
1:34:25
Yeah, that's the total number of signatures. So the guy said
1:34:27
about it, and we're talking
1:34:28
we're talking about the WordPress blog letter, right.
1:34:31
Yeah. toasts on our WordPress blog.
1:34:34
Yeah. Well, you know, it's free. So I did, I did a deep dive on
1:34:40
this thing. And so these health professionals that 1300 24 How
1:34:44
many of them do Sammy give you a quiz? How many of them do you
1:34:47
think are MDS doctors? Got a 13 124?
1:34:52
I don't know the exact number. But I've heard that there were a
1:34:55
whole bunch of people on this that were maybe not so
1:34:57
qualified, including podcasters Oh, wait
1:35:00
a minute you talking about the Allie Ward, the host science
1:35:06
correspondent for the ologies podcast or Bridget scallion. The
1:35:11
head of the unbiased Science Podcast. We'll shoot it. There's
1:35:15
four podcasts.
1:35:16
She's a scientist.
1:35:18
She's a podcaster
1:35:22
That's right. Once you become a podcaster you lose all other
1:35:25
credentials. That is that is a rule. I do agree.
1:35:29
There's four podcasters on there. Yeah. How many doctors
1:35:32
actual doctors? 5555 singers? Five. I'm gonna get 40 Okay.
1:35:37
Let's be real, but 10% Yeah, and then, but you think there were
1:35:43
more doctors or PhDs just PhDs random p renjo. PhDs who could
1:35:48
work? I bet there were 500 PhDs? No. 151 Oh, that's
1:35:52
disappointing. So he's taller than doctors. So where they
1:35:56
medical PhDs are like Doctor likes to have them. Where do you
1:36:00
know, Pete? Brando's doctor by? Here's what there's people like
1:36:03
this. Steve Rath G. He's a PhD candidate. Do I did the search
1:36:08
he would show up as one of the PhDs for is the Val chi, a
1:36:13
master's student at the University of Tulsa. I saw
1:36:16
that name. I remember seeing Oh, Master. Okay, moving on this.
1:36:20
Well, hey, man, he did the formatting and he did the
1:36:23
programming for the for the for the WordPress blog. So he gets a
1:36:26
credit. Okay.
1:36:28
768 nurses and 53, Master's of Public Health. Everybody else
1:36:34
has just wrapped rat poop inspectors. Yeah, so there's
1:36:38
that. So this look this letter is is to me very questionable at
1:36:44
that something you use the jump off on a on a piece it on?
1:36:49
National Public Radio, just slam some guy. I did pull a couple
1:36:53
bios and Jen. Jen Wenzel, who's at the University of San Diego
1:36:58
who signed the thing. And she's her area of interest is the
1:37:03
University of San Diego is a Catholic school. And she's got
1:37:07
nothing to do with anything that I can see that would make you
1:37:12
want to be on this list. I guess anyone could be on it, because I
1:37:14
could assign it. You know, I'm a science correspondent for no
1:37:20
agenda. Well, here,
1:37:21
if I may. This would be an interesting assignment when one
1:37:25
of these comes up. I mean, can you still get added to the list?
1:37:27
It seems like people are joining the list. Can you just dump
1:37:30
it depends on some of these lists are open and they keep
1:37:33
growing. But this
1:37:34
one seems to be growing. It started with 250 Then it was
1:37:37
1000. Now it's up to 1300 plus
1:37:40
13. Yeah. Well, anyway, so they just galls me that they you
1:37:44
know, these things, you know, this a mailing list is very few
1:37:47
people in reality, if it was 100,000 people bitching, I would
1:37:52
take a little bit.
1:37:53
Oh, you mean like change.org? That would change things?
1:37:56
No, no, but at least I think it's a jumping off point. For
1:38:01
for a piece of a hit piece on Joe Rogan and podcasting would
1:38:07
be a little more appropriate than just this random list that
1:38:11
we're dealing
1:38:12
with is bullshit. And what you're what is obvious is NPR
1:38:16
didn't check that.
1:38:18
They even if they did, they're just looking for an excuse to do
1:38:21
they hit peace. Yeah, exactly. So let's go to part two.
1:38:24
It provides a sense of false balance. Like there's two sides
1:38:28
to the scientific evidence, when really there's not the
1:38:32
overwhelming evidence is that the vast ones are effective.
1:38:38
That I don't even know how that can get on the air for someone
1:38:43
to say that that is that is Newspeak that is 1984 come to
1:38:48
life.
1:38:48
It provides a sense of false balance. Like there's two sides
1:38:52
to the scientific evidence, when really there is not the
1:38:56
overwhelming evidence is that the vaccines are safe and that
1:38:59
they're effective. That's
1:39:01
just a fact. That just needs to be an evergreen. We just from
1:39:04
time to time, just need to pull that clip out. And just remind
1:39:07
people that that is the consensus. That is what science
1:39:11
is. It's not two sides. It's whatever the scientists agree
1:39:14
the majority, it can be 98% Vote is more Yeah. Hey, is it
1:39:21
filibuster 60% is close enough.
1:39:24
She's particularly worried because Rogan has such a big
1:39:27
audience. a stand up comedian and TV personality Rogan has an
1:39:31
exclusive licensing deal with Spotify reportedly worth $100
1:39:35
million. So Wallace joined a group of fellow health
1:39:39
professionals in an open letter slamming the company for
1:39:42
allowing star to broadcast misinformation.
1:39:46
We are in a global health emergency and streaming
1:39:49
platforms like Spotify that provide content and public have
1:39:54
a responsibility not to add to the problem that we have right
1:39:57
now. They're not
1:39:58
asking Spotify kickoff Rogan, but they want the company to be
1:40:02
more transparent about its rules and to make it easier to flag
1:40:06
these kinds of baseless claims about COVID. Spotify declined to
1:40:10
comment for this story, but has previously said it bans content
1:40:14
about COVID that it deems dangerous or false. It's taken
1:40:17
down 20,000 podcast episodes for breaking that policy. But
1:40:21
Rogan's Malone interview is still available. Spotify CEO
1:40:25
Daniel act told Dan Primack of Axios last year that the company
1:40:29
does not take responsibility for what Rogan or his guests say
1:40:33
Joe Rogan is just a one out of 8 million craters that we have on
1:40:37
the best paid but the best paid of all of those, sure, but we
1:40:41
have a lot of really well paid rappers on Spotify to that make
1:40:44
10s of millions of dollars, if not more each year from Spotify,
1:40:48
and we don't dictate what they're putting in their songs
1:40:50
either.
1:40:51
Rogan did not respond to NPR his requests for comment.
1:40:54
misinformation, researchers say it was only a matter of time
1:40:58
until the spotlight turned to podcasts. Wherever you have
1:41:01
users generating content, you're going to have all of the same
1:41:05
content moderation issues and controversies that you have in
1:41:08
any other space. Evelyn DUAC is a research fellow at Columbia's
1:41:12
Knight First Amendment Institute. She says it's much
1:41:15
harder to ferret out things like falsehoods and hate speech in
1:41:18
podcasts compared to posts on Facebook and Twitter. But audio
1:41:23
can be a powerful way to spread misinformation. So as Valerie
1:41:27
Wert Shafter, at the Brookings Institution
1:41:29
did podcast is in your ear, you're probably alone listening
1:41:32
to this podcast. It's a really unique relationship in that
1:41:35
respect. The podcaster gains a level of authority and a level
1:41:40
of credibility among listeners.
1:41:43
Boom.
1:41:47
So, guys all
1:41:50
hold on. I want to talk to people. I want to communicate
1:41:55
something to them. Because I hear that when you're in their
1:41:57
rear, it's
1:41:59
in their ear, not in their rear.
1:42:05
Remember me vo had the slogan pod show. Stick it in your ear.
1:42:10
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Wow. That's well, yes, that's absolutely
1:42:14
true. It's interesting though that NPR voice it somehow don't
1:42:20
have that special relationship with my ear.
1:42:23
Don't get me.
1:42:28
Gosh, Tollywood there.
1:42:31
We finally get one as three markers here in this Two Minute
1:42:34
bit here. Okay, so
1:42:35
let's go and now so they go on, and I'm moaning and groaning
1:42:39
about podcast because it's a threat. Because people are sick
1:42:43
of their crap. It's just propaganda that they can't seem
1:42:47
to control is because someone is telling them what to say and
1:42:50
what to do to here, but it's still the thing. There's still
1:42:55
something that's obviously eating at them. And it's
1:42:58
revealed in the last clip
1:43:00
work. Shafter has been studying how the big lie that the 2020
1:43:04
election was stolen, spread on political podcasts before the
1:43:08
January six assault on oh,
1:43:10
we're not talking about fringe ideas. These are the most
1:43:14
popular podcasts in the United States.
1:43:17
She says as more people become aware of how misinformation
1:43:21
spreads online podcasts deserve the same scrutiny as social
1:43:25
media. Shannon bond, NPR News.
1:43:29
Pa,
1:43:30
they switch gears right at the end. I mean, it's just abrupt.
1:43:35
The Big Lie.
1:43:36
Oh man, that is really interesting. Okay, so let's
1:43:42
think about this for a second. First of all, I'm going to give
1:43:45
you a clip of the day for cutting that shit up into three
1:43:47
bits and putting in the right
1:43:48
order because logical Yeah,
1:43:52
well what's a chronological No,
1:43:55
it was it was
1:43:57
but it's not the whole report. The whole report was longer
1:43:59
I kept some stuff I love pieces here and they did a good job.
1:44:03
Yes, and a lot of it was boring.
1:44:05
Well first of all this stuff I left in was boring. First of
1:44:08
all, I saw this
1:44:09
coming a year and a half ago and that's why podcasting 2.0
1:44:13
exists. So good luck you know they still will be able to deep
1:44:17
platform people off of apple and offer Spotify Okay, fine,
1:44:20
whatever. But now that you
1:44:22
bring this you listen right in that report they said they took
1:44:25
down 20 20,000 episodes.
1:44:28
I find that hard very sketch very sketch about that. I mean,
1:44:32
if you say okay, sketch a sketch you know it's like it's the
1:44:36
opposite of Sim you know come on with it in for this we're
1:44:39
talking about Oh wow. Groovy baby.
1:44:44
It's hearing Oh, wow. Keep that money get
1:44:47
more everywhere. No, I have another Eisah it's it's
1:44:50
everywhere. Oh, wow. was back on Vogue. No, this is what the hell
1:44:55
was I talking about?
1:44:56
You're talking about podcasting 2.0 And how you save today you
1:45:00
Well, of course, I
1:45:00
just wanted to point that out. But yeah, they when they take
1:45:03
that when they remove the x 22 report, which is very innocuous,
1:45:08
I mean, the first four minutes of that damn show is ads that
1:45:11
start like this. Let's talk about your health. Let's talk
1:45:15
about it. And now some of the financial news. Well, the
1:45:18
Patriots in the private sector Wytheville anything, what are
1:45:21
you talking about? I'm talking about the type of stuff Spotify
1:45:23
took down podcast, they took me down. And why I don't know any
1:45:27
of this. No, because it's been taken down and you can't get it
1:45:30
on your Spotify. So how would you know about it?
1:45:32
Now? This is Spotify. So okay, sorry.
1:45:35
Let's just go back two years ago, right after I went on
1:45:38
Rogan, for the first time, a Rogan was leaving, and then
1:45:42
Apple spot as Spotify and a couple other podcasts. You know,
1:45:50
those to Amazon I think they decided, oh, no, we're taking
1:45:53
Alex Jones off in a number of other Q anon podcasts? Do you
1:45:57
remember this? Yeah. Right. And that was one of them was the x
1:46:01
20x 22 report, which is the podcast, I just mimicked. That
1:46:05
was the moment when I said, Oh, no, you don't, we're gonna have
1:46:08
our own independent index. So that and and just from my
1:46:14
conspiratorial thinking, at a meta level, once there was an
1:46:19
alternative, and it's an open alternative, and it really can't
1:46:22
be taken away, because the database is open. Anyone can,
1:46:25
you know, can re resurrect the databases? 1000s of copies
1:46:28
everywhere? Yes, I
1:46:29
DNS, right.
1:46:32
Apple then pivoted and went, Okay, we'll do subscriptions. We
1:46:35
don't give a shit. And they actually broke a whole bunch of
1:46:37
stuff. And they've kind of left the reservation. So Spotify is
1:46:41
still left. And but Apple has control and I'm sure they will,
1:46:45
they will pull down whatever they want. So I think Spotify?
1:46:48
Yeah, they took down X 22 report that had, you know, 1000
1:46:51
episodes. So if you're gonna count it that way, then I think
1:46:54
that's how 20,000 episodes is the number you see. Yeah, dad
1:46:58
die. Yeah. But you tying it into and then tying it into the big
1:47:03
lie. Now we understood because I'm thinking this is not an
1:47:06
intelligence operation. This is not because the the podcasting
1:47:10
is a problem. Now the cat is out of the bag. The problem is those
1:47:15
pesky asked podcasters have free rein to talk about whatever they
1:47:20
want, particularly as it pertains to January six. And
1:47:24
mind you, charges are now being filed against people for
1:47:31
seditious conspiracy. Or, Yes, I think it's seditious conspiracy.
1:47:36
So You conspired to maybe do some seditious stuff. And if you
1:47:43
listen to what the M five M is saying, Hey, we're going even
1:47:47
even if even if you weren't there. If you had anything to do
1:47:51
with this insurrection, we're coming for you. So why wouldn't
1:47:55
it? Why wouldn't you set up a from a political standpoint,
1:47:58
with your your hacks in the media and PR? Why wouldn't you
1:48:02
set up a little thing so we can make podcasters may be liable
1:48:08
somehow. And here's how it worked. You get the sorry to say
1:48:12
it, although he spoke some truth, you get the weak brother
1:48:15
Dr. Malone, who was completely compromised, you get him to say
1:48:19
something kind of off the wall. It wasn't so much about any
1:48:22
other vaccine. While I guess that was that was the main
1:48:25
point. But it was the, you know, the Oh, Hitler's coming. That's
1:48:28
what the letter states the letter, you know, the open
1:48:31
letter, you get 270 hacks to sign this thing. So that then
1:48:35
your other hack friends can come in and do a report about it. And
1:48:40
then you can bring in the the the Rockefeller people and got
1:48:44
to whoever else is doing studies, and then somehow
1:48:47
that'll tie into the big lie, and then we can go after those
1:48:51
people as well. That seems like something the Democrats
1:48:56
come up with is great. That way you've developed this just on
1:48:59
the on the fly. Well, the
1:49:00
reason why is because I have this super cut, which is
1:49:04
floating out there, which is the big line from 2000. And our
1:49:10
buddy Al Gore, who we heard from earlier, lost that election in a
1:49:15
and we don't have to go into the details. But most people in the
1:49:18
world remember hanging chads, and George W. Bush became
1:49:22
president. This is a super cut. It's a two minute super cut. But
1:49:26
holy crap when you hear it and compare it to what is being said
1:49:31
right now about Trump, and the big lie, the big lie is that the
1:49:35
elections were rigged and Trump really won the election. Let's
1:49:40
go back 22 years in history, we won that election. Al Gore
1:49:43
won the election by Al Gore was elected president United
1:49:47
States. This wasn't counted. You know,
1:49:49
I know it. They know it. We won that election. There is
1:49:52
overwhelming evidence that George W. Bush did not win this
1:49:56
election.
1:49:56
You think Republicans stole that election
1:49:58
on 2000 I wish the United States Supreme Court had let them
1:50:02
finish counting the votes.
1:50:03
The supreme court denied the actual and accurate counting of
1:50:08
the votes of Florida
1:50:09
if Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, Jim Baker, and the Supreme Court
1:50:14
had tampered with the results, Al Gore would be president and
1:50:20
election
1:50:21
has been stolen. Rod,
1:50:24
it wasn't a fair process.
1:50:27
It wasn't a neutral process. It was a process that was rigged
1:50:31
against us.
1:50:31
We actually won the last presidential election folks,
1:50:34
they
1:50:34
stole my presidency. As we look at our election system, I think
1:50:40
it's fair to say that there are many legitimate questions about
1:50:44
its accuracy, about its integrity,
1:50:47
are you to keep it from most be able to be in a position where
1:50:51
you can manipulate the machines manipulate the records. In
1:50:53
Virginia,
1:50:54
when I was governor, I had to replace all the machines,
1:50:56
too many voters have cast votes on machines the jam, or
1:51:00
malfunction, or suck the votes without a trace,
1:51:03
I can't vote in the Senate race kept voting for the Democrat
1:51:06
Republican name kept coming up three times that happened, how
1:51:09
many other votes to the computers get wrong, I brought
1:51:12
in some technology experts, they were able to hack into our
1:51:15
machines from off site in about five or six minutes. And within
1:51:20
four minutes, they were able to change a vote
1:51:22
the legitimacy of any president that's elected is going to be
1:51:27
impaired unless the American people understand that there has
1:51:31
been a full and fair count of all the votes, we will
1:51:35
continue to object to the election procedures until they
1:51:39
are corrected. The objection is in writing. And I don't care
1:51:42
that it is not it is not signed by a member of the Senate. It is
1:51:45
our duty to challenge this vote. It's not
1:51:48
as if it's just Republicans who have monkeyed around with
1:51:51
elections in the past sometimes Democrats have to I wouldn't be
1:51:54
standing
1:51:54
here saying this no matter what the outcome of the election. So
1:52:00
that's that's how I came up with it.
1:52:04
Nice, super cut. Isn't that cool? It hits the hits the spot.
1:52:08
That's what they do. Oh, this sorry. Think that's interesting
1:52:11
to me is that Malone going on and then we've decided that he's
1:52:15
you know, compromised. Because it brought up a point that I
1:52:18
which has been bugging me, which is the picture I ran in the
1:52:22
newsletter, Sean Hannity with his little CIA piece. Yeah,
1:52:27
yeah. It's like, okay, well, that's cute. You know, we can
1:52:31
oh, by the CIA pin from the CIA shop, which they do have. And
1:52:36
they have ch, you know, salt shakers, and challenge coins and
1:52:40
T shirts and sweatshirts and hats. Yeah. And your tour, you
1:52:48
can do a tour, and you can get a tour. And, and they get a little
1:52:52
pin. But to be wearing a pin as a as a personality of a pundit,
1:52:57
a reporter, who's man sick to be wearing a CIA pin to me is like,
1:53:03
it's either saying that he is doing their job for them or
1:53:08
something. And it brings me to the point where it ends and it's
1:53:11
annoying. And when who does he think he is? Right? Oh, yeah,
1:53:15
I'm buddies with the CA. It brings me the Smith Mundt Act,
1:53:20
which has been brought up on the show before Yeah, this thing has
1:53:23
to be I don't care if they've been doing it, even though
1:53:26
surreptitiously before this has to be put back in place. Because
1:53:31
it's obvious that they're screwing with the American
1:53:33
public in every way they can. And if Malone was doing the job
1:53:37
of the CIA, by placing that information in there to kind of
1:53:40
poison the well, this has to stop this, this, this
1:53:46
legislation has to go back into place. We can't propagandize our
1:53:49
own people anymore. This has to be put back in place.
1:53:52
Smith Mundt. Act was originally from the early 80s, I think, and
1:53:57
it was it forbid, the American government from using any
1:54:03
propaganda on its own people. It was repealed, I want to say in
1:54:07
2013, as a part of the National Defense Authorization Act under
1:54:10
President Obama's administration, it was kind of
1:54:13
snuck in there, although we all saw it. And the rationale was,
1:54:18
well, with the internet, it's impossible if you put something
1:54:21
out on the internet, you know, Americans might see it so you
1:54:24
might as well just remove the regulation so we can just do it
1:54:27
unhampered.
1:54:29
Yeah, that probably there's be some sort of a crackpot
1:54:32
rationale like that.
1:54:33
No, that was the rationale was crackpot they argued it.
1:54:39
We have to go back and re examine these arguments and who
1:54:41
is bored who's against it's got to be put back in place. It's
1:54:44
obviously the American public is being beaten up by this.
1:54:49
Yeah, especially with Yeah, that's a good point. And people
1:54:52
don't realize, you know, if you go look the number of people who
1:54:55
think that Tucker Carlson Tucker Carlson's dad I think it wasn't
1:55:02
one of the founding members of the room, one of the main guys
1:55:06
in the broadcast Board of Governors moistenable Voice of
1:55:11
America, you know, kind of like, literally the propaganda arm
1:55:15
intent or kind of old school propaganda arm of the US
1:55:18
government. Yeah. So you know this shit, look at my family.
1:55:23
spooks are everywhere, man, you can't trust anything.
1:55:28
The point is just has to go back into place. I don't care about
1:55:31
the internet or anything else they have to deal with it.
1:55:34
Because it's obvious that the public is being abused by the
1:55:38
intelligence community and our use the community meaning all of
1:55:42
them. every chance they get sometimes is an experiment.
1:55:45
Let's see what happens. Let's see how stupid our car people
1:55:48
are.
1:55:51
I think they actually call it the Smith month Modernization
1:55:56
Act.
1:55:59
Yeah, well, that would be
1:56:03
Yeah. If you go to bing.io as all you just do, type in Smith
1:56:09
month, you can get all the all the articles that we that we
1:56:14
use. And you can we can probably lead that back to what the
1:56:17
rationale was, but that's what I remember. I remember it being on
1:56:20
Oh, as the internet's makes it very difficult. So but it was
1:56:23
snuck away. Hey, mainstream media wasn't reporting on it.
1:56:27
Why would they
1:56:28
know? You can? Yeah, yeah,
1:56:31
of course not. Yeah, of course not. And we you know, the
1:56:35
propaganda is thick the propaganda is, is about Russia,
1:56:40
Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia. So we'll just consider all this
1:56:45
to be propaganda. Tonight, sources
1:56:47
from the administration confirming the USDA department
1:56:50
is preparing to approve the evacuation of some American
1:56:53
diplomats and their families from the Embassy in Ukraine. As
1:56:56
the security situation deteriorates and becomes
1:56:59
increasingly unpredictable. Unlike in Afghanistan, embassy
1:57:03
staff and families would most likely be flown out on
1:57:05
commercial flights. Other Americans have already been
1:57:08
advised not to travel to Ukraine, and those in the
1:57:11
country will be warned this week to depart.
1:57:13
This is propaganda. This is trying to conjure up last flight
1:57:17
from Entebbe to Afghanistan. Suicide bombers, scary place
1:57:22
Ukraine. Oh, where's that Africa? Oh, no. Who knows what's
1:57:26
going on? Oh, very, very frightening. Let's talk to Jim
1:57:29
Saki who has her foot in her mouth a lot these days. Is there
1:57:32
any effort right now to get a handle on how many Americans are
1:57:35
in Ukraine? Remember with Afghanistan that was sort of an
1:57:38
open question. Is the dynamic different this
1:57:41
time? It's an open question around the world. We don't put a
1:57:43
chip in Americans when they go to countries around the world
1:57:46
and track their movements. People can register with the
1:57:48
state.
1:57:49
No, there's literally a chip in your passport. Jim Psaki,
1:57:53
literally a chip in everybody's passport, so kind of chip in
1:57:57
Americans when they go to countries around the world and
1:57:59
track their movements. People can register with the State
1:58:02
Department, that's something they do, or they may choose not
1:58:05
to register, or there might be people in any country around the
1:58:07
world, who are dual citizens who haven't lived in or have never
1:58:11
lived in the United States. But the State Department would
1:58:13
certainly have the number in terms of Americans who have
1:58:16
registered with the State Department.
1:58:18
And this, this clip really shows you what kind of the putting an
1:58:22
operation this is total intelligence
1:58:25
methodology with the State Department when you floater, I
1:58:28
know. Anybody who has no,
1:58:32
so this is this is a classic. We'll explain it again, if you
1:58:36
want to. Sound official pass on an important message, which is
1:58:43
propaganda, but you don't want to be held accountable as a news
1:58:47
organization or even as a country. What you do is you say,
1:58:51
according to the Uganda times, here's the situation. And then
1:58:55
you just report that as truth because hey, man, it's the
1:58:58
Uganda times you can't argue with boots on the ground Times
1:59:02
New York Times, you know what's going to be good reporting,
1:59:05
because that's Uganda's hometown newspaper. So they're doing it
1:59:09
with Russia. Tonight, the
1:59:10
British government going public with this startling accusation,
1:59:13
claiming they have intelligence the Russian government is quote,
1:59:16
looking to install a pro Russian leader in kid as it considers
1:59:20
whether to invade and occupy Ukraine.
1:59:23
So let's not have our intelligence people say it let's
1:59:26
just call our buddies over at GCHQ Hey, can you put out a
1:59:31
statement that what is the UK even in the region? I mean,
1:59:36
they're technically but are they even threatening to put weapons
1:59:39
in like we our main threat? No, thanks. So we just the first US
1:59:44
shipment of lethal aid just arrived. Yeah. According to NBC,
1:59:50
which is what they send nothing this Anthony anti aircraft
1:59:55
200,000 pounds of lethal aid. What does that
1:59:59
do? They do by the day so that's how much you got there. What is
2:00:04
it way?
2:00:05
That's crazy. You're right that's probably exactly how they
2:00:09
do it. Oh, man. Yeah. Despite appeals from you came out that's
2:00:14
the way that's let's see what is this? I want to know what's in
2:00:17
there.
2:00:18
That's it anti tank weapons. I know that.
2:00:21
Yeah. Oh here we go. Estonia will provide Javelin anti tank
2:00:27
weapons while Latvia and Lithuania are Lithuania are
2:00:32
sending stinger and anti aircraft missiles. So they're
2:00:36
just ratcheting this up.
2:00:37
So he sent him to Lithuania Lithuania doesn't manufacture
2:00:41
them?
2:00:43
I don't think so we send them to Lithuania I presume?
2:00:46
Yeah. And then Lithuania sends him 440s Yeah, but you're
2:00:49
forwarding operation? Yes. You guys send these those guys
2:00:54
because we've already sort of enough stuff. We've sent an X
2:00:57
number of tons. So and you send those things to them.
2:01:01
So it does seem like a lot of what's happening and just
2:01:04
keeping with the CIA in Russia is the CIA and is are doing and
2:01:10
Turkey. As it turns out, Turkey may be the one that's been
2:01:16
training the troops or the you know, the 20,000 terrorist
2:01:21
brigade 20,000 Man strong terrorist brigade, which started
2:01:25
some of the crap in Kazakhstan. And, you know, Turkey definitely
2:01:30
needs to choose a friend seeing their you know, their the lira
2:01:34
is dead. I mean, the economy they've got what do they have
2:01:37
2020 plus percent inflation, guys and all kinds of trouble 35
2:01:42
It's crazy. It's like very big issues in Turkey. And it looks
2:01:46
like Erawan has chosen the side of the United States. And this
2:01:52
may be the reason it's all about the Black Sea. Air Diwan at the
2:02:00
2021 NATO meeting, told the Secretary General of NATO, you
2:02:05
are not visible in the Black Sea and your invisibility in the
2:02:07
Black Sea turns it into a Russian lake. And why are they
2:02:11
interested? Well, first of all, a turkey has part of the largest
2:02:14
coastline of any of the countries in the Black Sea. And
2:02:17
they found natural gas off of its coast in the Black Sea,
2:02:21
which Turkey wants to use to send to Europe to cut off
2:02:27
dependence on Russian gas imports. What do you know it's
2:02:33
about energy once again. The German a Germany just fired
2:02:38
their naval chief for saying hey, hey, hey, we need Russia on
2:02:42
our side. You know you we got to have gas and we can't have
2:02:45
China? Oh, no, get out of here. Shut up. Wall Street Journal big
2:02:50
article about Germany's rely on
2:02:52
debt. But I don't have it in here. But I got fired for just
2:02:56
saying saying the obvious.
2:02:58
Was it from the last show? Maybe? No, no,
2:03:01
it was it which I just heard it. It was on Deutsche velella.
2:03:05
Yeah. who see the Wall Street Journal. It's everyone seeing it
2:03:11
Germany's in trouble. Maybe to get a really big mechanical bat.
2:03:15
Actually, they do have mechanical batteries. Germany's
2:03:18
reliance on Russian gas limits Europe's options in Ukraine
2:03:21
crisis. Berlin is vulnerable if the West sanctions Russia over
2:03:24
Ukraine and Moscow responds by cutting off es exports. Well,
2:03:28
all that has to happen now what what they're seemingly aiming
2:03:32
for is let's call that it's not we're not gonna have any kinetic
2:03:36
Well, I'd say cyber strike would be enough cyber strike cut them
2:03:40
off from the US dollar. That's what that's what they're out
2:03:43
there threatening cutting them off from the US dollar. That's
2:03:45
the only thing I'm hearing unless you've heard other
2:03:47
sanctions they've been discussing.
2:03:50
Well, cutting them off from the US Dollar was actually is in the
2:03:53
banking sector. I would like to launch tell me since you've been
2:03:59
covering this quite closely. What's the point?
2:04:05
Well, you won't like my answer.
2:04:08
Well, I might not and I might disagree with it. But I You Do
2:04:11
you think there's a point?
2:04:12
Great reset. They are out or they are out to destroy
2:04:16
everything? That's that's the whole point. It's realizing. Oh,
2:04:22
yes.
2:04:23
Remember that? Says time to rub allies. If that's true.
2:04:30
Yeah, I'm looking for it right now. Let's see. We have we think
2:04:35
we need to bring them back. You're so right. We got that one
2:04:40
we got
2:04:41
ladies and gentlemen. It is time to realize
2:04:46
I'm shocked shocked to find out that verbalizations going on
2:04:50
here.
2:04:52
These clips are just ready to bring them all back. This is
2:04:55
fantastic.
2:04:56
Everything's a cycle.
2:04:58
Oh my goodness.
2:05:01
That is so good. What is this Kagan clan rubble? What is this?
2:05:07
Rubble, brought to you by clan Kagan. Yeah, I don't know if the
2:05:14
Kagan's are doing the operation on our own on our Well, yeah, I
2:05:17
guess it's worldwide? Of course they are. Yeah. I think that I
2:05:22
think they want to mobilize it but not just, you know, some
2:05:24
sandy area of the world Middle East. Now, the whole thing,
2:05:30
just feeling their chops they did the Middle East, they
2:05:33
realized everything. Let's try some bigger countries. See what
2:05:37
happens. You know, and by the way, Russia is not on board with
2:05:41
us on any of this stuff. They're pushing this pushing back.
2:05:45
Russia, Russia could actually be our friend in this I think, you
2:05:49
know, this is I'm sorry, Rockefeller lady, that I'm I'm
2:05:53
carrying water for Putin. But come on, come on. How stupid are
2:05:58
you? So obvious. You know, I know a lot of Russians who live
2:06:02
in America, a lot of Chinese who live in America. I like the
2:06:06
Russians better.
2:06:08
It's gonna say it.
2:06:11
The Russians are fun
2:06:12
to freshmen. They know how to party. They got humor, Chinese
2:06:16
always crouching on your space. But because you know, public
2:06:21
space is everything's public. It's not your space is
2:06:24
everyone's space, will stand right next to you. But even the
2:06:28
conditioning that is happening now. See now in context, it
2:06:31
makes more sense. You seen this Tom Hanks video that's promoting
2:06:36
the Biden administration?
2:06:38
No, Oh, my I have seen it. But it's something I obviously
2:06:42
didn't stick. Well.
2:06:44
You can call stop a copy of Yes, I do. You can call stop whenever
2:06:48
you want. If it's too boring, but you know me. Yeah. Because
2:06:53
the what is there's something wrong with what Tom Hanks is
2:06:57
doing in his narration, there's something very wrong, it's
2:06:59
throughout the whole video. So you can kind of stop it
2:07:02
whenever. But just so you know, it's very inspirational,
2:07:05
there is always liked, if only were brave enough to see it, if
2:07:10
only were brave enough to be it.
2:07:16
If only were brave enough, brave enough to live through two of
2:07:20
the most difficult years, many of us can remember brave enough
2:07:23
to pull ourselves up again. And again. America is the home of
2:07:28
the brave. It's why we keep getting up, no matter how many
2:07:32
times we get knocked down. Like with our economy. It is an all
2:07:35
the way back but it's getting stronger. We may be entering
2:07:39
year three of the pandemic none of us wanted or expected. But
2:07:42
we're moving.
2:07:43
I was the first person to get the vaccine in the whole
2:07:47
country. And now, how many people are vaccinated over 200
2:07:52
million, right? That's what keeps me going, that I can feel
2:07:56
the change.
2:07:57
Restaurants have opened their doors, shops and businesses are
2:08:00
buzzing again, all over the country. More jobs were created
2:08:03
in 2021 than in any year, in the last 80 years. We are stronger
2:08:09
than we were a year ago. Today. We're bringing
2:08:12
on new drivers. We're expanding the field that was there. It's
2:08:16
going away. Business is booming. This exciting
2:08:19
times for the auto industry, rebuilding our bridges, our
2:08:23
roads, our transit systems and the jobs. That's what this
2:08:27
administration has been doing. From our toughest times, America
2:08:31
has always built a brighter future. Yes, we are brave, brave
2:08:36
enough to see the light and be the light we need to rebuild
2:08:39
this country. We are strong. We are courageous. We are
2:08:43
resilient. We are America, land of the brave.
2:08:48
I've long said it's never been a good bet to bet against America.
2:08:51
And that's more true today than ever. I've never been more
2:08:55
optimistic about America's future. There's nothing beyond
2:08:58
our capacity if we do it together.
2:09:05
What was wrong?
2:09:06
It was an interesting little switcheroo in there.
2:09:09
Okay, a couple things may be that but yeah, what?
2:09:13
America has always been the land of home of the brave Yes, not a
2:09:19
switcheroo the land of the brave and there's no free anything. It
2:09:24
was just brave no freedoms. So you're just in ninth episode was
2:09:30
the land of the free in the home of the brave took the home of
2:09:32
the brave now it's the
2:09:33
home of the land the home of the brave? Is it home of the brave
2:09:37
land of the free? Is my own issue brave? No, he said home of
2:09:42
the brave. But it's not the switcheroo landed
2:09:45
the brave. No, I think it's home or land doesn't matter they left
2:09:49
out for Yes, yes, that's the
2:09:51
point. Home of the Brave. Land of the Free. That's the point.
2:09:57
He kept saying home of the brave now whenever I In 57 years I've
2:10:02
never heard home of the brave separating the end
2:10:05
of it again because I'm pretty sure he says Land of the brave.
2:10:10
Okay, which which to
2:10:12
some minor point is not important but I'll tell you this
2:10:14
if it if he does say that instead he's taken free which
2:10:18
should be landed the free and moved it yet
2:10:22
we are brave, brave enough to see the light and be the light
2:10:25
we need to rebuild this country. We're strong. We are courageous.
2:10:30
We are resilient. We are America, land of the brave.
2:10:35
I've long since May. Excuse me. And that's Wow.
2:10:40
Okay, great catch because he says Home of the Brave in the
2:10:43
beginning and then says Land of the brave. This is in 57 years
2:10:49
I've never heard that sentence separated. I've never heard it
2:10:52
switched around. That is evil. That is that is moral
2:10:58
moralistically evil
2:11:03
That's tricky.
2:11:05
Yeah, he's changed the land of the free to land of the brave
2:11:08
and left free out.
2:11:10
And then it did occur. And then he switches it and calls it land
2:11:14
of the free instead of land of the brave instead of land of the
2:11:17
free Yeah. So I meant to doesn't use free anywhere in there
2:11:21
because we don't we want to, we want to get that out of here is
2:11:25
well, it's Land of the slavery. Yes, got to go to it. COVID you
2:11:28
gave be free. And it
2:11:31
never gets well. Thank you. Just more of my point. They are not
2:11:37
done. They want full control, full control. But a bunch of
2:11:45
deuces. Alright, before we take a break, I do have a couple
2:11:49
other things. That'll be fun in this context. So you know, we've
2:11:56
got the voting thing, because we've got a you know, kind of
2:11:59
sticking with the big lie in the election. And you know, they
2:12:02
can't pass the bill back better, what are we going to do? And Jim
2:12:07
Psaki, just like Al Gore wants to rile everybody up, go get
2:12:11
drunk and go protest and make noise and tell the Republicans
2:12:15
they suck.
2:12:16
So my advice to everyone out there who's frustrated, sad,
2:12:19
angry, pissed off, feel those emotions, go to kickboxing
2:12:22
class, have a margarita, do whatever you need to do this
2:12:25
weekend, and then wake up on Monday morning, we got to keep
2:12:27
fighting. And what that means Lindsey is we have to keep
2:12:30
talking to members about federal legislation that's essential.
2:12:33
That's something that can be permanent, that can make sure
2:12:36
people's rights are protected. But we also need to
2:12:40
this is Saki, Who's she talking to?
2:12:44
Oh, she's just being interviewed. She makes the
2:12:46
mistake of doing interviews outside, okay, it was more like
2:12:50
personal injury, she was talking to the view.
2:12:54
She does interviews like
2:12:55
God, this is not acceptable.
2:13:00
She's not gonna be around long. So savor it while she's still
2:13:03
here.
2:13:04
That's something that can be permanent, that can make sure
2:13:06
people's rights are protected. But we also need to make sure
2:13:09
people are educated in states across the country about what
2:13:12
their rights are, how they can vote, when they can vote, how to
2:13:16
request an absentee ballot, there's a lot we need to do on
2:13:19
that front. And that's gonna rely on the energy and the anger
2:13:22
of those that activism as well.
2:13:24
Well, I'm glad you picked up on it, because there's a reason why
2:13:27
she did that, because she thinks that she is actually behind the
2:13:31
scenes part of the real machine. And she is she's part of the
2:13:35
real machine that is running behind the scenes, or I
2:13:38
get rid of you, which I'm enjoying it so much today. I
2:13:41
really am. I'm enjoying you, too. Thank you. Thanks for
2:13:44
having me. But I a little bird told me that you said you might
2:13:47
be retiring or resigning the job this year and say this in South
2:13:51
is a term.
2:13:53
I you know, I don't
2:13:54
know when I'm leaving. This is an honor and a privilege and I
2:13:58
love working for President of President Biden everything.
2:14:03
Oops. Wow.
2:14:08
That what do you think now? Did she ever she did work for Obama?
2:14:12
I think she was the the air the airplane secretaries
2:14:15
airplane. She was the Defense Department girl. She is the one
2:14:19
there's always getting into the little beefs with Matt.
2:14:25
Didn't but I thought at one point, she did do something for
2:14:28
a major state department. And I thought she was state. Yeah, she
2:14:32
definitely would do it. That was under Obama. Right. But but I
2:14:36
think she was actually Obama's. She press sec. Oh, she was John
2:14:42
Kerry's press secretary for his 2004 campaign. Then 2005 to
2:14:48
2006. She was communications director for representative
2:14:51
Joseph Crowley and then press secretary for the Democratic
2:14:56
Congressional committee. So she's in she's that's where she
2:14:58
got her insider child. And then she was yeah, she was Deputy
2:15:06
Press Secretary for Obama.
2:15:09
Yeah. Yeah, she'd get into beef with Matt. Yeah. Newland was
2:15:13
that was the same job Nuland had, right. When she was kind of
2:15:18
thin
2:15:21
body shaming? No, I'm
2:15:23
just saying that body shaming. She's who she is.
2:15:27
That's right. She can love who she wants to love. So that so we
2:15:33
have that happening. And then that's alright. This is the this
2:15:37
is the political part that really just blew me away. We
2:15:40
have CNN to what it CNN, CNN for years, reported on but it was
2:15:47
really the the Washington Post attracted all of President
2:15:51
Trump's lies, his lies, he's told how many lies was it? Do
2:15:56
you remember? It wasn't some astronomical amount
2:15:57
of 14,014 amounted to like, two nice day to day. Yeah, lie
2:16:04
raining,
2:16:05
he's a liar. It's not a nice day unless you'd like rain. So they
2:16:11
decide to suddenly get some religion into them. And they're
2:16:16
gonna treat President Biden the same way they treated President
2:16:20
Trump when it comes to inaccuracy. And well, I don't
2:16:24
know if they will say it's lies. But here's the setup.
2:16:27
It doesn't compare at all. I don't think, frankly, that
2:16:30
there's any comparison in terms of frequency, or egregiousness
2:16:33
of dishonesty between Donald Trump and anyone Republican or
2:16:36
Democratic in Washington life nice terms of frequency, Biden's
2:16:40
number of false claims in your one was somewhere in the dozens,
2:16:43
you could add probably dozens more if you counted misleading
2:16:45
or lacking in context claims. Trump was over 1000 false claims
2:16:49
in year one and was over 3000 false claims in year two. So
2:16:53
there's no comparison. But that's it. I don't think that
2:16:55
means we wave Biden's away say they don't matter. I think all
2:16:59
false claims from from the president matter. All these
2:17:02
facts matter. And we can't let the previous Presidency of
2:17:05
Donald Trump set the bar so low for every subsequent president,
2:17:08
that the bar just doesn't exist anymore.
2:17:11
So my my ears perked up, like CNN is using this custom alone
2:17:16
is gonna buy them to discovery that they're kind of turned like
2:17:19
journalists all of a sudden, is this auditioning? Or is this
2:17:22
something else going on?
2:17:23
No, no, you're right. First thing you said. Which is Malone.
2:17:28
Malone.
2:17:28
Well, let's get into the
2:17:30
way when we say me Lowertown by John John, the chairman, CEO
2:17:35
of Discovery Networks that own a lot. Yeah, he's been there by
2:17:39
Warner media mogul Brian Warner Brothers or war. Time Warner.
2:17:43
Yeah. Will that go through? Yes, no, that will. Cool. Now it's
2:17:49
one less douchebag to focus on. But hold on a second because
2:17:52
this is pretty good. So
2:17:54
Milan, you gotta remember was a supporter of Trump.
2:17:59
Well, that explains it and explain this this kid whoever
2:18:03
this. This is some reporter who's he's not even in the
2:18:07
studio. He has to come in from a webcam. He's a CNN political
2:18:11
correspondent. I've never seen the guy before. So Aha, there
2:18:15
you go. Here's more propaganda. The interesting thing
2:18:18
these guys know what a supporter of Trump he was. Malone was big.
2:18:22
I think he paid for the inauguration of that in its
2:18:25
first election. I think malos Amin made by guys who bought
2:18:30
bought the bought that celebration.
2:18:32
Holy crap. I didn't know any of that. Okay, yeah, maybe we did.
2:18:36
But yeah, yeah, we
2:18:37
knew it. And Milan was a it's a it is a Republican in there,
2:18:42
these guys. That kind of audition doesn't fly because
2:18:45
Milan knows about the live malarkey.
2:18:48
So you just use malarkey. As Attorney I'm
2:18:51
using malarkey from now on.
2:18:53
Let's listen to the the deconstruction of the
2:18:57
President's speech. According to the CNN kid, the two hour the
2:19:02
longest press conference in history filled with inaccuracies
2:19:06
and well, you know, Miss Trump's
2:19:08
Yeah, he
2:19:08
made false claims about a variety of topics from
2:19:11
Afghanistan to the economy to the COVID 19 pandemic,
2:19:15
immigration made one on ESPN and a high profile interview about
2:19:19
the new Georgia voting law. I think some of the Afghanistan
2:19:22
ones were among the most egregious you know, he said in
2:19:24
an interview that he opposed that war from the beginning, he
2:19:27
did not although he eventually turned against it. He said that,
2:19:30
you know, what interest is the US have an Afghanistan with al
2:19:33
Qaeda gone. Avocado certainly degraded in Afghanistan, but it
2:19:36
certainly was not gone at the time on the economy. He
2:19:39
repeatedly misstated what experts had projected about his
2:19:43
own plans. So for example, he repeated that the firm Moody's
2:19:46
Analytics said that passing his American jobs plan would produce
2:19:50
16 million additional jobs. Well, either he was Miss reading
2:19:53
or misstating. What moody said it was actually projection of
2:19:56
2.7 million additional jobs. So a big difference We had number,
2:20:00
a number of those. And then again, immigration, voting laws,
2:20:04
sometimes gun laws, he made false claims about a variety of
2:20:07
things.
2:20:08
So that's just the factual stuff that actually matters. But he
2:20:12
spent twice as much time on all the lies, I mean, exaggerations,
2:20:17
personal enhancements that our president has told throughout
2:20:22
the years, and he even rolled out a clip to accentuate it
2:20:25
to meet. I mean, this is subjective, but to me, the most
2:20:28
memorable ones were often the most trivial ones, the ones
2:20:32
where he would depart from his text, and invent or embellish
2:20:36
something about his own past. And we saw that last week were
2:20:39
in a voting rights speech in Georgia. He claimed in passing
2:20:42
that he had he had been arrested, he suggested in the
2:20:44
context of the civil rights movement, there is some some
2:20:47
record some evidence of him participating in some civil
2:20:49
rights activities back in his youth, but no record of any
2:20:52
arrest. He said a couple times that that he used to drive an 18
2:20:55
wheeler or, or a big truck, or you told this to, you know, to
2:20:59
Mack Trucks facility to students studying truck maintenance.
2:21:02
There's no evidence he ever did that, although he did want to
2:21:04
have a part time drug driving a school bus. And then he also
2:21:07
made a couple two Jewish leaders in the Jewish community while
2:21:11
trying to emphasize his connection to that community.
2:21:13
Listen to something he said about his relationship with the
2:21:15
late Israeli prime minister, golden ear,
2:21:18
I have known every every PRIME MINISTER Well, since golden a
2:21:24
year including gold, my air and Six Day War, I had an
2:21:31
opportunity. She invited me to come over because I was going to
2:21:35
be the liaison between xi and the Egyptians, about the Suez
2:21:39
and so on, so forth.
2:21:40
So there are two things wrong with this one, he actually met
2:21:43
with me your weeks before the Yom Kippur War in 1973, not
2:21:46
during the Six Day War in 1967. More importantly, there was no
2:21:50
evidence that this, you know, this, this senior Prime Minister
2:21:53
of Israel ever had any intention of using a 30 year old rookie US
2:21:57
senator who had never been to Israel before, and who the
2:21:59
Israeli government thought of his inexperience as some sort of
2:22:02
regional liaison with a key adversary. So yes, that's a
2:22:05
story about something that happened decades ago. Yes, is
2:22:07
peripheral, you know, to policy matters, but it's fascinating to
2:22:10
me, because the president, you know, chose ad lib chose to
2:22:13
bring this up and ended up you know, hurting his reputation for
2:22:17
for accuracy, hurting his credibility, rather than
2:22:20
cheating, whatever.
2:22:22
But reputation for accuracy, hurting his reputation for he
2:22:27
has a reputation for accuracy. In what world? Yes, kind of like
2:22:33
that. That's I guess that's a piece of propaganda right in
2:22:36
there.
2:22:37
Right, but they're breaking it down. They're using propaganda
2:22:40
to break down the propaganda. This, there's something going
2:22:44
on, you know, what I'm expecting next from CNN, wait for it.
2:22:47
Hunter Biden's laptop. These guys are up to something. Well,
2:22:53
it's
2:22:53
again, it's Malone.
2:22:54
story about something that happened decades ago. Yes, is
2:22:56
peripheral, you know, to policy matters. But it's fascinating to
2:22:59
me, because the president, you know, chose ad lib chose to
2:23:02
bring this up and ended up, you know, hurting his reputation for
2:23:06
for accuracy, hurting his credibility, you know, rather
2:23:08
than than achieving whatever, whatever aim he had by bringing
2:23:12
it up in the first place.
2:23:15
You could also interpret it as hurting his reputation for
2:23:18
accuracy as in he wasn't accurate there. Therefore, he
2:23:22
hurts his reputation, not necessarily that hasn't a
2:23:24
reputation for being accurate.
2:23:27
That that's not the way it would read in the subconscious.
2:23:30
There's no way he can, he has obviously a reputation for
2:23:33
accuracy this sense. I don't know that he does the same
2:23:39
thing. So no joke. So I was white kids. I was doing some
2:23:46
research on the 17 Nobel Prize laureates that said his build
2:23:52
back better scheme, which would stop inflation and all the rest
2:23:56
of oh, do tell. Yeah. So the thing, the thing about it is you
2:24:00
look into it, the 17 Nobel laureates, which are all
2:24:04
professors in various universities, around the
2:24:07
country, in in economics, and there is a group of them now,
2:24:12
and they're all kind of socialist, and they said they
2:24:15
not only think this is this would be a good thing to pass,
2:24:18
but they encourage as part of this, by the way, he never
2:24:21
mentions this. Did they encourage the $2.7 trillion in
2:24:26
increased taxes that need to be levied on the public? Oh, that's
2:24:31
taxes. Yeah. 2.7 trillion in taxes that are necessary to pay
2:24:37
for this bill and to and to dented needs to be. It to the
2:24:43
rich is that I think they the way they started,
2:24:46
we were promised we wouldn't pay a dime under
2:24:50
yourself according to Biden, but I'm telling you these 17 Nobel
2:24:55
laureates have as part of their approval, which is true just
2:25:00
encouragement to nick the rich for $2.7 trillion. Yeah.
2:25:09
Exactly. That's
2:25:10
all you can really do is just snicker.
2:25:13
Yeah. Unbelievable.
2:25:16
And are these economists these Nobel Laureates?
2:25:19
Yeah. No, they're all perfect. Mostly professors. There's
2:25:22
Krugman, one of them.
2:25:23
Isn't he the Nobel? Oh, it's
2:25:24
curious these.
2:25:25
What was it for that?
2:25:27
I was surprised myself.
2:25:30
Hmm. Nice. Interesting. Very interesting.
2:25:36
He didn't buy probably probably some, it was probably some
2:25:40
obligation to the New York Times he couldn't sign up from Sheree
2:25:43
wanted to. Alright, or the CIA one of the two tones. All right.
2:25:53
Do we have a couple of some little screwball snippet? If you
2:25:57
want to hear about the latest? Yeah, just before we take a
2:26:00
break? Sure. Because two parter. This is sleep equity.
2:26:08
Oh, God. Oh, God.
2:26:10
They won't leave me alone, will they?
2:26:12
But what about sleep? Lauren Whitehurst says that should be
2:26:16
our top priority. She's an assistant professor at the
2:26:19
University of Kentucky. And she researches the cognitive effects
2:26:22
of sleep with a focus on what she calls sleep equity. And
2:26:29
she's with us now, Lauren, welcome. Hello, thank you,
2:26:31
Sasha, more than a third of adults in the United States
2:26:35
struggle with sleep issues. That's according to the CDC,
2:26:38
what is it that keeps us from getting a good night's sleep?
2:26:41
I think there's, we can boil it down to a couple of different
2:26:44
things. One is interpersonal kind of just what we do, right,
2:26:48
maybe we don't value our sleep as high as we value other things
2:26:52
in our lives. Other things are kind of external factors, things
2:26:55
that act on us our work schedule, when we have to get up
2:26:58
when we have to be at work. Sometimes it's caregiving
2:27:01
responsibilities, our children not sleeping through the night.
2:27:04
Other things are societal factors, things outside of our
2:27:07
control, kind of the ways in which our society values, our
2:27:11
productivity, versus what our sleep needs actually are.
2:27:15
And what about people who end up scrolling Twitter before they go
2:27:19
to bed, or they have that blue glow? I always hear that if you
2:27:22
do that, right before you go to bed, you're probably
2:27:24
overstimulating yourself, it's gonna affect your sleep.
2:27:26
Yes, having access to light all the time is not great for our
2:27:31
bodies, systems that regulate our sleep. There's some new
2:27:34
science coming out that's really trying to peel apart when is it
2:27:38
helpful to use some of the tools that our phones give us access
2:27:41
to? And when is it not? When is it going to create kind of
2:27:43
greater or exacerbate some of the sleep problems that you
2:27:46
mentioned at the top?
2:27:47
There are also people who miss out on sleep more than others
2:27:50
because of life and socio economic factors. You and your
2:27:54
colleagues have a term for this. It's sleep equity. Oh,
2:27:59
my goodness. Okay. I'm ready. This you've set me up. I'm ready
2:28:03
for it. Well,
2:28:05
I could end it here. No, no. I just tell you, it's all blamed
2:28:11
on white supremacy. No.
2:28:15
But they can't quite bring themselves to but they do bring
2:28:18
them selves around nearly saying that. Oh,
2:28:21
thank goodness.
2:28:22
Yeah, I really think
2:28:24
yeah, me. Yeah. Yeah.
2:28:29
Yeah. I really think about sleep equity as an access issue. What
2:28:33
we find in the sleep issue or shift work when your body would
2:28:37
right,
2:28:38
it's asleep access issue. Issue. I got to use Yeah, that
2:28:43
is so cool. He has an access
2:28:45
issue an X I'll find, John, do you have enough access to sleep?
2:28:49
Yeah.
2:28:51
What we find in society is that caregiving roles or shift work
2:28:55
working when your body would rather be sleeping,
2:28:58
disproportionately falls on people of color, black people,
2:29:02
other people, in that's creates this kind of disparity in sleep.
2:29:08
That's more than just a difference more than just
2:29:10
something your sleep is different than someone else's.
2:29:13
This is more of a systemic systematic difference that we
2:29:16
find and that becomes a disparity.
2:29:22
I want to read something from your your university research
2:29:24
web pages about your research interest, and I'll read it
2:29:27
slowly so people can absorb this. You say that you're
2:29:30
interested in how the lack of access to restorative sleep can
2:29:35
play a role in creating or exacerbating disparities in
2:29:39
cognitive health for communities historically underserved.
2:29:42
Do you have any details on the on the guest on the show?
2:29:45
Because this sounds like someone who went to college got got a
2:29:49
degree is a professor at Kentucky. There you go. She She
2:29:53
has a degree and she just had to come up with something. I know
2:29:57
I'll figure out how sleep can be racist.
2:30:00
bipoc Sleep is racist. You're not to play any more than that.
2:30:03
No, no.
2:30:03
Okay. Are you kidding me?
2:30:05
Can you please let me know? Please? Please anyone's ever
2:30:08
worked shift work. Yes, I've
2:30:10
worked shift work, you've work shift work. Exactly. Everyone's
2:30:14
work, shift work, my wife work shift work. What the heck?
2:30:19
When I was working shift to work at Union oil, there was like,
2:30:24
two, one, probably one mech, and the group of maybe 25 people is
2:30:29
like one Mexican, one black guy. She's making it sound like only
2:30:33
these poor blacks and the bipoc. So the only ones working shift
2:30:37
work and is and is hurting them. White supremacy. Anyway,
2:30:42
continue to play there. Thank you, for
2:30:44
communities historically underserved by science and
2:30:47
medicine,
2:30:47
underserved by science and medicine historically, what kind
2:30:51
of racist piece of crap country are we?
2:30:53
How does sleep loss, worsen existing health disparities in
2:30:58
certain groups of people?
2:31:00
You know, that's something that has really taken off this idea
2:31:03
of sleep equity. Or any kind of original issue, and a lot of
2:31:11
other kind of health concerns that we've seen has really taken
2:31:14
off in the last, you know, 30 years or so. For a long time, we
2:31:17
knew that sleep problems happened alongside other health
2:31:21
conditions, maybe if you had heart conditions, or maybe if
2:31:25
you had some other diabetes, other types of health issues,
2:31:29
maybe your sleep was impacted to what we're finding now is that
2:31:32
sometimes sleep actually predicts those health issues.
2:31:36
And if we can start to think about or target the sleep issue
2:31:39
first, we can actually start to solve some of these other health
2:31:43
disparities where we find that black individuals or Hispanic
2:31:46
individuals suffer from diabetes and other health conditions at
2:31:49
higher rates than other white people in the population. And
2:31:53
poor sleep might be worsening those problems.
2:31:58
So hold on, did they have a resolution or solution or an
2:32:01
idea? Do we give all bipoc? Do we give them some sleeping pills
2:32:05
or some weed or some gummies? It
2:32:07
went on for hours.
2:32:09
You know, over the weekend, we were I mean, we we had some
2:32:13
conversations about the bipoc. Which you know it they're still
2:32:19
pushing this trying to make this the new black instead of instead
2:32:25
of the black and brown community or, you know, this is certainly
2:32:29
not meant to be American descendants of slavery because
2:32:32
it just means black indigenous people of color. Which is it's
2:32:38
like it's the it's so racist. It's not a single black
2:32:42
indigenous person of color. I know who likes that. Sorry. Not
2:32:46
it's it's it's
2:32:48
in and it leaves my puck over there.
2:32:51
It is rampant in the entertainment industry. It is
2:32:55
rampant in the medical industry. You cannot hire a white man. No
2:33:01
bipoc There is no hiring of white men barely have white
2:33:07
women be true at the moment. Yes.
2:33:10
And everyone who participates in that? You're gonna see what that
2:33:16
results in.
2:33:18
I don't know what is going to result in this poor quality
2:33:22
people you know, poor quality. Tonight is not is what they're
2:33:25
doing
2:33:26
air traffic control is applying the bipoc Hiring methodology.
2:33:31
All of their new recruits have to be bipoc. Just somewhere to
2:33:37
park is rolling over in his grave. Say hey, man, keep it a
2:33:40
to park. We had to get the bipoc
2:33:44
Bike didn't come out. Right. Three bug No, it didn't
2:33:48
leave equity. My goodness, we've gone off the rails. Okay. I
2:33:52
don't know if I can really top it. But just just to make us all
2:33:56
feel good that NPR is not the only it's Where's it coming
2:34:00
from? Let's go to Michigan. Let's go to one of our favorite
2:34:02
little meetings, a school board meeting. Here's a mom who has a
2:34:05
concern, but our
2:34:07
community needs to understand that the agenda that is being
2:34:11
pushed through our schools is just my opinion, but somewhat
2:34:17
nefarious when it comes to some of the activities. It was
2:34:22
addressed by a child a couple months ago, that they are put in
2:34:26
an environment where there are kids that are that identify as a
2:34:30
furry a cat or a dog, whatever. And so yesterday I heard that at
2:34:34
least one of our schools in our town has a in one of the unisex
2:34:38
bathrooms a litter box for the kids that identify as cats. And
2:34:44
I am really disturbed by that. And I will do some more
2:34:48
investigation on what's going on nationwide. I know it is it's
2:34:52
part of the agenda that's being pushed. I don't I don't even
2:34:54
want to understand it. But I think that people need to be
2:34:57
aware of it because I am really upset As a parent, that my child
2:35:01
is put in an environment like that, and, you know, I'm all for
2:35:06
creativity and imagination, but when someone lives in a fantasy
2:35:10
world and expects other people to go along with it, I have a
2:35:13
problem with that.
2:35:15
Dude.
2:35:17
That's a great
2:35:20
so, I mean, we have furries who are producers of the show we got
2:35:24
no problem with that. Because we love you. furries. We got a we
2:35:27
got our trans women we got to
2:35:28
make some one of the kids to be pooping in that thing. Well, I'm
2:35:32
thinking this may be a potential exit strategy, we can have kitty
2:35:36
litter, you know, approve
2:35:38
people to furry, furry
2:35:41
furry litter, which will be approved for for children. Yeah,
2:35:44
we'll have it all organically tested. Make sure no one's
2:35:46
allergic to it. And you know, we can actually have a contract to
2:35:49
use standards. You standards of kitty litter. Yeah. I'm kind of
2:35:56
digging this but I can see where where parents might be
2:35:59
concerned. Might might have some issue. Ah. Oh my goodness. Life
2:36:07
is great.
2:36:08
I'm gonna show my spoon by donating to no agenda. Imagine
2:36:12
all the people who could do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
2:36:22
Yeah, we do have a few people to thank for show 1419 Just didn't
2:36:29
know doesn't mean much. But sir Cal came in from Northville
2:36:32
Michigan. $461.80 Ah,
2:36:35
this is lavender blossoms.org Do you have any note? No, just
2:36:39
thank you for your courage. Thanks. Thanks, sir cow.
2:36:42
Dakota Walker birthday in Boise, Idaho. 120 802 a belated
2:36:49
birthday donation Dakota
2:36:51
Cuf. Yeah, miss my annual birthday donation with a Sox
2:36:55
Yeah, we'll make up for you.
2:36:57
Sure. Alan of Midlothian in Midlothian, Virginia 12345
2:37:03
That's his annual his annual donation Yeah, this reminds me
2:37:10
you know what we had to do our lieutenant colonel down in San
2:37:13
Diego that used to give a annual donation I had not heard from
2:37:17
him for over a year. I hope he's okay. He's okay cuz he was in
2:37:20
the hospital for a while. Bill Durkin in Greenville, South
2:37:24
Carolina. 12345 A birthday, Ian field. 100 Rick Jansen in Round
2:37:31
Rock, Texas 100. Matthew Smith 9999 for North Carroll Royalton,
2:37:38
Ohio. And Sir Kevin McLaughlin. Dukkha. We hear from him. Lover
2:37:45
of America and lover of boobs hold on man, we found it 808 A
2:38:06
surbey. Bob night of the frozen tundra New Brighton Minnesota
2:38:09
nuts. Die 678 Sir. Michael Anthony in New York City for the
2:38:16
678 David people.
2:38:18
That's our producer who got thrown in jail. He got thrown in
2:38:21
jail again in New York. This time is at the American Museum
2:38:26
of Natural History in Manhattan. Really slow. He's protesting
2:38:30
he's protesting about Yeah, but the mandates Good on you sir.
2:38:32
Michael Anthony.
2:38:34
We're on your side. Yes, David P 55. bucks in Decatur, Decatur,
2:38:38
Texas, Geoffrey Fife in Oakley, California out there in the East
2:38:44
Contra Costa County. 5154 is Martin 505 Alex Delgado and
2:38:51
Aptos California he did donate 50 In the following people are
2:38:54
all $50 donors name and location only. Julian Robbins, who's also
2:38:59
in Aptos. Curious that you should get together. Elizabeth
2:39:04
probably living together. Elizabeth Miller in Wake Forest,
2:39:07
North Carolina. Daniel laboy in Bath Michigan, Sean Overman in
2:39:12
Pleasant Hill California. Lucas Deaton in Dayton Dayton in
2:39:17
Dayton. I always say that Odra Azuri in McMurray, Pennsylvania,
2:39:23
William Jones and Cameron Park California. Gil presnel in
2:39:28
Wichita, Kansas, Sir Patrick may calm in New York City. And last
2:39:33
but not least, the Leann Shipley in Covington, Washington, as our
2:39:42
producers have well wishers and supporters for show 1490 Want to
2:39:46
thank each and every one of them very short today on donations.
2:39:50
In fact, the whole group of everybody including executive
2:39:53
producers, only 33, which is the magic number but doesn't do us
2:39:57
any good.
2:39:58
Shawn Overman did ask for his donation of $50 to be credited
2:40:03
for loop Vox. That's his four year old son who fights the good
2:40:07
fight with us do shame
2:40:10
you've been de deuced
2:40:15
and thanks to everyone who came in under $50 Typically for
2:40:20
anonymity but there's a lot of different subscriptions you can
2:40:23
get in on so please go to dvorak.org/na to find out what
2:40:28
you can do there we have a couple other notes oh yeah, this
2:40:31
was the back office rings note
2:40:35
Oh yes. Yeah, this needs to be read
2:40:37
the the resupply the night rings are not due to arrive until late
2:40:41
April. And we'll be shipping is available until the RE up
2:40:46
arrives the supplier has produced and shipped like
2:40:49
clockwork for 10 plus years until now. Maybe it's due to
2:40:53
global warming or bad we'd still not shipping to Australia
2:40:57
because of all the illustrious douche Dan Andrews. That's
2:40:59
right. We can't get anything to into Australia.
2:41:02
No, it's a weird Australia night. You're gonna have to wait
2:41:05
probably a year. Yeah.
2:41:08
So we're very sorry about that. And again, thank you all very
2:41:12
much for supporting the best podcast in the universe. VO
2:41:14
red.org/and Go karma for everybody. You've got
2:41:31
really interesting. All lists have been short, you know, short
2:41:34
on the executive producer short on the regular production,
2:41:38
donations and even the birthday list is short. It's like
2:41:41
something happened some kind of glitch in the matrix. So we say
2:41:45
happy birthday to Dakota Walker who turned 39 on the 13th of
2:41:50
January. And Bill Durkin says Happy Birthday to his twin
2:41:53
sister and his nephew Patrick and himself. Apparently all
2:41:57
celebrating tomorrow on January 24. Happy birthday for everybody
2:42:00
here at the best podcast in the universe. No, no, no, no, no,
2:42:05
no. No knights no title changes. That leaves us with the meetups.
2:42:18
That's right, the no agenda meetups where community can be
2:42:21
found everyone's looking for community. You've got one it's
2:42:24
built right into the show. And we have the producer organized
2:42:28
meetups done through no agenda meetups.com It's just great to
2:42:32
go hang out with people and just have a community no matter no
2:42:35
matter really what you do. And it's just being near people. It
2:42:38
works. We don't have any audio reports. We did get a meetup
2:42:40
report from Colorado Springs, the local 719 and cat sitting
2:42:44
meetup. This is Cheryl and Mike and they say who can say that
2:42:51
when visiting Colorado Springs they attended not one but two
2:42:54
meetup events. Mike and I had the pleasure of attending the
2:42:56
local 719 Thursday night. What a great group of comrades, Andrew,
2:43:00
Esther and Kirk to name a few good time. At a cat sitting
2:43:04
meetup in Colorado. We feel truly blessed to have met at
2:43:07
least and Lincoln who traveled two hours to the meetup. This is
2:43:10
a testament to the power of the no agenda family who had such a
2:43:13
great time, along with Andrew who checked in as well. It's
2:43:16
good for the soul to meet up. We've always had the best time
2:43:19
ever, please add at least to the birthday list for Sunday,
2:43:22
January 23. Did we have that? Yes. We have on there. There you
2:43:27
go. You just got added. And that's from Cheryl and Mike.
2:43:30
Thank you very much. Here's what's coming up. today. We have
2:43:33
the stop the Karen DC meetup. Your illustrious host Roger
2:43:37
roundy. Famous from all arts everywhere, is organizing the
2:43:42
unorthodox meetup. Go to no agenda meetup.com for details
2:43:45
you probably already there. If you aren't that you might have
2:43:48
missed it. You can still head to the first annual Connecticut
2:43:53
super spreader event that may be going on at bad son's beer
2:43:56
company in Derby, Connecticut. Or the crossroads of America ITM
2:44:00
tribal gathering three o'clock at the Indiana City Brewing
2:44:03
Company starts in just a couple of minutes. That'll be in
2:44:07
actually in an hour from now. Indianapolis, Indiana. Then we
2:44:10
have the Breck meetup on Monday, the 24th shred the gnar seven
2:44:14
o'clock Mountain Time gold pan Saloon in Breckenridge,
2:44:17
Colorado, and on Tuesday, the millennial mountain millennial
2:44:20
Mel's birthday bash Hey, where's my invite? though? It's in
2:44:24
Beaverton, Oregon, and a wonder this is our very own millennial
2:44:27
mill. sings her ass off that will be at the X Novo Brewing
2:44:32
Company in Beaverton Oregon marine or something. She was
2:44:35
traveling around Yes, she I guess she went back she she
2:44:38
dumped to the boyfriend. Well, that just didn't work out and
2:44:42
she's looking maybe she's back back to try or fortune in
2:44:45
Oregon. She got some chops, that's for sure. Millennial Mel
2:44:52
Yes. So I presume she will be celebrating and she's not on the
2:44:55
list. So I'll just say happy birthday in advance millennial
2:44:57
Mel and we have a Lots of meetups that are still ahead.
2:45:04
I'm just gonna say something. I can't remember there was some
2:45:06
other thing about the meetups that was happening. It'll come
2:45:09
to me. This is the no agenda meetups, if you've never been to
2:45:12
one, just give it a shot. There's one almost anywhere in
2:45:15
the world. Every week something is happening. Find out where no
2:45:19
agenda meetup.com You can search easily. And if there's not one
2:45:22
near you, all you need is just the location and put it on the
2:45:26
map. Organize one yourself is just like a potty you won't be
2:45:39
triggered
2:45:42
you and everybody feels the same. It's like
2:45:53
yeah, I was. With C see?
2:45:57
No. ISOs from me. None. So you get the wind. Oh, I
2:46:02
don't know. I don't. Okay, I only have two. Does that noise?
2:46:08
What does that play it again? Does that noise?
2:46:13
Okay. Yeah, I know. Was that a goat noise? I know. This is this
2:46:17
is this has got to be it this the only other one tickling the
2:46:20
amygdala. Oh, is it tickling the amygdala? Oh, wow. I know. You
2:46:29
said Wow. What are we going to do instead? Wow. Wow. Wow. What
2:46:34
are we going to?
2:46:36
Well, we could pull something from the archives. Tons.
2:46:41
Let me see how we have this. We have always a winner. We got
2:46:45
that one. We got Oh, whoa, whoa, hang
2:46:49
on guys.
2:46:51
That use that one. Just use the got the right response.
2:46:57
I mean, that's good.
2:46:59
I like that. It should be I like to hear a little louder but
2:47:02
louder. It's already quite Jack. Oh, Jack. Oh, man. I'm gonna
2:47:06
jack you up. Hold on. Let me normalize. Normalizing. Okay, it
2:47:12
can't be any louder than that. Sorry. JC. Okay. Anything else
2:47:21
for the
2:47:24
get a report? I think one of the reasons we got low donations
2:47:28
because if you notice there's nobody from North Carolina.
2:47:30
Well, there was there was Concord, North Carolina. Our
2:47:34
boobs lover.
2:47:35
Do we have any checks?
2:47:38
Now the checks were scant same thing.
2:47:41
Oh, I have I have a screwball clip for you. I got a screw up
2:47:45
but Yeah, cuz I'm sick and tired of this. I'm so sick. This is
2:47:49
such a Gwyneth Paltrow and her goop
2:47:54
she gave up on that company.
2:47:56
Oh my goodness. She's still all she does is come up with oh,
2:47:59
this is so funny. I can do something political do something
2:48:02
for good and I can make it fit the Debt Debt. So now, we had to
2:48:06
celebrate the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, because, you know, I
2:48:10
just want to be honest, good products to my customers, to
2:48:14
women everywhere. That's what it's about. That's really what
2:48:17
I'm trying to do. Um, Gwyneth Paltrow, Regina Candler. Hello,
2:48:22
Hannah
2:48:22
is in honor of the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, we made a candle
2:48:28
called hands off my vagina. Oh, yes.
2:48:31
Very good. Oh,
2:48:36
edgy big. That's exactly gets people talking. And yes, yes,
2:48:40
people, you know, shows like yours.
2:48:43
I think we we are very pro Women at Google, obviously. And we
2:48:49
really do believe that, that no one should touch a woman's
2:48:52
vagina. Women should have agency to make whatever choice they
2:48:56
want to make in their lives in any area. And so we were happy
2:49:00
to be able to partner with the ACLU
2:49:02
and do this. It's in the ACLU. Was it on the vagina candle?
2:49:05
It's really exciting.
2:49:06
What did they pay for it? Because they help with the name
2:49:10
with the branding.
2:49:11
What is the ACLU got to do with that these guys are off the
2:49:14
rails just years ago cuz you used to give them money? Oh,
2:49:19
yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. You got one plea. And you said I'm not
2:49:23
what? Yeah, they're off the rails. It
2:49:25
was like come protest. My ACL test. Let me see. Let me see if
2:49:29
they have anything about a vagina. I'm going to play the
2:49:31
rest of this horrible clip from the Tonight Show. While I look
2:49:35
up the ACL us exact involvement in this vagina candle.
2:49:38
How do you come up with new products? You just write them
2:49:40
all down? Do you do you record them on your phone in the middle
2:49:43
of the night? This could be an idea or this can be something
2:49:46
I usually get them sort of in a lightning flash like I like like
2:49:49
I did with this candle. While I was having a dinner one night,
2:49:53
and we were we were talking about freedoms in this country
2:49:56
freedoms. It sort of hit me. I was like, Oh, I would I would
2:49:59
love to make Have you candle like that? And sometimes they
2:50:01
come from collaboration with the team and our team can come up
2:50:06
with like the funniest, cleverest names for products and
2:50:10
yeah, so it's really, it's, it's a great process, you know, to be
2:50:13
able to have that creative freedom at work and to do things
2:50:16
you know, will be edgy and like, move culture forward and get
2:50:20
people tall. Yeah, for a good cause. So, and we love it
2:50:24
for a good cause it went
2:50:25
on and went on. No, it's, it's the Move culture forward.
2:50:29
Yes. Culture has to move. You are right. Move culture forward.
2:50:37
I don't see them promoting it. In news maybe under the news
2:50:41
thing that would be embarrassed if I was them. So apparently, it
2:50:44
benefits the ACLU Women's Rights Project. Oh, here we go. Oh,
2:50:51
abortion is essential. Okay, this is it. ACLU Here we go. We
2:50:59
testify Oh, goodness. There's so many different groups here. Ah,
2:51:04
not saying that. That's, that's, you know, they can't believe in
2:51:07
whatever is important. But come on with your vagina candle. What
2:51:12
it smells like,
2:51:13
I wonder what is shaped like?
2:51:16
Just a regular candle, John.
2:51:21
Ah, all right. I think that's
2:51:25
the softballs.
2:51:27
Softball. I didn't
2:51:28
know what to do. I didn't know what to do. I mean, you just
2:51:31
nailed it. I can't do anything.
2:51:34
Okay, I think we're good. Yeah, I
2:51:36
don't think I only had this night the dumb dog drive.
2:51:40
Okay, let's play this inflation discussion. This is something we
2:51:44
should all know what's causing inflation that we really need to
2:51:47
know.
2:51:48
Where's this from? NPR I believe could two of
2:51:52
the main factors that affect inflation are labor and energy.
2:51:56
That's according to an online discussion led by experts at
2:51:59
Heritage Foundation on Tuesday. Oh, rachel Dressler, a research
2:52:03
fellow in economics budget and entitlements, said the high
2:52:06
inflation curve began during the pandemic when policymakers
2:52:09
issued the $600 unemployment insurance payments that resulted
2:52:14
in two thirds of unemployed workers collecting more money by
2:52:17
not working. She also said 4.3 million workers have quit their
2:52:22
jobs on average per month in the last four months,
2:52:25
replacing workers is extremely costly, on average, takes about
2:52:29
six to nine months worth of a worker salary, to have the cost
2:52:33
of finding a new worker and training them. So if you look at
2:52:37
the quits this year, compared to last year, employers have had to
2:52:41
replace about 10 million additional workers when you do
2:52:44
the math that increase their costs by about three to 4%. And
2:52:48
there's no new value added to that. It's just a higher cost.
2:52:51
So of course, they're having to pass that on to customers.
2:52:55
Energy is also a critical factor when it comes to inflation.
2:52:58
Katie Tubb, a senior policy analyst for energy and
2:53:01
environmental issues, said that in 2020, energy consumption was
2:53:05
down 7% due to COVID-19 policy responses. And those in the
2:53:10
conventional energy industry have a very uncertain future.
2:53:14
Under the Biden administration.
2:53:15
The administration has used basically every regulatory
2:53:20
toolbox tool in the toolbox to attack coal, oil and natural
2:53:24
gas, whether you're talking about the financing side of this
2:53:28
production or the consumption side of it. And so if you're in
2:53:32
those industries, I don't know why you would want to spend
2:53:35
millions of dollars investing in workers and infrastructure when
2:53:40
this administration has said you have no future in this country.
2:53:45
Wow, that this is not NPR obvious. No. NTD New Tang
2:53:49
Dynasty.
2:53:50
I just love the Brookings Institution, as determined all
2:53:53
those things are what makes inflation and not one word about
2:53:58
inflating the money supply.
2:54:03
Yeah, they could have dropped that
2:54:05
in I think they could have dropped that. That wasn't that
2:54:08
the original way back when we understood that we print money
2:54:11
at 2% a year that's what inflation was we'll have
2:54:15
the quantitative easing period, which was supposed to be various
2:54:18
hyperinflationary was not it was almost deflationary. So that
2:54:22
those old theories are out the window.
2:54:24
No, but okay. I'm just looking at the pure definition back in
2:54:28
the 70s. When we were looking at inflation, I remember my parents
2:54:32
talking about inflation, about the government printing too
2:54:34
much.
2:54:35
Yeah, I knew the same thing. It was an old rule. That's why
2:54:39
everybody and their sister was predicting hyperinflation during
2:54:42
the quantitative easing era, because they were using those
2:54:46
old rules and it never happened. No,
2:54:47
of course not. Because we shut down the economy.
2:54:52
This is my entire theory of Dawn about 2009. We didn't Oh, no,
2:54:56
no, no. 2009 we shifted. We shoved it all under the rug and
2:54:59
now it's coming to roost that's what I think. Yeah. Who knows?
2:55:03
Who knows? But I know this, Nick, the rat will be live right
2:55:08
after the show and no agenda stream.com Hang in the troll
2:55:11
room, John. We might want to hang around. He's going to
2:55:14
deconstruct our episode smoke weed and take calls.
2:55:19
Though that will probably mean sounds a little like a throwback
2:55:22
to an old show. He once remembered. Yo agenda. Yo
2:55:26
agenda. Yeah, we'll see. Yeah, we'll see what those guys did
2:55:31
smoke weed, I'm sure of it.
2:55:33
Quite sure. And to show mixes Rolando Gonzalez and Tidewater
2:55:38
architects appreciate their work. And we returned in just
2:55:44
three short days having dinner with the former New York banker
2:55:48
on Monday, so I might have stories. I'll ask him about the
2:55:51
pending collapse. Coming to you from the heart of the Texas hill
2:55:58
country here in FEMA Region number six in the morning,
2:56:01
everybody.
2:56:02
I'm Adam curry. And for no other Silicon Valley, I'm John C.
2:56:05
Dvorak. We return
2:56:06
on Thursday with another hour of deconstruction just for you.
2:56:09
Remember, we do need your support, so do it. Go to divorce
2:56:13
hack.org/na Z on Thursday, everybody until then adios mofos
2:56:22
and such.
2:56:43
Thank you for teaching students that our own mental health is
2:56:46
much less important than making triple vaccinated adults feel
2:56:50
safe. Thank you for teaching me that even the most new risk is
2:56:54
not worth taking. Life is best when you take the path of least
2:56:58
resistance with no chance of failure, and definitely no
2:57:01
chance of catching a cold. Thank you for allowing me to
2:57:04
experience anxiety so she's never seen facial expressions.
2:57:09
Thank you for teaching us that we should never question
2:57:11
authority or think critically. But instead, we should follow
2:57:15
whatever the people in charge tell us to do. I realize now
2:57:18
that thinking for yourself is overrated and not really
2:57:21
necessary when you can just make decisions based on fear. Thank
2:57:25
you for pushing your irrational fears and anxieties on me
2:57:28
because I didn't already have enough to worry about. Obedience
2:57:32
is best masks work. Thank you for teaching me that being a
2:57:36
morally superior person only requires that I cover my face
2:57:39
for eight hours a day, and that the most morally superior people
2:57:42
wear two masks or even three masks. Thank you for staying
2:57:47
silent about masking despite the fact that mobile has a very high
2:57:51
survival rate and kids my age. Who needs data anyway, though,
2:57:57
we all know that it will never be safe to see anyone's face
2:58:00
ever again.
2:58:05
This morning, the cabinet concluded that because of the
2:58:07
extraordinary booster campaign, together with the way the public
2:58:10
have responded to the plan measures, we can return to plan
2:58:14
a in England and Alliance plans and regulations to next and
2:58:18
there was much rejoicing. As a result from the start of first
2:58:23
day, next week, mandatory certification and there was much
2:58:27
rejoicing organizations can of course choose to use the NHS
2:58:31
COVID past voluntarily. But we will end the compulsory use of
2:58:34
COVID status
2:58:36
and there was much rejoicing.
2:58:42
The government is no longer asking people to work
2:58:46
and there was much rejoicing.
2:58:49
The government will no longer mandate wearing face masks we
2:58:54
will no longer require face masks and classrooms and the
2:58:58
Department for Education. They use in common errors and there
2:59:03
was much rejoicing. boruch.org/n A
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